Friday, December 11, 2015

Liftoff will be begining and not the end of it

"One has to be able to count if only so that at fifty one doesn't marry a girl of twenty."
—Maxim Gorky (Russian, 1868-1936)
Word for the day
Schmatte (n)
An old ragged garment; tattered article of clothing.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
The law has no place for opinion of the public.
—Mumbai HC Judge
First random thought this morning
If we go by the popular maxim of Eldridge Cleaver, the entire political spectrum in India would appear part of the problem.
As a common man I fail to understand why politicians are always busy highlighting the problems. Someone needs to remind them that no one needs to tell us the problems we face in our day to day life. Tell us the solutions.
If you know any politicians telling the solution for rise in price of pulses to the government - please do let me know.
An Investor's Diary
Next week US FOMC is scheduled to take a much awaited decision on ending the zero rate regime, prevalent since past few years.
Many readers have asked for my views on the market scenario once US Fed begins to hike. I feel I am thoroughly incompetent to comprehend the implications of this event at this point in time.
I have been repeatedly saying that it is not merely a routine policy decision (see here). It goes much beyond that.
However, here not going into political implications of the decision, I would focus on the economic implications only.
In my view, to forecast the market impact of Fed rate hike, it is critical to first assimilate the background in which rates were brought to zero in the first place. Rates were brought down to Zilch to fight deflationary pressures that resulted from collapse in demand due to burst of leverage bubble created by ultra-accommodative monetary policies of Greenspan and Ben Bernanke.
The collapse left US financial (and consequently global) system and government's fiscal balance shattered. By allowing the government to borrow at Nil or negative rate to fund the fiscal correction; and US corporates like GM to borrow free of cost so that they could buy back their stocks and the stock market bubble by giving a feeling of "all is well".
Lower rates were also needed to weaken the mighty USD to help the US economy, especially US lenders. As highlighted in the latest quarterly report of BIS (see here), "Since 2008, dollar credit has grown more rapidly outside the United States than inside. Although there is only one dollar yield curve, the two stocks of dollar credit behave differently. Dollar credit to non-US residents grew faster owing not only to more rapid growth in emerging market economies (EMEs) over the last six years. Dollar credit also expanded owing to its substitution for local currency credit given favourable dollar interest rates and exchange rate expectations as EME firms leveraged up. Dollar credit to non-banks outside the United States reached $9.8 trillion at end-Q2 2015."
Post Lehman collapse, it appeared that the US is becoming a marginal force in the emerging global order. Emerging economies like BRIC, South Africa. Mexico, Indonesia etc. asserted themselves as leaders in a new multipolar world. G-20 was formed to undermine the supremacy of US led G-3, G-8 etc. The global multilateral financial and development institutions also saw rise in influence of these countries in their affairs.
US has successfully transmitted the sub-prime disease to these resurgent emerging economies and rescued its financial institutions. Most emerging economies, especially India and China are now struggling with huge sub-prime assets with no clue as to how to get rid of these. US banks are now inarguably amongst the strongest global financial institutions....to continue next week

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