• Thanong
  • ranking : Nation Staff
  • email : thanong@nationgroup.com
  • created : 2007-07-02
  • entry : 279
  • visitors : 201373
  • votes : 316
  • send msg :
Thanong
Thanong Khanthong
Permalink : http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/thanong
Wednesday , November 4 , 2009
US debt, Japanese debt
Posted by Thanong , Reader : 262 , 08:37:32  
Print


November 4, 2009

By: Eric Sprott & David Franklin
SPROTT ASSET MANAGEMENT LP
Surreality Check Part Two...

In November 2007 we wrote an article entitled “Surreality Check… Dead Men Walking”, in which we discussed the early warning signs of the impending credit crisis and highlighted companies that were looking particularly troubled to us at the time.


We identified General Motors with a book value of negative $74 per share that boasted a market cap of $15 billion. (Ask your friendly neighborhood Chartered Financial Analyst to explain that one to you). Two years later? Following a $50 billion government injection, GM declared bankruptcy on June 1, 2009 and reemerged on July 10, 2009 with new owners consisting of: the US Treasury (60.8%), the Crown in Right of Canada (11.7%), previous GM bondholders (10%) and the UAW Health Care Trust (17.5%). GM stock went to zero.

We identified Fannie Mae, which, at the time, had a market cap of $40 billion and owned/guaranteed $2.7 trillion of mortgages - or about a quarter of all residential mortgages in the United States. Fannie’s leverage ratio was a sobering 67:1. Two years later? Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have both been nationalized. On September 7th, 2008, the US Treasury announced the two mortgage giants were being placed into a conservatorship run by the FHFA and pledged up to $200 billion each to back their crumbling balance sheets.

We highlighted Citigroup as a candidate for collapse under the weight of its subprime portfolio. One year later? $25 billion from the TARP program, a massive US government guarantee on $306 billion in residential and commercial loans and a cash injection of $27 billion into Citigroup for preferred shares. It was a de facto nationalization.
Why the walk down memory lane? The equity market performance in November 2007 masked the underlying problems plaguing the financial system at the time, and it’s blindingly apparent that it is doing the same again today. The government has assumed most of the financial system’s liabilities in a giant game of ‘kick the can’. The calls for a new bull market are coming fast and furious. Market participants are bidding up the stocks of companies that are demonstrably bankrupt, and government balance sheets have ballooned to unforeseen levels. As respected market commentator David Rosenberg recently wrote, “the stock market is divorced from economic reality”.1 It’s time for another surreality check, but this time it isn’t the publicly traded companies that deserve attention, it’s the governments that have saved them. Make no mistake – the dead men are still walking – they’re just a lot bigger now than they were two years ago, and they don’t generate earnings – they print money and tax their citizens.

In case you failed to catch it in our previous articles this year, we thought we’d state it outright for our readers this month: the United States Government is on a trajectory to default on their obligations. In its current financial condition, it will not be able to fund its forecasted budget deficits and unfunded Social Security and Medicare promises on top of its current debt obligations. This isn’t official yet, and we don’t know when the market will react to it, but there is no longer any doubt about the extent of their trajectory. There simply isn’t enough taxing power, value creation or outside capital willing to support its egregious spending.

Stating the obvious may be construed by some as fear mongering, ‘talking up our book’ or worse, but our view is not as severe as you might think. In the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis’ Review from July/August 2006, Lawrence Kotlikoff stated that “partial-equilibrium analysis strongly suggests that the U.S. government is, indeed, bankrupt, insofar as it will be unable to pay its creditors, who, in this context, are current and future generations to whom it has explicitly or implicitly promised future net payments of various kinds.” 2 He went on to suggest that the US should immediately close the Social Security program to reduce future liabilities (could you imagine?), use a voucher system for Medicare to limit costs, and replace personal, corporate, payroll and estate taxes with a single federal sales tax. All this, published in an article from 2006, well before the credit crisis and subsequent meltdown had even begun!

Three years later, the financial condition of the US government is completely untenable. The projected US deficit from 2009 to 2019 is now slated to be almost $9 trillion dollars.3 How on earth does anyone expect them to raise this capital? As we stated in a previous article, in order to satisfy US capital requirements, all existing investors would have had to increase their US bond purchases by 200% in fiscal 2009. Foreigners, however, only increased their purchases by a mere 28% from September 2008 to July 2009 - far short of what the US government required.4 The US taxpayer can’t cover the difference either. According to recent estimates, tax revenue from all sources would have to increase by 61% in order to balance the 2010 fiscal budget. Given that State government income tax revenues were down 27.5% in the second quarter, the US government will be lucky just to maintain its current level of tax revenue, let alone increase it.


The bottom line is that there is serious cause for concern here – and don’t be fooled into thinking this crisis will fix itself when (and if) the economy recovers. Just how bad is it? Below we outline the obligations of the US Federal Government from 2004 to 2009. We present two sets of numbers, as government accounting can vary widely depending upon the source. In column A, we outline the Total US government Obligations, using actuarial reports from the Social Security Administration and the Medicare Trustees Reports. In column B we identify Total Federal obligations according to GAAP accounting provided by Shadow Government Statistics, calculated on a US fiscal year end basis with estimates for 2009. The differences in the absolute amount of total obligations ($114.7 trillion vs. $74.6 trillion in 2009) are a function of timing, the calculation timeline for Social Security and Medicare, and other obligations included under GAAP rules. Either way we choose to calculate it, the total number is preposterously large. From 2004 to 2009, US unfunded obligations increased by an average of almost 50% over this six year period under both calculation methods, while US government revenue increased by only 12%.6 No company or government can increase its liabilities by more than four times the rate of its revenue and stay solvent for an extended period of time.

And as the numbers imply, the hole that the US government is digging is getting deeper by the minute. On a GAAP basis, US government unfunded obligations increased by more than $9 trillion from last year alone! That represents ten years of projected deficits added in a mere twelve months. How can this be happening? The numbers are surreal, and we must ask ourselves how much longer the world will continue to support this spending frenzy.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is another major problem for the US. The FDIC’s Deposit Insurance Fund, which had $10.4 billion at the end of June, has spent so much covering bank failures over the last three months that it is now completely out of money. This means there is no capital set aside to insure the $4.8 trillion of deposits and $320 billion worth of FDIC-guaranteed debt that US banks and other financial companies have issued. The real shocker that we discovered some time ago is that the FDIC ‘funds’ were never even held in a segregated bank account – the fees collected from the banks are accounted for as a part of the government’s general revenues that go towards military spending, bailouts, interest costs and other government programs. The FDIC ‘fund’ merely consisted of IOU’s from the general revenues accounts. And now that the Deposit Insurance Fund balance as of September 30, 2009 is negative the FDIC wants the institutions to prepay their assessments for all of 2010, 2011 and 2012.13 In effect, the FDIC wants to borrow money from the banks it provides insurance for. Does this not strike you as surreal? Why would anyone have any confidence in anything the FDIC guarantees?

**********************************************

It's Japan we should be worrying about!

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Published: 5:33PM GMT 01 Nov 2009


It is Japan we should be worrying about, not America
Japan is drifting helplessly towards a dramatic fiscal crisis. For 20 years the world's second-largest economy has been able to borrow cheaply from a captive bond market, feeding its addiction to Keynesian deficit spending – and allowing it to push public debt beyond the point of no return. 
 

The rocketing cost of insuring against the bankruptcy of the Japanese state is telling us that the model has smashed into the buffers. Credit default swaps (CDS) on five-year Japanese debt have risen from 35 to 63 basis points since early September. Japan has suddenly decoupled from Germany (21), France (22), the US (22), and even Britain (47).

Regime-change in Tokyo and the arrival of Yukio Hatoyama's neophyte Democrats – raising $550bn (£333bn) to help fund their blitz on welfare and the "new social policy" – have concentrated the minds of investors at long last. "Markets are worried that Japan is going to hit a brick wall: the sums are gargantuan," said Albert Edwards, a Japan-veteran at Société Générale. 

 
Simon Johnson, former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), told the US Congress last week that the debt path was out of control and raised "a real risk that Japan could end up in a major default".

The IMF expects Japan's gross public debt to reach 218pc of gross domestic product (GDP) this year, 227pc next year, and 246pc by 2014. This has been manageable so far only because Japanese savers have been willing – or coerced – into lending for almost nothing. The yield on 10-year government bonds has been around 1.30pc this year, though they jumped to 1.42pc last week.

"Can these benign conditions be expected to continue in the face of even-larger increases in public debt? Going forward, the markets capacity to absorb debt is likely to diminish as population ageing reduces saving," said the IMF.

The savings rate has crashed from 15pc in 1990 to near 2pc today, half America's rate. Japan's $1.5 trillion state pension fund (the world's biggest) has become a net seller of government bonds this year, as it must to meet pay-out obligations. The demographic crunch has hit. The workforce been contracting since 2005.

Japan Post Bank is balking at further additions to its $1.7 trillion holdings of state debt. The pillars of the government debt market are crumbling. Little wonder that the Ministry of Finance has begun advertising bonds in Tokyo taxis, featuring Koyuki from The Last Samurai. If Japan's bond rates rise to global levels of 3pc to 4pc, interest costs will shatter state finances.

No one knows exactly when a country tips into a debt compound trap. But Japan must be close, even allowing for the fact that liabilities of the state Loan Programme (FILP) have fallen by 40pc of GDP since 2000.

"The debt situation is irrecoverable," said Carl Weinberg from High Frequency Economics. "I don't see any orderly way out of this. They will not be able to fund their deficit. There will be a fiscal shutdown, a pension haircut, and bank failures that will rock the world. It is criminally negligent that rating agencies are not blowing the whistle on this."

Mr Hatoyama inherited a country that was already hurtling into sovereign "Chapter 11". The Great Recession has eaten up 27pc in tax revenues. Industrial output is down 19pc, even after the summer rebound; exports are down 31pc; the economy is 10pc smaller today in "nominal" terms than a year ago – and nominal is what matters for debt.

Tokyo's price index fell 2.4pc in October, the deepest deflation in modern Japanese history. Real interest rates have risen 300 basis points in a year. It reads like a page from Irving Fisher's 1933 paper, Debt Deflation Causes of Great Depressions.

The Bank of Japan seems oddly insouciant. It will end its (feeble) quantitative easing in December by suspending purchases of corporate debt, much to the fury of the Finance Ministry.

"This is incredibly dangerous," said Russell Jones from the RBC Capital Markets. "The rate of deflation is shocking. The debt dynamics are horrible and there is the risk of a downward spiral."

Tokyo has let the yen appreciate violently – 90 to the dollar, 13 to the Chinese yuan – giving another twist to the deflation knife. Top exporters are below break-even cost, says RBS. The government could stop this, as it did in a wave of manic dollar purchases from 2003-2004. It could print money à l'outrance to stave off deflation. Yet it sits frozen, like a rabbit in the headlamps.

Japan's terrible errors are by now well known. It failed to jettison its mercantilist export model in time. It resisted the feminist revolution, leading to a baby strike by young women. It acquiesced in a mad investment bubble (like China now) in the 1980s, stealing growth from the future.

It wasted its immense fiscal firepower, scattering money for 20 years on half-baked spending projects to keep the economy afloat. QE was too little, too late, and this is the lesson for the West. We must cut borrowing drastically over the next decade, and offset this with ultra-easy monetary policy. Does Downing Street understand this? Does the White House? Does the European Central Bank? Clearly not.


Read comment

comment 9
wch date : 06/11/2009 time : 08.54
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/wch

Income vs debt is 1 : 4 the justifiable justice 'manageable level', of any government in power. Here 1 is annual tax income.
If it goes beyond this ratio, they can easily find solution. Increase income tax or print note.
comment 8
massein date : 05/11/2009 time : 12.21
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/massein

The golden rule always applies C 1.I take it that Mr Thanong does not except tha t President is the mirical man to solve all these problems
comment 7
lonewolf date : 05/11/2009 time : 03.44

Perhaps the greatest known and most successful capitalist in the US, Warren Buffett has just agreed to invest $44 Billion USD in the purchase of a US railroad.

“Widely regarded as both one of the world's richest men and the investment community's more brilliant minds, Buffett called his firm's investment an ‘all-in wager on the economic future of the United States’.”

“The reason that a rebound in the fortunes of railroads, truckers and air freight carriers speaks well for the economy's prospects is fairly simple. Increased demand for transportation services is probably a sign that companies are manufacturing and producing more goods that need to be shipped to warehouses, retailers and -- eventually -- consumers.” Buffett also indicated that because of the cheap dollar, American products are now marketable throughout the world which will increase product demand and the manufacturing base in the US. Jobs which this time around, will not be outsourced to China.

In an interview with several investment and financial newspapers and periodicals Warren Buffet stated that he is very pro-Obama and fully supports his economic policies which he believes has and will continue to positively shift the economy. You may disagree with his political perspective but it is hard to contradict his lifetime of capitalist success…he is optimistic about the economic future of the US and he is spending his money in support of his beliefs.
Why would one accept the opinion of economists who are positioned above the fray, rather than a person who is in the trenches and who arguably understands the current economic system better than most?
comment 6
Alien date : 04/11/2009 time : 23.00
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/alien

The last time I read about it, the average U. S. worker is much more productive than the average European worker. This is mostly due to the fact that the U. S. worker does not get the time off allowed to Europeans and works a longer work-week (40+ hours in U. S.). What is France now - 32??? The average U. S. worker gets a little under 2 weeks vacation per year, alot of Europeans seem to get a month. I think Europeans may have a better "quality of life" factor. The figures are probably even wider apart now as U. S. companies, seeing that the government doesn't want to enforce any immigration laws are now replacing U. S. workers with Mexicans at 1/2 the price with few or no benefits. OK, maybe the last sentence is an exaggeration, but not by much. American companies seem to only be able to attrack 50% of the Mexican population to come here and work at lower wages. The other 50% is too stubborn. Not to worry, Asians are picking up some of the short-fall.
comment 5
anthonyford date : 04/11/2009 time : 13.30
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anthonyford
The Truth is Freedom

C4- If you asked the question if European workers are twice as efficient as a US workers and 16 times more efficient than a Thai worker then I would have to say not and this case is definately not sustainable. However, European businesses and workers are more heavily protected from the free market than the US or Japan. Their correction may come later.
comment 4
Plaadip date : 04/11/2009 time : 12.00

C2, you should talk about the salary of workers in Europe, first. They've got more than twice than us.:) Can you maintain this status quo?
comment 3
Alien date : 04/11/2009 time : 11.52
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/alien

Hee's the good news - GMAC (General Motors financing arm) is asking for another 7 to 8 billion of government bailout money. Easy bet. The unions own Obama, the unions and the government own GM, will they get the additional money??? Only one guess per person. Ford, which did NOT take a government bailout is predicting a one billion dollar profit this quarter and sales are UP. Like the guy said, now that the government and the union owns GM and Chrysler, there's no way we're not going to get excellent cars from them!
comment 2
anthonyford date : 04/11/2009 time : 11.50
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anthonyford
The Truth is Freedom

Looks like the Japanese and the US economies are heading for a good dose of hyper inflation combined with some major currency depreciation.

Economic rationalist could right with their theories of Economic relatively and the markets search for equilibrium: Is a Japanese worker 8 times more efficient than a Thai or Chinese worker? Maybe at best 3 times as efficient, but this does not justify a Japanese worker getting 8 times the salary of a Thai worker. Either South East Asia and China are too cheap or US and Japan are too expensive. Market equilibrium forces are at work now. Governments can only hold off the inevitable for a finite amount of time.
comment 1
Patriot date : 04/11/2009 time : 08.42
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/Patriot

In times like these it is important to remember the golden rule: " He who owns the gold rules".
Comment

  "If you are not member, please register to comment.
It take only a few steps."


  |  
name :  
email :  
website :  
comment :  
   
   

back top