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I do
not think I have ever seen a warning like this one. BMO literally says Go to Cash - In Plain English
Summary
We advocate switching out of equity positions and going to cash. The European
sovereign debt crisis appears to be nowhere near over. The global credit
environment is worsening. Cost of capital is going up and availability is
going down. There are large gaps between where the credit market prices risk
and where the equity market is priced. Equity is lagging the deterioration in
credit conditions. Moves in currency, equity and commodity markets are
mirroring the moves in the credit market. Global growth, in a
credit-constrained environment, will slow. Profits will be squeezed by the
higher cost of capital.
State of the Market: Credit vs. Commodities & Jobs
The frail state of the markets is now becoming more obvious and as such the
audience for our call to cash is growing. The difficulty in getting our
message out is that in its raw form (how we normally write), the argument is
quite technical:
Client: Why go to cash?
Quant/Technical: Look at the euro-dollar basis swap pricing!
Client: Say what??
Now, however, the market is showing signs that everyone can easily recognize
as indicative of economic weakness:
Job growth has stagnated, and
Commodities and inflation expectations are
falling.
These new signs are not new information on why things are bad. Rather, they
are symptoms, or outward displays of how weak the credit market has become.
Weakening credit conditions are the cause.
Economic fallout is the effect.
Western European Sovereign Debt Crisis = Asian Growth Problem
We observed that the sovereign default risk of Europe was very well connected
to the sovereign default risk of Asia.
Then we tracked down the tidbit that European financials have funded Asia to the
tune of more than half a trillion dollars.
By observation, we know there is a link and now we have part of the economic
rationale for what we are seeing.
We have what we need for our call for extreme caution:
The funding of Asian growth is closely tied to the health of the European
financial system.
Further, we know that the North American equity market is fixated on
Asian growth.
Our equity market correction starting gun went
off the moment Asian currencies, and thus optimism toward
Asian growth, started falling.
The close ties between European and Asian credit are showing up in the tick
charts only in times of stress, which is why we started picking up the
relationship quite recently.
Growing Asian risk is equal to, outward capital flows, and ultimately a
slowdown in Asian growth. An Asian economic slowdown in a capital-constrained
world will bring forth lower global growth, and lower commodity prices.
European Sovereign Debt: Hard & Soft Asset Bubbles
Greece has started the process to sell
private assets to raise capital. Publicly traded
Greek stocks in which the government has a stake are falling fast, as investors fear large government sales.
The market is concerned that the German taxpayer will have to fund a Greek debt default spiral.
Alternatively, euro holders worry that the German taxpayer will not fund
Greece, leading to euro disintegration.
The market is now giving Spain a hard time, with
Spanish government 10-year yields now higher than when the bailout package
for Greece was announced.
The Spanish problem is also one of easy euro credit, which fed a construction, or hard asset bubble, that has
now burst.
At the leading edge of the credit crisis in this case are Spanish regional banks, or cajas.
As the FT described succinctly; “the
unlisted cajas – many of them politicised, linked to regional
governments and with an opaque ownership structure – seized market share
from the banks at the peak of the recent housing boom and now account for
about half of outstanding loans in Spain. Several are heavily exposed to
bankrupt property developers and homeowners unable to meet mortgage
payments.”
There is much
more in the report.
Without directly saying "go to cash", I see no reason to have net
long exposure here. Except perhaps for some exposure to gold, if you are not
hedged, cash is the safe option.
Finally, if you do not know how to hedge, now is not the time to learn.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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Thoughts
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gold, silver, currencies, interest rates, and policy decisions that affect
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