"There
can be few fields of human endeavor in which history counts for so little as
in the world of finance. Past experience, to the extent that it is part of
memory at all, is dismissed as the primitive refuge of those who do not have
the insight to appreciate the incredible wonders of the present."
-- John Kenneth Galbraith, A Short History of Financial Euphoria

The spadefoot frog makes its home in Australia. It is an explosively breeding,
desert-dwelling amphibian. It may burrow underground for years, waiting for
a seasonal rain or flood. However, when this "liquidity event" arrives, a period
of frenzied mating ensues. Incredibly, in a space of as little as a month,
its eggs advance through the tadpole stage to full metamorphosis. It needs
to quickly reach adulthood before the pools of water again dry up. Fascinatingly,
as the water puddles begin to get tepid, murky and shallow, the tadpoles grow
teeth ... 3 rows of them. They then start eating each other to accelerate the
growth of the survivors. Eventually, the frog must go back underground in order
to survive the next dry season.
Sound a little like today's capital markets ... with 3 rows of teeth?
It makes an apt allegory for the explosive financial market rallies witnessed
to date this year. From the March 9th lows of earlier this year, global equity
markets have soared 68% (in USD terms) flushed by a veritable flash flood of
liquidity.
There is more to this allegory as we will outline.
Strategy & Door #4
We have always said that the tough questions precipitated by the Global Financial
Crisis (GFC) would come later ... at the end of the first major recovery rally.
At the extreme equity market lows of late 2008 and into March 2009, the values
were self-evident no matter that the world might have ended. It required precisely
such scares to mobilize new and inventive interventions on the part of central
banks and governments. The appropriate response at the time was to "buy" and
ask questions later. There would be plenty time to assess the quality and sustainability
of the recovery.
Now is the time to answer these questions. It is opportune in more ways than
one. Not only are asset markets again over-valued, consensus opinion appears
to be as unified and unsuspecting as at the previous equity market tops of
2007 (and the bond market top of February/March 2009.) Alarming -- as it always
should be when this characteristic occurs -- is that correlation measures between
markets, asset categories and sectors are again very high. (See the indicator
of equity market correlations shown on the front page graph.) Without a doubt,
it has been a liquidity and panic-driven recovery that has floated all ships
and creatures, amphibious or not. But what of the recovery? Is it sustainable?
We think not ... except for one possible development for financial markets
-- Door #4.
Re-Assessment of Our Five Macro Scenarios
We have progressively dialled down risk in our portfolios since June of this
year, making further downshifts recently. Lately, we are again underweight
equities ... though only modestly. We are probably not as underweight as the
dour long-term outlook for economic growth over the next few years would otherwise
suggest. Why? Developments to date this year argue that we should raise the
probability on scenario #4 of the five that we are currently considering --
Velocity Inflation.
Just what is velocity inflation? It is a type of price inflation that is driven
by a change in preference between assets. For example, if everyone suddenly
wishes to own tulip bulbs, beanie babies or pet rocks, their prices can rise
to stratospheric levels. The asset mix shift itself from cash to tulip bulbs
-- or as we think may be possible ... from bonds and cash to equities and other
hard assets -- drives up the price of the attractive asset and deflates the
asset being aggressively sold. This phenomenon need not even involve actual
monetary inflation (of which there is plenty at the present time).
To illustrate, when a crowd runs from one side of a ship to the other, the
average water displacement of the ship remains the same. Yet, the vessel will
have experienced a significant movement and shift in mass. The boat will have
changed its tilt ... one side rising, the other falling. Of course, monetary
inflation can only serve to accelerate a shift from bonds to equities and hard
assets.
Monetary Inflation: Where is it Going?
There is lots of monetary inflation in the system given the enormous balance
sheet expansions initiated by central banks around the world. Many observers
therefore worry about explosive inflationary conditions in ensuing years. What
they expect is rising prices of the things that are the product of current
economic output. In this sense, some even worry about an inflationary spiral
similar to the one that occurred in Weimar Germany during the 1920s.
Vigilance against the effects of inflation are certainly not unreasonable.
High alert is warranted. However, the type of inflation manifestation that
Germany experienced and others since that time, is not likely to happen today.
Why not? There are at least three major reasons. For one, the inflation chameleon
is much too devious to follow any predefined script. A knowledge of history
alone is not a reliable help without the understanding of underlying causality.
Inflation can express itself in different ways, running in channels determined
by the financial and economic landscape of the time. Its quixotic and wily
nature was noted by Keynes: "By a continuous process of inflation [...] engages
all of the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does
it in a manner that not one man in a million can diagnose."
Secondly, and importantly, there exists today an enormous traded bond market.
Any sniff of an inflationary spiral (if not temporarily outweighed by fear
and a run to quality) would soon trigger the deflationary impact of rising
bond yields. Thirdly, the structure of financial assets and their distribution
is entirely different today. This is likely to direct inflation and investor
behaviour into an entirely different channel. Allow us to explain.
Several factors -- both psychological and structural -- working together,
could set up conditions of possible
"velocity inflation" with respect to equity assets and other more (monetary)
inflation-proof assets.
1. Structure and Distribution of Global Financial Assets. Though a
long-running trend, the bulk of investable assets in securities markets (equities,
fixedincome, and derivatives) are more centrally managed by professionals than
ever before. This effects market behaviour. Here are several factors to note:
Concentrated Owners. Consider that latest available year-end 2006
data shows total institutional investors -- defined as pension funds, investment
companies, insurance companies, banks and foundations -- controlled assets
totalling $27.1 trillion, up from $24.4 trillion in 2005. This level represents
a ten-fold increase from $2.7 trillion in 1980. The equity market value of
total institutional equity holdings increased from $571.2 billion in 1980
(or 37.2% of total U.S. equity markets) to $12.9 trillion (or 66.3% of total
U.S. equity markets) in 2006. This represents a historic alltime high in
the amount of total U.S. equities controlled by these institutional investors.
(Source: Conference Board)
More Evidence of Concentrated Holdings. A pair of physicists at the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich recently published preliminary
findings of their network analysis of the world financial economy as it looked
in early 2007. Stefano Battiston and James Glattfelder extracted the information
for 24,877 stocks and 106,141 shareholding entities in 48 countries. It revealed
what they called the "backbone"
of each country's financial market. These backbones represented the owners
of 80% of a country's market capital, yet consisted of a remarkably small
number of shareholders. The most pared-down backbones exist in Anglo-Saxon
countries, including the U.S., Australia, and the U.K. Paradoxically; these
same countries are considered by economists to have the most widely-held
stocks in the world, with ownership of companies tending to be spread out
among many investors. But while each American company may link to many owners,
Glattfelder and Battiston's analysis found that the owners varied little
from stock to stock, meaning that comparatively few hands are holding the
reins of the entire market. (Quoted from GlobalResearch.ca) (Source: Backbone
of complex networks of corporations: The flow of control, J.B. Glattfelder
and S. Battiston, Chair of Systems Design, ETH Zurich, Kreuzplatz 5, 8032
Zurich, Switzerland.)
Financial Institutions Become More Concentrated. Perversely, financial
institutions continue to become larger, despite the clear "moral hazards" of "too
big to fail." Quoting an article on this topic: "Survivors to emerge from
the turmoil with strengthened market positions, giving them even greater
control over consumer lending and more potential to profit. J.P. Morgan Chase,
an amalgam of some of Wall Street's most storied institutions, now holds
more than $1 of every $10 on deposit in this country. So does Bank of America,
scarred by its acquisition of Merrill Lynch and partly government-owned as
a result of the crisis, as does Wells Fargo, the biggest West Coast bank.
Those three banks, plus government-rescued and -owned Citigroup, now issue
one of every two mortgages and about two of every three credit cards, federal
data show." (Washington Post, August 28, 2009)
Global Wealth Skew. In December 2006, a groundbreaking report entitled The
Worldwide Distribution of Household Wealth (World Institute for Development
Economics Research, UN University -- UNU-Wider) was released. The results
were much more pronounced than had been previously indicated by other studies
that surveyed income. Wealth and income, though surely related, are quite
different. Income is generally defined as the annual flow of earnings and
incomes, while wealth is the accumulation of income and hoarded assets.
According to its authors' research, the top 10% of adults in the world
own 85% cent of global household wealth (2005). The average member of this
wealthy group therefore has 8.5 times the holdings of the global average.
Furthermore, the top 2% and 1% of the world's population is estimated to
own 51% and 40% of world household wealth, respectively. This is a more
extreme distribution than had been estimated by surveying global incomes
in previous studies.
2. Psychological. Here, two factors may act to promote velocity inflation
risks.
Investor Desperation. A sense of desperation has set in. Consider
that the prominent U.S. demographic group (45 to 64 year-olds) has discovered
that accumulated pension assets are insufficient to support an agreeable
retirement lifestyle. This realization, combined with the fact that net worth
of the middle class has been decimated (both financial and real asset declines
impacting household net worth) while alleged cronyism between Wall Street
and the Beltway has either enriched or bailed-out a select few
"bulge bracket" chiefs, may cause individuals to
"swing for the fences."
A similar sense of desperation is evident in professional money management
circles. Given the deep financial destruction of the GFC, market rallies
simply cannot be missed. Every rally must be traded and capitalized upon,
seen from an individual's perspective. In the overall, of course -- what
economists call the "Fallacy of Composition" -- the average investor will
be chained to the market returns at best.
Globalization of Sentiment and Feedback Loops. As the GFC (and recent
recovery rallies to date) illustrate, never before in history has global
opinion been galvanized by financial events so quickly. This is remarkable.
Never before has the entire financial world behaved so much as one monolithic
culture as is now evident in global capital markets.
Robert Shiller, in a recent commentary in the New York times, provides an
insightful perspective:
"It is a large and diverse world, after all, so why should confidence
have rebounded so quickly in so many places? The popularity of the term
'green shoots' shows the kind of social epidemic underlying our changing
thinking. The phrase was propelled in Britain by Shriti Vadera, the business
minister, in January, and mutated into a more contagious form after Ben
Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, used it on '60 Minutes' on March
15. The news media didn't need to change the term for different cultures
around the world. With nothing more than a quick translation -- brotes
verdes, pousses vertes, grüne Sprösslinge, etc. -- it is now
recognized as a symbol of a revival coming soon. All of this suggests that
a social epidemic is supporting renewed confidence. This confidence can
keep growing by contagion, as a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy, and we
may see the markets and the economy recover further. But in an economy
that is still unstable, the stories could also morph into different forms,
the price feedback could turn downward and the dynamic could turn ugly
again -- just as it has in the past." (Source: Robert Shiller, An Echo
Chamber of Boom and Bust, New York Times, Economic View, August 30, 2009.
Putting it all together, we crucially now recognize that the economic, financial
and psychological conditions of global markets have come to the point where
the mood can change quite suddenly. A viral media-generated chain can impact
the sentiment of the entire world rapidly. This is a developing factor that
needs to be reflected in investment strategy.
Given the convergence of the above-mentioned trends, it is not unreasonable
to remain alert to the potentiality of a wild
"velocity inflation." But what are the odds? History suggests that these types
of conditions do not come about very often. But when they do, they can launch
very suddenly.
While the Weimar-era hyperinflation is not likely to be repeated with all
the same characteristics, there remain lessons that apply today. Certainly,
the manifestations of inflation are different. This time, the wealth-dislocating
effects are through asset markets and credit systems. The net effect, however,
is the same. Quoting from Otto Freidrich's book (Before the Deluge: Berlin
in the Twenties): "[...] the inflation was by far the most important event
of the period [...]. It wiped out the savings of the whole middle class [...]..Nothing
ever embittered the German people so much -- it is important to remember this
-- nothing made them so furious [...] as the inflation."
True to form, to date the middle class today has already been bruised with
respect to relative net wealth declines. The inflationary effects of too much
credit and the recent bust of asset inflation (both equities and real estate)
accomplished a similar outcome. The final impact of inflation is the same ...
but happening differently ... with different colors. Not to be forgotten, is
the potential for a rapid behavioural change. This is a common feature of all
major inflations. There comes a point where everyone finally wakes up to what
is actually happening. They then can change behaviour en masse.
However, a point we make is that "mob behaviour" today is not likely to be
limited to the private individual. It also applies to professional circles
(and probably always did.) If anything, institutional investors are most prone
to herd behaviour. What we witness, then, are some very large financial beasts
that are desperate and startled, and are subject to stampedes such as already
appear to have been witnessed over the past several years ... certainly this
past 6 months! Mr. Market may not be above the ancient tactic of North American
natives -- hunting buffalos by stampeding them over a cliff from time to time.
Conclusions
Precisely at times were investment returns are perceived to be meagre longer-term,
conditions are most conducive to desperate "velocity inflation"
behaviour. We are worried that such a scenario could play out sometime over
the next 5 years. Of the five that we are currently probability-weighting,
we have moved up its probability from 20% to 22.5%. We will want to continuing
monitoring these conditions very attentively.
Shades of the Velocity Inflation scenario already appear evident. Commodity
and equity prices are higher than is usual for this stage of economic recovery.
However, after observing the explosive breeding of financial markets so far
this year, the ponds have become tepid and carnivorous of late. The Australian
spadefoot frog would already be heading back to the safety of the underground
at this stage. So are we.
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