By Jack Rasmus
March 10, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Monday, March 9, financial
asset markets continue to implode: US stocks are
further collapsing -6% (Dow down 1650, Nasdaq >500
mid-day). Ditto Asian and Europe stock markets -6%.
They were already declining sharply last week due to
coronavirus induced supply chain shocks (reducing
production) and expanding demand shocks (consumer
spending contraction in select industries like
travel, hotels, entertainment)–all of which are
being forecast by investors to whack corporate
earnings in 2Q20 big time. But imposed on the
equities market crash of the past 2 weeks now is the
acceleration of the global oil price deflation that
erupted yesterday as the Saudis deal with Russia
last year to cut production and prop up prices fell
apart. Collapsing oil & commodities futures prices
are now feeding back up equities and other financial
asset prices. Financial price deflation spreading,
including to currency exchange rates. Money capital
fleeing everywhere into ‘safe havens’ (gold,
Treasuries, Yen). Historic decline of US Treasuries
now below 1% (30 yr.) and .5% (10 yr).
Will the financial asset markets deflation soon
spill over to the credit system (especially
corporate bonds) and accelerate the decline of real
economies worldwide in turn? Are traditional
monetary & fiscal policy tools now less effective
compared to 2008-09? If so, why? Is the global
economy on the precipice of another ‘great
recession’?
Financial Asset Markets Imploding
So we have oil futures market prices–i.e. another
financial asset market–collapsing now and impacting
the stock markets. In other words, a feedback
contagion underway on stocks market prices in turn.
Feedback is occurring as well on other industrial
commodity futures prices that are following oil
futures prices downward in tandem. But that’s not
all the financial contagion and deflation underway.
The freefall in financial assets (stocks, oil,
commodities) is also translating into currency
exchange price deflation in turn, especially in
emerging market economies in Latin America, Africa,
Asia highly dependent on commodity sales with which
to earn needed foreign exchange with which to
finance their past debt (e.g. case of Argentina
whose egotiations with IMF on how to restructure
their debt will now break down, I predict).
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Currency exchange rates are in sharp
decline everywhere as a result. For emerging
market economies that means money capital is
more rapidly flowing out of their economy,
toward safe havens globally like the US
dollar, US Treasury bonds, gold, and the
Japanese Yen currency.
In short, stocks, oil-commodity futures, and
forex currency markets are all imploding and
increasingly feeding back on each other in a general
deflating downward spiral. This is a classic
‘cross-contagion effect’ that occurs in financial
asset market crashes. And crashing financial markets
eventually have the effect of contracting the real
economy in turn, by freezing up what’s called the
credit markets. Businesses can’t roll over their
loans and refi their corporate bonds. Banks stop
lending. The rest of the real economy then contracts
sharply. It starts in the financial markets, spreads
to credit markets (corporate junk bonds, BBB
corporate bonds, then top grade bonds).
Coronavirus Effect as Precipitating Cause
But it even earlier begins in a slowing real US
and global economy that precedes the markets crash.
The global economy was already weakening seriously
in 2019. The US economy at year end 2019 was also
weak, held up only by household consumption.
Business investment had already contracted nine
months in a row in 2019 and inventories built up too
much. And, of course, the Trump trade war took its
toll throughout 2018-19.
Then came the Coronavirus which shut down supply
chains in China, and then in So. Korea and Japan in
turn. That then began impacting Europe, already
weakened by the trade war (especially Germany) and
Brexit concerns. The supply chain economic impact of
the virus developed into a consumer demand economic
impact as well, as travel spending was reduced
(airlines, cruise ships, hotels, resorts, etc.) and
now, in latest development, other areas of consumer
spending too. Both supply chain (production
cutbacks) and demand (consumption cutbacks) are
interpreted by investors as leading soon to a big
fall in corporate earnings–which translates in turn
into stock price collapse we see now underway.
Investors have decided the 11 year growth cycle is
over. They’re cashing in and taking their money and
running to the sidelines, moving it from stocks to
cash or Treasuries or gold or other near liquid
financial assets.
So the Coronavirus event is really a
‘precipitating cause’ of the current markets crash.
The real economy weakness was already there. The
virus just accelerated and exacerbated the process
big time. (see my 2010 book, ‘Epic Recession’ for
explanation how financial causation comes in
different forms as precipitating causes, enabling
causes, and fundamental causes. Book reviews are on
my website). Again, worth repeating: global and US
economies were weakening noticeably in late 2019.
The virus further impacted supply chains
(production) and demand (consumption), reduced
corporate earnings in the near term and thereby
simply pushed stock markets over the cliff.
Mutual Feedback Effects: Real & Financial
Economies
But financial crashes have the effect of feeding
back into the real economy as well, causing it to
contract further in turn. What starts as a weakening
of the real economy that translates into financial
markets crashing, in turn feeds back into a further
weakening of the real economy. Mainstream economists
don’t understand this ‘mutual feedback effect’;
don’t understand the various causal relationships
between financial asset cycles and real investment
cycles. (For my explanation of this relationship
there’s my 2016 book, ‘Systemic Fragility in the
Global Economy’ and specifically chapters on the
need to distinguish between financial asset
investing and real investing and how late
capitalism’s financial structure has changed such
that the inter-causal effects of financial-real
investment have deepened and intensified.) Financial
crashes accelerate and deepen the contraction of the
real economy. Recessions turn into ‘Great
Recessions’ as in 2008-09. They may even turn into
bona fide ‘Depressions’ as in the 1930s should the
banking system not get bailed out quickly.
Corporate Bonds & Credit Markets Next?
The feedback effect of the current financial
asset price deflation–now underway in stocks,
commodity futures, forex, (and derivatives)–on the
real economy will soon emerge as the financial
markets deflation affects the various credit
markets. The key credit market is the corporate bond
market. Bond markets are far more important to
capitalism than equity-stock markets. The credit
markets to watch now are the corporate junk bonds
(sometimes called high yield corporates). Junk bonds
are debt issued to companies that have been
performing poorly for years. They are kept alive by
banks helping them issue their bonds at high
interest rates. Investors demand a high rate because
the companies may not survive. In good times they
do. But when markets and economies turn down,
companies over loaded with junk financing typically
default–i.e. can’t pay the interest or principal on
their bonds. They go under. The investors that
bought their risky bonds are then left holding their
debt that becomes near worthless. The US junk bond
market today is ‘worth’ more than $2 trillion. At
least a third of that is oil & energy (fracking)
companies. A large part of their bonds must be
rolled over, refinanced, in 2021. But many of them
will not be able to refinance. Why? Because global
oil prices have just collapsed to $30 a barrel,
perhaps falling further to $20 a barrel. At that
price, the oil-energy junk bond laden companies will
not be able to refinance. They will default. That
will spread fear and contagion to other sectors of
the $2 trillion junk bond sector–especially big box
and other retail companies (e.g. JC Penneys, etc.)
that also loaded up on junk financing in recent
years. Investors will disgorge themselves of junk
bonds in general.
The fear of a crash in junk bonds will almost
certainly spread to other corporate bonds, first to
what’s called BBB grade corporates. That’s another
$3 trillion market. But most of BBBs are really also
junk that’s been improperly reclassified as BBB, the
lowest (unsafe) level of corporate Investment grade
bonds (the safest). So at least $5 trillion in
corporate credit is at risk for potential default.
If even a part defaults, it will send shock waves
throughout the corporate economy that will have very
serious implications–for both the financial and real
economies, US and global, which are increasingly
fragile.
Is Another ‘Great Recession’ on the
Horizon?
For example, Japan is already in recession as of
late last year. Now it’s contracting, reportedly, by
7% more. Europe was stagnant at best, with Italy and
Germany slipping into recession before the virus
hit. So. Korea and Australia are in recession now,
as other economies in Asia and Latin America are now
contracting as well. China economy reportedly will
come to a halt in terms of GDP this quarter, or even
contract, according to some sources. Meanwhile,
Goldman Sachs forecasts the US economy growth will
stall to 0% in the second quarter 2020.
So a collapse in risky corporate bonds will occur
overlaid on this already weak real economic
scenario. Should that happen, then the recession
could easily morph into another ‘great recession’ as
in 2008-09; maybe even worse if the banking system
freezes up and central banks cannot bail them out
quickly enough. Or if banks in a major economy
elsewhere experience a crash–as in India or even
Europe or Japan where more than $10 trillion in
non-performing bank loans exist–and the contagion
spreads rapidly to banking systems elsewhere
Failed Monetary & Fiscal Policies,
2009-2019
Which leads to the question can central banks now
do so? After the 2008-09 crash, the Fed bailed out
the US banks by 2010. But it kept interest rates
near zero under Obama for six more years. Banks
could still get free money from the Fed at 0.15%
interest. (The Fed then paid them 0.25% if they left
the money with the Fed). The Fed bailed out other
financial companies to the tune of $5 trillion more
as it bought up bad loans and Treasuries from
investors at above then market rates. That is, it
subsidized them. And did so for six more years. All
this free money flowed, mostly into financial
markets in the US and worldwide, creating the stock
bubbles that are now imploding. So the Fed and other
central banks went on a binge subsidizing banks for
years, and in the process broke their own interest
rate tool needed for instances like the present
crisis. The Fed tried desperately to raise interest
rates in 2017-18 so it could have a cushion for
times like this. But it then capitulated to Trump
and began reducing interest rates again in 2019–as
it had under Obama for six years.
The free money from the Fed artificially boosted
stock prices. On top of this Trump added a further
subsidization of banks and non-bank corporations,
businesses, and investors with his $4.5 trillion 10
year tax cuts passed January 2018. Most of that went
as a windfall to corporate-business bottom lines.
23% of the 27% rise in corporate profits in 2018 is
attributable to the windfall tax cuts. And where did
that go? It too was redirected to stock and other
financial markets,further inflating the bubbles.
Here’s the channel and proof: Fortune 500
corporations in the US alone spent $1.2 trillion in
both 2018 and 2019 in stock buybacks and dividend
payouts to their shareholders. The stock buybacks
inflated the stock markets, and most of the dividend
payouts did as well. (Buybacks+dividends under Obama
were nearly as generous, averaging more than $800
billion a year for six years).
In other words, the 25% run up in US stock
markets in 2017-19 under Trump was totally
artificial, driven by the tax cuts and by the Fed
capitulating to Trump and lowering rates again in
2019. Very little of the annual $1.2 trillion went
into the real US economy. For the past year real
investment in structures, plant, equipment, etc.
actually contracted for nine months in 2019, and is
now contracting even faster in 2020.
Just as the Fed has busted its own interest rate
monetary tool as it continually subsidized banks and
businesses with low interest rates for years, the
chronic corporate-investor tax cutting has busted
fiscal policy responses to recession as well. Since
2001 the US has provided $15 trillion in tax cuts,
the vast majority of which have gone to
corporations, banks, and wealthy investors. That has
led to government deficits averaging more than $1
trillion a year since 2008. And accelerated the US
federal debt to more than $22 trillion. Fiscal
policy is now seriously constrained by the deficits
and debt–just as monetary policy as interest rates
is now constrained by virtually all Treasury bond
rates below 1% in the US and negative rates in
Europe and Japan.
Interest rate policy responses to today’s
emerging crisis is thus dead in the water. (As this
writer predicted it would become in 2016 in the
book, ‘Central Bankers at the End of Their Rope:
Monetary Policy and the Coming Depression’). After
years of monetary policy used as a tool to subsidize
banks, it is now ineffective as a tool to stabilize
the economy. Ditto for fiscal policy as tax policy.
Used by Obama and even more so by Trump to subsidize
corporations, stock buybacks, and financial markets,
it is confronted by massive annual US budget
deficits and accelerating national debt.
The likely responses by politicians and policy
makers to the current emerging financial crisis and
recessions in the real economy will be to cut taxes
even further for businesses. It will have little
effect, however. But will exacerbate levels of
deficit and debt. That means the follow up will be
to attack and reduce government spending, especially
targeting social security, medicare, healthcare and
education in 2021. Trump has already publicly
indicated his intent to do so. On the Fed side,
expect more injection of money directly into the
economy and failing businesses by means of another
major round of ‘quantitative easing’ (QE). That’s
coming soon. Ditto for Europe and Japan where
negative rates already exist. Watch China too should
its economy contract for the first time in 30 years.
And watch India, where it’s banking system is
already fracturing due to causes totally separate
from the virus effect. A banking crash in India is
on the agenda. It could result in yet another
financial blow to the global economy, adding to the
current Saudi-produced oil price shock and the virus
effect on supply chains and demand.
Summary and Conclusions
In summary, the global capitalist economy is
unraveling financially, and soon further in real
terms. Massive job layoffs in coming months in the
US are a growing possibility. That will drive the US
economy deep in contraction as household
consumption, the only area holding up the US economy
in 2019, now joins the contraction. It remains to be
seen how US monetary and fiscal policy can restore
economic stability given its self-destruction by US
politicians since 2008. Trump policies have been no
different than Obama’s-just more generous to
corporate America and investors. Trump’s policies
are best described as ‘Neoliberalism 2.0’ or
‘Neoliberal on steroids’. (see my just published
2020 book, ‘The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US
Economic Policy from Reagan to Trump’).
The US and global economies are well on their way
to a repeat of the ‘great recession’ (or worse) of
2008-09. Only this time traditional monetary-fiscal
policy is much less effective. More radical policy
responses will likely be developed to try to
stabilize the capitalist economies both in USA and
elsewhere (where problems are even more severe).
Watch closely as the crisis on the financial side
moves on from equity (stock), commodities, and forex
financial markets into derivatives markets and
credit markets–especially junk bond and other
corporate bond markets. Watch as the Fed tries
desperately to provide liquidity to business and
markets via its Repo channel and QE since its
traditional rate channels are now ineffective. And
watch as US and global capitalist advanced economies
try to coordinate new fiscal policy responses to the
general dual crisis in financial and real economic
sectors of global capital.
Dr. Jack Rasmus
March 9, 2020
Dr. Rasmus is author of the just published
book, ‘The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US
Economic Policy from Reagan to Trump’,
Clarity Press, January 2020. His website is
http://kyklosproductions.com. He blogs at
jackrasmus.com and tweets @drjackrasmus. Dr. Rasmus
hosts the weekly radio show, Alternative Visions, on
the Progressive Radio Network, fridays, at 2pm
eastern.
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