Saturday, September 15, 2012

The first milestones in turning the tide around; still underappreciated by markets


The actions of ECB and the Fed cannot be underestimated. They are the first milestones in turning the tide around to help the global economy fight out of the Great Recession.  They effectively guarantee that deflation will not happen. More central banks, like Bank of England and Japan, will follow the steps. This is exactly what I have predicted when I said to turn around the bearish trade on June 15
 (http://xlpartners.blogspot.hk/2012/06/like-always-if-all-central-banks-are.html).
I hope you have paid attention and have not completely missed the rally.

By now, markets are still not fully appreciating the significance of these actions. So I have been out of the pair trading of buy S&P and shorting China related EMs a couple of weeks ago. I have gained max exposure to US small and mid caps, gold producers, Brazil, Spain, Thailand (hope no flood this year), and Norway. Even for S&P, there could be another 10-15% ahead to the end of year. I am also short long term T-bonds.

The ECB actions are implicitly supported by Merkel. Even though opposed by German voters, Merkel is likely to throw the implicit support to ECB before her reelection. To get reelected, ECB is the only institution that would provide enough firepower to prevent the collapse of the Eurozone, and German economy. After her likely reelection, I have hopes that she will be more explicitly supporting ECB. The negative news that would happen in the next few months will be the classical ones when one only relies on monetary stimulus but not fiscal ones. The peripheral economies could deteriorate further, and Greece probably will leave Eurozone next year.

The Fed actions are significant in the open-end nature of QE3, though if you track by blog, you would know that I still think it should come much earlier and in much bigger magnitude. By August 2010, I have argued for even more drastic actions
Now we finally have some form of what I advocate, I would get out of long term T-bonds unless for some protections against events such as Greece leaving Eurozone. We are much less likely to have as dramatic risk on and risk off cycles from now on.

Is the coast all clear? Not really. Only having monetary stimulus is like fighting the battle with one hand. ECB in particular will need fiscal backstop of Germany badly to expand its bond purchases substantially. We may still have limited growth even though central banks have guaranteed that deflation will not happen. Further, Greek departure from Eurozone could still bring a lot of disruptions. U.S. fiscal cliff early next year could be highly disruptive even though its impact may have been exaggerated a bit. Maniacs (at least in rhetoric, and may be adopted to cater to their conservative base) like Romney and Ryan could still be elected (if they do, and if they implement policies they advocate so far, e.g., moving even slightly toward gold standard, it would be great time to leverage long term T-bond exposure and short equity big time).

Whatever will happen to the rest of the world, China, and the countries with big exposure to its growth model, will keep slowing down substantially from next year and on. Their equity markets will keep lagging or dropping until all the investors slowly come to terms of this fact. I expect the shorts to be set up late in the first quarter of 2013.

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