Thursday, August 27, 2015

What side effects will U.S. rate hike trigger? Emerging markets, Europe will suffer - Analysts


Today central bankers, analysts and economists are gathering in Jackson Hole for their annual meeting. Two questions are on the top of the agenda: Will the Fed hike interest rates in September, and will the global economy sink if it does?
For months, traders, economists and various market players have been wondering whether Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen will raise rates in September or wait until 2016. Ms. Yellen has decided not to appear at the Jackson Hole meeting this year, possibly because she's already sick of this endless question.
But she's partly to blame for that. For weeks, she went back and forth on the rate liftoff question. Sometimes she said the time was approaching, while after that she highlighted further economic recovery was needed.
Recently, the unemployment rate in the U.S. has been approaching low levels - at which workers' bargaining position could get strong enough to induce economy-wide wage increases - which are usually a crucial factor in driving inflation.
Since the beginning of the global financial crisis 2008, the Fed kept its "federal funds rate" (the rate at which the Fed lends to banks) at the lowest levels in history - between 0.0 and 0.25%. With interest rates offered to savers by commercial banks set lower than the inflation rate, wealthy people have complained about having their savings devalued, or even robbed of, as a side effect.
On the other hand, financial markets participants with the ability to borrow on margin have become cheap-money addicts. Besides, the central bank's policy of large-scale bond-buying (QE) between 2009 and October 2014, under previous Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke poured $3.5 trillion into the accounts of institutional investors. This avalanche of money had to be invested somewhere, and so QE's net result was a sustained equities boom, Deutsche Welle comments.

Risks for emerging markets

Two years ago, when Bernanke hinted at a nearing end of QE, emerging-market currencies got under a heavy pressure. Among the hardest-hit countries were Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, Indonesia and India, which since have been called the "fragile five."
Commerzbank analyst Lutz Karpowitz said in a report: "What made them especially vulnerable was their high trade deficits, which became more expensive to finance in 2013 because of slightly higher US interest rates and a stronger US dollar."
Since then, India's trade deficit has substantially decreased. Indonesia's one has shrunk somewhat too, while others have remained vulnerable.
For many analysts, Brazil is a concern. Over there, production and consumption are both in decline, and inflation is hitting double-digit levels. Russia has been extremely weakened with the rouble plunging due to the lower prices of oil. In Turkey, political uncertainty is putting the Turkish lira under pressure. The circle of unstable emerging economies is growing.
China deserves a special mention. The economic uncertainty connected to internal debt crisis in the second largest economy is threatening to infect its trading partners. The global economy is expanding less than expected, Chinese exports are declining, and Shanghai equity prices are have just started recovering after a grinding 23% drop.
The Chinese slowdown is affecting its partners: Dutch wealth management company NN Investment estimated that almost a trillion dollars has left emerging markets over the past 15 months.
Undoubtedly, Chinese or Brazilian problems have nothing to do with the Fed rate hike, but it would nevertheless intensify negative trends in EMs - because it could cause a great deal more money to be pulled out. This could trigger "something like the Asian crisis at the end of the 1990s, when countries would have to impose capital controls and protectionist measures" to prevent the collapse of their economies, chief economist at Assenagon Group Martin Hüfner said in an interview with DW.

Developed and emerging markets

Risks for Europe

Europe will not be hurt too much. Quite the opposite: the strong greenback has helped euro-denominated exports more competitive globally. However, Europe could feel the side effect from EMs.

Today the world has hardly any tools left in hand with which to face a crisis: interest rates are already at near-zero levels; stimulus packages like the ones launched in 2008 aren't likely either, since many national governments are already groaning under high debt loads.
The Fed is now considering the global environment which could soon include the EM rout and thinks on postponing the hike.
Yesterday, William Dudley, president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, added fuel to the speculation that rates won’t lift off in September. At a news conference in New York Dudley said, “From my perspective, at this moment, the decision to begin the normalization process at the September FOMC meeting seems less compelling to me than it was a few weeks ago.”
However, the strong data released earlier is quite convincing that the Fed may shrug off the turmoil overseas.
Data released yesterday showed that U.S. core capital goods orders showed the biggest increase since June last year.
Investors will now await the U.S. second quarter GDP later in the day, as well as a weekly report on initial jobless claims and data on pending home sales for July.
But above all, there is Jackson Hole in focus, with its questions and awaited answers.

Chinese government intervened to prop up stocks - sources


According to Bloomberg, China’s government intervened to boost the stock market today.
The authorities want the market to stabilize ahead of a September 3 military parade celebrating the World War II victory over Japan, said the people who asked to stay unnamed because the move was not public.
Beijing bought blue-chip stocks, according to one of the people.
This would explain that late rally in Shanghai, in which the index closed at 5.34%. It also suggests the government will keep propping up the market, if needed, until the WWII commemoration is over.
Elsewhere, Germany's DAX rallied 3%, while France’s CAC 40 and London's FTSE 100 were both up around 2.5%.
U.S. stock futures are expected to open higher on Thursday.
During early morning hours in New York, the blue-chip DJIA futures surged 195 points, or 1.2%, the S&P 500 futures added 21 points, or 1.1%, while the Nasdaq 100 futures rose 60 points, or 1.42%.
A day earlier, the Dow jumped more than 600 points, the S&P 500 soared 3.9% to bounce off the correction territory, while the Nasdaq added 4.2%, boosted by positive economic data and dovish comments from a key Federal Reserve official who said a rate hike in September now looks "less compelling".

Peak gold ahead, but it will hardly change anything for a bullion - analysts reflect

26 August 2015, 21:02

Less supply usually means higher prices and more profit. The story is different for gold.
With bullion near a five-year trough and investors getting rid of the metal they hoarded for about a decade, some mining companies are losing money and output is set to drop for the first time since 2008.
However, history shows that the cutbacks will hardly have any impact on the market.
When mines last reduced operations, bullion still dropped as much as 29 percent into a bear market. Even surpluses in 2010 and 2011 didn’t stop prices from touching records.
Global mine output jumped 24 percent in a decade to a record 3,114 metric tons in 2014, as firms dug more to exploit a 12-year bull market in prices, according to data from industry researcher GFMS.
Almost 65 percent of bullion that’s mined or recycled is applied in jewelry and industry, and the rest is sold to investors.
In September 2011 gold has dropped 40 percent from a record $1,921.17 an ounce as investors lost faith in the metal as a safe haven. Expectations of higher U.S. rates and a robust dollar pushed the yellow metal to $1,077.40 on July 24, the lowest since February 2010.
Even with today's rally, prices aren’t high enough for some producers, says Bloomberg. About 10 percent of the world’s mines have lost money, according to London-based researcher Metals Focus Ltd.
Associated Gold Mine, Kalgoorlie, Australia, 1951
Many analysts consider that output will start dipping as soon as next year.
Polymetal International Plc. Gold Fields Ltd.’s CEO expects a big fall from about 2018, while HSBC Holdings Plc forecast the drop will be 25 tons this year.
With prices at about $1,100, production probably will drop 18 percent by the end of the decade, Metals Focus estimates.
This will happen probably because the industry, on average, requires about $1,200 to break even when all costs are considered, says James Sutton, a portfolio manager at JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s $2 billion Natural Resources Fund.
Barrick Gold Corp., the world’s largest producer, will trim output in the next few years, Moody’s Investors Service said earlier, after lowering the company’s credit rating to one level above junk status.
Trimming output by 5 percent would help balance the market and support prices, according to Mark Bristow, CEO of Jersey, Channel Islands-based Randgold.
Meanwhile, HSBC predicts that the yellow metal will recover 19 percent by 2017, partly as supply tightens.
Barclays considers that the implied gold surplus, which estimates mine output and recycling vs demand from jewelers, manufacturers and investors, will fall to 999 tons in 2016, the lowest since 2012, after reaching 1,476 tons in 2013.
Cutting production may take a while to influence prices because demand can be faced by recycling jewelry and using metal held in vaults, according to Georgette Boele, an analyst at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam. She predicts the yellow metal to touch $800 by December 2016.