Monday, 24 November 2014

Concerted action by world leaders boosts recovery hopes



There is more than a hint of possible policy co-ordination in the air. Countries very rarely act in concert when it comes to major policy changes, but last Friday saw some good clues that global policymakers are coming together to help repair the global economy.

The Eurozone threw its doors wide open to new monetary policy initiatives, Japan called snap elections to get a fresh mandate for more policy stimulus and China cheered the markets with a surprise rate cut. The fact that it all happened on the same day suggests something more than serendipity is at play.

Fear can sometimes be a very powerful motivator and the dread of another global downturn has probably spurred world policymakers into action to boost recovery. Global economic summits generally tend to be long on promises and short on delivery, but the spectre of another world recession might have been enough to tip the balance at the recent Brisbane G20 world leaders’ summit. Their pledge to boost global output by an extra $2 trillion over the next four years, combined with last Friday’s events, suggests a new watershed in policy efforts to get the world economy working faster again. Global markets could have something really tangible to cheer about.

The Eurozone has given markets plenty to worry about in recent years as one of the weakest links in the global recovery chain. But that may be changing very soon. On Friday, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi ramped up the rhetoric that unless the Eurozone economy improves soon, the bank must do everything in its power to raise inflation and inflation expectations and quickly. In other words, Draghi is giving his blessing for full-blown quantitative easing (QE) – by buying bonds and printing money to fast-track the Eurozone economy into much better health, stronger growth and fuller employment. It marks a major sea-change for the ECB and boosted investor hopes for a potentially happy ending. The markets loved it with the benchmark German DAX share index ending Friday’s session up a massive 2.6%.

Japan is also picking up the baton for change after the economy slipped back into a shock recession in the third quarter. Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dissolved parliament’s lower house last Friday for a snap election in December. The markets see this as good news as it should pave the way for extra stimulus measures to boost the chances of faster Japanese growth ahead. Critically, the second leg of an unpopular sales tax, which has clobbered consumer spending in the last two quarters, has been put on hold. The Bank of Japan will continue to bear the brunt of recovery efforts through hyper-easy monetary policy and the next government will need to conjure up more fiscal stimulus to pump up demand. As long as a return to faster growth remains the over-riding priority it should be good news for Japanese stocks.

China joined in Friday’s day of action too, surprising the markets with a cut in interest rates to boost the economy as it struggles to overcome its slowest expansion in a quarter of a century. The interest rate cut followed disappointing purchasing mangers’ data which showed manufacturing activity stalling and getting dangerously close to contraction. Slower growth, lacklustre domestic credit expansion and the cooling property market mean that this rate cut is unlikely to be an isolated incident. The case for further rate cuts extending into next year will continue to build. The pressure on the Chinese authorities to deliver more growth and jobs is not going to go away any time soon.

Meanwhile, in the background, the US and UK are doing their bit for global reflation efforts – by doing nothing on normalising super-easy monetary policy just yet. While the rapid pick-up in growth and employment prospects in both economies would normally dictate quicker policy reversals, the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England both seem reasonably content to delay tightening for now to allow conditions for sustainable recovery to consolidate longer term. And while the Fed and the BOE continue to hold fire on higher rates, it is reassuring for global equity markets to know that the US and UK are keeping a mindful eye on the bigger picture and helping to propping up global GDP in the process.

The global recovery may seem on tenterhooks right now but there is no reason for markets to lose heart. If global policymakers are starting to pull together and stepping up efforts to boost world growth in a more co-ordinated way, the chances of securing a recovery capable of enduring a lot longer should improve dramatically.

It would be a watershed that could extend the five year old rally in global stocks for a few more years to come.

Reprinted by courtesy of South China Morning Post - 24 November 2014


Thursday, 20 November 2014

Avoiding a hard landing for euro economy isn't rocket science


Europe can achieve great success when it tries. The European Space Agency has just managed to plant a robotic lander on a tiny comet after a four billion mile journey through space. It’s a scientific achievement that could help us unlock some of the deepest secrets of the universe.

European economic policymakers on the other hand cannot hit a barn door with a shotgun. That means the odds of a hard landing for the euro zone economy are rising, not falling some six years after the global financial crisis first erupted.

Policymakers appear paralyzed by the after-effects of 2008-2009 crisis and 2011-2013 twin recessions. Weak economic confidence, high unemployment, grueling fiscal austerity policies and growth-sapping debt deflation are big problems, but they are not insoluble.

If Europe’s politicians had the same kind of focus as their top scientists, it’s hard to believe that we’d have suffered the half-hearted and mis-directed reflation efforts that have kept the euro zone economy at a standstill and made a slide into deflation seem inevitable.

Euro zone GDP growth squeezed a meagre 0.2 per cent rise in the third quarter after a 0.1 per cent increase in the previous period. Without another major push, the economy could be bouncing along the bottom of recession for years.

The bloc’s largest economies, Germany and France, were spared an embarrassing plunge into triple-dip recession, but only by a small margin and they are not out of danger yet. Italy has not been so lucky. It is suffering its third recession in six years and deepening its economic plight in the process.

Some of the former euro zone crisis countries have fared better, especially Ireland, Spain and Greece, but this will be short-lived unless the Big Three core economies can achieve a growth orbit that is not at perpetual risk of decay.Stronger euro zone growth though is not going to happen unless policymakers do something much more substantive to fuel the recovery. The key building blocks for recovery – stronger consumption, increased investment, greater stock-building, more government spending and faster trade growth – have all been badly damaged and it is up to politicians to fix them.

Unfortunately, the political boffins seem stuck in denial, relying on a stubborn belief that recovery will spontaneously self-start at some stage soon. Considering the dismal economic backdrop at home and the wider international economy, the chances of that happening without official intervention are remote.

Without a plan for radical action soon, European Central Bank forecasts for 1.5 percent economic growth next year look highly improbable, and the chances of another recession look a much more likely possibility.

On the monetary side, the ECB needs to get its skates on for a speedy launch of quantitative easing (QE) – printing money to fund mass purchases of euro zone government bonds that will allow credit to be pumped into the economy to get the recovery’s vital life-signs working again.
The longer the ECB delays QE, the harder it will be contain recession and deflation once they break out again. In the long run, the cost of prevention will be much cheaper than the political cost of a possible future EMU break-up.

A return to expansive German fiscal policy could also boost demand for consumer and investment goods from abroad, lifting global growth prospects. Germany is, after all, the largest surplus economy in the world.


Putting the euro zone economy back on a clear growth trajectory will be an epic journey. Like every mission into the unknown, it needs brilliant organisation and enterprising ideas to help it on its way. Without it, the euro zone recovery could end up lost in space.

Reprinted courtesy of the South China Morning Post 17th November 2014

Wednesday, 12 November 2014

How EU withdrawal could turn Britain into an economic backwater


Britain's economic destiny hangs in the balance in the next few years. The country and the European Union remain on a collision course and, thanks to Prime Minister David Cameron's pledge for a public referendum on EU membership by 2017, a future British exit (Brexit) cannot be ruled out. A deepening gulf between Britain and Brussels and British voters' growing disenchantment towards Europe mean the chances of a messy divorce loom large.


The stakes are high. The fallout from an EU exit could wreak massive collateral damage on the British economy. Britain might not only end up marginalised outside Europe, but its growth prospects could be left badly scarred for decades to come.

The EU has done itself few favours in recent years. The spectacle of Europe's crisis-strewn economy and the image of the EU's bloated, over-regulating bureaucracy have alienated Britain's public opinionWith the British economy basking in 3 per cent-plus growth right now, it is no surprise that British eurosceptics argue the moment has arrived for the country to break free. They contend that greater national sovereignty is the best passport to faster growth.

They would be wrong to think that way. Britain's economic fortunes are completely intertwined with Europe's, no matter whether the country is in or out of the EU. Mutual economic dependency is so strong that if Britain plugs for an EU opt-out, the damage to both economies would be extensive and long-lasting.

Business with Europe is important to Britain. Export earnings to EU countries are worth up to £240 billion (HK$3 trillion) and support more than four million jobs in Britain. With business with the EU possibly worth up to 10 per cent of Britain's output, withdrawal from the EU would pose serious risks for the country.

Britain is a major beneficiary of foreign investment inflows. Since the early 1980s, multinational corporations have flocked to the country after former prime minister Margaret Thatcher opened Britain's doors to a European free enterprise zone. Companies from the United States and Asia see Britain as their gateway to Europe's single market. If Britain exits, there is a danger that these overseas firms would leave in droves, shifting their operations to Europe. The potential loss in production, investment and jobs would be catastrophic for Britain.

Britain's financial services sector would be under threat, too. London plays host to more than 250 international banks, accounting for a third of last year's £71 billion financial services trade surplus. Most US and Asian banks headquarter their European operations in London, giving them a passport to provide services across the EU. If Britain withdraws from Europe, many of these banks would abandon London and relocate to other EU financial centres to guarantee business continuity. The impact on London's financial industry and the fallout on construction and the property market in the southeast could be devastating for the economy.

In the long run, it would be a blow the British economy would struggle to recover from. It would be hard to imagine home-grown British companies rushing to fill the gap left by the exodus of businesses decamping to Europe. It would take years of government nurturing and massive national reinvestment to repair the damage. The dire state of Britain's public-sector finances would tend to rule that out. Britain could turn into an economic backwater.

Right now, Britain has the best of both worlds by being part of the EU, but not the euro and its associated economic risks. Dropping out from Europe's single market and relegation to membership of Europe's free trade association would see a key diminution of Britain's sphere of influence in European policymaking.


Britain's pro-independence politicians are gambling that the country can do better striking out on its own, a risky ploy in an uncertain world. Indeed, the EU needs vital reforms to put its economy back on the road to recovery.

In the long run, the better option for Britain may be to Fixit rather than Brexit.

Reprinted by courtesy of the South China Morning Post

Thursday, 6 November 2014

Yellen's Fed adjusting to life in the fast lane



All good things inevitably come to an end. In the case of the US economy, it was about time that US Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen brought the Fed’s five-year bond buying programme – quantitative easing – to a timely conclusion. The US economy has been hogging the fast lane of recovery for so long that last week’s decision to ease off the monetary throttle and set the stage for a new policy era seemed long overdue.

In the last six years the US has been through challenging times and it has taken radical action by the Fed to beat off recession, deflation and a punishing financial crisis. Janet Yellen’s predecessor, Ben Bernanke, needed to be a trailblazer, championing the use of zero interest rates and unprecedented amounts of bond-buying to snatch the US out of the jaws of disaster. But the US has become so hooked on cheap money that Yellen will have her work cut out, weaning the economy off its dependency, without compromising sustainable growth and full employment in the process. The last thing the US economy needs right now is a toxic withdrawal shock.

The Fed’s controversial era of quantitative easing is over, but the Fed is not about to go into a painful knee-jerk reverse just yet. Despite heading into a sixth year of recovery, the economy still needs careful nurturing. US third quarter GDP growth at 3.5% may look impressive, especially after a powerful 4.6% growth spurt in the second quarter, but weak spots remain in the economy. Consumer confidence is still wavering despite the US jobless rate falling to a six year low of 5.9%. A tell-tale sign of continuing vulnerability is the downward drift in US inflation below the Fed’s 2% CPI target. And on-going global uncertainties are another reason for the Fed to tread carefully.

Even so, Yellen’s new monetary regime is already underway. As promised, the Fed brought its monthly bond buying programme to a close, but still stands ready to keep its massive $4.4 trillion balance sheet intact for the time being. It is an important bellwether for investors as it underlines the Fed’s commitment to keep financial markets awash with more than ample liquidity to support risk-taking and investment in the economy.

The Fed’s language has assumed a more hawkish tilt too. In an important departure from past policy statements, US labour market slack is no longer described as being ‘significant’. The Fed has also downplayed global risks to US growth prospects, especially recent financial market volatility and the weakening economic picture in the Eurozone. The minutes say the Fed “continues to see sufficient underlying strength in the broader economy”. In other words, the US recovery has enough stamina to stand on its own feet.

The Fed is sticking to its belief that interest rates should stay near to zero for a ‘considerable’ time, but warns that rate rises will be brought forward if the Fed’s employment and inflation objectives are met too soon. The market still envisages the Fed will bump up borrowing costs by mid-2015, but this could be sooner now given the Fed’s conditional link to the improving economic picture.

There are good reasons why the Fed can take its time. US monetary conditions have already started to tighten thanks to the impact of a stronger US dollar. Since mid-year, the US dollar index against a basket of currencies has appreciated by 10%, equivalent in monetary terms to a 2.5% rise in short term interest rates. Over the next year this could shave as much as 0.25%-0.5% off US growth potential – no bad thing for the Fed if they are worried about possible overheating risks. Given the bullish mood surrounding the US dollar right now, the proxy tightening effect on the economy looks set to extend even more.

And as market expectations continue to discount higher US rates ahead, the impact of rising US bond yields will do the Fed’s work for it as US borrowing costs start to rise up in step.

Yellen has set the wheels in motion for tighter money without any reason to rush into it just yet. The economy is moving well under its own steam, job-creation is making good progress and inflation is not a worry. Yellen can afford to wait and see how the economy shapes up over the next few months. The Fed has done its bit for global recovery and now it is time other countries to step up to the plate.

The Bank of Japan could not have picked better a better moment with last week’s announcement to crank up growth prospects with extra stimulus measures. The European Central Bank just needs to grasp the nettle for full-blown QE and do its bit to help revitalise global growth in the next few years. 

Reprinted courtesy of the South China Morning Post - 3rd November 2014