Monday, December 28, 2015

Long equities - short gold

Thought for the day
"The formula for achieving a successful relationship is simple: you should treat all disasters as if they were trivialities but never treat a triviality as if it were a disaster."
—Quentin Crisp (English, 1908-1999)
Word for the day
Munificence (n)
Generosity, benevolence
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Shocked by the PM Modi's Lahore surprise, Indian opposition leaders make demented comments.
First random thought this morning
In past senior political leaders from other States, especially UP, Bihar, Haryana and Tamil Nadu have used much vulgar language than AAP leaders in Delhi.
It would therefore be inappropriate to credit AAP for lowering the level of political discourse.

Long equities - short gold

Over a 10yr timeframe Indian equities have outperformed most financially tradable asset classes, except gold. Apparently gold has outperformed, but adjusted for duty element, gold would also underperformed equities.
The point of interest here is whether over next couple of quarters, this outperformance will continue or we may see commodities or USD outperforming Indian equities.
From the following chart of relative performance it appears that it might be little early to initiate long commodities short equities trade, but a relative trade might still exist in short gold vs long equities.
 
 
 

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Investment Strategy 2016 - 6: Corporate earnings & valuations

"We sometimes congratulate ourselves at the moment of waking from a troubled dream."
—Nathaniel Hawthorne (American, 1804-1864)
Word for the day
Schmuck (n)
An obnoxious or contemptible person.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Imagine the bedlam (intolerance) that would ensue if some Indian male politician uses Trump's language for a female politician!
First random thought this morning
The indignation over release of the juvenile culprit in infamous Nirbhaya rape case if baffling. The unmindful social media 'forwards' imply that the public is manifestly agitated and anguished. It is not only challenging the primary tenets of classical jurisprudence but also holding a distinct preference for the savage "eye for an eye" law.
The moot point is that if we completely reject the reformative aspect of punishment, we may need to isolate (or eliminate) all sentenced criminals for whole life, irrespective of the severity of their crime. And what about those who could not be sentenced due to poor evidence or inefficiency of prosecution.

Investment Strategy 2016 - 6: Corporate earnings & valuations

The Indian businesses are passing through interesting times, and there is nothing to suggest that the conditions will change in next couple of quarters at the least.
A multitude of challenges and opportunities present for Indian businesses makes the task of forecasting a trend in earnings extremely difficult. In particular, the following factors appear to be creating material uncertainty for Indian businesses:
(a)   The policy environment is in state of flux. Ideally, the direction will be towards further opening of the economy to global capital, technology and competition. Save for a total failure of political establishment (not likely), we may see more and more global players dominating the Indian industrial space in near future. Influx of foreign competition in services sector may be rather gradual and partial. This may make many large Indian corporates operationally uncompetitive, financially unviable and technologically redundant. On the other hand many smaller niche businesses that can potentially play a supporting role to global players can see substantial growth in their businesses.
(b)   The global competition may materially impact the margins of domestic businesses, for example due to (a) erosion of pricing power; (b) higher investment in technology and therefore lower ROCE; and (c) higher compliance cost due to adoption of best global business practices.
(c)    If the rout in global commodities continues, the earnings of many businesses would be impacted, at least in nominal terms. Moreover, economic turbulence in commodity economies, which incidentally happen to be largest export destinations for Indian businesses, may impact the export demand also.
On the positive side, the structural reforms initiated by the government may lead to lower cost for many businesses. For example, the success of Jan Dhan and DBT schemes could materially lower cost of funds for banks.
Easier FDI and ease of doing business norms could bring in unprecedented capital and intellectual property igniting a virtuous cycle of economic growth that would be much stronger and sustainable than the easier credit led growth cycle of 2000's.
For limited purpose of ST (one year) investment strategy, I would assume 10-12% earnings growth for CY2016, and believe most of it will be back-ended.
At this point in time there is little argument for re-rating of Indian equities, as these still enjoy premium (deservedly so) over EM peers. However, the premium may grow larger in later part of the year if execution improves and domestic demand pick up post a good monsoon.
Also Read

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Investment Strategy 2016-5: Investment, savings & consumption

"Religion and art spring from the same root and are close kin. Economics and art are strangers."
—Nathaniel Hawthorne (American, 1804-1864)
Word for the day
Schmooz (v)
To seduce with flattery
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Ratan Tata is losing his heart to UP!
Does it mean Gujarat is also losing to UP?
First random thought this morning
The chill in Delhi's air is rising forcing people indoors early in the evenings. The Winter session of the Parliament is ending today.
The government has two months, before the Budget session begins, to set its house in order, sort out priorities, work out floor strategies, reach out to opposition and showcase its achievements. Alternatively, it could escalate confrontations and vitiate the environment further.
Either way, no winter vacations for the government!

Investment Strategy 2016-5: Investment, savings & consumption

Private investment & consumption, public spending and exports are four primary drivers of economic growth of any nation.
·         Private consumption is in turn a function of private income and borrowing.
·         Private investment is a direct function of domestic consumption and export demand and is materially influenced by credit conditions.
·         The government spending is a function of private income & consumption (direct & indirect taxes) and government borrowing.
·         Exports in simplistic terms a function of global demand and relative terms of trade.
In simple terms, the price performance of various economic assets primarily depend on economic growth and liquidity (demand-supply equilibrium), I find it easy to portend as follows:
(a)   Private consumption has remained sluggish for past couple of years, led by decline in rural income. Real urban consumption has also been under pressure due to persistently higher consumer inflation. 2016 may see partial reversal in this trend, assuming CPI remains under control, El Nino recedes and we have a normal monsoon after two years, and pay commission and OROP disbursements find their way to markets.
Rising income may also see growth in consumer borrowings. Though the household balance sheets have seen rising leverage in past one year, still there is scope for further leveraging, in my view.
However, there is little to suggest that things will improve in 1H2016. So this kicker will come only in later part of the year.
(b)   Given that presently capacity utilization in Indian industry is low, balance sheets of corporates are highly leveraged, export demand is decelerating and real rates are rising, the environment for domestic private investment is expected to remain challenging for better part of 2016. However, a material easing in FDI norms and administrative efficiency in managing foreign investments could support gross private investment. Again do not expect material improvement in 1H2016.
(c)    Current equity market conditions (little divestment potential), high real rates (expensive borrowing and debt servicing for government), likely lower growth in indirect taxes, and desire to maintain fiscal discipline do not augur well for material pick up in public spending as well. As it appears today, only a global collapse will only spur government stimuli.
(d)   As discussed yesterday, the global growth, especially in major trade partners of India (except US) is not likely be encouraging. So no material improvement expected at export front. In fact, a serious CNY devaluation (not unlikely) could hamper exports further.
Also Read

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Investment Strategy 2016 - 4: Global growth and flows

"We must not always talk in the market-place of what happens to us in the forest."
—Nathaniel Hawthorne (American, 1804-1864)
Word for the day
Fortnight (n)
The space of fourteen nights and days.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Should PM Modi support Shashi Tharoor's Bill to abolish Sec 377 IPC to send a strong signal to the burgeoning fringes on his side of the political spectrum.
First random thought this morning
Sometimes it feels that history is refuge of losers. Those who are unable to move forward, look back and try to camouflage their failures with the luster of their history. And if their history is also not illustrious, they would flagrantly manufacture one which they could pretend proud about.
Successful live in present and think about future.

Investment Strategy 2016 - 4: Global growth and flows

The consensus at this point in time appears to be favoring a modest pickup in global economic growth during 2016. Most sell side economists are building in a stable US economy sustaining the growth momentum and improving Euro zone economy.
Japan managing to stay out of recession and peripheral Europe benefitting from core Eurozone growth are incidental assumptions. Most economists see China and other major emerging markets continuing to slowdown. The consensus has factored in ~1% rise in Fed rates during the course of 2016.
The global growth is mostly expected to be uneven and skewed in favor of the developed world.
I find it hard to agree fully with these mostly sunny days forecast, primarily for the following three reasons:
(a)   Most of these forecast strongly support marginal rise in inflation (primarily on base effect) and completely ignore the possibility of acceleration in deflationary pressures. I do not see how feeble European and already plateauing US growth will absorb the commodity glut that may actually worsen as the cost of carry rises with stronger USD, higher interest rates and even higher margin requirements as risk rises.
The lyrical 2% inflation, 3% real growth, 4% normalized Federal funds and 5% unemployment sounds too good to my ears. Even if as the end result these targets are achieved, the journey may not be smooth and safe.
(b)   Assuming "no hard landing" in China is ok, given the strong reserves and controlled economy, but underestimating the extent CNY devaluation could be perilous to any investment strategy.
(c)    Most forecast have deftly avoided the probability of Lehman moment reoccurring. Given the expected USD strength, precipitous fall in commodity prices (and currencies) and likely rise cost of capital to me it is more likely than ever in past 6years.
With most central bankers now predictable and fast running out of arrows in their quivers, the bears may not be tamed as easily as these were in summer of 2009.
Therefore, I would like to built in my strategy (a) highly volatile and unpredictable global economic conditions; (b) probability of a global credit and liquidity condition; (c) pick up in global demand only from 2H2016; (d) material rise in global risk premium and lower flows to EMs; and (e) geopolitical strife triggered by economic considerations.
Specifically to India, I feel FPI flows could be lower and volatile. FDI flows may however remain buoyant due to further opening of economy.
Also Read

Monday, December 21, 2015

Investment Strategy 2016 - 3: Technical trend


Investment Strategy 2016 - 3: Technical trend
In strict technical terms, Nifty is poised to begin 2016 with downward bias. On weekly and monthly charts it is weak on most parameters, whereas on daily charts it is marginally weak.
At present Nifty is trading 4% below 200DEMA of 8086. Historically, markets have not sustained at levels more than 10% below 200EDMA. Thus Nifty has strong support around 7200 mark for next 3months. The support level will rise after March when 200EDMA jumps on base effect.
Moreover, Nifty also finds a strong support at 7000 level on the long term rising trend line from March 2009 lows.
Thus, my technical outlook for 2016 is as follows:
(a)   1Q2016: Nifty may mostly trades between 7200-8050 range, with a negative bias.
(b)   If Nifty ends 1Q2015 below 7400, Nifty may peak around 8400 levels in 2016. However, if Nifty ends the first quarter close to 8000, we may see material gains in rest of the year with Nifty likely scaling new highs. At this point in time the later scenario looks less probable (25%) as compared to the former (75%). Anyways, strong buying opportunities will exist below 7400 Nifty level.
(c)    Bank Nifty appears marginally worse than Nifty on charts, suggesting that the down moves will likely be led by banks, whereas the up moves will see more diversified leadership.
 


Also Read

Nifty: Bank Nifty outperformance may ease further


Nifty: Bank Nifty outperformance may ease further

The appointment of Raghuram Rajan as RBI governor, coincided with perceptible change in India's monetary policy. A host of measures were taken to successfully improve the faltering current account situation and sliding INR.
Though, the measures did not see any marked improvement in credit growth or asset quality of banks, especially PSBs, the Bank Nifty witnessed huge outperformance over Nifty; perhaps due to under-ownership of financials since global financial crisis
Since beginning of 2015, the outperformance has eased to some extent. However, considering the current state of economy and credit, the outperformance does not seem justified and needs to correct further.
The first phase of correction has been led by PSBs and ICICI. The next phase may see some private banks also joining.
Could short Bank Nifty Long Nifty still be a good pair trade?
 
 

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Investment Strategy 2016 - 2: 10 things to watch

"Power does not corrupt men; fools, however, if they get into a position of power, corrupt power."
—George Bernard Shaw (Irish, 1856-1950)
Word for the day
Clishmaclaver (n)
Gossip; idle or foolish talk.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
When it comes to choice of words and buses - Arvind Kejriwal is truly an Aam Aadmi!
First random thought this morning
The democracy in India appears to have degenerated into the worst form of Feudalism. Egocentricity rather that public and national interest is palpably driving the policies and administrations.
The elected representatives even claim accolades for repair of choked drains and broken roads by civic authorities.
Did the writers of our constitution intend to create a new "Ruling Class" in elected representatives or these people were actually intended to be "Public Servants".

Investment Strategy 2016 - 2: 10 things to watch

In my view, regardless of the current volatility in markets and nervousness over Oil, China and geopolitical situation in Europe and Middle East, the investment strategy should be looking beyond 2016. I am aware that at these time of heightened uncertainties, investors may be inclined to trade out the smaller market cycles, but still I would argue that it is worth taking a longer perspective in order to suitably calibrate (a) asset allocation (b) return expectations and (c) sectoral preferences.
In my view, the following 10 key factors are critical for the Indian financial markets, in particular, in next 12-18 months. Investors therefore would want to keep a close watch on these. Prima facie, these factors are very generic and may offer no great insight. But, I would like to watch of these from my colored glasses and see through them the emerging trends.
(1)   Revival of investment cycle
In my view, it will depend on a host of factors like credit worthiness of borrowers and project undertakers, extent of bank capitalization, viability of infra sector projects, policy support and investor's risk appetite to name a few.
(2)   Household savings and consumption
Employment growth and household inflation are key deciding factors.
(3)   Rural Income
Rural wage growth and monsoon are key factors to watch.
(4)   Corporate earnings
Watch for pricing power led by demand growth and higher utilization.
(5)   INR movement
Restoring faith of Indian investors and NRIs in INR strength, export demand, USD relative strength and current account management are the key factors that need to be watched.
(6)   Bond yields
Credit demand growth & fiscal prudence would be key factor to watch.
(7)   Political will
The political will to pursue radical reforms and faster growth agenda would be a key determinate of the future growth trajectory
(8)   Global economic growth
Price stability and consumer demand growth will be the key.
(9)   Global flows
(10) Technical trends
In next few days I shall discuss each of these factors in some detail.
Also Read

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Strategy 2016-1: Adapt to lower return on investments

"If women were particular about men's characters, they would never get married at all."
—George Bernard Shaw (Irish, 1856-1950)
Word for the day
Telluric (adj)
Of or relating to the earth; terrestrial.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
...and the parrot stays caged, happily eve rafter!
First random thought this morning
A US town has recently rejected a proposal for a solar farm following public concerns. Public in Woodland, North Carolina, expressed their fear and mistrust at the proposal to allow a Solar Company to build a solar farm off Highway. Jane Mann, a retired science teacher, said she was concerned the panels would prevent plants in the area from photosynthesizing, stopping them from growing. (see here)
This reminds me of the opposition to India's first hydro-power project in Punjab (Bhakhra-Nangal at Satluj river) when farmers protested that their fields will get de-energized water from the project and therefore impact their crops adversely!

Strategy 2016-1: Adapt to lower return on investments

As we approach the end of 2015th year of Christ, it is time to light awhile, reflect back, make necessary corrections and plan for 2016.
This time last year (see here) I felt that the forces of fear were overpowering the forces of greed. I find it painful to claim that most of my anticipation came true. The market moved in the projected range of 7450-9400 and is ending the year close to lower bound.
I see the forces of fear continuing to dominate the scene in 1Q2016. I have been sharing my opinions on the likely market scenario in my recent posts (see here and here). The primary idea is to posit an appropriate strategy.
Many readers have pointed out that my views have come in bits and pieces and it would be appropriate that I consolidate my views and present in a more cohesive manner. Over next few days, I shall be sharing my outlook about likely trend in performance of various asset classes and the strategy I would adopt under the assumed circumstances. There of course will be some repetition, which I request you to bear with me.
Strategy 2016-1: Adapt to lower return on investments
Investors in Indian assets are most likely entering once in five year phase when the return prospects on most asset classes may be frustratingly low. Fortunately though the return of investment is not under threat as yet.
On YTD basis benchmark equity indices have given a negative return of ~8%. Given the slower earnings growth, likely slowdown in global flows and moderation in optimism over economic reforms, the outlook for 2016 is not very encouraging. Save for a major re-rating of Indian equities (no reason to foresee that today) the benchmark indices may return a moderate return in 2016, with a reasonably higher degree of risk and volatility.
Despite 125bps reduction in repo rates, benchmark yields have fallen by just 5bps this year. The best in class debt funds have given ~10% return over past twelve months. However given that both economic growth and consumer inflation might have bottomed, the scope for a further reduction in rates from the current level may not be great.
Save for a global crisis requiring larger monetary stimulus, one should not expect the rates to fall materially from the current level. On the contrary, a material spike in consumer prices; precipitous fall in INR and/or major sell off in Indian bonds may actually warrant some hike in policy rates. This would essentially mean that the debt investment also may not offer more than 8% return in next twelve months.
Gold funds have yielded a negative -6% return in past 12months. Going by the most forecast, 2016 may not be a good year for gold investors also.
Leaving apart very high priced locations e.g., South Mumbai, and areas with huge oversupply hang, e.g., NCR and Central Mumbai, real estate prices in many areas may bottom out in next twelve months. Lower rates and stability in employment conditions may spur decent demand in LIG/MIG segment. However expecting any material rise in home prices in next twelve months would be bit unreasonable at this point in time....to continue

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

It ain't a done deal yet

"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
—George Bernard Shaw (Irish, 1856-1950)
Word for the day
Matutinal (adj)
Relating to or occurring in the morning; early.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
Lord Venkateswara, Sidhi Vinayak, Sai Baba - all Gods seems to have decided to step in to help PM Modi; with gold to begin with.
First random thought this morning
The demolition of allegedly illegal shanties on railway land in Delhi and the events in the aftermath are significant in many ways. It highlights the complete lack of political consensus on the approach to urbanization and civic compliance, though in private all politicians would agree to the need for this.
Terming it lack of administrative empathy would be inappropriate. The malaise is much deeper. The rising economic disparities have pervaded deep into social psyche. The conditions are ideal for a Marxist revolution. But where is India's left?

It ain't a done deal yet

Continuing from Friday (see here), I feel that the economic reasons for a Fed rate hike may not be as indubitable as the non-economic ones. I believe that a material proportion of market participants are harboring similar sentiments; and that explains the market behavior in the past few weeks.
The markets are cautious but by no means panicked. Bond markets are not discounting anything similar to Fed's forecast trajectory of rate hike. Adjusted for China and Oil, commodities markets, gold and USD - nothing appears to be under panic from Fed hike.
As suggested earlier also, I will not be surprised if US Fed indeed decides not to hike on 16th December to have a peaceful Christmas vacation, (see here).
I find the following piece in Zero Hedge explaining this context very well. Since, I cannot improve upon this, I am reproducing excerpts verbatim.
"Two weeks ago, we predicted that if the same September storm clouds return, and if December, which is increasingly looking as shaky as August as a result of a return of China devaluation fears, soaring dollar concerns and - the cherry on top - the collapse in junk bonds, forcing the Fed to have some literally last minute concerns about a rate hike, then the Fed's official mouthpiece, Jon Hilsenrath will be very busy as he scarmbles to realign market expectations of a rate hike "because the economy is oh so strong", with the reality that a rate hike may just unleash the next Lehman event of the past 8 years.
It looks like Hilsenrath indeed had a very busy weekend with his Fed "sources", as he attempts to readjust the market consensus for a December rate hike lower, warning that the Fed's "big worry is they'll end up right back at zero."
For some inexplicable reason, he also adds that "Federal Reserve officials are likely to raise their benchmark short-term interest rate from near zero Wednesday, expecting to slowly ratchet it higher to above 3% in three years. But that's if all goes as planned." Well, just how many things can take place in the next 72 hours that derail the Fed's "planning?" And just what kind of lift-off is this, if the Fed's decision is quite literally dependent on daily market, pardon economic, fluctuations?
It was not immediately clear what the answer to these questions is. What Hilsenrath did answer, however, is why and how the Fed will proceed to cut rates right back to zero.  Here is Hilsy:
Any number of factors could force the Fed to reverse course and cut rates all over again: a shock to the U.S. economy from abroad, persistently low inflation, some new financial bubble bursting and slamming the economy, or lost momentum in a business cycle which, at 78 months, is already longer than 29 of the 33 expansions the U.S. economy has experienced since 1854.
Sounds an awful lot like setting the stage for an imminent, and confidence destroying, rate cut unleashed by, drumroll, the Fed's own rate hike. In fact, so likely is that the Fed's rate hike will be the catalyst for the Fed's next easing cycle, that practically nobody has any doubt:
Among 65 economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal this month, not all of whom responded, more than half said it was somewhat or very likely the Fed's benchmark federal-funds rate would be back near zero within the next five years. Ten said the Fed might even push rates into negative territory, as the European Central Bank and others in Europe have done--meaning financial institutions have to pay to park their money with the central banks.
Traders in futures markets see lower interest rates in coming years than the Fed projects in part because they attach some probability to a return to zero. In December 2016, for example, the Fed projects a 1.375% fed-funds rate. Futures markets put it at 0.76%.
Among the worries of private economists is that no other central bank in the advanced world that has raised rates since the 2007-09 crisis has been able to sustain them at a higher level. That includes central banks in the eurozone, Sweden, Israel, Canada, South Korea and Australia.
"They effectively have had to undo what they have done," said Susan Sterne, president of Economic Analysis Associates, an advisory firm specializing in tracking consumer behavior.
Here is the bigger problem: what the Fed has done - which is very little for the actual economy -  is to push the S&P from 666 to 2100. It is the undoing of that most market participants are terrified about, and what will be to most, very unpleasant.
The pre-emptive excuses continue:
The Fed has never started raising rates so late in a business cycle. It has held the fed-funds rate near zero for seven years and hasn't raised it in nearly a decade. Its decision to keep rates so low for so long was likely a factor that helped the economy grow enough to bring the jobless rate down to 5% last month from a recent peak of 10% in 2009. At the same time, waiting so long might mean the Fed is starting to lift rates at a point when the expansion itself is nearer to an end.
Ms. Sterne said the U.S. expansion is now at an advanced stage and consumers have satisfied pent-up demand for cars and other durable goods. She's worried it doesn't have engines for sustained growth. "I call it late-cycle," she said.
Actually, there is one time when the Fed waited this long to tighten conditions, in fact waited too long: the economy was already in recession. That was back in 1936. What happened next was the second part of the Great Depression and a 50% collapse in the Dow Jones.
Hilsenrath's odd litany of preemptive excuses continues.
Several factors have conspired to keep rates low. Inflation has run below the Fed's 2% target for more than three years. In normal times the Fed would push rates up as an expansion strengthens to slow growth and tame upward pressures on consumer prices. With no signs of inflation, officials haven't felt a need to follow that old game plan. Moreover, officials believe the economy, in the wake of a debilitating financial crisis and restrained by an aging population and slowing worker-productivity growth, can't bear rates as high as before. Its equilibrium rate--a hypothetical rate at which unemployment and inflation can be kept low and stable--has sunk below old norms, the thinking goes.
That means rates will remain relatively low even if all goes as planned. If a shock hits the economy and sends it back into recession, the Fed won't have much room to cut rates to cushion the blow.
This goes to the question of what r* is, or the Equilibrium Real Interest rate, one which as we showed last week, is almost entirely a function of nominal US economic growth rate (very low) and consolidated debt/GDP (at 350%, it's very high). Under current conditions, it is either negative or just barely in the positive, suggesting any Fed rate hike will be followed by an immediate rate cut, something Hilsenrath just acknowledged.
The excuses continue:
Among the risks to the economy are financial booms that could turn to busts. One is in commercial real estate. Another in junk bonds is already fizzling. Each of the past three expansions was accompanied by an asset price bust--residential real estate in 2007, tech stocks in 2001 and commercial real estate in the early 1990s.
Normally in a recession the Fed cuts rates to stimulate spending and investment. Between September 2007 and December 2008 it cut rates 5.25 percentage points. Between January 2001 and June 2003 the cut was 5.5 percentage points, while from July 1990 to September 1992 it was 5 percentage points.
If the Fed wants to reduce rates in response to the next shock, it will be back at zero very quickly and will have to turn to other measures to boost growth.
Yup: such as QE4 and NIRP, which are inevitable, but which the Fed wants to "hike" rates first just so it has the alibi to unleash even more easing. And now even Hilsenrath is warning that this is the endgame:
Fed officials worry a great deal about the risk. The small gap between zero and where officials see rates going "might increase the frequency of episodes in which policy makers would not be able to reduce the federal-funds rate enough to promote a strong economic recovery...in the aftermath of negative shocks," they concluded at their October policy meeting, according to minutes of the meeting.
In short, the age of unconventional monetary policy begun by the 2007-09 financial crisis might not be ending.
Coming from Hilsenrath, it does not get any clearer than that." (Zero Hedge)