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Betting on the race to the bottom
Betting on the race to the bottom
Courtesy of Bruce Krasting
On Monday and Tuesday the market’s attention will be on the USA and the negative economic implications of the Nonfarm payroll (NFP) miss. Market eyes will also be focused on the bond markets in Italy and Spain. As of last Thursday, Europe seemed to be on the verge of another “accident.” The EURCHF closed the week a fraction above the 1.20 peg to the Euro. The Swiss National Bank will likely be forced to show its muscle. While the peg will not break, news of the attack will rile the FX markets.
If this scenario plays out, the Yen should benefit against the dollar and the Euro. If the Yen crosses get cheap, I think it will be a good opportunity to short the Yen. As bad as Euroland appears, and as shaky as the USA looks, Japan looks like it might end up winning the race to the bottom.
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There are two very big issues that Japan is confronting; energy and taxes. Both of these issues will come to a head over the next sixty days. I don’t see a soft landing.
Fourteen months ago Japan had 54 operating nukes. Today it has one. By the end of May, it will have none.
The Japanese press is discussing options such restarting the nukes, but many people want to shut them all down:
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There are two significant consequences of the shutdowns: (A) soaring imports of expensive hydrocarbons (LNG, oil and coal), and (B) this summer, there will be as much as a 12% shortfall in electricity to to cool homes and run factories.
The shutdown of the nukes has already led to a major turnaround of Japan’s external trade position. In 2011 Japan reported its first annual trade deficit in over 30 years. The shortfall came to Y2.5T ($32B). In 2012 that number could be as large as $100B.
The shortage of “juice” this summer will cause cut backs in supply to big industry. As a result, industrial production will fall. Depending on the severity of the summer slump, Japan could face negative GDP growth for the full year. This will translate into more red ink in the national budget (already 10+% of GDP). More debt will have to be issued to cover the gap. Japan’s already insane Debt to GDP (230%) has nowhere to go but up.
Japan is leading the world into trouble as far as demographics go. The Social Security and medical costs of its aging population are exploding. Unlike in the USA, most of the Japanese leaders have acknowledged that the country's position is un-sustainable. Not a day goes by without it being the subject of an article in the press. On March 31, the Noda government formally proposed doubling the consumption tax from 5% to 10% in a desperate effort to shore up the government’s empty coffers. The proposal for new taxes will be debated in the Japanese Diet in April. A final vote is anticipated in June.
I doubt this critical legislation will pass. The proposal has opposition from many political directions. It has fierce opponents within Mr. Noda's own party, the Democratic Party of Japan, but the real opposition will come from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
Japan’s politics are not unlike that of the USA. The opposition parties will do anything to undermine the efforts of those in power. My reading is that the LDP would support a tax increase as a philosophical matter, but it will oppose Noda’s legislation with the objective of bringing down the government.
It’s a good bet that the LDP will succeed, and the Noda government will be forced to call for new national elections. That would be a "worst case” outcome. As of today, polls show that there is substantial opposition to the new tax. Failure to pass new taxes would put Japan on a debt trajectory pointing to infinity.
Political instability in Japan is becoming a real issue. The country has had six Prime Ministers in six years. Another recession may kick in this summer. The trade deficit will be at levels never seen before. ($500m USDYEN must be bought every trading day to fund the deficit.) The failure of the country to pass new taxes will force downgrades of the public sector debt. Japan will be on track to exceed 300% Debt to GDP.
I like USDYEN on the long side at 81 and under. EURYEN is hard to call, and for the time being is a “stay-away”. If the EURYEN cross would somehow get down to around 100, I think it would be“safe” to get long.
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Unfortunately, that is about as easy as summarizing the tax code on a single page.
I suspect the work has been done already.
It took me 30 seconds and Google to find this:
http://www.bargaineering.com/articles/fuel-taxes-gas-prices-vary.html
Only because all other delivery points are along the way to destino ultimativo.
Actually, we do get a bit of discount because the world has to accept that crappy US dollar if they want to sell us oil. Saddam Hussein and Ghaddafi learned the hard way that you don't mess with the Petrodollar.
"Careful what you wish for ... The price of gas is considerably lower in the
US because it can free-ride on the fact that the world uses it to turn its crude oil into gasoline. Ban exports of the finished product, and the rest of the world will source refining of the raw material elsewhere" ....and the fact that the US military protects the supply chain from Point A to Point B.
"Protects" the supply chain? That's just rich.
A lot of smart folks have been calling for---and betting on---Japan to implode over the last 10+ years.
While it's almost 100% likely that Japan will crash, it's clearly been next to impossible to predict the timing.
impossible to predict the timing
If Japans Nuc power is mainly off-line, and thus more reliant on oil, time your bets on when the "Iranian Incident" is started - there's your timing.
Fucking with Iran creates collateral damage and unintended consequences (fucking with civilians) - another calamity foisted upon Japanese.
TPTB don't give a shit about tax paying units, no matter who or where we are in the world.
So STFU, lets bomb Iran, and who cares if the Japanese can't get the energy (oil) they need. /sarc
Man, we been played like a banjo.
Thank the Magic Negro in DC for that.
Thank the Magic Negro in DC for that.
I never trust the comments of anyone who borrows phrases from the L.A. Times. I suggest you go back to HuffPo.
Japan is the result of misguided economic policies put in place to protect the countries' wealthy cronies at expense of the population. Instead of letting real capitalism take hold, they covered up their imploding economy by borrowing to the ying-yang. How the end moment will look shall be interesting. Default or turn on the printing presses Zimbabwe style.
Seems Japan just can't catch a break. The "unwind" of Japan's nuclear position, without any substitute, will place an unbearable load on the populace, leaving no choice but to downsize.
No choice but to "downsize" off their radioactive deathbead island
Iran has plenty of oil for Japan. Amadenajihad just needs a little asian persuasian to supply Japan with all the oil they need to keep going. Japan and Iran can enter into a bilateral agreement and ignore the petrodollar. Seems everyone is doing it these days.
Japan gets 10% of its crude from Iran.
Japan's already been trading oil with Iran like a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest. They were recently "exempted" from America's unilateral embargo until the US can find some magic petroleum from somewhere else to give them. All that's left is to ignore the petrodollar, but Japan can't do that because the only surplus they have of anything is US dollars from 4 decades of unbridled mercantilism.
Have you tried to buy a good Geiger counter lately? Can't find one at a reasonable price. Now that Japan realizes it needs other energy sources, LNG might follow the same path.