The Land of Rising Yields — Part One |
Tuesday, 1 August 2023 — South Melbourne | By Vern Gowdie | Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia |
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[6 min read] Quick summary: For almost seven years, the Bank of Japan has been actively manipulating the interest rate pricing on Japan’s 10-year Government bond. Meddling with market forces can work for a period of time, but not indefinitely…which is why Communism failed. Markets — in the end — always win… |
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Dear Reader, The Bank of Japan (BoJ) is the world’s leading exponent of money printing and blatant market price intervention. In a never-ending effort to stimulate economic activity, all manner of artificial mechanisms has been (dreamt up, and) employed by Japan’s central bank and elected officials. Remember, the late PM Shinzo Abe’s much hyped ‘Three Arrows’? Monetary easing from the Bank of Japan Fiscal stimulus through Government spending Structural reforms Firing the second arrow was highly conditional upon the launch of the first arrow. The BoJ went into quantitative easing (QE) overdrive AND, for good measure, in February 2016, pushed borrowing rates on Government debt into the negative. In a concerted attempt to contain the Government’s debt servicing cost, yield curve control (YCC) was introduced by the BoJ in September 2016. For almost seven years, the BoJ has been actively manipulating the interest rate pricing on Japan’s 10-year Government bond. Meddling with market forces can work for a period of time, but not indefinitely…which is why Communism failed. Markets — in the end — always win. BoJ gives a little Late last week (28 July 2023), the newly appointed Bank of Japan Governor announced a ‘mea culpa’ of sorts, on yield curve control…. To quote from the article (emphasis added): ‘The Bank of Japan heralded the start of a slow shift away from decades of massive monetary stimulus on Friday, allowing the country's interest rates to rise more freely in line with increasing inflation and economic growth. ‘In what some analysts said could be a seismic shift for global financial markets, the BOJ made its bond yield control policy more flexible and loosened its defence of a long-term interest rate cap.’ What prompted the change in policy direction? ‘BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda brushed aside the view that the move was a step towards policy normalisation, instead describing it as a pre-emptive move against the risk of too-high inflation. ‘But he also said the bank could tweak policy further if the likelihood of sustainably hitting its 2% inflation target heightens, underscoring the sharper focus on price pressures.’ Governor Ueda’s public assurance that this modest relaxation in YCC is not a declaration of ‘relinquishing control on interest rates to market forces’ — it was intended to calm investor nerves. Why would he do this? We’ll get to that shortly. But first, let’s look at the caveat of ‘the bank could tweak policy further if the likelihood of sustainably hitting its 2% inflation target heightens.’ The good oil on Japan’s inflation Over the past 30 years, Japan’s inflation rate has, for the most part, remained in the MINUS 1% to PLUS 1% range. Prior to the current spike up to 4%, the two previous inflation surges were due to one-off impacts…the 2007 oil price spike and an adrenalin shot from Abe’s arrows. Both wore off and Japan’s inflation went back into its longer-term box…much the same as it did (on the downside) after the GFC. You may recall in 2007 that the oil price rocketed to US$140/barrel. Japan is highly dependent on imported oil for its energy needs. Which makes the Land of the Rising Sun vulnerable to oil price ‘shocks’. As reported by the International Energy Agency (IEA)… ‘Oil remains the most significant energy source in Japan, accounting for about 40% of the country’s total energy supply… ‘Having no notable domestic production, Japan is heavily dependent on crude oil imports, with between 80%–90% coming from the Middle East region.’ Therefore, it’s no coincidence Japan’s inflation rate tracked higher with the oil price in 2022. In 2023, commodity prices have taken a breather. However, in recent weeks there’s been an uptick in the cost of crude. Could a resumption in higher fossil fuel pricing be the reason why Governor Ueda is hedging his bets on whether a further tweak in YCC policy might be required? Another wave of higher oil prices was the topic of discussion in the June 2023 issue of The Gowdie Advisory. To quote… ‘What about an oil shock? ‘Perhaps one is coming in the second half of 2023. ‘Global advisory group, Raymond James, recently published this report… ‘In summary, the reasons for this outlook are… ‘What would a spike of US$40 in oil do to the economy? ‘We know the answer to that question by what happened in the 1970’s and late 1980s. ‘In support of their outlook, the research team at Raymond James provided these charts. ‘New sources of (oil and gas) supply are in decline… ‘Reinvestment in E&P (exploration and production) has also been headed in the wrong direction… ‘Economics 101 is all about supply verses demand. ‘Limited supply verses increased demand equals higher prices.’ If we are entering an unsettling period of rolling ‘oil shocks’ (much like what happened in the 1970s), containing the impact higher energy prices has on inflation, means the repeated use of that blunt instrument — higher rates — is all but assured. The most least discussed risk in the financial press At present, yield curve control requires the BoJ to spend tens of billions of dollars EVERY SINGLE BUSINESS DAY of EVERY WEEK of EVERY MONTH in EVERY YEAR. The annual cost is beyond HUGE. In a world of sustainably higher rates, marshalling the financial effort to combat global bond market pressures, could see the Bank of Japan throw its hands up in the air…abandoning its long-running experiment in interest rate suppression. And that’s where it gets (pardon the pun) interesting and why investor anxiety levels will go up even higher than interest rates. Would that result in Japanese investors making a wholesale retreat (selling out) from foreign markets to re-invest their repatriated capital in the higher-yielding JGBs (Japan Government Bonds)? The 25 January 2023 issue of The Gowdie Advisory, under the heading of, ‘Is there another Lehman Moment out there?’ included this extract… ‘Why we should be looking at Japan. To quote (emphasis added): ‘I think Japan is perhaps the most important risk in the world, not least because it is among the least discussed risks, certainly in the Western press.’ Who said it and in what context? That’s the subject of part two in next week’s The Daily Reckoning Australia. Until then. Regards, Vern Gowdie, Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia Advertisement: Only 0.04% of Aussie Investors Have This ‘Crash Shield’ It could protect them from what top analyst Jim Rickards reckons could be the world’s biggest ‘out-of-the-blue financial shock’. Click here to get this advantage yourself. |
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| By Bill Bonner | Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia |
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Dear Reader, ‘Ukraine is the most corrupt and dumbest Government in the world, outside of Nigeria, and Biden’s support of Zelensky can only come from Zelensky’s knowledge of Biden, and not just because he was taking care of Biden’s son.’ US official quoted by Seymour Hersh We’re spending the summer in France, as we always do. We are in the ‘France profonde’…the deep countryside with few tourists or tourist attractions. Our grandson, 15, is with us. He is bright and alert. But he gets his information mostly from the internet. The result: his mind is like his bedroom. There is a lot of stuff in there…but it needs to be tidied up. As it is, he gives equal weight to a sighting of a UFO over Nevada in 1957…as to the arrival of the Allied armada off the coast of Normandy in 1944. ‘Grandad, did you know that a man has invented a robot that can do anything? It has AI so it’s smarter than we are. It’s supposed to take over and do all our jobs. ‘And in the future…these robots will be our soldiers. Wars will be fought between robots. Did you see that in the news? ‘No…I didn’t. And I don’t believe it. ‘No kidding…it was in the news. It’s a fact. ‘You can’t believe everything you read. I don’t believe any fact unless I make it up myself.’ ‘Strategic windfall’ Meanwhile, the war in the Ukraine continues…a war fought by real people. Approximately 380,000 of them have been killed since Putin invaded. That is a ‘fact.’ More or less verifiable. It is probably more or less true. As near as we can tell, the result of the war so far was to move the border of the Russian Federation a few miles south and west to encompass the Russian-speaking areas of the Ukraine. That is the current status. Most likely, that is where it will remain. Was it worth it? Did the dead men and women give Putin what he wanted? Or did they give the US a ‘strategic windfall’ as The Washington Post columnist, David Ignatius claims? What would the ghosts have to say about it? And why do US elites care so much about the border between Russia and Ukraine? Of course, there’s a lot of money at stake. The US Empire costs US$1.5 trillion per year, according to Winslow Wheeler. That money doesn’t all sink into the earth like a corpse. Most of it ends up with living Ukrainians or Americans. And there, it whispers from its Northern Virginia mansions and Swiss bank accounts — ‘keep the war going as long as possible.’ Money can be persuasive. It convinces many people that a fact (a few hundred thousand stiffs) is a small price to pay for an idea (making the world safe for democracy, protecting the sovereignty of Ukraine…delivering a ‘strategic windfall’ to NATO, etc.). Thinking tanks But there’s more to the story, isn’t there? If money were the motivation behind the war in Ukraine, what drove the COVID Hysteria? Yes, a few pharmaceutical companies reaped billions in profits, but was that enough to shut down much of the world economy, at a loss of some US$16 trillion in lost output and related costs? And how about the campaign to dispense with fossil fuels? How does money explain that? Practically the entire elite establishment — the great and the good…the think tanks…the press…the universities, all are lined up in favour of the Green agenda. It is, after all, just an idea…not a fact. But it is an alarming one. AlterNet: ‘Meteorologist: Humanity has reached “a point we cannot return from” as ocean temperatures soar’: ‘Emmy-Award-winning veteran NBC Miami meteorologist Steve MacLaughlin sounded his loudest-ever alarm on Saturday about the state of Earth's oceans amid record temperatures that were recorded off of Florida's coast this past week. “This is the first time that I have been overly concerned that we have reached a point we cannot return from, and that's because of those 101-degree ocean temperatures,” MacLaughlin said. “…right here in South Florida.”’ Now, there’s an idea! Facts verses fiction Still, in order to favour the ‘Energy Transition,’ you have to believe a number of things… …that temperatures are rising (and will continue to rise) …that our use of fossil fuel is to blame …that lower temperatures are better than higher ones …that if we stop using fossil fuel, disaster will be avoided …that we can replace fossil fuel with other forms of energy, conservation and doing without …that we can afford the cost of the transition and that it will be managed successfully …that we don’t have better uses for the money …that it is not too late; that we can return from whatever point Mr MacLaughlin thinks we’ve reached …and that the world will be a better place if we make the effort. None of these things are facts! Dead bodies are facts. ‘Lebensraum’ and the ‘ubermensch’ were just ideas…liberating the Holy Land from the infidel…witch trials…Prohibition…making steel in backyard furnaces…the ‘domino theory’…the ‘axis of evil’…protecting the sovereignty of the Ukraine… …the ideas always sound pleasantly appealing. But the facts stink. Regards, Bill Bonner, For The Daily Reckoning Australia All advice is general advice and has not taken into account your personal circumstances. Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment. |
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