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Abenomics Creates "Potential For Economic Collapse Triggered By Bond Market Crash", Warns Richard Koo

Tyler Durden's picture




 

While Richard Koo is an employee of Nomura, or a bank which is among those who stand to benefit the most from the BOJ's doomed Banzainomics experiment, he has less than kind words to say about this latest and greatest demonstration of sheer desperation by Japan's Prime Minister, whose tenure may not be all that long - something which perhaps he is not very much against, as Abe is hardly looking forward to being named in the history books as the person who dealt Japan's economic death blow.

To wit:

When evidence meets faith, it doesn’t stand a chance

 

When a year and a half of aggressive quantitative easing failed to produce a recovery in private demand for funds, the government should have realized that the answer to the economy’s problems was not in monetary policy and shifted its focus to the second and third arrows of Abenomics.

 

But the reflationists in academia and bureaucracy who are unable to accept that monetary policy is powerless in a balance sheet recession have basically said that if one pill doesn’t cure the patient, try two, and if two don’t work try four, 16, 256....

 

Most patients would start to question the doctor’s diagnosis before they agreed to swallow 256 pills. But such voices have been erased from Japan’s policy debate.

 

ECB President Mario Draghi quipped in a press conference on 6 November that “when evidence meets faith, it doesn’t stand a chance.” For those who believe monetary policy is always effective, no amount of evidence that there are times when monetary policy does not work will convince them otherwise.

Ironically, instead of boosting the economy, Abe's latest lunacy will merely lead to even greater Japanese economic devastation and the inevitable quadruple dip. That, or an outright economic depression, one from which the country will not emerge.

Fanning inflation expectations and devaluing the yen will depress domestic demand

 

Reflationists like Mr. Kuroda argue that people will start borrowing again if they anticipate higher inflation. If inflation is being driven by an excess of demand over supply, the private sector will naturally borrow money to invest in facilities aimed at rectifying the supply shortfall.

 

But if real demand is not growing—if real consumption is actually declining and the money circulating in the real economy is increasing at a negligible pace, as is the case today—there is no reason why Mr. Kuroda’s promises should convince anyone that inflation is on the horizon.

 

In fact, most of the price increases reported in Japan recently have been imported inflation fueled by the weak yen. The resulting decline in the nation’s terms of trade implies an outflow of income, which naturally depresses domestic final demand.

So if Japan's QE12 (it may be QE13, we lost count after QE10) won't do much for the economy, what will it do? Well, what else: blow bubbles.

Central bank-supplied liquidity has nowhere to go without real economy borrowing

 

As I have repeatedly pointed out, the central bank can supply as much base money (liquidity) as it wants simply by purchasing assets held by private-sector banks.

 

But a private-sector bank cannot give away that liquidity, it must lend it to someone in the real economy for that liquidity to leave the banking sector.

 

For the past 20 years, Japan’s private sector has not only stopped borrowing money but has actually been paying down existing debt and increasing its savings in spite of zero interest rates.

 

Traditional economics never envisioned this kind of behavior, but the collapse of debt-financed bubbles in Japan in 1990 and the West in 2008 left many businesses and households owing as much or more than they owned, prompting them to focus on repairing their damaged balance sheets.

 

QE without private demand for funds only generates mini-bubbles

 

While Japan’s private sector finally cleaned up its balance sheet around 2005–06, the debt trauma lingered on. That, together with the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, led to a situation in which Japan’s private sector is still saving 5.7% of GDP in spite of zero interest rates and aggressive quantitative easing.

 

Unless the government borrows and spends this 5.7%, the funds supplied by the BOJ under quantitative easing would never leave the banking system and neither the money supply nor private credit would have increased—in fact, they might actually have decreased.

 

No matter how much the BOJ eases policy during this kind of balance sheet recession, the liquidity it supplies will not enter the real economy as long as there are no private-sector borrowers. The only result is likely to be the creation of mini-bubbles in the financial markets.

 

While funds supplied under quantitative easing may provide a temporary boost to the prices of stocks and other assets, at some point those prices will correct unless they are justified by corporate earnings growth and other appropriate measures, and that will be the end of the mini-bubble.

Unless, of course the QE baton has passed to the ECB by then and/or the Fed's QE4. In which case Japan's "mini bubble" will merely merge into the maxiest bubble ever blown by the central banks.

Finally, we are happy to see that Mr. Koo reads Zero Hedge and the Banzainomics term that was conceived on these pages.

Overseas views on QQE2 are divided

 

Overseas views on the BOJ’s surprise easing announcement can be broken down into two camps: the reflationists, who commend the BOJ for its bold actions, and those critical of the policy, who say it is a symptom of the final stages of Japan’s economic decline.

 

The critics can further be divided into two groups: those who believe that continuing the current policy of “Banzainomics” will lead to a collapse of the Japanese economy and government finance triggered by a crash in the JGB market, and those who worry that the ongoing devaluation of the yen under this policy will hurt their own countries’ industries.

 

Of those in the second group, I think the voices from the US and the UK can be safely ignored. After all, what Japan is doing now is exactly what those two countries did six years ago with their reckless quantitative easing and currency devaluation 

 

But the first group’s scenario, in which the BOJ’s reckless attempts to achieve a 2% inflation target trigger a bond market crash and an eventual collapse of the Japanese economy, is of greater concern. After all, it is the same scenario the world’s QE pioneers—the US and the UK—are desperately trying to avert at this very moment.

Collapse it is then. The only question is when.

 

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Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:16 | 5437629 yogibear
yogibear's picture

"greatest demonstration of sheer desperation by Japan's Prime Minister, whose tenure may not be all that long"

He's just doing what the criminal money printers at the US Federal Reserve asked him to do.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:18 | 5437639 Publicus
Publicus's picture

Nah, they can just change a few files in the computer and all will be OK. We now possess the technology.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:21 | 5437656 ZerOhead
ZerOhead's picture

There is no risk of a bond market crash as long as the BOJ buys ALL of the bonds.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:22 | 5437665 Publicus
Publicus's picture

Yup, and once all the bond is bought, there is no bond. There never was a problem and they now realize it. They were a fool thinking it was a problem, creating it in the process.

 

It's all just data in a computer file. Why let it destroy society when you have the power to edit it?

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:40 | 5437740 css1971
css1971's picture

Because the vested interests that benefit from the current system will see all of us suffer (in fact die in a nuclear fireball) before they will allow a sane monetary system to replace the current one.

That is why.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 20:55 | 5438609 philipat
philipat's picture

If I were Japanese I would right now be turning my Yen into every Oz. of Gold I could lay my hands on. Is Mrs Watanabe missing something or is it me?

Wed, 11/12/2014 - 00:28 | 5439249 americhinaman
americhinaman's picture

she's not missing anything, nor are you.  XAUJPY (gold priced in yen) has been increasing fairly steadily since the turn of the century.  it is certainly down from the highs (which is actually early 2013 priced in JPY), but only by ~15% or so.  if current policy continues, i would bet that it won't enter an "official" bear market of 20% down.

 

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:55 | 5437814 css1971
css1971's picture

True. It becomes a currency market crash instead.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 17:13 | 5437846 ZerOhead
ZerOhead's picture

It's called competitive currency devaluation.

I suspect it may become catchy...

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 20:37 | 5438634 Squid-puppets a...
Squid-puppets a-go-go's picture

well theyre always banging on about how important it is to be competitive 

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 18:27 | 5438151 jaxville
jaxville's picture

Its all about maintaining the yen/dollar carry trade.  Most Western banks are short the yen as a result.  Should the yen rise against the dollar, 2008 would look like a picnic by comparison.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 18:34 | 5438177 TheInfoman
TheInfoman's picture

The BOJ is purchasing new bond issuance.  They do not own every bond ever offered.  So there is plenty of Japanese government bonds available to crash.  Mostly held by elderly Japanese citizens.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:21 | 5437658 Aeternus
Aeternus's picture

This sounds like a conspiracy theory.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Od9D6TECSa0

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:17 | 5437640 venturen
venturen's picture

Maybe they need the nuclear option! 

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 17:14 | 5437883 ZerOhead
ZerOhead's picture

They tried that already...

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 23:14 | 5439096 tc06rtw
tc06rtw's picture

How about a  DOUBLE  nuclear option?

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:27 | 5437647 JustObserving
JustObserving's picture

With a 20 year bond yielding 1.2% a year and the yen falling 6% or 7% a week, even a schoolboy would predict a bond crash in Japan. Though most economists may be challenged.

Japan has already committed harakiri. Hope it is painless as the song promises:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-BtquTKw78

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 20:40 | 5438643 Squid-puppets a...
Squid-puppets a-go-go's picture

but, as zerohead pointed out above - how can it crash when 100% of issuance is bought by the BOJ?

Im not asking rhetorically or snarkily, i really would like an answer to that because im not all that savvy with bond market dynamics. can anyone explain?

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 23:53 | 5439169 Wild Theories
Wild Theories's picture

it can't

people who practice autofellatio will only stop when they want to, or when they get tired

unless the Japanese people and their political establishment itself says no, it can just keep going till they are tired - a long possible time

Wed, 11/12/2014 - 06:24 | 5439518 Squid-puppets a...
Squid-puppets a-go-go's picture

exactly what i thought must be the answer. so its hyperinflation, nothing else

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:18 | 5437648 Seize Mars
Seize Mars's picture

How many claim checks have been issued on real assets?
And issuing more will lead to prosperity? How?

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:20 | 5437660 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

redickurus

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:32 | 5437712 huggy_in_london
huggy_in_london's picture

They're Japanese, not Chinese!  I think you mean that you no rikey this-a policy.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:33 | 5437718 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

me thinky a bond clash seem unrikery

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:23 | 5437671 jubber
jubber's picture

How can there be a bond crash as all the bonds are held domestically and the only buyer is BOJ, it would have happened a long time ago if it was likely, the Japanese mentality is that they would prefer to die then actually do this, now the currency I guess is another matter...if the BOJ is forced to raise rates higher and higher then I guess then there could be trouble???

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:27 | 5437686 salvadordaly
salvadordaly's picture

KAMAKAZI ABE BITCHEZ!!!!!!

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:32 | 5437709 skbull44
skbull44's picture

That Japanese bug is picking up speed in its search for a windshield!!

 

http://olduvai.ca

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:37 | 5437724 css1971
css1971's picture

Um. I seem to recall Koo being one of the biggest cheerleaders for keynesian economix.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:42 | 5437742 yogibear
yogibear's picture

They'll just keep printing. Like it's worked the last 25 years.

Stick a fork in it. It's done.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:44 | 5437762 Yancey Ward
Yancey Ward's picture

Then Koo is only half a moron.  He still believe the answer is massive government borrowing and spending in the case of Japan.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:49 | 5437781 juggalo1
juggalo1's picture

The reason we are relying on monetary policy is not because it is effective but because it is easy.  Economy still weak = do more = more QE.  In the fiscal policy arena, you need agreement to do anything, and when one side is satisfied with doing nothing, it makes it impossible to take any action.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:53 | 5437796 J Pancreas
J Pancreas's picture

Any Kyle Bass pr0n since Abe decided to go full retard? I would like to hear his opinion.

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 18:10 | 5438070 jubber
jubber's picture

well he has done his bollox on JGB's now they at an ATL, GM bonds and of course Gold, does talk a lot of sense but forgetting he is fighting the worlds central banks in the other side of his trades

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 16:57 | 5437820 Spungo
Spungo's picture

First nuclear meltdown, now financial meltdown. This is also the only country to be nuked during a war. And it's the country associated with ritualistic suicide. Seppukunomics!

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 17:06 | 5437849 FABBAS
FABBAS's picture

ALL BENEFIT GOES TO GOLD

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 20:14 | 5438543 AdvancingTime
AdvancingTime's picture

Japan is past the point where they can return to a "free and fair market" interest rate marketing their bonds to the world and still be able to pay the debt service. We are starting to see form a self feeding loop of wealth leaving Japan as people seek to save themselves from the meltdown in the yen.

The moment the Japaneses stock market fails to rise enough to offset inflation and the people of Japan realize that even a weaker yen will not help we will see a tsunami of money fleeing Japan. This will constitute the end of the line for those left holding both JGBs and the yen. This has been a long time coming and I contend the cross-border flow of money leaving Japan is why some stock markets have remained so resilient . When Japan crumbles it will be felt across the world. More on this subject in the article below.

 http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/05/japan-sliding-towards-abyss.html

Tue, 11/11/2014 - 22:53 | 5439038 Seize Mars
Seize Mars's picture

Sliding toward the abyss? The shit abyss? The shitabyss?

http://into-the-shit-abyss.ytmnd.com/

 

 

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!