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Everyone Is About To Make The Same Mistake They Made In March 2009 [推广有奖]

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kmay 发表于 2011-12-19 09:30:53 |AI写论文

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Earlier

we speculated

that the European crisis might in fact be over.


The point of the post wasn't to argue that Europe had been solved; rather the point was that crises can and do end without the fundamental problems being solved. So if you're waiting around for a "solution" then you'll inevitably end up missing the turn.

The US crisis of '08-'09 demonstrates this pretty nicely.

Back in the thick of the crisis, what was everyone screaming about?

Well, there was the housing collapse obviously. This was probably the essential economic event, as it set off the wave of defaults and foreclosures hit the financial system like a bomb. Closely associated with the housing collapse was the acknowledgment that consumers had drowned themselves in debt during the boom, and that it would likely take years and years to get back to normal.

And the truth is that these issues have not gone away.

Take a look at revolving consumer credit (credit cards, basically).

While the rate of decline has improved a little bit, consumers remain in non-stop deleveraging mode.

Or consider housing.

According to the government's house price index, 2009 was not the bottom there. That index has hit its lowest level yet earlier this year, fully two years after the stock market bottomed.

While we're at it, here's a big, scary looking at household debt (outstanding) vs. GDP.

The bottom line, which you should hopefully grasp, is that there are some big, honking economic overhangs -- trends that have arguably built up for decades -- that haven't gone away or even improved over the last couple of years. We're going to be wrestling with these for awhile.

But the crisis has gone away, because despite these big issues, the market isn't worried that the whole thing is a sandcastle that's about to blow away. So even as housing market and credit trends have gotten worse, the market has had a really nice 2 or 2.5 year-run.

For what it's worth, it's this contradiction of a crisis being over against the backdrop of ongoing fundamental problems that's caused so many experts to miss the incredible comeback in the market.

So what does this mean for the Eurozone crisis? Well, it's the same: You don't actually need to fix all the fundamental problems for the crisis to end; you just need to be fairly certain that the whole thing isn't headed for total collapse.

Let's back up...

There's no doubt that the Eurozone is deeply flawed. We talk about the problems all the time here, but there are really two huge issues.

  • The competitiveness issue: It's very difficult for less productive, peripheral economies to compete. Greece, Italy, et. al. don't have the luxury of competitive currency devaluation like they used to, and so they run ongoing trade deficits with their core neighbors (Germany, chiefly) and it's not obvious how that gets fixed. So-called "internal devaluation" via austerity hasn't really worked at all, and has produced considerable political and social discomfort (which has further exacerbated economic weakness).
  • The lack of sovereign currencies issue: A big problem for Italy and others is not their high debt loads, but that they lack their own currency to print. This is crucial as it explains why the UK is a safe haven and France is not. It explains why Sweden is a safe-haven but Finland is not. It explains why Japan has a monster debt-to-GDP but borrows at rates that are the envy of the world.

How are these big issues possibly going to get solved? It's really hard to wrap your head around that. Nothing we've seen so far from any government meeting has been even close to satisfying.

Any "fix" that you could come up with inevitably runs into the politics problem -- the fact that you have 17 sovereign Eurozone countries and none of them want to spend a dime of taxpayer money helping out their peers, especially the peers who live in nice climates on the beach.

Remember this Venn diagram?



Image: Pawelmorski


But as we established with the American crisis of 2008-2009, you don't actually need to solve the underlying problems to end a crisis. All you need is for the markets to think that it's not all about to collapse. The solution can then be worked out over years

......

People are in a state of panic right now. This is nicely illustrated by this recent chart from Nomura, which examines cross-border equity flows: When people start freaking out they dump foreign equity assets. Right now, these flows are at a level that's only been surpassed twice in over 25 years: The crash of '87 and the collapse of Lehman.



Image: Nomura


Bottom line: It's possible that the crisis/panic we're seeing now could subside long before the core problems in Europe get fixed, a process that at best will take years.


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