About a year ago, TMM heard a bit of shoe-phone that at a meeting of Chinese Mandarins, after one such mandarin gave a presentation upon the risks to the economy from the stock market and other potential asset bubbles within China, Premier Wen simply replied something along the following lines: "I've seen the stock market go from 2000 to 6000 and then back to 2000 and now back up to 3000... I know how to deal about that... What I want to know about is food inflation". And so, with China's Food CPI running at 8% YoY (see chart below), and slightly-less-manipulated data that TMM look at suggesting it is running far higher, the alarm bells are ringing.
But it's not just Asia. Turkey printed an upside surprise in CPI last week, with Food price inflation running at an eye-watering 15.33%, and headline CPI now running at 9.24% vs a low of 7.6% in July. Yet 5yr Xccy Swaps (see chart below) are sub-8%...
...And India, with Wholesale Prices rising at just shy of 17% (see first chart below), the 5yr OIS is hovering around 7% (see second chart below).
Now TMM totally get the QE-leakage story in terms of capital flows into Emerging Markets, but the idea that EM rates markets will be bulletproof in the face of an inflation scare seems baloney to them. The flip side of the QE-leakage story is that inflation is fueled by attempted FX intervention and domestic money supply expansion. The RBI's, and the PBoC's, recent rate hikes merely signal further moves in this respect. It seems to us that the trade here is to pay rates in EM vs being long the currencies, rather than just sitting long of both the currency and the bonds on the "search for yield" argument.
It's all looking a bit too much like 2006 in EM for TMM.
Elsewhere TMM are somewhat bemused by the Anglo/French defense deal. Would it not save a lot of time, money and angst if the UK went direct to doing a defense deal with the Chinese? Apart from the obvious benefits of making a pact with the biggest bully in the playground, we are unaware of any large national monuments in the UK dedicated to famous triumphs over the Chinese that will obviously need renaming. Unlike Trafalgar Square and Waterloo Station and surrounding environs. Of course we would happily rename the British Boxer dog in case they felt it was anything to do with a rebellion.
7 comments
Click here for commentsOne can reasonably expect price controls, export quotas etc. on food items to be established by many EM-governments if the trend continues. This would, mostly, create even more inflation and is almost certain to fail as a solution - but hey, it's almost a ritual (especially in post-socialist countries).
ReplyIrish bond spreads approaching alarming levels while EURUSD appears to be suspended in mid-air....? So much for Ireland taking the austerity route back to solvency and prosperity...
ReplyOh man LB, waiting for the man in Asia time SUCKS. The cracks are definitely showing, I just worry that the liquidity tsunami is going to be much more the game than fundamentals for the rest of this week and likely the month.
ReplyLB clings to the belief that Bernanke is not in fact a complete lunatic and will not in fact unleash a tsunami. So we will see no more than $600B (6 months worth of $100B or 12 months of $50B) in asset purchases announced tomorrow. That, or more, is already priced in here, so we are cautious and heavily invested in mattresses at this time while most investors are wildly bullish.
ReplyIn addition, the left-centre and minorities are going to sit home in the US today and proffer the finger to their Vice President who instructed them to Stop Whining, and as a result we are going to see a tremendous number of Raving Loony party candidates elected, which will be interpreted by market watchers as USD positive, under the heading of "deficit reduction".
But the truth is there just aren't many people left to sell the dollar short, so maybe it's time to focus our attention on wildly over-valued currencies in areas with exposure to festering banking crises: sterling (UK exposure to Ireland) and the Euro (PIGS in general). Let's get back to bashing Betty...
MM, could you clarify your comment, "looks like 2006"? Are you implying that negative real rates re-ignite a 2007-like EM boom? Your initial comments seem rather bearish, but perhaps you are speaking from a Fixed-Income angle?
ReplyTwas the night before QE2, when all through the house
ReplyNot a creature was stirring, not even a Wall St banker louse
The stockings were hung by the chimney with care
In hopes that Ben Shalom soon would be there
Blankfein and Dimon were nestled all snug in their beds
While visions of free money danced in their heads
http://fatboysez.blogspot.com/2010/11/night-before-qe-2.html
TMM,concur comrade,not yet in my book though, start 2011, couple more macro variable need to align before we have lift off, or be it I'm sure we're already gliding through milky way but with so many liquidity programs in place no one knows what the the outer limit is yet, these guys are , how do you say it, becoming comfortably numb , definitely a case of fimilarity breeds contempt ,this may leave us with some time to decide if or wether to go all in.
ReplyFeeling as if future positive(very few) macro-policy events are being priced in before yearend.