The Australian Retail Battle: Why Myer and David Jones Need to Lift Their Game

By MoneyMorning.com.au

You’ve heard of all the problems facing Australian retailers: the internet, high rents, falling consumer sentiment and Australia’s high wages.

In fact, if you listened only to Myer and David Jones, you’d think that the Australian retail market was a desert wasteland of calcified skulls and tumble weed. For them it is. Both have enjoyed anaemic growth at best.

But recent developments are showing these claims up for what they are — a giant load of hot air.

The impending international assault on Australian retail

If the Australian retail environment was as bad as David Jones and Myer describe it, you wouldn’t expect large international chains to be entering the market.

But that’s exactly what’s happening.

H&M has just signed its first Australian lease. It will join Costco, Zara and Uniqlo in setting up new Australian operations.

These are global players with stores across the world. They too will come up against the Australian dollar and falling consumer sentiment. They will pay Australian wages, the same wages which some have claimed are sending retailers broke.

So what’s going on?

Myers and David Jones – Look out…
There’s a better, faster and more efficient retail sector set for Australia

Put simply, they are running better businesses than Myer and DJs.

They’re able to compete with the disruptive force of the internet by selling better products, and utilising a quicker supply chain which means in-store clothing is always up-to-date.

They are more efficient and leaner, but also invest in customer service — Uniqlo has promised to hire hundreds in their Australian stores to provide the best customer service.

Myer and DJs have gone some way to speeding up their supply chain, and after gutting customer service are hiring again.

But if they want to compete, they’ll have to do better.

Callum Denness
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Qantas job cuts explained: what Alan Joyce isn’t talking about

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Here’s a question for you. Where in the world can you turn a profit into a loss, lose $235 million in half a year, preside over a calamitous single day share price drop of 9%, and not only keep your job, but deny all responsibility and blame others?

The answer: the Qantas boardroom.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce has been quick to blame external factors — the high dollar, ‘legacy’ issues, the price of fuel, competition — for the airline’s woes as it moves to cut $2 billion dollars in costs and up to 5000 jobs.

But these issues are taking the fall for a more fundamental problem: Australians simply aren’t choosing to fly Qantas any more.

Why Qantas customers have lost the ‘Spirit of Australia’

Back in the late 80s, before the government sold off Qantas, Australia was a very different place. The government still owned the airline and controlled which airlines could serve our island continent.

Australians, overwhelmingly, flew Qantas internationally. It was enforced brand loyalty. And it came at a price…to the consumer.

But from the nineties, after the government sold Qantas, and routes opened up for competition. International airlines have since swamped the Australian aviation market competing for our travel dollars.

And this is the problem for Qantas: the international carriers do it better. Qantas customers are wising up to the fact that the international players fly better and newer planes. Their staff are friendlier, serve better food and entertainment, and fly better routes.

Qantas job cuts are just a piece of ‘the package’

Alan Joyce, busy sticking his cap out to the government, hasn’t addressed this. Last week’s announcement looks like exacerbating the problem.

He’s deferred the purchase of new aircraft, and cut 5000 jobs, including service and catering staff. He’s also cutting back on routes, leaving competitors — the same group he’s blaming for Qantas’ woes — to snap up Qantas customers.

Here’s another question for you: why would anyone fly Qantas internationally when it flies fewer routes, older planes, and has worse food and service than its competitors?

The answer is they aren’t. This is why Qantas is in the trouble it’s in today.

Callum Denness
Contributing Editor, Money Morning


By MoneyMorning.com.au

My Letter to a ‘Really Confused’ Money Morning Reader

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Some readers find Money Morning confusing.

They don’t get how one person (yours truly) can predict that the Aussie stock market will triple over the next five years, while another (our good pal Vern Gowdie) can predict a 90% market crash.

We understand that confusion. Most people are used to the mainstream ‘company line’ approach of financial advice. That’s where everyone says the same thing at the same time.

So when a publication like Money Morning dares to give readers different views, it’s not a surprise that it’s a shock.

From time to time a reader will challenge us head on. They’ll ask us to explain how we can publish two different views. Here’s how we responded to one gentleman just last week who wrote in to say he was ‘really confused‘ by our publishing of two opposing views…

Hi Richard,

Thanks for your email. It’s a relatively common question, so you’re not the first to ask.

The important thing to note with investing is that there are rarely right or wrong answers to anything. It’s all about the analysis that an individual analyst may use in order to reach a specific conclusion.

In mainstream financial services organisations there is typically a ‘house’ view. The chief analyst or strategist will form a view and all other analysts must follow and comply with that message – even if they don’t agree with it. Put simply, it’s the central planning of ideas.

At Port Phillip Publishing we have a different philosophy. The only ‘house’ view, if you can call it that, is that our editors broadly have the same macroeconomic view of the market (to varying degrees) which advocates free market principles and limited (or in my case zero) government involvement.

This open philosophy means that editors are free to do their own analysis, form their own views, and put forward their own ideas on how people should invest in today’s markets. Naturally, in an open market for ideas there will be conflicting views. But we see that as a positive, not a negative.

But here’s the thing, on the surface it may appear that my view of a soaring market differs completely from Vern’s view of a 90% crash and Dan’s view of an Australian recession. In reality the views aren’t that different.

All three of us agree that governments and central banks have made a hash of supposedly ‘solving’ the 2008 financial meltdown. Each of us agrees that they have in fact made the situation much worse. Each of us agrees that the central banks are distorting markets and asset prices. And each of us agrees that this will lead to a big stock market crash.

The difference is the timing and how investors should approach the market until that event happens.

My view is that the global experiment with paper money and inflation is back on track. By that I mean that governments and central banks have done just enough to avoid a complete collapse, and that the next 5-10 years will see a resumption of the market direction that occurred from the early 1980s through to 2008. This will see the market more than triple over the next six years.

Therefore, I take the view that investors should take advantage of this inflationary stock rally by using central bank and government meddling to their advantage.

Conversely, Vern’s view is that the market is so risky right now that if the market only advances by – say – 5% per year, the reward from holding stocks doesn’t offset the risk if stocks fall.

Because if Vern is right, the market is at serious risk of a calamitous 90% crash. So he suggests that investors hold all their money in cash and then look to buy stocks after the fall.

So who’s right?

That’s impossible to tell until after the event.

The important part is that Port Phillip Publishing employs free thinking analysts who are free to publish their ideas without the constraints of a ‘house’ view. After all, just because Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Commonwealth Bank or Royal Bank of Scotland have a single ‘house’ view it doesn’t make it any more likely they’ll get it right – 2008 is a perfect example of that.

In fact I’d argue it’s more likely they’ll get it wrong and miss big market moves due to the lack of questioning and opposing views within the organisation.

But let me make one final point.

Although Port Phillip Publishing has an open policy on ideas, that doesn’t mean we publish any old rubbish. Part of Dan [Denning] and I’s role as publishers is to vet every idea we publish to make sure the analyst is making a coherent and defensible argument.

If we don’t believe the analyst has thought about an idea thoroughly or if we believe they haven’t fully explained their position, we’ll ask them to rethink their work. Only when we’re satisfied that the analyst has prepared an idea that stands up to criticism will we allow it to be published. It’s then up to the market and the course of events to determine whether the analyst was right or wrong in their view.

After that, it’s then up to the reader to decide for themselves whose argument makes more sense. Some readers follow one idea because it conforms to their own views. Other readers take a mix of the ideas because they’re both equally well argued. Others don’t have a biased view, and therefore base their investments on the ideas that they believe will work best for them with the money they have to invest.

I hope that goes some way to explaining how we operate.

Ultimately, we’re providing investment ideas to individuals. We don’t manage money. The final decision on whose advice you follow and how you invest your savings is entirely up to you. That, we believe, is the beauty of individuals taking charge of their investments and making their own decisions.

Cheers,
Kris+

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Technology’s Response to a Highly Adaptable Disease: Cancer

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Humans are complex organisms. Not only are we composed of trillions of cells, but those cells come in an incredible array. From a single fertilised reproductive cell dividing in two, our cells somehow differentiate into at least 200 different variations.

New tools constantly reveal more about the inner workings of cells. For example, we have found that some cell types specialise in transmitting and storing information. Electrical messages speeding through the central nervous system travel at more than 100 miles per hour.

Red blood cells deliver oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body and remove carbon dioxide. Trillions of them circulate in the bloodstream at any given moment, and they are replenished in the bone marrow at an astonishing rate of 2 million per second.

Unfortunately, the great variety of cells that make human life possible also makes it difficult to design a single cure to repair genes when they become corrupted and threaten to change into cancers. Because there are hundreds of different cell types, there are hundreds of different kinds of cancer.

One of the reasons cancer isn’t a single disease is that each cell type behaves differently when it goes haywire. A drug that works in one type of cancer often won’t work on another. Even in the same cancer, mutations can be different.

Meanwhile, as we begin to conquer other diseases, cancer is moving up the ranks as the leading cause of death. In the United Kingdom, for example, it has already overtaken cardiovascular disease. In the United States, it is poised to do so.

That’s one result of longer lifespans: we increase our chances of getting cancer.

It isn’t so much that cancer is deadlier than it used to be in times past, by the way.

We are constantly improving our ability to fight the disease, and we make progress every year as new diagnostic tests or therapies become available. The reason cancer is moving up the ranks is because of relative improvement compared with other life-enders — we’ve become much better at dealing with other big killers, like heart disease, than with cancer.

Overall, we live longer, of course. But the flip side of living longer is that cancer rates tend to rise as we age. Since we now escape cardiovascular ravages at greater rates than ever before, our cells reach ages where they become more prone to malignant mutation.

I had my own brush with this threat at the ripe old age of 20.

Thankfully, I’m still alive, thanks to technology that became available by the 1990s. Only a few decades sooner and I’d just be a memory.

Since then, both the size of the problem and the cost of treating cancer have only been rising.

The National Institutes of Health estimates that cancer of all kinds cost the U.S. economy $124 billion in 2010. By 2020, that figure is expected to rise to $200 billion. If we add indirect costs such as loss of productivity and premature death, the price of cancer doubles.

And of course, there is no way to put a price on the loss of life itself. What is the cost of losing your husband or wife, son or daughter, mother or father?

Cancer is tough because it isn’t a single disease, but a group of diseases. The more we learn about it, the more complex it appears.

In addition, cancer is highly adaptive. Like the Borg, that alien race of cybernetic aliens from Star Trek, it can quickly adjust and neutralise our most powerful weapons.

Not only is cancer complex at the cellular level, but we are also learning that a tumour can contain different kinds of cancer cells, making it much like an organism in that sense. We may be able to develop a drug that can wipe out one kind of cancer cell, but others can survive and regrow a tumour.

Some people think we’ll never vanquish this biological Borg. I believe they’re wrong and that we eventually will.

Even if we don’t find a single magic bullet to end the relentless advance of mutant cells once they’ve appeared in the body, we can develop a suite of weapons that, if used in combination, can eventually slay the invaders in cases that are incurable today.

Although I don’t expect we’ll hit upon a magic formula for treating all cancers anytime soon, we will continue to make inroads treating different types.

Nonetheless, progress seems horribly slow. The truth is that the vast majority of "cured" cancer patients are not far away from a return of their cancer as metastasised cells can no longer be reined in. For a number of cancers, the true cure rate over 20 years is 4%.

Yet no one is giving up. There are more drugs in development for cancer than for any disease, partly because people will pay huge sums when lives are at stake.

The market is enormous, and innovative biotechnology pioneers who succeed in using the latest science and technology to find new ways to vanquish the disease will make their investors wealthy.

Ray Blanco,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed note: The above article was originally published in The Daily Reckoning US.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Binary Options Trading Platforms Explained

Typical Binary Option Trade Window

When conducting some research it is amazing how little information there is on binary options trading platforms. When you do come across site is usually the same web interface that is calling you to make a deposit in order to test out the system. The software will ask the question will EURUSD go up or down? Then they will have their enticing interface for you to guess whether upper down should be your choice.

MT4 Binary Options

The first question one would ask is how about a little more information? This tiny little chart that is being provided that looks more like an EKG rather than something that will determine which direction a Currency Pair will go. It appears that a little more in terms of analytical tools would help. You should be able to use the full functionality of the charting package to determine this. Another question one should ask is how about market transparency?

Are you able to trade the underlying currency pair at this broker? The answer to this is not really for most of the binary options brokers. So what we discovered is that for most binary options brokers they don’t really provide you with trading software. They also don’t provide you with the ability to trade the underlying Forex currency pair.

Within seem only logical to use a true and tested trading platform. Anyone who is traded Forex in the past should be quite familiar with MT4. MT4 is used by a vast majority of Forex traders. Now through a few select Forex brokers you can now trade binary options on it as well. Of course you can trade both binary options and Forex and whatever other products are offered from your broker. This will look to provide anyone looking to trade binary options all the necessary tools.

 

To learn more please visit www.clmforex.com

 

Disclaimer

Trading of foreign exchange contracts, contracts for difference, derivatives and other investment products which are leveraged, can carry a high level of risk. These products may not be suitable for all investors. It is possible to lose more than your initial investment. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) is available from the company website. Please read and consider the PDS before making any decision to trade Core Liquidity Markets’ products. The risks must be understood prior to trading. Core Liquidity Markets refers to Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd. Core Liquidity Markets is an Australian company

 

 

 

EUR/USD Forecast March 10 – 14

Article by Investazor.com

Euro currency has ride a rising wave which pushed it back to 2011 highs. The first half of last week was calm, but the second half brought some interesting market moves. The ECB press conference has triggered the rally for the single currency. Beside the fact that the ECB maintained the interest rate unchanged, Draghi kept its optimist tone at the press conference.

After EURUSD reached a multiannual high it was helped to retreat back under 1.3900 on Friday when the NFP was published above analyst’s expectations. The 175K published for the Non-Farm Employment Change and the 6.7% unemployment rate pushed the dollar a bit higher, but the EURUSD did not fell lower than 1.3850.

Keep on reading our article to see what to expect for this week and also what our technical view are for the short and medium term for the EURUSD price action.

Economic Calendar

Tuesday

German Trade Balance – (07:00 GMT). The difference in value between imported and exported goods during the reported month it is expected to be around 19.3 billion. In February the actual was higher than the analysts forecasted and higher than the January value.

The post EUR/USD Forecast March 10 – 14 appeared first on investazor.com.

Trading the GBP Using Economic calendar Data

UK manufacturing production (MoM) (YoY) and UK industrial production (MoM) (YoY) are set for release on Tuesday, March 11.  The figures are forecast at 3.0% (YoY)/0.2% (MoM) and 3.3% (YoY) / 0.3% (MoM) respectively. A better than expected release across the board will drive the GBP/USD towards 2009 highs and hint at a continuation of the longer term uptrend. A worse than expected release will reinforce 2009 highs as resistance, and indicate a potential reversal. If the data is bullish, expect the GBP support of 1.670 to hold and GBP/USD should rise to 1.6800. If the data is entirely bearish, expect a break below the long term resistance and channel support of 1.670. Then there will likely be a decline towards the 2000-period MVA.

gbp-usd mva

By Daniel Elo, Analyst at www.EconomicCalendar.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thoughts from the Frontline: The Problem with Keynesianism

By John Mauldin

 

“The belief that wealth subsists not in ideas, attitudes, moral codes, and mental disciplines but in identifiable and static things that can be seized and redistributed is the materialist superstition. It stultified the works of Marx and other prophets of violence and envy. It frustrates every socialist revolutionary who imagines that by seizing the so-called means of production he can capture the crucial capital of an economy. It is the undoing of nearly every conglomerateur who believes he can safely enter new industries by buying rather than by learning them. It confounds every bureaucrat who imagines he can buy the fruits of research and development.

“The cost of capturing technology is mastery of the knowledge embodied in the underlying science. The means of entrepreneurs’ production are not land, labor, or capital but minds and hearts….

“Whatever the inequality of incomes, it is dwarfed by the inequality of contributions to human advancement. As the science fiction writer Robert Heinlein wrote, ‘Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances that permit this norm to be exceeded – here and there, now and then – are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of society, the people slip back into abject poverty. This is known as bad luck.’

“President Obama unconsciously confirmed Heinlein’s sardonic view of human nature in a campaign speech in Iowa: ‘We had reversed the recession, avoided depression, got the economy moving again, but over the last six months we’ve had a run of bad luck.’ All progress comes from the creative minority. Even government-financed research and development, outside the results-oriented military, is mostly wasted. Only the contributions of mind, will, and morality are enduring. The most important question for the future of America is how we treat our entrepreneurs. If our government continues to smear, harass, overtax, and oppressively regulate them, we will be dismayed by how swiftly the engines of American prosperity deteriorate. We will be amazed at how quickly American wealth flees to other countries….

“Those most acutely threatened by the abuse of American entrepreneurs are the poor. If the rich are stultified by socialism and crony capitalism, the lower economic classes will suffer the most as the horizons of opportunity close. High tax rates and oppressive regulations do not keep anyone from being rich. They prevent poor people from becoming rich. High tax rates do not redistribute incomes or wealth; they redistribute taxpayers – out of productive investment into overseas tax havens and out of offices and factories into beach resorts and municipal bonds. But if the 1 percent and the 0.1 percent are respected and allowed to risk their wealth – and new rebels are allowed to rise up and challenge them – America will continue to be the land where the last regularly become the first by serving others.”

– George Gilder, Knowledge and Power: The Information Theory of Capitalism

“The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually slaves of some defunct economist.”

– John Maynard Keynes

“Nothing is more dangerous than a dogmatic worldview – nothing more constraining, more blinding to innovation, more destructive of openness to novelty.”

– Stephen Jay Gould

I think Lord Keynes himself would appreciate the irony that he has become the defunct economist under whose influence the academic and bureaucratic classes now toil, slaves to what has become as much a religious belief system as it is an economic theory. Men and women who display an appropriate amount of skepticism on all manner of other topics indiscriminately funnel a wide assortment of facts and data through the filter of Keynesianism without ever questioning its basic assumptions. And then some of them go on to prescribe government policies that have profound effects upon the citizens of their nations.

And when those policies create the conditions that engender the income inequality they so righteously oppose, they prescribe more of the same bad medicine. Like 18th-century physicians applying leeches to their patients, they take comfort in the fact that all right-minded and economic scientists and philosophers concur with their recommended treatments.

This week, let’s look at the problems with Keynesianism and examine its impact on income inequality.

But first, let me note that Gary Shilling has agreed to come to our Strategic Investment Conference this May 13-16 in San Diego, joining a star-studded lineup of speakers who have already committed. This is really going to be the best conference ever, and you need to figure out how to make it. Early registration pricing goes away at the end of this week. My team at Mauldin Economics has produced a short, fun introductory clip featuring some of the speakers; so enjoy the video, check out the rest of our lineup, and then sign up to join us.

This is the first year we have not had to limit our conference to accredited investors; nor are we limiting attendance from outside the United States. We have a new venue that will allow us to adequately grow the conference over time. But we will not change the format of what many people call the best investment and economic conference in the US. Hope to see you there. And now on to our letter.

Ideas have consequences, and bad ideas have bad consequences. We started a series two weeks ago on income inequality, the current cause célèbre in economic and political circles. What spurred me to undertake this series was a recent paper from two economists (one from the St. Louis Federal Reserve) who are utterly remarkable in their ability to combine more bad economic ideas and research techniques into one paper than anyone else in recent memory.

Their even more remarkable conclusion is that income inequality was the cause of the Great Recession and subsequent lackluster growth. “Redistributive tax policy” is suggested approvingly. If direct redistribution is not politically possible, then other methods should be tried, the authors say. I’m sure that, given more time and data, the researchers could have used their methodology to ascribe the rise in teenage acne to income inequality as well.

So what is this notorious document? It’s “Inequality, the Great Recession, and Slow Recovery,” by Barry Z. Cynamon and Steven M. Fazzari. One could ask whether this is not just one more bad economic paper among many. If so, why should we waste our time on it?

(Let me state for the record that I am sure Messieurs Cynamon and Fazzari are wonderful husbands and fathers, their children love them, and their pets are happy when they come home. In addition, they are probably outstanding citizens who are active in all sorts of good things in their communities. Their friends and colleagues enjoy convivial gatherings with them. I’m sure that if I were to sit down to dinner with them [not likely to happen after this letter], we would have a lively debate and hugely enjoy ourselves. This is not a personal attack. I simply mean to eviscerate as best I can the rather malignant ideas that they are proffering.)

That income inequality stifles growth is not simply the idea of two economists in St. Louis. It is a widely held view that pervades almost the entire academic economics establishment. Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has been pushing such an idea for some time (along with Paul Krugman, et al.); and a recent IMF paper suggests that slow growth is a direct result of income inequality, simply dismissing any so-called “right-wing” ideas that call into question the authors’ logic or methodology.

The challenge is that the subject of income inequality has now permeated the national dialogue not just in the United States but throughout the developed world. It will shape the coming political contests in the United States. How we describe income inequality and determine its proximate causes will define the boundaries of future economic and social policy. In discussing multiple problems with the Cynamon-Fazzari paper, we have the opportunity to think about how we should actually address income inequality. And hopefully we’ll steer away from simplistic answers that conveniently mesh with our political biases.

I should note that my readers have sent me an overwhelming amount of research on income inequality that I’ve been wading through for the past week. Some of it is quite discomforting, and a great deal is politically incorrect, at least some of which is almost certain to offend my gentle readers. Who knew that income inequality is not due to the greedy rich but to marriage patterns or the size of households or any number of interesting correlated factors? The research will all be thought-provoking, and we’ll will cover it in depth next week; but today let’s stay focused on the ideas of defunct economists.

Why Is Economic Theory Important?

Some readers may say, this is all well and good, but it’s just economic theory. How does that matter to our investment portfolios? The direct answer is that economic theory drives the policies of central banks and determines the price of money, and the price of money is fundamental to the prices of all our assets. What central banks do can be either helpful or harmful. Their actions can dampen volatility in the short term while intensifying pressures that distort prices, forming bubbles – which always end in significant reversals, often quite precipitously. (Note that it is not always high asset values that tumble. It is just as possible for central banks to repress the value of some assets to such low levels that they become a coiled spring.)

As we outlined at length in Code Red, central banks have a very limited set of policy tools with which to address crises. While the tools have all sorts of unlikely names, they are essentially limited to manipulating interest rates (the price of money) and flooding the market with liquidity. (Yes, I know that they can impose changes in a few secondary regulatory issues like margins, reserves, etc., but these are not their primary functions.)

The central banks of the US and England are beginning to wind down their extraordinary monetary policies. But whenever the next recession or crisis hits in the US, England, or Europe, their reaction to the problem – and subsequent monetary policy – are going to be based on Keynesian theory. The central bankers will give us more of the same, but it will be in an environment of already low rates and more than adequate liquidity. You need to understand how the theory they’re working from will express itself in the economy and affect your investment portfolio.

I should point out, however, that central banks are not the primary cause of distorted economic policy. They are reacting to the fiscal policies and political realities of their various countries. Japan’s government ran up the largest government debt-to-equity ratio in modern times; and now, as a result, the Japanese Central Bank is forced to monetize that debt.

Leverage and the distorted price of money have been at the root of almost every bubble in the postwar world. It is tempting to veer off into a soliloquy on the history of the problems leverage creates, but let’s forbear for now and deal with Keynesian thinking about income inequality.

The Problem with Keynesianism

Let’s start with a classic definition of Keynesianism from Wikipedia, so that we can all be comfortable that I’m not coloring the definition with my own bias (and, yes, I admit I have a bias). (Emphasis mine.)

Keynesian economics (or Keynesianism) is the view that in the short run, especially during recessions, economic output is strongly influenced by aggregate demand (total spending in the economy). In the Keynesian view, aggregate demand does not necessarily equal the productive capacity of the economy; instead, it is influenced by a host of factors and sometimes behaves erratically, affecting production, employment, and inflation.

The theories forming the basis of Keynesian economics were first presented by the British economist John Maynard Keynes in his book The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, published in 1936, during the Great Depression. Keynes contrasted his approach to the aggregate supply-focused “classical” economics that preceded his book. The interpretations of Keynes that followed are contentious, and several schools of economic thought claim his legacy.

Keynesian economists often argue that private sector decisions sometimes lead to inefficient macroeconomic outcomes which require active policy responses by the public sector, in particular, monetary policy actions by the central bank and fiscal policy actions by the government, in order to stabilize output over the business cycle. Keynesian economics advocates a mixed economy – predominantly private sector, but with a role for government intervention during recessions.

(Before I launch into a critique of Keynesianism, let me point out that I find much to admire in the thinking of John Maynard Keynes. He was a great economist and taught us a great deal. Further, and this is important, my critique is simplistic. A proper examination of the problems with Keynesianism would require a lengthy paper or a book. We are just skimming along the surface and don’t have time for a deep dive.)

Central banks around the world and much of academia have been totally captured by Keynesian thinking. In the current avant-garde world of neo-Keynesianism, consumer demand –consumption – is everything. Federal Reserve monetary policy is clearly driven by the desire to stimulate demand through lower interest rates and easy money.

And Keynesian economists (of all stripes) want fiscal policy (essentially, the budgets of governments) to increase consumer demand. If the consumer can’t do it, the reasoning goes, then the government should step in and fill the breach. This of course requires deficit spending and the borrowing of money (including from your local central bank).

Essentially, when a central bank lowers interest rates, it is trying to make it easier for banks to lend money to businesses and for consumers to borrow money to spend. Economists like to see the government commit to fiscal stimulus at the same time, as well. They point to the numerous recessions that have ended after fiscal stimulus and lower rates were applied. They see the ending of recessions as proof that Keynesian doctrine works.

There are several problems with this line of thinking. First, using leverage (borrowed money) to stimulate spending today must by definition lower consumption in the future. Debt is future consumption denied or future consumption brought forward. Keynesian economists would argue that if you bring just enough future consumption into the present to stimulate positive growth, then that present “good” is worth the future drag on consumption, as long as there is still positive growth. Leverage just evens out the ups and downs. There is a certain logic to this, of course, which is why it is such a widespread belief.

Keynes argued, however, that money borrowed to alleviate recession should be repaid when growth resumes. My reading of Keynes does not suggest that he believed in the continual fiscal stimulus encouraged by his disciples and by the cohort that are called neo-Keynesians.

Secondly, as has been well documented by Ken Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart, there comes a point at which too much leverage on both private and government debt becomes destructive. There is no exact number or way of knowing when that point will be reached. It arrives when lenders, typically in the private sector, decide that the borrowers (whether private or government) might have some difficulty in paying back the debt and therefore begin to ask for more interest to compensate them for their risks. An overleveraged economy can’t afford the increase in interest rates, and economic contraction ensues. Sometimes the contraction is severe, and sometimes it can be absorbed. When it is accompanied by the popping of an economic bubble, it is particularly disastrous and can take a decade or longer to work itself out, as the developed world is finding out now.

Every major “economic miracle” since the end of World War II has been a result of leverage. Often this leverage has been accompanied by stimulative fiscal and monetary policies. Every single “miracle” has ended in tears, with the exception of the current recent runaway expansion in China, which is now being called into question. (And this is why so many eyes in the investment world are laser-focused on China. Forget about a hard landing or a recession, a simple slowdown in China has profound effects on the rest of the world.)

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Crude Prices Declines on China Data and Tension in Ukraine

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Crude prices seen trading lower on Monday on weak China export data, while the crises in Ukraine remains in the spotlight as Crimea prepares on voting to join Russia. Currently, the EU position seems to be that the voting will not be authorized for the Ukrainian government because the Ukrainian government did not agree to the referendum.

The West Texas Intermediate (WTI) delivery slid 1.17% lower to $101.39 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at the time of writing. At the same time the European benchmark Brent crude for April settlement fell 0.79% to 108.14 per barrel on the ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Crude – China

The drop in China’s exports was the most since the global financial crises, adding to concerns over the crude-demand growth, after the Communist Party leaders meeting set a 7.5% economic growth target for 2014.

China imported 23.05 million metric tons of crude in February, dropping by 18% from the record-high seen in January, the custom reports revealed.

China is expected to account for nearly 11% of global oil demand this year, while the US is forecasted to account for 21%, forecasts from the International Energy Agency confirmed.

According to analysts, reports from China and the ongoing in tension in Ukraine is dragging the crude prices lower. The German politician, Angela Merkel said she rebuked the Russian president Vladimir Putin, saying that a planned referendum on whether Crimea should join Russia was violating Ukraine’s constitution.

Crude – Other News

Meanwhile, the oil and gas company, Gazprom posted a notice on Friday that the company could stop shipping gas to Ukraine due to unpaid bills, adding pressure on the new government. Nearly one third of major gas supplies to the EU come from Russia.

 

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Asian Stocks Edges Lower on Downbeat Reports

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Stocks in the Asian region were seen trading lower on Monday, as a string of Japanese economic reports, including Japan’s gross domestic product (GDP) figures and current account data; came in lower than expected.

The Japanese benchmark Nikkei 225 index slid 1.01% lower at 15,120.14 points on Monday, while Tokyo’s broader Topix gauge lost 0.76% to 1,227.61 points.

Stocks – Japan Reports

The Japanese gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a slower pace than initially reported, rising by 0.2% in the fourth quarter, weaker than the 0.3% reported by the Cabinet Office in February. Domestic demand climbed by 0.7%, while investment rose by 1.5%. Exports rose by 0.4%, while imports surged 3.5% over the quarter.

A separate report released revealed the gap in Japan’s current account deficit reaching 1.59 trillion yen in January, climbing some 350% over the year and 176% from 638 billion yen in the previous month, according to data from the Ministry of Finance on Monday.

Stocks – China Trade Balance

Over the weekend, China’s trade data came in disappointing and raising concerns about the country’s economic growth as China’s trade balance revealed a deficit of $23.0 billion in the previous month. As exports dropped 18% year-on-year, compared to analysts forecast of an 11% growth. As for the country’s imports, imports growth picked up slightly higher than expected, standing at 10.1% year-on-year.

The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) lowered the rate of the Yuan to the lowest officially fixed exchange rate of the Yuan since December 3. Inflation in China came in at 2.0% in February, weaker than analysts’ estimates of 2.2%.

Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng index was dragged lower by the reports, dropping 1.85% lower to 22,240.21 points at the time of writing, while the mainland China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite declined 2.86% to close at 1,999.06.

 

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