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BFTP: How to Become a Trillionaire And Other Thoughts

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BTFP:  Blast From The Past

Time to repost our piece from January 2017, almost two weeks before the Trump administration took power.

We hit the big topics back then which are now making headlines today:  1)  Modern Monetary Theory;  2)  How Trump’s fiscal policy will lead to larger trade deficits, regardless of his “trade deals”;  and 3) Our call on spikey interest rates, which though gained some traction by breaking out in September 2018, which took the stock market down, but has yet to fully play out.  Give it some more time.

New Charts

Here are some up-to-date charts, which confirm some of our predictions back in January 2017.

Absolutely stunning to see such large budget deficits as far as the eye can see with the actual and projected unemployment rate under 5 percent. What kind of budget deficit beast will we run if we have a recession?  Will demand for Treasury securities be there to finance, say, a $2 trillion deficit?

Source:   Forbes

Source:  Forbes

Another Macro Divergence 

The Exploding Twin Deficits Will Eventually Hit Stocks

Source:  Otavio (Tavi) Costa  @TaviCosta

Also see the recent Forbes article, Trump’s Twin Deficits Are Exploding.

Nobody cares until it they think it matters — and it will, folks.

How to Become a Trillionaire and Other Thoughts

Posted on January 7, 2017

Grab one of these:

Careful what you wish for central bankers and fiscal policy makers.  Though we don’t see signs of “rollover risk” in any of the G5 or G20, it’s all about confidence and you know what Joe said about confidence:

.

The World Economic Forum reports this about Zimbabwe’s ghost of hyperinflation past,

This is what happens when you are not a reserve currency — i.e., there is global demand for and a financial incentive to hold your currency  — and markets have lost confidence in your central bank and central government.   That, in our opinion, is the next major systemic macro swan:  the loss of confidence in a G5 central bank and government.  Not a black swan as it is a known unknown rather than an unknowable unknown.

We still have ongoing debates with our good friends from the modern monetary theory (MMT)  about whether a major sovereign government can default if they have an independent central bank.   Yes, they can!

We had the same debate with our Argentine friends several years ago as to whether their government would or could devalue their currency when it was on an effective currency board.  Yes, they did!  And defaulted to boot.

Just as Russia chose to default on its GKOs (short-term ruble denominated treasury bills) in 1998 with an independent central bank,  the same can happen to a G5 country as we approach the upper bound of debt limits and the lower for longer interest rate meme seems to be sunseting in a post-Trump world.

When a highly indebted sovereign crosses the tipping point — and nobody knows where the tipping point is —  when the markets lose confidence in its ability to repay or rollover debt coming due and the window shuts on refinancing,  they face three choices:

1)  bailout – easy for a small country,  such as Greece,  but Italy or Japan are too big to bail;   2) hyperinflate – print money to pay maturing debt obligations and finance budget deficits.  An aside:  the Bulgarian central bank did this in 1996 resulting in hyperinflation, which peaked at a monthly inflation rate of 242%  in February 1997.   I was in the Bulgarian central bank in the fall of 1996, when a senior official looked me in the eye and said, [Gregor],  we will not let the government default on its treasury securities.”  I knew what was to come; and 3)  default and restructure.

Like the Russians,  the decision to hyperinflate, default, or go begging to the IMF, is a political one.  Russia saw that a high percentage of holders of its local currency debt was held by foreigners,  hedge funds such as David Tepper.

The Russians made a political choice to default and inflict the pain on foreigners rather their domestic population through hyperinflation.   What was interesting is Russia continued to pay their dollar-denominated euro bonds, which had a relatively low debt service burden compared to the maturing GKOs.  The Russian government effectively carved out and gave implicit seniority to a specific component of their debt structure.  Totally contrary to what MMT predicts will happen, i.e.,  print money to pay the local debt and default on the hard currency external debt.

The major industrialized countries have gotten away with massive money printing and central bank financing not only of their sovereign governments but even some private corporations as well.

Good things don’t last forever.

As interest rates rise and are normalized,  highly indebted countries could enter a vicious cycle on the fiscal side,

We think foreigners will not be that “kind” to the U.S. in the new hardball world of  Trumplandia as the risk of trade wars and deglobalization increases.  Run, don’t walk, to read Martin Wolf’s latest,  The long and painful journey to world disorder.

Furthermore, given the Trump fiscal policy, which will significantly reduce net public savings and is highly dependent on big increases in private investment and consumption for growth, further reducing net private savings,  the U.S. current account balance, by definition, will deteriorate markedly over the next several years.   Thus, there will be yuuuuge competition for the world’s foreign savings to finance the larger U.S. current account deficits.  In this world, if realized, real interest rates will head north in a hurry.

Remember the National Accounting Identity,

As the tide of easy money recedes,  we have a queasy feeling we’ll be seeing a lot of schlong over the next few years as the markets find out who has been swimming naked.

And, always, keep this in mind:

Fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy night.    Stay tuned!


Source: https://global-macro-monitor.com/2019/03/12/bftp-how-to-become-a-trillionaire-and-other-thoughts/


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