With US QE about to end, the rest of the world faced the prospect of another "taper
tantrum" financial crisis, one that this time around could suck the world into
a deflationary vortex. So it should come as no surprise that the end of QE
was countered with a series of offsetting treats for the global financial markets:
• The US Fed promised
to keep interest rates low for a really long time.
• The European Central Bank announced that in November it would start
buying asset backed bonds, in effect beginning an open-ended,
potentially huge debt monetization program of its own.
• Japan's version of Social Security is massively
increasing its equity purchases:
Japan's public retirement-savings manager will put half its holdings in
local and foreign stocks and start investing in alternative assets as the
world's biggest pension fund seeks higher returns.
The 127.3 trillion yen ($1.1 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund
set allocation targets of 25 percent each for Japanese and overseas equities,
up from 12 percent each, it said at a briefing today in Tokyo. GPIF will
reduce domestic bonds to 35 percent of assets from 60 percent. The new figures
don't include an allocation to short-term assets, while the previous targets
did. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg this month had anticipated levels of
24 percent for local stocks, 15 percent for global shares and 40 percent
for Japanese bonds, taking short-term holdings into account.
And last but definitely not least:
Japan
central bank shocks market with fresh easing
LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- In an unexpected move, the Bank of Japan's
policy board voted by a 5-to-4 margin to expand the pace of its quantitative
easing, sending Tokyo stocks soaring and the Japanese yen falling sharply.
The central bank expanded the size of its Japanese Government Bond purchases
to the equivalent of "about 80 trillion yen" ($727 billion) a year, an increase
of ¥30 trillion from the previous pace. It said it would also buy longer-dated
JGBs, seeking an average remaining maturity of 7-10 years.
The central bank also said it would triple its purchases of exchange-traded
funds and real-estate investment trusts.
Concerns about dwindling inflation appeared to drive the move, with the
Bank of Japan saying that "on the price front, somewhat weak developments
in demand following the [April 1] consumption-tax hike and a substantial
decline in crude-oil prices have been exerting downward pressure recently."
The equity markets loved all this, of course. Japan's Nikkei index rose an
amazing 4.83% on Friday. The S&P 500 is up about 3% on the week and most
emerging markets are soaring. From the point of view of bureaucrats attempting
manipulating formerly-free markets, this is a ringing success. Unfortunately,
like most attempts to mess with the laws of nature, it contains the seeds of
its own demise.
First and foremost, the end of QE in the US coupled with a ramp-up of bond
buying in Europe and Japan has the dollar up sharply:
A surging currency is functionally the same thing as rising interest rates
in that it tends to cut corporate profits while making debt harder to manage
for pretty much everyone. So it's good for savers (who see the value of their
savings rise) and bad for borrowers, both individual and governmental. And
that -- more onerous debts and plunging corporate profits -- is what the US
is looking at in 2015.
This is coming at a really bad time for some crucial parts of the economy.
Housing, for instance, is looking like the end rather than the beginning of
a recovery, with mortgage
purchase applications at 19-year lows (chart courtesy of Zero Hedge):
The upshot: As good as things feel right now in the stock and bond markets,
they'll feel that bad or worse when it dawns on the leveraged speculating community
that the rest of the world is exporting their deflation to America.