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After having suffered the worst May since 1940 (Dow), equities have continued their sell-off into early June, amidst concerns about spreading European debt crisis, Chinese tightening and fading US recovery. The rally off the March 2009 lows was driven by liquidity, stimulus and improving economic and earnings data, particularly in the US. Now that government stimulus starts to taper off the question is whether economic growth has become self sustaining or not.
A natural slowing in the second half of the year has been expected. However, concerns about a double dip recession now appear to be growing, given the sovereign debt crisis and contagion risks in the eurozone and Europe’s impact on the global economy as countries start implementing austerity measures. Add concerns about Chinese tightening to cool an overheating economy and rampant real estate speculation, plus a weakening recovery in the US… the picture is not pretty.
In the US leading economic indicators have started turning over. The Economic Cycle Research Institute’s (ECRI) Weekly Leading Index has gone negative for the first time in over a year, falling to 123.2 from 124 the week before – the lowest level since July 2009. The ECRI WLI has historically been a good predictor of US economic activity, so its downturn is pointing toward a significant slowing in economic growth in the coming months. The Conference Board’s LEI for the US peaked in March.

China has taken steps to cool growth. China’s LEI (leading economic index) peaked last fall, Chinese PMIs are weakening and property market activity has been declining in response to the authorities’ measures to curb speculation. The worry is how much the world’s growth engine will now slow down; so far the economy remains very resilient (exports jumped 48.5% in May). However, the Shanghai Composite index is off nearly 30%, indicating weaker global growth prospects.
May saw the largest slump in commodity prices since Lehman’s collapse, pointing to potentially disappointing global economic growth. The Journal of Commerce Industrial Price Commodity Smoothed Price Index plunged 57% last month, the most since October 2008. Copper price broke down to a new 7-month low, before a bounce this week.
For now the global business cycle expansion appears intact but growth is starting to soften. A mid-cycle slowdown is not so unusual; however, it’s not immediately clear whether we should expect a normal moderation or indeed a double dip recession.
According to the yield curve a recession is not likely. Having correctly called past recessions when it inverted (short rates higher than long rates), the yield curve presently sees the risk of a recession in the next 12 months or so as near zero.

(courtesy of nowandfutures.com)
Buy on dips? Maybe not this time …
So, has the recent panic in the financial markets been overdone? The global economy and financial system are still fragile and vulnerable to further shocks, and confidence is fast evaporating. This is no time for complacency – things could get very ugly very fast.
On top of everything else, policy shock (including US financial regulatory reform outcome) is an additional risk investors have to consider. As is often the case, the authorities have been adding to the uncertainty by increasingly erratic moves (chaotic ECB actions, Germany’s ban of naked short selling of some financial stocks and eurozone sovereign bonds and CDS – likely to be further extended, etc). Such actions are counterproductive; they only heighten volatility, increasing the cost of capital and reducing liquidity.
May proved catastrophic for most assets, including equities, commodities (except gold), the euro. The winners have been the US dollar and Treasuries, reflecting a flight to safety as well as a symptom of a deflationary trend. (Money supply is falling at a pace not seen since the early 1930s!)

(courtesy of nowandfutures.com)
Markets went into June very oversold, so the relief rally currently underway was expected, and indeed could last a little longer. However it is unlikely to be more than a short term bounce. The S&P has now closed below its 200 day moving average for 16 consecutive sessions – a clear sign of trend change. Although we can’t yet be 100% certain that this is indeed something far more worrisome than a standard correction, there are signs that the trend has turned negative. Until there is more clarity it may be wise not to buy this market – you will likely be able to pick up most assets at much lower valuations late in the year.
It is true that the market has already priced in plenty of bad news – assuming the global recovery remains intact and there is no contagion from Europe; however, that scenario is increasingly looking too optimistic. Considered there is still a great deal of complacency, the bulls could be in for a nasty shock in the coming weeks and months.
Credit crunch is back!
Furthermore, there is good reason to believe this sell-off is different from the previous ones we have seen since March 2009 – the action in the credit markets. We have not witnessed significant deterioration and widening of credit spreads since the start of the rally – until several weeks ago. This is a fundamental change and a sign that the credit crisis is returning.
Credit is the early warning sign; equities lag deterioration in credit conditions. Decline in commodity and equity prices, and ultimately in economic growth, are a result of weakness in the credit markets. It would be foolish to overlook that the current correction has indeed a differentiating characteristics to it; do pay attention to the funding markets.
The European sovereign debt crisis is not going anywhere, and global credit conditions have been worsening. Cost of credit is rising and credit availability declining, which is affecting the funding needs of corporations worldwide. The economic fallout is only just starting to become apparent.
And it’s not only Europe. Higher cost of capital is also noticeable in the US and emerging markets where corporate debt spreads have been rising and debt issuance slowing. Funding markets are seizing up and capital is becoming more expensive, a consequence of which will be a squeeze in profits and slowdown in global growth.
Credit clearly continues to point to further stress ahead. Some disturbing signs that we may be witnessing the beginning of credit crisis 2.0:
Widening eurozone government bond spreads: yield spreads between German bunds and Club Med bonds have resumed their widening trend in recent weeks and in some cases became wider than before Europe’s mega bailout package was announced (although they tightened somewhat this week). And it’s not just the PIGS’s creditworthiness that has been deteriorating; we have seen huge spikes in CDS spreads on Eastern European sovereign debt and even that of France, Austria, UK and Germany over the last month.

European bank CDS have surged, indicating rising stress in the banking system, loss of confidence and growing risk aversion. It means sharply higher borrowing costs for banks. (European banks have raised less from the capital markets in the past six weeks than in any year since 1995.) Some smaller banks have been reported to be completely shut out of the credit markets. Even more troubling is that some of the world’s largest banks in Spain, Germany and France are now becoming infected. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index of CDS on 25 European banks and insurers soared to the highest level since March 2009 (before improving somewhat this week).

The LIBOR-OIS spread has widened significantly in recent weeks (now standing at 32.4bps). Equally, the TED spread has been deteriorating and is now at 47, up more than 300% in the last three months.

TED spread
LIBOR-OIS and TED reflect the health of (and perceived credit risk in) the interbank lending markets. They are gauges of financial strength or weakness of banks. A rising spread shows that banks are unsure of the creditworthiness of other banks, hence charging higher interest rates to compensate for greater risk. Due to the European debt crisis counterparty risk is increasing and banks are reluctant to lend to each other once again.
Eurozone banks have been parking record sums in the European Central Bank’s deposit facility. Use of the facility, which pays an interest rate of just 0.25%, reached a new high of 364.6 billion euros (higher level than after the Lehman collapse) – a further sign that banks don’t trust each other’s creditworthiness, opting to instead deposit funds with the ECB.
The uncertainty is also rocking the corporate debt markets. May was the worst month for corporate bond sales for over a decade. Issuance of high-yield company debt nearly halted amid new signs that Europe’s sovereign debt crisis may be spreading; investment grade companies are also finding it more difficult to issue bonds. Both High Yield and Investment Grade spreads have soared in recent weeks.

There has also been substantial deterioration in the US Commercial Paper market (short-term IOUs), which contracted to its lowest level since 1999. Debt outstanding dropped, after six straight weeks of decline, to the lowest level on record as companies pared back on tapping short-term funding.
The European contagion impact and lack of liquidity is being felt in the emerging markets as well. New bond issuance of Brazilian companies halted for a sixth straight week, the longest stretch in 14 months, as Europe’s debt crisis drove up borrowing costs and caused a surge in volatility.
This worrying credit contraction is eerily reminiscent of the situation in summer 2007. Investors are fleeing all but the safest government securities. Poor liquidity and vanishing risk tolerance could see consumers contract, businesses stop hiring and investing and economic activity coming to a halt.
The prospects aren’t so good. A recent ECB forecast (Financial Stability Review, May 2010) that eurozone’s financial institutions may have to write off 195 billion euros of bad debts by 2011 – on top of the 238 billion already accounted for – confirmed fears about the fragility of the financial system.
Deflation and double-dip recession?
Meanwhile, the economic picture in Europe is not encouraging.
On the positive side, European core has been surprising with strong economic data; German manufacturing and exports are booming – exports to non-euro area have now surpassed the pre-Lehman bankruptcy peak (a weaker euro will only supercharge this growth), Germany’s PMIs are at a four year high; IFO Expectations Index is at its highest level since mid 2007.
On the other hand, Greece is insolvent and will unlikely avoid debt restructuring/default, which poses a massive risk for the European banking system. (Could Spain and Portugal also turn out to be insolvent in the end?) The hope is that Europe has bought sufficient time to stabilize the rest of the eurozone before a Greek debt restructuring.
The question is whether the European sovereign debt crisis could bring down Europe’s banking system, causing a collapse in confidence and economic activity similar to the fallout of Lehman in September 2008. It’s too early to tell, but a bank run (and a capital strike against eurozone investments) is looking increasingly more plausible.
(Of course European banks are already in a precarious shape, having made much less progress on writedowns and rebuilding of equity than US banks. They will also have to refinance some 800 billion euros in long-term debt by the end of 2012, and bank borrowing has already suffered a major blow because of sovereign risks – see notes above on deterioration in the credit markets.)
It’s not just the ultimate value of their government bond holdings the banks have to worry about. The deficit reduction and austerity programs much of Europe is embarking on are a step in the right direction but will inevitably kill consumption, investment and growth in the short to medium term. A long and painful deflation and severe recession in the periphery would appear unavoidable. (Defaults down the road are still a likely scenario.)
The fiscal retrenchment under way will see incomes in a number of eurozone countries beginning to fall in nominal terms; this will undermine the ability of households and businesses to service their debts, leading to a surge in private sector loan losses at European banks. Credit growth will also further contract as banks – already burdened with the until recently thought safe government bond holdings – will become even more reluctant to lend to riskier private sector borrowers.
Lack of credit will further reduce investment, job creation and economic growth. Slower growth and lower tax receipts will make it even more difficult for the periphery to get their debts under control. And, slower economic growth will create further problems for the banks, causing higher loan losses as highly indebted eurozone households and companies default on their loans. A vicious feedback loop.
A double dip recession in parts of the eurozone should, on itself, not have a disastrous impact on US and Asian economies, although some industries are companies will be more heavily exposed to diminishing European revenues (Europe is China’s largest export market). However, a potential collapse of the European banking system would undoubtedly have catastrophic consequences for the global financial markets, plunging the world back into recession.
And this time policy makers and central bankers would have little ammunition left to support the economy; interest rates are already at or near zero and there is (for now) little appetite for several more trillions worth of stimuli. That might change, of course, after a severe deflationary period, financial collapse, recession/depression; the Fed, ECB and other central banks and governments would then undoubtedly embark on quantitative easing and stimuli on a never before seen scale.
Deflation followed by hyperinflation, anyone?



June 13, 2010 at 1:07 pm
Hi Petra,
your article contains a lot of key words:
- “collapse of the European banking system”
- “deflation” (not necessarily bad thing…)
- “collapse of Greece”
- “credit crunch”
- “double dip recession”
and many more.
It can mean only one thing: Fear is back. And surely for a reason. I feel the same way since beginning of May. The S&P500 is still a bit overvalued, in my view. Stocks are not that cheap, yet. But they might get cheaper, perhaps, again, in terms of S&P500.
Selectively, I believe, there are many great companies in Europe, selling for a good price, today. Not only banks. Oil companies are selling for their 10 years earnings (2000 – 2009) and some energy companies, like E.ON, are worthh considering, too. I accept, that their earnings were perhpas too good to be sustainable in real terms. But in inflated currency, who knows….
Simply because others are becoming nervous once more, Im preparing myself for greedy period number II.
I think people hold a lot of cash today, and they know it is risky. Therefore, I expect a lot of up and down, and finally UP. People hold cash because of greed, not as a safe haven!!! They know it is a bad/risky investment, but they believe that, later, they will be able to exchange cash for cheap equities or commodities. Once they understand that equities will not get cheaper any more in nominal terms, I expect huge rally, driven by inflationary fears. (Im not saying equities can not get cheaper, today. They surely can. Im just not good at market timing.)
In my view, the solution of all this is hyperinflation, not deflation. And governments will realize that sooner or later. Hyperinflation effectively means that all debts, payable in paper money, are forgiven. And that is what all indebted people need. It is not fair, it is not responsible, but I can imagine that it can work. Chapter 11 for everybody.
have a ncie day, G.