There is much doom and gloom. Despite
the recovery from the Great Financial Crisis, there is a high element of
economic anxiety. It is not just about economics. Political developments
are worrisome. We are told by various pundits in the media that democracy
is dying.
Six months ago, we
argued that the consensus narrative under-estimates the resilience of the
system. Recall that then many feared that the so-called
populist-nationalist wave that saw the UK vote to leave the EU and the US vote
to elect Trump was going to sweep across Europe.
For several years, many in the media have been talking about currency wars and beggar-thy-neighbor policies of
competitive depreciation. The occasional talk by the new US
administration threatens a new
front. Even more seemed to believe in the demise of the European Monetary
Union. The UK's vote to leave (in a non-binding referendum) was going to
be the catalyst. The barrier to exit was
broken. Others would join in regaining their sovereignty.
Nobel-prize winning economist Stiglitz joined a crowded field in providing a
new volume on the demise of the euro (at the hands of Germany and
Italy).
The UK journalist Paul Mason told us in 2015 that "end
of capitalism has begun" at the heart of emerging postcapitalist era was the revolution in
information technology. The explicit call for utopian thinking
has been superseded it appears. Now
the same journalist, mostly citing developments in China, Russia, Turkey,
Hungary and the election of Trump, as evidence democracy is dying. Others
may not go quite that far but are remain concerned about the "democratic
deficit." The rise of nationalism, opposition to legal immigration (no one
is really in favor of illegal immigration), and the increasing rigidities to
social mobility appears to be contributing to latent and obvious racial and
ideological tensions.
Yet we remain impressed with the
resilience of the economic system and democratic institutions. The
populist-nationalist movements have been denied national victories in
Europe. UK Prime Minister May has confirmed that the nonbinding resolution to leave the EU would be treated as authoritative. After
initially rejecting the advice, she did seek a popular mandate and lost her parliamentary majority. At the same
time, some of her rhetoric about capitalism and social obligations sound more
than a social democrat that the Cameron-Osborne wing of the Tory
Party.
Seventy-five years ago, the US Supreme Court allowed the left-center
populist President intern American citizens of Japanese descent. Now
the judicial system is acting as a check
on President Trump's immigration plans. Forty years ago, the
National Socialists (Nazis) were marching in Skokie, Illinois, where many
Holocaust survivors resided. Home-grown terrorism has always been more of
a threat to Americans than foreign-sourced terrorism. The existence of
the KKK or Nazi's does not mean democracy has ended, and to the contrary, the
widespread outrage suggests that more
than embers remain.
Trump, like his immediate predecessors, promised to cite China as a
currency manipulator. He has not, anymore
they did. He threatened to pull out of NAFTA and instead will start
negotiation later this week to update it,
apparently building on some of the heavy lifting
of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The withdrawal from those negotiations
was not simply a Republican decision. As Trump noted at the time, both
Clinton and Sanders were also opposed to the TPP (in the campaign). The
investigation of US steel imports on national security grounds has reportedly been completed, but apparently, the administration has been reluctant to make public its finding or announce fresh
measures.
The constitutional system of checks and balances is working.
As Bismark warned, one should not see the way laws or sausages are made. While the Republicans
have a majority both houses of Congress, they have been unable to do very
much. They have sought to exploit
the rules that allow that to use a simple majority, but this has blocked by the
differences within the party. One of the few issues that Republicans and
Democrats have worked together was on the new sanctions against North Korea,
Russia, and Iran. The measure limits the President's ability to
backtrack. As has often been the case, Congress also moved to prevent
recess-appointments by the President.
There are countless other ways to measure the resilience, but our point
is that the doom and gloom narrative of the end of globalization, the end of
democracy, and the demise of the EMU have been
grossly exaggerated. The occasional political tension that arises tends
to be short-lived and provide opportunities for trend follows as well as value
investors. The Russell 1000 Value Index (RLV) has fallen in only
three weeks since the end of May. Last week it fell by 1.85%, the most
since March. A five-month peak had been
reached on August 8, when it recorded a key reversal. It subsequently
fell to the 50% retracement of the rally since May and is recovering sharply
today.
We suspect that the resilience of the system means that investors ought to stick to their knitting.
The economic laws of supply and demand have not been
repealed. Politics are often messy,
and representative government is no utopia. While monetary and
fiscal policies shape the investment climate, politics is most often a
transitory influence.
There are a number of events in the
coming weeks that investors will likely find more significant than the
political events that are dominating the headlines today.
The Jackson Hole confab will draw attention. ECB President Draghi will
speak at the venue for the time in three years, and many are hoping for clues to the
trajectory of ECB's unorthodox policy. September sees the ECB meeting,
where 2018 purchases are likely to be announced. At its September FOMC
meeting, the Fed is expected to announce it will begin allowing its balance
sheet to shrink slowly in Q4. There is a small chance that the BOJ lifts
the target for its 10-year JGB. Germany and Noway hold national elections
in September. The US needs to lift its debt ceiling (or face missing a
debt payment) and renew spending authorization (or
face a government shutdown).
The conventional narrative has abandoned divergence in favor of new convergence; we are skeptical. First,
we note that it is likely that if the Fed begins its balance sheet operations
in Q4, by the middle of next year, the
balance sheet will shrink by $180 bln (modest on a $4 trillion plus
base). The ECB's balance sheet will expand
by about 180 bln euro in Q4, and we
estimate another 180 bln euros in H1 18. Second, we suspect the
Federal Reserve will hike rates 2-3 times by the middle of next year.
During this period we do not expect the
ECB to hike its minus 40 bp deposit rate.
Third, much is made that US
President Trump lacks broad public support. However, since he lost the popular vote, but won the decisive
electoral college vote, the divided nature of the American electorate is well
known. What is new is how fast the newly elected French President has
lost support. Macron's standing in France is lower than Trump's in the
US. This is important because it
would seem to jeopardize his agenda, which is key to renewed vigor in the Franco-German relationship and addressing
the simmering structural challenges in EMU.
Japan's Prime Minister Abe has also fallen out of favor amid several
domestic scandals and allegations. A cabinet reshuffle a couple of weeks ago stemmed the bleeding, but
the Cabinet's support is now just above Trump's support. Italy has an
unelected Prime Minister (the fourth since the last parliamentary
election). The new electoral law is not in place yet, but a loose
affiliation of center-right parties are polling ahead of the center-left.
In the UK, there is talk of another
cabinet reshuffle ahead of the Tory Party conference in Q4.
Disclaimer
The Meaning of the System's Resilience for Investors
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
August 14, 2017
Rating: