It is widely recognized that the
sharp depreciation of the Japanese yen has not lifted Japanese export volumes.
In December 2015, Japanese export volumes had fallen 4.4% year-over-year after
rising 3.9% in December 2014 and 2.5% in December 2013.
These are a number of explanations
for this counter-intuitive result given the yen's past depreciation.
First, global demand is weak. Second, has adopted a direct investment
strategy rather than an export-orientation. For example, many of the
Japanese brand autos in on the US highways were produced in the US.
Servicing foreign demand through local production may diminish
exports. Third, Japanese producers did not risk antagonizing
competitors may cutting prices to boost market share. Japanese producers
were content to let the translation of foreign earnings boost the yen value of
their revenue.
The weaker yen did not produce the kind of export gains that many
economists, especially those who stress currency wars, had anticipated.
However, there are two other anomalies that may not have received nearly as
much attention.
First, let's look at the Swiss trade balance. Recall that
January, the Swiss National Bank lifted its cap for the franc and its
appreciated sharply. What has happened to the Swiss trade balance and
exports over the past year?
The February trade surplus was a record high of CHF4.07 bln. This is a not a one-month fluke. The
12-month moving average is CHF3.21 bln. The February 2015 trade surplus
was CHF2.28 bln, and the 12-month moving
average stood at CHF2.55 bln. In volume terms, exports have risen 6.4% year-over-year.
According to the OECD, the Swiss franc is the most over-valued of the
major currencies at 24.3%. The second most over-valued, according to the OECD is the Danish krone at
11.2%. The same methodology finds the euro, where the destination of the
bulk of Swiss exports, the most under-valued at 17.7%.
Export growth in February was driven
by value-added activity in chemicals and pharmaceuticals. The
traditional, but lower-value-added and
more price-sensitive exports, like
jewelry and timepieces, fell.
The second anomaly involves US trade. Recall that the US
lifted its ban on oil exports in December. However, it appears that US
oil exports have fallen rather than risen here at the start of 2016. Clipper
Data was quoted in the Financial Times
suggesting that US oil exported via tankers has fallen by around 5% to 325k
barrels a day. Such shipments of oil were 342k barrels a day in Q1 2015.
A good part of the explanation is Canada. Oil exports to Canada were not subject to the
ban. Exports to Canada are less attractive now, and exports elsewhere have not picked up the slack. One
of the important developments in Canada was the reversing of a pipeline (Line
9B) which allowed crude oil to be transported
from the West to the East. Previously, the Quebec would often get US oil
by tanker.
The spread between Brent and WTI has narrowed. WTI is a little
cheaper but not enough to offset transportation costs. It is not as if
the world was waiting for US crude and it is not like the price is sufficiently
attractive to for US producers to gain market share.
Not only are US oil exports soft in the first quarter, but imports have
been strong. Oil imports are running near four year highs.
There is strong domestic demand, and US refineries are busy creating diesel and
petrol products to meet foreign demand,
Disclaimer
Two Trade Anomalies
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
March 28, 2016
Rating: