Showing posts with label crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crisis. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Peru import/export update

We haven't done this for a while, so last week's publication of Peru's January Imp/Ex numbers gives a good time to check out the state of play.

Let's start with exports-only. There were superduper fanfares in the local press about exports rising 44% or 48% or some weird number, but a more careful look at the numbers show that January 2010 compares very closely to Janaury 2008. In other words, two years have gone by and the net result for the country is zero.

click on charts to enlarge

On the one hand, it's a good thing to see Peru coming out of the crisis trough of course. However, it hardly merits the rah rah you hear (and keep hearing all year) of the YoY comparatives that get spun out of Lima.

Also let's note, once again, just how little Peru's export mix has evolved. It's still a primary materials monoculture with metals (mainly copper and gold) making up the largest chunks of the total. How do you add value to a 1kg ingot, Twobreakfasts? Meanwhile, other traditional exports have trodden water along with the non-traditionals too. Here's the percentage breakdown of exports for January 2010:

Mining exports: 62.48%
Other Traditional Exports: 17.2%
Non-Traditional Exports: 20.31%

Peru's historic exports mix is with 60% metals....nowadays it's even higher. So much for the productive "miracle" of Peru's growth, which in fact rests squarely on the shoulders of large world miners that remit all profits back to Canada, Australia, the USA, the UK etc. Viva investment grade, baby...

Now comparing imports to exports, we again see that 2010 is no better compared to 2008 or even 2007, such is the inertia.

A recovery is on? Yes no doubts, with that steady climb in imports underlying the good news. Anything better than 2007 or 2008? Nope. So next time the headlines scream the Kool-Aid at you, remember the real context of the "growth" figures that you'll see out of Peru this year.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Peru: Will Spongebob Carranza resign in disgrace as Peru slips further into recession?

When the last set of Peru GDP figures hit in July, FinMin and Liar Spongebob quickly came out and said that the economy "had touched bottom" (samo samo he's used all year) and said that the first half of 2009 would finish around +1%.
So inquiring minds would like to know whether Carranza will finally admit his policies have been utterly ineffective and that his constant overestimating bullshit has led his country up the garden path if the latest Banco Continental forecast of a Peru GDP downturn of -2% to -2.4% in June (the official number is expected out mid August) is proven true. According to the report:
"The Economics Studies Service of BBVA Banco Continental projects a fall in June GDP of between 2% and 2.4% after the poor performance (figures) of the primary and manufacturing sectors."
Such a figure would put Peru's GDP at around -1% negative growth for the first half of the year, a mile away from Spongebob's +1% for the first half of the year, a million miles from his 3% yearly forecast (that was as high as 5% in March) and a quadsquillion miles away from the total demagogic piffle spouted by Twobreakfasts late last year when he forecast Peru's 2009 as +6.5% and that his country's economy was "armour plated" against the world financial woes.
While we're at it, that 5% GDP figure mentioned by Carranza in March found its way into this IKN post at the time. A humble blogger like me calling bear on Peru all year against the world's economic brains calling "Peru economic miracle", so let's see now........
"... Twobreakfasts says it's going to be 5% this year, and Carranza says 5% this year, and the Central Bank says 5% this year, and the IMF says 5% this year. I mean, why on earth should you listen to me and ignore all those utterly reliable and impartial sources?"
Nuff said. I am available for hire or autographs so Spongebob, feel free to mail me you dumbass. You were a random walk FinMin who got lucky and did nothing during your first stint at the job, then actually bought into the BS they wrote about you. Fact is you're a zero, a liar, an emperor with no clothes and a knownothing. Resign and put us out of our misery.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Chile: It helps to have smart friends

Armen Kouyoumdjian is the dude in question and when it comes to analysis of Chile's macro situation (or any other South American country when he put his mind to it, for that matter) there's no better independent voice out there. Armen's been kind enough to allow me to reproduce his weekly missive on the blog here today. If you want to join his list send him a mail (address below) and tell him Otto sent you...and say please, cos I consider being on his list a privilege, not a right.

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CRISIS IMPACT ON CHILEAN FISCAL RESULTS

An Analysis of the First Quarter 2009 results

By Armen Kouyoumdjian

kouyvina (AT) cmet.net
June 12, 2009

The news that Chile’s GDP was negative for two quarters and fell even sharper during April means that the country is in recession according to the generally accepted principles of economic analysis. However, the authorities have refused to use the term, adding another element to my description of “management by negation”.


There is one aspect where figures do not lie, because contrary to many other vague macro-economic statistics (such as GDP, Unemployment or Inflation), it reflects a more or less precise accounting exercise. This refers to the fiscal accounts, for which first quarter 2009 figures were published in late April, and I have only now gotten round to processing them.


PARTICULAR FACTORS Even though budgetary figures may be precise, their presentation has become exceedingly hard to fathom in recent years. The reasons include combining current, fixed and financial transactions in the final results, and allow Hacienda advisors to come up with somewhat distorted final figures. Still, the raw material is there and it can tell us a lot. Another statistic which tells us a lot about the crisis in Chile, but is not financial, are the 20,000 homeless people who seek shelter each night in Santiago alone, and that figure only relates to those staying in the hostels of one such charity, the Hogar de Cristo.



The first quarter of 2009 figures should not be projected for the full year, because they incorporate some aspects which are unlikely to persist for the whole of the year. They include the impact of the exchange rate on both revenue and expenditure denominated n foreign currency. In the first quarter of 2008, the exchange rate averaged 454 pesos per U$. The equivalent figure for 2009 was 581 pesos. Discounting inflation, the real peso value of the dollar increased by 22 % on a year-on-year basis.


The other variable which marked a strong change was the price of copper. From an average of U$ 3.54/lb. in January-March 2008, the price dropped 56 % to just U$ 1.56 this year. It has averaged U$ 2.03 in April/May and is now over U$ 2.30.


One aspect which does look as if it will continue all year is the increase in expenditure, because it is an electoral year. One has to take this with a pinch of salt as announcements and actions are separated by the Chilean bureaucratic Colorado Canyon (the U$ 1 bn capitalisation of CODELCO, part and parcel of the U$ 3bn “stimulation plan” announced ages ago, is still under discussion).


There is not much point comparing the first quarter results to the draft budget for 2009 announced at the end of October last year. This is not so much because we only have one quarter’s figures, but the hypotheses contained therein on growth, inflation, copper price and the exchange rate have long since lost their meaning.


REVENUE SIDE Looking at current revenue, which consists mainly of taxes, these plunged by 37.3 % in the first quarter, to a total of U$ 7.64 bn. Though some of the drop was due to temporary reductions or suspension of taxes on fuels and stamp duty for instance, other items truly reflect a very sick economy in terms of growth.


No tax reflects economic activity better than VAT. Revenue from that source accounted for no less than 38 % of current income, and fell by 20.5 % in real terms (all percentages mentioned in this report, in accordance with Chilean accounting principles, are in real terms).


Revenue from copper and other mining activities saw the sharpest drop, falling by 92 %, and ending up at just 3.4 % of revenue. In fact, they reverted to form, and maybe now people will believe me when I say that in most years, the Chilean state gets more out of the nasty habit of smoking than from copper. No wonder, in the country with the highest per capita expenditure on cigarette and drink, as previously mentioned. In fact, tobacco taxes brought in $ 248 million during the quarter, 70 % more than copper, and bucked the trend with a 6.5 % increase. A combination of less driving and lower taxes meant that on the other hand, fuel duties brought-in 13.9 % less, at U$ 314 million. Lower imports and statutory reductions under Free Trade Agreements meant that customs revenues dropped by 48.6 %. Income tax, another good measure of economic activity, and which accounted for 29.5 % of revenue, saw its yield reduced by 25.2 %.


There is a puzzling increase of 8.4 % in the revenue from state social security contributions, which at first glance does not square up with the increase in unemployment. The only explanation I can think of is the move of lower paid workers from private health coverage to the less expensive state FONASA scheme.

Non-current revenue only brought in an additional U$ 57 million.


Some time in the near future, if it has not already been said, some (or several) authorities will insist that the deterioration of public finances is mainly due to the fall in copper. This argument, which is older than the Tibetan Book of the Dead, once again stands no scrutiny. In the first quarter of 2009, the Treasury received U$ 2.2 bn less from copper. This represents less than half the total loss in revenue (U$ 4.54 bn).


Like all of us stupid savers, public finances also bore the brunt of the drop in interest rates on the country’s savings. These dropped by 77 % to U$ 257 million. As of March 31st, consolidated Treasury savings amounted to U$ 23.4 bn.


EXPENDITURE SIDE The analysis of the expenditure side of the equation is more complicated, because we have an important element of non-current items. Starting with current expenses, these increased by 15.3 % in the first quarter, with all items showing an increase, led by purchases of goods and services (+ 20.5 %) and subsidies & donations (+ 17.7 %). The 14.9 % increase in the interest bill (itself a modest U$ 255 million, almost exactly equal to the revenue on savings), is most probably due to the higher peso cost of servicing dollar debt, as mentioned earlier.


To the U$ 7.18 bn of current expenditure, one has to add U$ 1.55 bn of non-financial investments and transfers. The amount of investment, at U$ 922 million, jumps by 57.3 %, though transfers to other entities also shows a 57.5 % increase. It remains to be seen how much of that money has actually been spent at the receiving end. The official report mentions a 73 % increase for housing, 52 % for public works and 45 % for public security.

Combining current and investment outlays, total expenditure increased by 21.3 % in the first quarter.


BALANCE AND OUTLOOK On the basis described above, there was a quarterly deficit of U$ 1.1 bn or 0.7 % of GDP. Under the circumvoluted methodology of Hacienda, they still aim for a balanced budget for the full year.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Peru: Anti-crisis, what anti-crisis?

Remember Cesar Zumaeta from this story last week?
Nice to have a pal as a gov't minister, innit

Anti-crisis measures come to Peru! After all that bluff and nonsense from Twobreakfasts about how Peru was armour-plated against the financial crisis and the ongoing WalterMittyness of FinMin Carranza saying how Peru will grow 4% this year (betcha he doesn't resign when it ends up as 2%), we now get the Employment Minister Jorge Villasante saying that his "Revalora Peru" plan to be launched on Tuesday will create 215,000 new jobs by placing laid off workers in new work areas (that's code for "miner becomes box-shifter").

But scratch the surface of this "new" plan, and we see that it's exactly the same anti-crisis pro-employment plan that Peru launched in December 2008 to combat the financial downturn. The only thing that has changed is the name, as before the name change it was called "PERLAB" (Programa Especial de Reconversión Laboral, or Special Laboral Reconversion Program).

So how many people has this program managed to help in the past five months?
Yep, the same ministry with the same plan expects to move their success rate from thirty-four people in five months over the length and breadth of Peru to 215,000 with the change of a name and a wave of a magic wand. I'm not making this up; it's exactly the same plan with a different name.

And you gringos actually believe Peru is worthy of Investment Grade.

Monday, April 20, 2009

LatAm's steel production figures underline the regionwide recession

This BN Americas report tells a sorry tale of pan-regional slowdown in steelmaking activity. Here's the chart.

According to ILAFA (the respected LatAm steel people) crude steel output dropped by a regional aggregate of 40% to 10.1 million metric tonnes (MMT). Brazil (5MMT) and Mexico (2.4MMT) are the big players in the sector and between them made up 7.4MMT of that reduced total. Third place now taken by Venezuela at 1.06MMT. Argentina is now fourth, dropping from 1.37MMT to 798,000MT in the quarter.

FWIW, primary iron and hot rolled productions are just as nasty. Check that link to find out.

As for that Venezuelan production hike, it's interesting that steel production went up but that doesn't necessarily mean they found someone to buy it. However it is a graphic illustration of a the difference in economic model used by Hugolandia. But Venezuela aside, steel prodution numbers over the whole region really ram home the fact that no country escapes this mess. Somebody tell that dumbass Carranza, please.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Luis Carranza, Man in Denial


Yesterday Peru's increasingly embarrassing FinMin, Luis Carranza, said that first quarter GDP growth would come in at 3% and his full year forecast was still 4%. He alled the February 0.19% disaster a "pothole"....potsmoke is more apt under the circumstances, as Luis is obviously been toking the waccybaccy.

So let's check on this blathering. First Carranza's quarterly forecast January was 3.1%, February was 0.19%, so to get a 3% average for 1q09 we'll need March to come in at 5.7% or so. I mean, even his own ministry is calling March at 3%, and that's the highest forecast out there...and by a long way.

Secondly his 4% growth target for the year. I refer you, kind and gentle lector of IKN, back to the theoretical projections chart of yesterday, reprinted here.


The above isn't my estimate or guessworrk, this is just plain old mathematics and numbercrunching. Put simply even if Peru knocks out a 4% average monthly growth from here to December Peru's GDP comes up short of 4%.

He pins his hopes on a $3Bn stimulus package that doesn't even get close to covering the difference in copper revenues in 2009 (forget all other exports....just copper is going to drop by at least $4Bn). He cites the fact that fishery will pick up in March but forgets it's only 0.72% of GDP weighting, conveniently ignoring the disastrous 7.45% drop in manufacturing output that will surely repeat.

Look, this stuff isn't tough economics and Carranza knows his subject, so he's either suddenly developed a nasty case of stupid or he knows he's lying through his teeth.

Go on...take a wild guess....

Thursday, April 16, 2009

The IKN forecast for Peru's GDP in 2009

Enough of just laughing at the neverending downward revisions of the dumbasses in suits, it's time to nail colours to the mast. Yesterday's February GDP numbers from Peru were downright horrible. No ifs, no buts, no maybes. So instead of getting on with my life last night I started to play with some previously tweaked models and then whipped up a couple of charts from them, too.

This first chart shows how Peru's 2009 GDP number will evolve (devolve?) in 2009 under five different and purely theoretical growth scenarios. From a highly optimistic 4% growth per month to a 0% average growth scenario.

Note that with this chart above even a 4% monthly growth rate from here will end up with a lower 2009 GDP than is being forecast by Peru's Central Bank, its Finance Ministry, the IMF and all the other liars. And to repeat: February GDP came in at 0.19%. March GDP is likely YoY flat or negative. Same for April. Etc etc.

Now this second chart is my best case (honestly, this is being optimistic) for Peru in 2009. The yellow bars show the monthly GDP figures and the red bars are the 12 month trailing GDP forecasts. And so after the shocking numbers posted yesterday, right now I'm predicting Peru to grow 1.28% in 2009. As for 2010, almost certain recession.


Moral: Miracles are for the religions, not economics. Welcome to reality.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

So what makes you think Peru is any different?

The next time somebody tries to bore you with the Peruvian economic miracle story and how they are protected from the storm, show them this chart.

The only difference is that one is in for a much harder landing.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Yves Smith crucifies Alan Greenspan

Yep, off my beaten LatAm track for sure and all this post really does is to pass on a must-read link.

But it is must-read. Greenspan stood up and tried to defend himself today in the London Financial Times. Nearly all of us know he deserves to be knocked off his perch as the intellectual author of the clusterf we're going through, but Yves Smith of Naked Capitalism does it better than the rest.

100% agreed, Yves, I doff my cap. Magnificent rant backed up by a whole dose of smarts. Greenspan deserves every single word. Link here, so use it.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Morgan Stanley is the first to be honest about LatAm 2009

Viaducts Break Ranks (1937)
Paul Klee

It had to happen eventually.

I don't have a copy of the report yet (any fwding appreciated), but here's the link to the Bloomie coverage of today's Morgan Stanley macroeconomic review that finally... FINALLY... has a heavyweight player injecting some much-needed honesty into the debate over growth (or non-growth) for LatAm in 2009. Here's the country by country rundown of the Morgan Stanley team's 2009 GDP forecast for the region:

Brazil: GDP to drop by 4.5%
Mexico: GDP to drop by 5%
Argentina: GDP to drop by 4.7%
Chile: GDP to drop by 1.4%
Venezuela: GDP to drop by 4%
Peru: GDP to grow by 0.9%
Colombia: GDP to drop by 1.6%

Regionwide LatAm GDP to drop by 4%

These forecasts are clearly far more pessimistic than the normal ones trotted out by the national governments and dependent economic bodies. They may turn out to be overly pessimistic, but at least they are in the realms of realism and not sugar-coated for sheep consumption. I'm limited to a media-filtered report of the paper for the moment, but even so one quote featured in the Bloomberg text has me vigorously nodding my head in agreement. Here it is:

It is difficult to imagine that credit growth will play a meaningful role in boosting economic activity even as monetary policy is eased, given the sharp declines that we envision in consumer and business confidence, the weakness in labor markets and the risks to the quality of the loan portfolio

Or in plain English, pushing on a string won't do a thing. The regional governments and their economic teams might be anything from smart to stupid, but they're all in the same boat here. And once again, those governments (e.g. Chile, there are others) that treat their fellow citizens as adults and don't try to mask the fact that there's a serious slowdown coming will fare better than those governments (e.g. Peru, there are others) that continue insulting people's intelligence by insisting everything is fine and all you need to do is think pretty thoughts and all the nasty stuff goes away.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Stop Peruvian Stupidity


It's always funny until someone gets hurt

And then it's just hilarious
Faith No More, Richochet


So today I get this comment from the a reader resident in South America (let's just say):

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Luchillo has left a new comment on your post "Peru: Does this look like a solid economy to you?": We know you don't like Peru, but unfortunately for you it's doing far better than your Bolivarian friends...

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This kind of mindset is what comes of of having too much ego, too much nationalistic pride, not enough insight and not enough basic common sense. In the world of the South American establishment-fed egoist, criticizing Peru's government means I hold an automatic hatred for the country, its people, its food, its beaches, its mountaintops. It also means I'm some pinko communist Evo-Hugo-worshipper. That's not what this is about, you silly little person.

What it's about is not believing the crap you're hypnotized with about this, that and the other. You are constantly told that Bolivia is doing badly economically and is on the verge of collapse. Look at the figures for yourself...y'know, pretend you have a brain and do it all independent like, dude... and you will see that's wrong. You're told non-stop that Bolivia is being irresponsibly managed. That's also false. Look at all the macro numbers for Bolivia in the past three years and look at its exposure to the recessionary pressures to come and if you have an idea of how macro-numbers flow you'll see that, although not perfect by any means, it's being run well, it's ready for the downturn and will get through just fine, much to the chagrin of those who think that lefties can't run countries to the lasting benefit of their people.

Meanwhile, you're told that Peru is some great white hope, is an oasis of stability and growth in a continent of fools. This is a highly misleading, dishonest and downright dangerous message that's being propagated by the Garcia government and spoonfed to a sheep-like population by its friendly media. What I am saying here is nothing to do with love for nations and peoples. What I am trying to tell you is that Peru is also in deep trouble due to this world economic crisis, but its government is being extremely irresponsible in trying to pretend that everything is fine, Peru is in good shape and the world slowdown somehow won't affect it. That's false. Get it? It's a lie! It's not true, it's bull, it's blatant, populist propaganda, it's whatever you want to call it. In fact, if you really want to betray a whole nation and leave the door open for that arch-dickhead named Ollanta Humala, what better way than to lie and fake your way through a whole government term of office and then send your whole country down the toilet just before the next presidential election?

Profess love for countries and live with hatred for others all you want, cos I don't give a damn. But don't tell me that the Garcia administration is being honest with you about the Peruvian economy and don't confuse my abhorrance for Peru's corrupt government with my feelings for the country, because they are poles apart.

Rant over.

Brazil: No doubt about today's top regional biz story


Reuters: Brazil economy contracts 3.6% in fourth quarter

Bloomberg: Brazil Fourth-Quarter GDP Shrank 3.6%, Most on Record

AP: Brazil Growth Slows Sharply in Q4 Amid Meltdown

Plenty of other versions to choose from. Beyond the headline number that "beat" (if that's really the operative word) expectations of a -2.3% drop in the quarter (it even beat the worst estimate from the 17 economists* polled), your future-looking Otto particularly notes capex spending down 9.8%, which doesn't bode well for the next few quarters. Other notables compares to 3q08 are:
  • Industrial output down 7.4%
  • Agro output down 0.5%
  • Consumer spending down 2%
  • Service sector down 0.4%
By the way, get your information raw and not via the mediafilter by going to the relevant Brazilian gov't webpage right here. If you do you get useful charts like this one:


*aka dumbasses in suits. I think that's getting beyond question now

Monday, March 2, 2009

Look into my eyes, Peru.......


A truly frightening display of idiocy was on show for viewers of Peru's TV program "El Cuarto Poder" last night. Finance Minister Luis Carranza was interviewed on show and managed to pack in haughty arrogance, arch stupidity and a full-on attempt at mass-hypnosis in the space of just ten minutes. Here's an Ottotrans™ of some direct quotes:

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"The most important is that they (the Peruvian people) are relaxed and continue making their consumption, savings and investment decision with a long-term view and not on account of bad news that might appear one day in a newspaper or from a pessimistic analyst.

He then went on to ask people not to be carried away by negativity because the government has the clear objectives to maintain growth and reduce poverty. And then...

"The important thing is to be relaxed and be safe in the knowledge that in the government we are doing everything we can and we have the strength to maintain GDP and employment growth according to our needs."
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Repeat after me:
"The Government Will Look After You."
"I'm From The Government And I'm Here To Help You."
"Every Day In Every Way I'm Getting Better And Better."
"Fitter, Stronger, More Productive."

So as you can imagine, Otto is sure his words went down well with the 10,000 Peruvian miners laid off in the first two months of 2009. Certain that the 45% drop in real estate sales registered in Lima in the final three months of 2008 will immediately bounce back thanks to Carranza's soothing words. And how can there be any doubt that the ZERO PERCENT CURRENT GROWTH registered by local experts (when they don't swallow the gov'ts massaged numbers whole) will immediately pick up again thanks to Luis's performance last night?

To round off his pep-talk last night, Carranza reminded the world yet again that the IMF had predicted 5% growth for Peru in 2009. Hey wow..the IMF...they're serious people and never get it wrong in South America. Or perhaps not.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Paul Volcker: Yes, yes and thrice yes

This recent Paul Volcker speech has reached me via this post at BiiWii. If it were possible to agree more than 100%, I would. This is one of the smartest and most integral finance guys out there and once Geithner is done he'll get his turn at bat. When he does, things will get better.

Read it. Proof that to be finance doesn't involve selling your soul to greed. Thanks Gary for passing it on. I hope somebody else copypastes this speech in their blog.

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I really feel a sense of profound disappointment coming up here. We are having a great financial problem around the world. And finance doesn't work without some sense of trust and confidence and people meaning what they say. You take their oral word and their written word as a sign that their intentions will be carried out.

The letter of invitation I had to this affair indicated that there would be about 40 people here, people with whom I could have an intimate conversation. So I feel a bit betrayed this evening. Forty has swelled to I don't know how many, and I don't know how intimate our conversation can be. But I will, at the very least, be informal.

There is a certain interest in what's going on in the financial world. And I will disappoint you by saying I don't know all the answers. But I know something about the problem. Let me just sketch it out a little bit and suggest where we may be going. There is a lot of talk about how we get out of this, but I think it's worth remembering, or analyzing, how this all started.

This is not an ordinary recession. I have never, in my lifetime, seen a financial problem of this sort. It has the makings of something much more serious than an ordinary recession where you go down for a while and then you bounce up and it's partly a monetary - but a self-correcting - phenomenon. The ordinary recession does not bring into question the stability and the solidity of the whole financial system. Why is it that this is so much more profound a crisis? I'm not saying it's going to get anywhere as serious as the Great Depression, but that was not an ordinary business cycle either.

This phenomenon can be traced back at least five or six years. We had, at that time, a major underlying imbalance in the world economy. The American proclivity to consume was in full force. Our consumption rate was about 5% higher, relative to our GNP or what our production normally is. Our spending - consumption, investment, government -- was running about 5% or more above our production, even though we were more or less at full employment.

You had the opposite in China and Asia, generally, where the Chinese were consuming maybe 40% of their GNP - we consumed 70% of our GNP. They had a lot of surplus dollars because they had a lot of exports. Their exports were feeding our consumption and they were financing it very nicely with very cheap money. That was a very convenient but unsustainable situation. The money was so easy, funds were so easily available that there was, in effect, a kind of incentive to finding ways to spend it.

When we finished with the ordinary ways of spending it - with the help of our new profession of financial engineering - we developed ways of making weaker and weaker mortgages. The biggest investment in the economy was residential housing. And we developed a technique of manufacturing class D mortgages but putting them in packages which the financial engineers said were class A.

So there was an enormous incentive to take advantage of this bit of arbitrage - cheap money, poor mortgages but saleable mortgages. A lot of people made money through this process. I won't go over all the details, but you had then a normal business cycle on top of it. It was a period of enthusiasm. Everybody was feeling exuberant. They wanted to invest and spend.

You had a bubble first in the stock market and then in the housing market. You had a big increase in housing prices in the United States, held up by these new mortgages. It was true in other countries as well, but particularly in the United States. It was all fine for a while, but of course, eventually, the house prices levelled off and began going down. At some point people began getting nervous and the whole process stopped because they realized these mortgages were no good.

You might ask how it went on as long as it did. The grading agencies didn't do their job and the banks didn't do their job and the accountants went haywire. I have my own take on this. There were two things that were particularly contributory and very simple. Compensation practices had gotten totally out of hand and spurred financial people to aim for a lot of short-term money without worrying about the eventual consequences. And then there was this obscure financial engineering that none of them understood, but all their mathematical experts were telling them to trust. These two things carried us over the brink.

One of the saddest days of my life was when my grandson - and he's a particularly brilliant grandson - went to college. He was good at mathematics. And after he had been at college for a year or two I asked him what he wanted to do when he grew up. He said, "I want to be a financial engineer." My heart sank. Why was he going to waste his life on this profession?

A year or so ago, my daughter had seen something in the paper, some disparaging remarks I had made about financial engineering. She sent it to my grandson, who normally didn't communicate with me very much. He sent me an email, "Grandpa, don't blame it on us! We were just following the orders we were getting from our bosses." The only thing I could do was send him back an email, "I will not accept the Nuremberg excuse."

There was so much opaqueness, so many complications and misunderstandings involved in very complex financial engineering by people who, in my opinion, did not know financial markets. They knew mathematics. They thought financial markets obeyed mathematical laws. They have found out differently now. You know, they all said these events only happen once every hundred years. But we have "once every hundred years" events happening every year or two, which tells me something is the matter with the analysis.

So I think we have a problem which is not an ordinary business cycle problem. It is much more difficult to get out of and it has shaken the foundations of our financial institutions. The system is broken. I'm not going to linger over what to do about it. It is very difficult. It is going to take a lot of money and a lot of losses in the banking system. It is not unique to the United States. It is probably worse in the UK and it is just about as bad in Europe and it has infected other economies as well. Canada is relatively less infected, for reasons that are consistent with the direction in which I think the financial markets and financial institutions should go.

So I'll jump over the short-term process, which is how we get out of the mess, and consider what we should be aiming for when we get out of the mess. That, in turn, might help instruct the kind of action we should be taking in the interim to get out of it.

In the United States, in the UK, as well - and potentially elsewhere - things are partly being held together by totally extraordinary actions by a central bank. In the United States, it's the Federal Reserve, in London, the Bank of England. They are providing direct credit to markets in massive volume, in a way that contradicts all the traditions and laws that have governed central banking behaviour for a hundred years.

So what are we aiming for? I mention this because I recently chaired a report on this. It was part of the so-called Group of 30, which has got some attention. It's a long and rather turgid report but let me simplify what the conclusion is, which I will state more boldly than the report itself does.

In the future, we are going to need a financial system which is not going to be so prone to crisis and certainly will not be prone to the severity of a crisis of this sort. Financial systems always fluctuate and go up and down and have crises, but let's not have a big crisis that undermines the whole economy. And if that's the kind of financial system we want and should have, it's going to be different from the financial system that has developed in the last 20 years.

What do I mean by different? I think a primary characteristic of the system ought to be a strong, traditional, commercial banking-type system. Probably we ought to have some very large institutions - or at least that's the way the market is going - whose primary purpose is a kind of fiduciary responsibility to service consumers, individuals, businesses and governments by providing outlets for their money and by providing credit. They ought to be the core of the credit and financial system.

This kind of system was in place in the United States thirty years ago and is still in place in Canada, and may have provided support for the Canadian system during this particularly difficult time. I'm not arguing that you need an oligopoly to the extent you have one in Canada, but you do know by experience that these big commercial banking institutions will be protected by the government, de facto. No government has been willing to permit these institutions, or the creditors and depositors to these institutions, to be damaged. They recognize that the damage to the economy would be too great.

What has happened recently just underscores that. And I think we're at the point where we can no longer fool ourselves by saying that is not the case. The government will support these institutions, which in turn implies a closer supervision and regulation of those institutions, a more effective regulation than we've had, at least in the United States, in the recent past. And that may involve a lot of different agencies and so forth. I won't get into that.

But I think it does say that those institutions should not engage in highly risky entrepreneurial activity. That's not their job because it brings into question the stability of the institution. They may make a lot of money and they may have a lot of fun, in the short run. It may encourage pursuit of a profit in the short run. But it is not consistent with the stability that those institutions should be about. It's not consistent at all with avoiding conflict of interest.

These institutions that have arisen in the United States and the UK that combine hedge funds, equity funds, large proprietary trading with commercial banks, have enormous conflicts of interest. And I think the conflicts of interest contribute to their instability. So I would say let's get rid of that. Let's have big and small commercial banks and protect them - it's the service part of the financial system.

And then we have the other part, which I'll call the capital market system, which by and large isn't directly dealing with customers. They're dealing with each other. They're trading. They're about hedge funds and equity funds. And they have a function in providing fluid markets and innovating and providing some flexibility, and I don't think they need to be so highly regulated. They're not at the core of the system, unless they get really big. If they get really big then you have to regulate them, too. But I don't think we need to have close regulation of every peewee hedge fund in the world.

So you have this bifurcated - in a sense - financial system that implies a lot about regulation and national governments. If you're going to have an open system, you have got to get much more cooperation and coordination from different countries. I think that's possible, given what we're going through. You've got to do something about the infrastructure of the system and you have to worry about the credit rating agencies.

These banks were relying on credit rating agencies while putting these big packages of securities together and selling them. They had practically - they would never admit this - given up credit departments in their own institutions that were sophisticated and well-developed. That was a cost centre - why do we need it, they thought. Obviously that hasn't worked out very well.

We have to look at the accounting system. We have to look at the system for dealing with derivatives and how they're settled. So there are a lot of systemic issues. The main point I'm making is that we want to emerge from this with a more stable system. It will be less exciting for many people, but it will not warrant - I don't think the present system does, either -- $50 million dollar paydays in that central part of the system. Or even $25 or $100 million dollar paydays. If somebody can go out and gamble and make that money, okay. But don't gamble with the public's money. And that's an important distinction.

It's interesting that what I'm arguing for looks more like the Canadian system than the American system. When we delivered this report in a press conference, people said, "Oh you mean, banks won't be able to have hedge funds? What are you talking about?" That same day, Citigroup announced, "We want to get rid of all that stuff. We now realize it was a mistake. We want to go back to our roots and be a real commercial bank." I don't know whether they'll do that or not. But the fact that one of the leading proponents of the other system basically said, "We give up. It's not the right system," is interesting.

So let me just leave it at that. We've got more than 40 people here but they're permitted to ask questions, is that the deal?

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Argentina and the Call to Default

Eduardo Duhalde (for it is he)

If you read El PorteƱo's excellent post yesterday that explains the key present role of Eduardo Duhalde in Argentine politics, you'll understand that what follows is a very significant move towards Argentina defaulting in 2009 or 2010. If you haven't read it yet, here's the link again. You'll see just how important Duhalde is right now.

Now here's the crunch: Duhalde gave an interview on Argentine radio this morning and basically said that if all the rest of the world were in financial trouble and were defaulting on loans, they'd be stupid to pay up. Remember this is the most powerful man in Argentine politics outside of the Kirchner block and many expect the Duhalde-led pact to make a very strong showing in the 2009 end of year elections. Do not take Duhalde or his words today lightly; this is a serious call for Argentine default.

Here are some direct quotes from this morning's interview put through the Ottotrans™:

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"It's not that simple, this bill is not ours to pay. Latin America has to rebel like Africa and Asia. We have nothing to do with this. There's no reason why we should be hurt by this."

"The government does what it can (but) there is no deep analysis about what is happening."

"If the world is bankrupt, let's put our debt in with the others and see what happens later. What we have to do is take care and look after what is left of our reserves."

"It's very difficult and I don't think that much more can be done. The government has to think seriously in what I've said; this bill isn't ours to pay. This crisis was born in the USA, it hurts all of us and they have the chance to print money and save their own people. We don't have that opportunity.

"(During the Kirchner government) unfortunately they paid the U$9Bn dollars in IMF debt. It was announced in such a triumphant way that it was like Fidel Castro descending from the Sierra Maestra, when in fact it was stupid."

"That they now want to pay the Paris Club debt of other unnecessary highlights the fact that in this government there is no deep analysis about what is happening and what must be done."

UPDATE: Dear Mr. Dowsett, learn Spanish.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

I know it's Chomsky....but he does have a point

I'm in a definitions mood today, ok?

This was sent to me by my bestest pal in Argentina today. Yeah I know...Chomsky Chomsky Chomsky...but he does have a point, especially the last line about the way anti-crisis measures that are the exact opposite to those prescribed to us little countries by the (now utterly discredited) experts up North have been swallowed whole by a largely uncritical press.

Also, it's strange how the quote made the MSM in Spanish, but to find the original in English the choice is either Counterpunch or a handful of blogs. Nah, on second thoughts it's not that strange. Anyway, Noam dixit below:

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"It is a worldwide crisis and it is very serious. It is striking that the ways that Western countries are approaching the crisis [entirely contradict] the model that they enforce on the Third World when there is a crisis. So when Indonesia has a crisis, [or] Argentina and everyone else, they are supposed to raiseinterest rates very high and privatize the economy, and cut down on public spending, measures like that. In the West, it is the exact opposite: lower interest rates to zero, move towards nationalization if necessary, pour money into the economy, have huge debts. That is exactly the opposite of how the Third World is supposed to pay off its debts. That this seems to pass without comment is remarkable."
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