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Liquidity And Manipulated Prices Are Not An Economy And Never Will Be

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Submitted by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

The Greek drama seems to have reached somewhat of a boundary, with deadlines and credit assistance drawing toward maximums. If this seems more than a little déjà vu that’s because it is an almost exact replay of 2012; all that is missing at this point is another default (debt swap or however it shall be classified). Greek banks have been beset by billions in withdrawals, in turn sending them to the Bank of Greece, loosely backstopped by the ECB, for “liquidity.”

In broader terms, it has always been liquidity that answers these difficulties. Central banks have little else to offer, but that doesn’t necessarily violate what they are trying to accomplish. In fact, it is an article of monetary faith, neutrality and all that, where liquidity is the answer to these problems. The operative orthodox theory for all of this is that the economy, of true and robust character, is hidden amidst a mountain of irregularity. In the case of Europe, the ECB has decided that banks are the issue as they fail to restore the immense credit function that central bankers believe consistent with typical economic momentum.

To gain a robust economy, then, requires, as they believe, robust banking and therefore robust liquidity. Working backwards from the 2008 panic, the ECB has been almost exclusively fixated on the liquidity portion in order to jump-start lending. In terms of Greece’s specific problems, that was accompanied by fiscal refiguring born out of intense monetarism, where the national government was “relieved” of massive burdens through what was called a debt swap but was really a default.

The highlight of the process, and the formal step with which success was briefly claimed, was last year’s floatation of new Greek government debt. It was just fourteen months ago that Greece was selling its issue at a promised yield of 5.25% to 5.50%, around €3 billion euros total of five-year paper. The underwriters took in more than €20 billion in bids, and the deal eventually priced at a yield of just 4.95%!

Again, that was by intention as Mario Draghi promised in July 2012 that he would use the ECB in whatever capacity to save the euro, taken to mean that he would no longer allow such high yields to clog monetary channels. Greece selling its bond only two years after the largest sovereign default was the high point in the effort. With all that euphoria over once-disowned and disavowed paper surely meant that monetary policy had reached at least Step 2, liquidity into lending, inching tantalizingly close to Step 3 – real recovery through debt.

ABOOK June 2015 Greece 5yr

The illusion lasted perhaps longer than it should have, as that 5-year bond remained priced at a premium into October 2014 (there’s that month again), despite the ECB’s struggles elsewhere to convince the economy to follow its simple monetary packages. Reality has caught up, as “markets” (a term that in this case deserves the scare quotes) realize that liquidity solved exactly nothing except convincing at least €20 billion worth of “investors” that monetary policy actually holds some specific healing capacity.

At the time the Greek bond was first taking subscriptions, I wrote quite incredulously:

That is more than astounding given the risks attached. Greek bond yields have been steadily dropping ever since Draghi’s promise, but it strains reason to see new Greek bonds trade to the same yield as that of Hungary, Dominican Republic or even Sri Lanka. All three of those countries hold higher ratings than Greece (though the “big” news is that Moodys might upgrade Greece to less junk status), but far more importantly none of them have defaulted in the past three years. The Greek government managed to do it twice.

The way things are going, including bond prices and “emergency” liquidity yet again, Greece may yet find a third default in its future. That would mean the ECB, for all its supposed and assumed economic vigor and attention, only managed to accomplish creating €20 billion in Greater Fools that we know of; small miracle, then, that the Greek government did not dare to float far greater debt, especially as current thinking has the chance at that third default around 75%.

ABOOK June 2015 Greece ELA

NOTE:  the Emergency Liquidity Assistance program (ELA) is aggregated with other monetary programs, classified within a single line item on the ECB’s aggregated view of all its constituent National Central Banks’ (NCB’s) balance sheet; “Other Claims on Euro Area Credit Institutions Denomimated in Euros” as an asset.

By every measure of what those bond “investors” were expecting, the Greek government and the economy there failed miserably – which is not actually a change from the period leading up to the default. In fact, despite all the immense interference financially from central planners, Greece has exhibited an extraordinary sense of stability of the exact wrong kind. As the Bank of Greece put it just two days ago,

In late 2014, there were serious indications that the Greek economy had overcome the recession and was returning to positive growth. At the time, the Bank of Greece, as well as all the international organisations, were projecting positive GDP growth in 2015 and a further pick-up in 2016.

These projections have since been revised downwards, as the latest GDP data point to a sharp slowdown in annual growth and to quarterly contractions of GDP in two consecutive quarters. The deterioration of economic sentiment indicators and financing conditions in the private sector suggest that the slowdown of the economy is likely to accelerate in the second quarter of 2015, putting the economy at risk for a renewed bout of recession.

In other words, despite all that was done, nothing (nothing) was moved even slightly in the right direction except a bunch of prices predicated on the same assumptions disproven time and again. Liquidity is effective in only a narrow capacity to send economic estimates and asset prices ever-skyward – prices that now only create more problems.

It would be fittingly tragic if this was all limited to just Greece, but it is rather universal beyond even Europe. This is a failure of orthodox thinking from its most basic premises, including how an economy actually works. If you view the economic world through the concepts incorporated into Milton Friedman’s plucking model and encounter a great financial “shock” that produces a severe recession, including a huge curtailment in credit supply and lending, then it might seem a plausible solution to address only that shock and expect the economy, through restored lending, to return to its prior and healthy trajectory.

ABOOK June 2015 TrendCycle Plucking

If that doesn’t occur, certainly after the passage of five and now six years, that might suggest rethinking the entire premise. But orthodox monetary economics does not allow such evolution. Instead captured by monetary neutrality and Keynesian hysteresis (which is nothing more than an updated, fancy “pump priming”) the “solution” is never to change course but always bigger. The ECB, as other central banks, do greater and greater “liquidity” convinced only of debt (and future debt at that) as the one true answer.

The ECB cannot even gain Step 2 aside from some minor turns here and there. Overall, as noted last week, lending in Europe is decidedly unbothered no matter what the ECB does or does not do. Despite tremendous influence in the banking system, consistently and perpetually, real economy lending is about as stable as could possibly be; if there is monetary influence in these lending patterns it is remarkably well-hidden. You would think trillions in euros in “stimulus” would at least offer some minor perturbation, but none still exists exactly where it should be and is expected to be.

ABOOK June 2015 IP ECBQE HHABOOK June 2015 IP ECBQE NFC

The Greek case offers quite a relevant view into the world of 21st century monetary alchemy, because that is what it really amounts to. Consistent with the Yellen Doctrine, the ECB conspired to a bubble (even a mini version this time) in order to create the economy that would eventually justify the bubble on an ex post facto basis – liquidity, to prices, to lending, to recovery and normal economy. That places financial factors upside down or backwards, as asset prices are no longer discounting mechanisms but simple (and ineffectve) tools not to recognize what might happen in the near future but rather to actually make it happen (rational expectations).  What is left, however, is the worst of all cases; no recovery, no lending and now just more financial imbalance piled onto the same negative pressures and imbalances that never really went away. The recessionary “shock” in the first place was itself the “solutions” that central banks continue to offer; thus, what they really offer is the condition to make it all still worse.

Accountability will likely continue to be narrowed to hysteresis terms yet again, meaning that the “experts” will claim that they didn’t do enough to get Sisyphus’s rock over the economic hill. The problem isn’t really Sisyphus or the rock, it is the fact that the hill, the mountain of debt, remains the primary problem and can never be solved by more of the same. What is amazing is how short the attention of “investors” may be, and how they allow themselves to think monetary complexity passes for proficiency or even expertise despite all and continued observation otherwise. The ECB has innumerable programs, theories and mathematical equations, all of which amount to everything I have shown above; nothing.

 

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Sat, 06/20/2015 - 13:52 | 6217567 MonetaryApostate
MonetaryApostate's picture

And the show, I mean fraud, must go on.....  (Until it can't anymore, coming soon!!!)

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 23:03 | 6218453 The Rolling Thunder
The Rolling Thunder's picture

I'm making over $7k a month working part time. I kept hearing other people tell me how much money they can make online so I decided to look into it. Well, it was all true and has totally changed my life. This is what I do... www.earnmore9.com

Sun, 06/21/2015 - 08:14 | 6218833 Eugend66
Eugend66's picture

Go away, bot!

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:12 | 6217598 wmbz
wmbz's picture

"the mountain of debt"

What's all this talk and worry about debt for? I thought that everyone understood that "debt doesn't matter"!

Just ask any "financial guru" here in the USSA, they'll tell it's just data entry!

All we need is MOAR! 

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 15:56 | 6217789 MonetaryApostate
MonetaryApostate's picture

Right, that sounds all so true until countries they are robbing band up together to come kick our asses.... 

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:21 | 6217614 This is it
This is it's picture

Oh, you state the obvious, in a long article using charts.

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:28 | 6217622 Handful of Dust
Handful of Dust's picture

EU consumers, akin to Merikan consumers, are Broke Donkeys. Very little has been done since The Collapse to help the Middle Class. In fact, moar regulation and  laws such as Obamacare, etc have pounded them even further.

Zero yield on savings accounts has certainly compounded the problem and expanding the FSA on the one hand, and empowering the Corporate Monopolies on the other, have not helped.

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:43 | 6217659 Bobbo
Bobbo's picture

How does one repossess an entire nation? 

After all, the ECB did buy Greece, didn't it?  SOMEBODY sold it to them.  Now it's theirs. 

Which Plantation Army will march on Greece to punish the slaves?  Not the US, I presume.  None from BRICS.  Will it be the German, the Argentine, ... Antarctic?  You know what I mean.....

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:44 | 6217661 Jack Burton
Jack Burton's picture

The 2015 economic theory is that Banks are the well spring of wealth and economic growth. Banks must be supported in all their mad schemes and business model failures, because they MAKE the economy and thus the wealth. In fact, that's all bullshit. Banks are stores of the wealth created by the economy, a store and a distributor through loans to good credit risks. This has all been turned on it's head, as banks become great trading houses and manipulators of markets in their own rights. When we allowed this to be done with guaranteed depositsm we dug our own economic graves. Without crokked banking, Greece never could have gotten deep into debt, no sane lender would have backed the Olympics, pay raises for public employees, early retirement for public employees, paid for with borrowed money! Never.

Either go after the banks and fucking tear them down, close them, fire all the cunts working there. The rebuild with a series of utility banks. Banks as Public Utilites. Strict rules. If you want to be a trading house, then open a trading house, but you can't be a guarnteed deposit taker and trade and manipulate on the markets!

Why is that not done? Billionaire Bankers would lose their asses, and their bought and paid for politicians would never let that happen!

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 14:48 | 6217666 i_call_you_my_base
i_call_you_my_base's picture

I always get a kick out of justifications for stimulus to try to get back to trendline. The trendline over the last few decades has only been defined by periods of bubbles and CB intervention. Most economies haven't known a "natural" state of growth in a really long time. All attempts to "prime the pump" are merely attempts to regain the trendline of a bubble. By definition, the goal becomes bubble.

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 15:03 | 6217693 The Delicate Genius
The Delicate Genius's picture

its all about who controls the energy, and who controls the ink and paper used to conduct real world valuable transactions. Good and services for nothin' - {and their chicks for free}

http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-geopolitics-of-gas-and-the-syrian-crisi...

Everything else is trivia.

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 15:10 | 6217707 Handful of Dust
Handful of Dust's picture

How much is gold worth?

 

According to management consulting firm McKinsey & Company, the world now sits beneath a mountain of debt worth an astonishing $200 trillion. That’s greater than twice the global GDP, which is currently $75 trillion. If we were to distribute this amount equally to every man, woman and child on the face of the earth, we would each owe around $28,000. More surprising is that if gold backed total global debt 100 percent, it would be valued at $33,900 per ounce.

 

http://www.businessinsider.com/how-much-gold-would-be-worth-if-it-backed...

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 16:01 | 6217762 falak pema
falak pema's picture

you should have sung that to Nixon and Friedman in 1971; when the USD went "free n floating" outside Keynes's gold exchange of BW concoction...hahaha; yes we killed Keynes's model right there although we villify his ghost day in day out today ! ('Cos our Oligarchs play both ends of the construct like true despots, sons of Machiavelli's mantra).

And the Chicaaago school of monetary floating rates became the dictatorship of the Greenback hegemony, behind the curtain of FED's phony game, in the new fixation of "our money your problem", run out of City's Eurodollar free and easy market, where the TBTF were born in fractional reserve without any counterchecks print and recycle debt to infinity phony-baloney "free market". 

Monopoly capitalism was truly born then, by a FED OWNED by the TBTF cabal of USA, now gone Bilderberger anointed on both sides of the pond; soon to become the Trilateral when Dear Henry included Japan and then ping ponged Mao's China! 

When Clinton revoked Glass Steagall, now a vestige of past given Greenspan's forced feeding of market exuberance with Zirp, the age of world assets fed on steroids to further enrichen the already rich  was thus born; under dear old Ronnie R's legacy of uncontrolled markets that the Democrats dared not change.

This time leveraged beyond recognition like a face lifted, botoxed Holywood star.

The past casts a long shadow more than most people understand; like in Afghan/Syrac/Libya; as a result of FDR's Saud handshake in 1945 which sealed the deal of Ghawar's new age of ME supply side supremacy under the Pax Americana umbrella as successor to Pax Britannica.  

Oil's stranglehold and phony money hegemony feed the thirst for military surpemacy to control the world. 

We've been here before for the fight for spice and silk routes of orient, it started the wars of control for deep Asia's wealth.

Now Asia is biting back ! So its back to 1453 and maybe even to Mongol times !  

Sat, 06/20/2015 - 19:51 | 6218176 bentaxle
bentaxle's picture

Greece is drunk! To make it better we just have to make it drunker!

S\

If the CB's let Greece fail.......should have a hard time convincing the sheeple their QE BS won't fail anywhere else?

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