Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Consumer Spending Growth In China Fades; Spending a Mere 34% of GDP; Can China Fail Like Japan?
- IMF "Ready and Willing" to Throw Away More Money; 10 Point Summary of Sorry State of Affairs; Market Repeatedly Calls Foolish Bluffs by IMF, ECB
- Collapse in Philly Fed Manufacturing Index; Current Outlook, New Orders, Unfilled Orders in Contraction; Profit Squeeze is On
- 2-Year Greek Bond Yield Hits 28.15%; Investors Bet on Prospect of 'Greek Accident'
Consumer Spending Growth In China Fades; Spending a Mere 34% of GDP; Can China Fail Like Japan? Posted: 16 Jun 2011 11:24 PM PDT China and the US both desperately want consumer spending to grow. Instead, the Chinese economy has grown even more unbalanced. China is increasingly reliant on fixed investment, yet there are few economically viable projects. Worse yet, China is in the midst of gigantic property bubbles that will soon pop. Please consider Consumer Spending Fades in China Economy At the Haiyang Zhuangshi Co. hardware store in Beijing, sales of paint and aluminum window frames are slowing, one sign of a diminished role for consumer spending in China that's foiling government objectives.China Can Fail Like Japan Please consider How China could yet fail like Japan by Martin Wolf Until 1990, Japan was the most successful large economy in the world. Almost nobody predicted what would happen to it in the succeeding decades. Today, people are yet more in awe of the achievements of China. Is it conceivable that this colossus could learn that spectacular success is a precursor of surprising failure? The answer is: yes.That is an excellent article by Martin Wolf. Inquiring minds will want to take a closer look. Bearish on China Fixed investment in China is going to collapse at some point. When it does, it will take China's massive property bubble with it. Losses at Chinese banks will be staggering. The ripple effect will hit commodity prices which in turn will hit Australia and Canada. Expect more unrest. Interestingly, China is in the midst of a surge in unrest already. Please see Wave of Violent Protests, Rioting, Bombings Hits China; Expect More Riots When China's Credit Bubble Pops, Exposing Mountains of Fraud for details. I see no reason to be bullish on China or the Yuan either. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 16 Jun 2011 11:43 AM PDT Inquiring minds are making note of the current state of affairs in Greece. Here is a quick 10-point synopsis. Current Sorry State of Greek Affairs
Logic Useless Logic would dictate that given the current sorry state of affairs in Greece that the IMF would not be willing to lend Greece more money. Indeed point number 1 alone would seem to be sufficient to settle the hash. However, once must not attempt to apply logic to decisions made by the IMF, by ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet, or by Euro-Zone officials in general. IMF 'Ready to Continue Support' for Greece Please consider IMF 'Ready to Continue Support' for Greece "We stand ready to continue our support for Greece subject to adoption of the economic policy reforms agreed with the Greek authorities," Caroline Atkinson, the director of IMF external relations, said in an e-mailed statement today.Progress? What Progress? Progress is being made? What progress? Where? Will the Greek government go along or has the Greek government had enough of these austerity measures? Caroline Atkinson also said that the IMF board will still have to approve the "conclusions of the pending program review." There is nothing to approve. The papers are signed, stamped, and sealed already. The only open question, and it's a major one, is "Will Greece Go Along?" Logic Cannot Be Used on Pathological Liars Attempts to apply logic to what pathological liars say is useless. How can you possibly believe that known liars will do what they say? "When it becomes serious, you have to lie," said Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the regular meetings of eurozone finance ministers. The IMF, the ECB, and the Fed are the same. To get things correct you cannot believe a thing pathological liars at the IMF, ECB, and Fed say. Instead, simply bet they will kick the can down the road until the market kicks it back in their faces, smashing some teeth in the process. Brute force and a lick in the teeth by the market is the only thing liars react to. Even then, it takes multiple kicks before they get the message. In regards to politicians, in many instances they are kicked out of office, never understanding the message at all. Market Repeatedly Calls Foolish Bluffs by IMF, ECB Recall that Trichet loaded up the ECB's balance sheet with garbage from Greece and Ireland. Trichet thought that bluff would lead the markets to accept his idea that Greece would not default. His move stabilized bonds for about 2 weeks. Then the market kicked that can back in Trichet's face, bruising his forehead, but unfortunately leaving his arrogance intact. More recently, ECB executive board member Juergen Stark threatened the "nuclear" option of refusing to accept Greek debt as collateral if there was a restructuring of Greek debt. This was a foolish bluff that was supposed to bring the market into line. Instead, yields and CDS shot up and continued higher. In simple terms the market kicked that can back into the ECB's face. The bluff was not remotely believable. The ECB would trash its own balance sheet if it did what Stark suggested. Moreover, it would also destroy the balance sheets of French banks who are the primary bag-holders of Greek garbage. Solid Kick in the Teeth in Progress A solid kick in the teeth of the ECB and IMF appears to be in progress right now. However, Jean-Claude Trichet, the IMF, and Christian Lagarde (running to head the IMF), still have not gotten the message. Expect to see more teeth kicked out in the weeks or months to come if the fools at the ECB, IMF, and EU try to kick the can down the road one more time. Running Greek Recap
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Posted: 16 Jun 2011 09:18 AM PDT Economic activity continues to slow nearly everywhere you look. Today's look-see is in the Philly Fed Business Outlook Survey. Responses to the Business Outlook Survey suggest that regional manufacturing activity weakened in June. The survey's indicators for activity and new orders turned negative this month, while indicators for shipments and employment fell but remained slightly positive. Indicators for prices show a continuing trend of moderating price pressures. The broadest indicator of future activity fell sharply in June, recording its lowest reading in 31 months.June Business Conditions vs. May click on any chart or table to see sharper image In Contraction
Price, Profit Squeeze
Prices paid fell more than prices received but from a much higher level. Prices received is on the verge of contraction. A price squeeze (profit squeeze) is on. Business Conditions Expectations 6 Months from Now Employment Outlook Looking ahead 6 months the survey is positive, but barely. Unfilled orders, delivery times, and inventory are currently in contraction and expected to remain so. The average work week is projected to contract. If it plays out this way, and I suggest it too optimistic, wages and hiring will be weak at best. More on the Profit Squeeze The special questions for June 2011 are interesting. More businesses than not are unable to pass on price hikes. However, businesses had to pay increased prices for items, especially transportation costs. This was an anemic report from every angle, yet treasuries are barely up. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
2-Year Greek Bond Yield Hits 28.15%; Investors Bet on Prospect of 'Greek Accident' Posted: 16 Jun 2011 01:02 AM PDT Greek, Irish, and Portuguese yields are at or flirting with new all-time highs. Moreover, things are not looking pretty for Spanish and Italian bonds. Both trade at the upper end of their respective ranges yet German bond yields have fallen since the second week in April. The prospect of a messy default in Greece is rising, even though it appears the IMF will hold its nose and give Greece another trance of money. Credit default swaps price in a 75% chance of default in 5 years. However, Investors Now Bet On a 'Greek Accident' Within a Year. A new bet has been placed on the Greek debt crisis. It backs a growing view among investors that Athens may be about to suffer a messy default that could spark a run on the country's banks and a deeper euro zone crisis.Inquiring minds may wish to consider some charts of 2-year sovereign debt yields. 2-Year Yield Germany - 1.47% 2-Year Yield France - 1.75% 2-Year Yield Italy - 3.05% 2-Year Yield Spain - 3.52% 2-Year Yield Ireland - 12.28% 2-Year Yield Portugal - 12.44% 2-Year Yield Greece - 28.15% If there was no risk of default as ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet insists, there would be no investor preference for German bonds over Greek bonds, Portuguese bonds, or Irish bonds. Instead there is a significant difference between German and French bonds and the bonds of every other country. Spain is too big to bail and Italy is much bigger still. All hell is going to break loose when yields in Spain or Italy rapidly rise, and it's only a matter of time before they do. Spanish 10-Year bonds are flirting with disaster right now. 10-Year Yield Spain - 5.62% German 10-year bonds are 2.95%. A sustained move above this level spells serious trouble for Spain. Greek Recap
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
You are subscribed to email updates from Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |