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Weekly Commentary
In a warning which has relevancy for and could have been directed at householders
in most of the western world the Irish Central Bank released it's quarterly
bulletin warning of a "heightened vulnerability" of Irish households to higher
interest rates or changes to their job status.
The Central Bank's head of economic research, Tom O'Connell, says householders
need to factor in up to a 3% increase in interest rates, when assessing their
ability to repay their debts. Over the past 10 years the level of debt has
increased by 600%, largely as a result of speculation in the property market
due to record low interest rates and banks making credit easier to access.
Last year, John Hurley, governor of the Central Bank, warned that Ireland would
become the most indebted country in the eurozone within a few years if private
sector credit growth continued at the record pace which it clearly has.
The Irish Central Banks concerns were echoed by the President of the ECB,
Jean-Claude Trichet who warned that the large increase in house prices was
not welcome, not sustainable and created risks which we should be vigilant
of. It is believed that he was referring to house prices in Ireland, the UK
and Spain all of which have experienced exponential increases in recent years.
The Irish Central Bank and the President of the ECB's warnings were reinforced
by a survey conducted by Standard Life which showed that consumers are borrowing
too much and that mortgage holders have not considered or made provision for
the likelihood of rising interest rises. It found that householders have been
lulled into a false sense of security as they believe that the advent of the
euro meant continuously low interest rates. It also found that householders
are not taking a long-term view and that 71% of mortgage holders have no plans
to accommodate increases in monthly repayments and thus may not be able to
when interest rates begin to go up.
Thus, the Irish Central Bank, the President of the ECB and Standard Life join
an illustrious list of other astute and highly respected economic institutions,
publications and economists who have all warned about overvalued property markets
being vulnerable to rising interest rates. The ECB, the IMF, The Economist
magazine and respected economic commentators such as Garret Fitzgerald in the
Irish Times, Damien
Kiberd in the Sunday Times and David
McWilliams in the Sunday Business Post (articles linked) have all recently
voiced concerns about the Irish property market. However, their warnings have
been dismissed by economists such as Austin Hughes of IIB Bank and Dan McLaughlin
of Bank of Ireland. Dan McLaughlin has recently heralded the return of 'the
Celtic Tiger' and said there was no need for concern because the current debt
situation "was not unique to Ireland."
Only time will tell who will be proved right. So far the optimists have the
upper hand in the debate but over the long term those advocating caution may
be proved right. One way or another it is better to be safe than sorry and
thus householders would be advised to be a little more prudent and prepare
for a rising interest cycle by paying down debt and beginning to save again.
The Week in Quotes
"Everyone knows that payback time will come, but we are all hoping that
miraculous intervention will bail us out. We want to warn ourselves and our
neighbours, but feel that the act of warning itself may awaken the sleeping
dogs. So we remain silent, stunned in the face of a rising debt monster."
David
McWilliams, Sunday Business Post
"As regards households, with total debt, mortgage and non-mortgage, last
year exceeded disposable income for the first time by an estimated 20%. There
is a heightened vulnerability to adverse developments in income or interest
rates, should circumstances change. Consumers could face serious financial
risk if interest rates rise sharply or if they lose their jobs, such is the
high level of personal debt in the economy."
John Kelly, Quarterly Bulletin, Central Bank of Ireland
"If it's not bad enough that other Central Banks are selling the dollar,
the news that Bill Gates has shorted the currency should send a shiver down
the collective spines of Federal Reserve governors. . . . . Rather worryingly,
there have been some comments to the effect that it isn't in anyone's interest
to provoke a dollar crisis. The implication of that is that the world can
allow the US to behave like a kid in a candy store and that someone else
will always pick up the tab. That is truly unsustainable."
Sheila O'Flanagan, Irish Times
"It is a bit scary. We're in uncharted territory when the world's reserve
currency has so much outstanding debt. The old dollar, it's gonna go down
...I'm short the dollar."
Bill Gates, World's Richest Man
"Gold is an undervalued asset held by the I.M.F., and provides a fundamental
strength to its balance sheet. Gold holdings provide the I.M.F. with operational
manoeuvrability both as regards the use of its resources and through adding
credibility to its precautionary balances. In these respects, the benefits
of the I.M.F.'s gold holdings are passed on to the membership at large, to
both creditors and debtors. The I.M.F. should continue to hold a relatively
large amount of gold among its assets, not only for prudential reasons, but
also to meet unforeseen contingencies." "In the interest of clarifying their
intentions with respect to their gold holdings, the undersigned institutions
make the following statement: 1. Gold will remain an important element of
global monetary reserves. . . ."
IMF, March '04
"In some parts of the euro area we see (house price) phenomenona that are
not, in our view, sustainable and certainly are not necessarily welcome.
The combination of ample liquidity and strong credit growth could, in some
parts of the euro area, become a source of unsustainable price increases
in property markets. Central banks have to react to asset price bubbles before
they burst, not afterwards. There are risks there which could materialise
and we have to be vigilant. I will not be alarming but I must observe that
we have perhaps an appreciation of risks which is quite low...at the European
and global level."
"Clearly what we have ... is that there is a level of lack of savings which
has to be corrected, certainly in the United States and we all agree on that.
The industrialized world as a whole is in deficit, that is the current account
deficit, and there is no offsetting of the US current account deficit by
the other industrialized countries and that of course means that we are asking
the rest of the world to finance us. Sharp moves in the dollar-euro exchange
rate are unwelcome and are not contributing to economic growth. It doesn't
seem to be that it's acceptable as a sustainable, long-term feature of the
present functioning of the global economy."
Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the ECB
"Our study suggests that Irish mortgage holders may indeed have been lulled
into a false sense of security by the current low interest rate environment.
Most mortgage lenders have allowed for increases in interest rates in their
assessment of borrowers' ability to repay their loan, but our survey finds
that the majority of home owners have not factored in the possibility of
an interest rate increase. If this happens they will have to make sacrifices
and cut back on discretionary spending."
Michael Leahy, Chief Executive, Standard Life
"As a country we have become complacent about the sustainability of the
current economic boom, casual even. So many businesses appear to have grown
used to the period of easy money that few real questions are being asked
about future realities."
"All major sectors of the real economy are operating at a frenetic pace
fuelled by what seems like a boundless supply of very cheap credit. But even
the continued availability of such credit does not mean that people want
to go on piling up personal debt in a country that has endured a prolonged
asset price bubble and which has become a hugely expensive place to live."
"Less predictable issues . . . . include the collective decision of citizens
to "stop borrowing incremental amounts" because debt servicing is pre-empting
enough spending power. Or the possibility of externally generated shocks
to the Irish labour market which could leave a proportion of highly leveraged
people high and dry, prompt distress selling of assets and generally sap
confidence."
Damien
Kiberd, Sunday Times
"But borrowing when rates are low is fool's gold. The worst time to borrow
is when interest rates are at historical lows, because they will only rise
over the course of the loan, so you are in for negative surprises. The best
time to borrow is when rates are at historic highs - as they were in the
early 1990s - because as the rates fall, the value of all other assets will
rise."
"Any fall in prices would lead to bad debts, profit warnings, share price
collapses, and bank takeovers. No chief executive of an Irish bank would
survive such a scenario, so there are good careerist and personal, as well
as corporate, reasons for double-digit lending to a workforce whose personal
income is only rising by 2 or 3 per cent. Sometimes, we fail to see that
banks are simply selling money. Therefore, instead of being the guardians
of prudence, the banks can become the agents of profligacy."
David
McWilliams, Sunday Business Post
| |
% Change |
| As of 7th Feb, 2005 |
Today |
5 Days |
1 Year |
5 Year |
| Gold |
414.40 |
-2.7% |
2.3% |
38.1% |
| Silver |
6.58 |
-3.2% |
2.5% |
26.3% |
| S&P |
1203.03 |
2.7% |
5.3% |
-15.5% |
| ISEQ |
6635.30 |
2.7% |
30.1% |
34.6% |
| FTSE |
4832.80 |
0.0% |
9.8% |
-21.9% |
Market Analysis
Precious Metals
Gold futures closed at their lowest level in four months Friday to mark a one-week
loss of some 2.4% percent with traders assessing the weaker-than-expected
January employment report and the possibility of short or medium term strength
in the dollar. The price decline was currency-based selling and the potential
for gold sales or revaluation by the International Monetary Fund, analysts
and traders said. April delivery gold at the New York Mercantile Exchange's
COMEX division fell $2.60 to $415.90 an ounce, after dealing from $419.50
to $415.50, which was the contract's cheapest since Oct. 13. March silver
fell 4.2 cents to close at $6.635 an ounce, trading between $6.71 and $6.605.
Spot silver hit $6.61/64, off from $6.65/67 previously. Friday's fix was
at $6.655. April platinum lost 80 cents to $866 an ounce. Spot platinum last
changed hands at $862/866.The recent weakness in gold may result in gold
testing support at the 200 day moving average at $413 if this is convincingly
taken out to the down side look for gold to consolidate in the $400's before
resuming it's long term uptrend.
Commodities
The Reuters/CRB index, a broad measure of commodity futures markets (basic
components include hard tangible assets such as Metals, Textiles and Fibers,
Livestock and Products, Fats and Oils, Raw Industrials, Foodstuffs) closed
down slightly yesterday at the 281 level for a drop of 1.1% for the week.
After trading between about $3,020 and $2,986, three months copper London
Metal Exchange (LME) was trading at $2,973 a tonne, down $33 from Thursday's
London kerb close. Aluminium was at $1,820 versus $1,830. Most other metals
fell, with zinc losing $10 to $1,278 and lead down $10 at $917. Tin was untraded,
but indicated at $7,820/30 versus $7,980. Nickel dropped $305 to $14,450. LME
base metals crept lower Friday, due to technical selling and a firmer US dollar,
which prompted light liquidation before the weekend, traders said. The metals
complex was expected to remain quiet next week as major players in China, the
major diver for the metals boom since last year, are on holiday to celebrate
the Lunar New Year, the traders said.
Energy Prices
Oil prices steadied, ending a three-day losing streak as dealers weighed OPEC's
threat to cut output against healthy supplies of crude and gasoline in the
United States, the world's biggest consumer. U.S. crude oil futures gained
3 cents to $46.48 a barrel, halting a slide that had shaved $1.75 off the
price since Monday. U.S. oil inventory data on Wednesday showed still robust
crude oil supplies and higher gasoline stocks, easing concerns about meeting
demand in the late spring when motor fuel consumption picks up.
In London, Brent crude also ended little changed, settling up 4 cents at $43.89,
after trading $43.66 to $44.48. NYMEX March heating oil settled 0.23 cent higher
at $1.2742 a gallon, after holding support at $1.27. Resistance was seen at
$1.30, above the day's high of $1.2930. NYMEX March gasoline settled 0.79 cent
lower at $1.2605 a gallon, with support holding at $1.25. It posted its session
high at $1.28, with resistance charted at $1.30.
The US$ and Currency Markets
In currency markets, the euro briefly fell to its lowest level in almost three
months below $1.2900 before settling at $1.2975 for a weekly gain of 0.5
percent. The deficit in the current account was a record $164.7 billion in
the third quarter and this has made many including Bill Gates, Warren Buffet,
George Soros and many foreign Central Banks voice their concerns about the
long term health of the dollar. The gap means the U.S. must attract about
$1.8 billion every day to compensate for the shortfall and maintain the dollar's
value, according to Bloomberg calculations. The current account is a measure
of trade, services, tourism and some investments. The White House predicts
the budget shortfall will reach $427 billion this year. President George
W. Bush pledges to halve the gap by 2009. Despite the long term trend for
the dollar likely being down it may be that the dollar is experiencing a
short or medium term correction or rally.
Stock Markets
For the week, the Dow rose 2.77 percent or a healthy 289 points, the S&P
500 rose 2.7 percent and the Nasdaq rose 2.5 percent. The Dow and the S&P
500 last week gained back almost all of their losses in January, although the
Nasdaq is still down 4 percent since Jan. 1. Friday was the strongest day of
the week for stocks despite the release of the January employment numbers which
were weaker than expected, although the economy only added 146,000 jobs - many
fewer than the 200,000 analysts expected - experts say the news could mean
that the Federal Reserve might temper its eagerness to raise rates and this
will ease fears of the impact of rising interest rates on the debt laden US
consumer.
Bond Markets
Similiarly, U.S. Treasury prices jumped as another month of mediocre job creation
eased fears the Fed might pick up the pace of interest rate increases. January
payrolls showed the net creation of 146,000 jobs, well short of forecasts
of 190,000 and market chatter of an even higher reading. Longer-term debt
led the way as the lacklustre job gains and softness in average earnings
suggested the labour market will not be a cause of inflation anytime soon.
Thirty-year bonds powered 1-21/32 higher to 113-19/32 for a yield of 4.49
percent, down from 4.58 percent late on Thursday and the lowest since mid-2003.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury note spiked up 23/32 to 101-11/32, taking
yields to 4.08 percent from 4.15 percent on Thursday. Shorter-dated debt
also climbed but more modestly. Two-year notes rose 3/32 to yield 3.29 percent
from 3.32 percent.
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