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Payback Time - The Coming Decade Of Deleveraging

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Having gorged on the fat pipe of cheap credit for much of the previous few decades, the last few years have rapidly and aggressively slapped the US (and indeed much of the world) from its stupor. All that growth, was it real? The speed of economic leveraging began to gain momentum in the early 1970s and accelerated sharply in the 1980s as the cost of debt began its decades-long decline. That leverage enabled consumption and capex to rise quicker and with less capital but obviously with more risk. With the current balance-sheet recession stymieing monetary policy and fiscal policy hardly supportive, it seems the private deleveraging hole will be difficult to fill with public borrowing excess. It seems that credit markets (the ubiquitous source of all that leverage) have again and again sung from a different song-sheet with regard to the way we escape from the inevitable deleveraging we are currently undertaking. Matt King, of Citigroup, provides a thought-provoking (and all-encompassing) slide-deck on the coming decade of deleveraging and how now is time for payback.

 

Payback Time: The Coming Decade Of Deleveraging

Matt King - Citi Investment Research & Analysis


1. The Bubble In Credit

Post Crisis Recoveries... Temporary Blip, or permanently altered trajectory?

The current recovery in context...Fine in some respects, but something seems broken

A Crisis of Demand? Not just a matter of lowering rates (the balance sheet-recession)

More Borrowing = More Growth? previous growth was founded upon borrowing - was it real?

How Much Have We Borrowed? More debt in more sectors in more countries than ever before

Wealth Effects - spending only possible because of high net worth

Leading To The Growth Triangle - But Don't Look Down!!!

Love Triangle or Pyramid Scheme?

 

2. Ways Of Deleveraging

Balancing Government's Books - Austerity works if offset by private leveraging

Assessing The Broader Economy...but the private sector is in savings mode too!

Whole Economy Deleveraging - much harder - unless you debase the currrency

The Effect On GDP - without FX, adjustment is extremely painful!

Bring On The Central Banks - But don't expect them to work miracles

 

3. Investment Implications

Saved, or Doomed? It's all a question of confidence!

Growth - Lower, but above all, more volatile!!

Expectations Management - Optimism is becoming harder to sustain

Real Estate - Deleveraging + Older Populations = Downward Spiral

Equities - The end of the equity culture?

Banks and Bankruptcies - Be wary of multiples on leveraged instruments

Fixed Income - low yields should eventually make for tight spreads...

Credit -...but only once the bankruptcies are out of the way

Structured Credit - Better the devil you know (EFSF anyone?)

And In Conclusion...

Debt Needs To Fall...

Asset Prices Likely To Go With It...

and Fixed Returns Beat Uncertain Ones...

Deleveraging Is More Difficult Than You Think

 

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Thu, 11/17/2011 - 23:29 | 1890168 rambler6421
rambler6421's picture

Deflation bitchez?

 

libertarian86.blogspot.com

Thu, 11/17/2011 - 23:35 | 1890180 Little Red Rooter
Little Red Rooter's picture

Chickens provide meat and eggs, bitchez!

Thu, 11/17/2011 - 23:40 | 1890189 High Plains Drifter
High Plains Drifter's picture

hey who said silver wasn't money..............

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=q6Uxahy4Yt4#!

Thu, 11/17/2011 - 23:55 | 1890218 Demogorgon
Demogorgon's picture

The 1930s Great Depression's got nothing on us. We've got it beat already, and we're still in the first inning. Go central banking!

 

Thu, 11/17/2011 - 23:54 | 1890223 Great Depressio...
Great Depression Trader's picture

So many pretty pretty charts!

Fri, 11/18/2011 - 02:47 | 1890534 billsykes
billsykes's picture

well i think everyone is missing a couple of charts are skewed to reflect the authors bias.

Real Estate - Deleveraging + Older Populations = Downward Spiral slide

note where  US timeline ends (2020) and all other slides begin.

and these- never trust charts don't start at zero.

Wealth Effects - spending only possible because of high net worth

Credit -...but only once the bankruptcies are out of the way

regardless, of the faulty analysis- I still think the conclusion is the same, the average person is fucked.


Fri, 11/18/2011 - 02:55 | 1890541 Temporalist
Temporalist's picture

Lawrence Kotlikoff about the U.S. "We are insolvent."

 

Kotlikoff Sees U.S. Fiscal Gap of $211 Trillion

http://www.bloomberg.com/video/80689698/

Fri, 11/18/2011 - 02:57 | 1890542 hedgehog9999
hedgehog9999's picture

I will dare to say the deleveraging started a few months ago in the spring. I believe we have just ended a major bounce of this deleveraging process in the last week or so. The strong outiside reversal in OIL Today confirms that.

Gold is also heading down to $1050 in this deleveraging phase we are now in which might take 6  to 8 months.

Fri, 11/18/2011 - 09:50 | 1890941 PulauHantu29
PulauHantu29's picture

Did he say why CentralB*nks are gobbling up all the gold they can buy?

Don't they know what Buffet said?

Tue, 11/29/2011 - 03:09 | 1924417 Lord Koos
Lord Koos's picture

(In a financial crisis), Citi says "fixed returns beat uncertain ones"  Wow these guys are fucking geniuses.

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