Richard Koo: a personal view of the macroeconomy


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I agree, and the deficit of consequence isn’t that high as I think that figure includes the TARP funds
which were a form of regulatory forbearance and not spending.

Unfortunately, elsewhere he falls short in explaining why deficit spending doesn’t have the downside risks the mainstream attributes to it.

Send him a copy of the 7 deadly innocent frauds draft for comment? (attached)

Richard Koo: a personal view of the macroeconomy

US a mirror image of Japan 15 years ago

In the last two weeks, I made my annual fact-finding mission to
Washington and also spent time in Boston and San Francisco. What I
witnessed was very reminiscent of the situation in Japan 15 years ago:
people were latching on to isolated fragments of good economic news as
evidence of recovery while ignoring the steady deterioration in the real
economy.

In addition to meetings with officials from the Federal Reserve and the
White House, I had the opportunity to talk with various groups at the
Hill including two Congresspersons over lunch.

Although there have been signs of improvement in the real economy,
particularly in production, the problems in the jobs picture are
underscored by the unemployment rate’s rise into double digits.

And on a personal level, the San Francisco bank that my parents
patronized for many years was shut down by the FDIC last Friday. To
prevent panic, the bank opened for business as usual on Saturday under
the name of another lender. This event added a personal dimension to the
crisis for me.

Budget deficit concerns make new fiscal stimulus all but impossible

One issue of particular concern on this trip was that people seem to be
paying little attention to the economic impact of the Obama
administration’s fiscal stimulus and instead are focusing entirely on
the size of the resulting budget deficit.

With the government running a deficit equal to 10% of nominal GDP, more
people are looking at the continued weakness in the economy:
particularly in employment: and drawing the conclusion that the
administration’s policies are ineffective and should be discontinued as
soon as possible. This view is so strong that additional fiscal stimulus
is seen as being almost impossible to implement today.

This pattern mirrors events in Japan 15 years ago. The more the
government draws on fiscal stimulus to avert a crisis, the more
criticism it receives.

People are giving no thought to the economic consequences if the
government had not responded to the $10trn loss in national wealth (in
the form of housing and stock portfolios) with fiscal stimulus. Instead,
they focus entirely on the fact that the economy has yet to improve
despite $787bn in expenditures.

In Japan, fiscal spending succeeded in keeping GDP above bubble-peak
levels despite the loss of Y1,500trn in national wealth, or three years
of GDP, from real estate and stocks alone. But because disaster was
averted, people forgot they were in the midst of a crisis and rushed to
criticize the size of the resulting fiscal deficits.

Their criticism prevented the Japanese government from providing a
steady stream of stimulus. Instead, it was forced to adopt a stop-and-go
policy of intermittent stimulus: each time a spending package expired,
the economy would weaken, forcing the government to quickly implement
the next round of stimulus. That is the main reason why the recession
lasted 15 years. And the mood in Washington today is very similar.

R. Koo


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IEA oil consumption forecast


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A modest rise in consumption for next year means the Saudis/OPEC remain firmly in control of price.

Global oil consumption is likely to average 86.1 million barrels a day in 2010, the IEA said in an Oct. 9 monthly report, raising next year’s forecast for a third consecutive month. The agency expects demand of 84.6 million barrels a day this year. The IEA’s next monthly report will be issued on Nov. 12.

It will be up to members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to satisfy the bulk of the world’s increasing need for oil as conventional production in countries outside the group peaks next year, the IEA said.

“Most of the increase in output would need to come from OPEC countries, which hold the bulk of remaining recoverable conventional oil resources,” the agency said in the report.


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China to Re-Export Copper as Stockpiles Mount, Xi’an Maike Says


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Interesting turn of events.

China to Re-Export Copper as Stockpiles Mount, Xi’an Maike Says

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) — China, the top copper user, holds as much as 350,000 metric tons in duty-free warehouses and the metal may be re-exported as supplies outpace demand, according to Xi’an Maike MetalInternational Group.

“We can hardly find buyers for refined copper,” said Luo Shengzhang, general manager of the copper department at Xi’an Maike. The
company ranks among the country’s three biggest importers, according to the executive. “China’s got to export some copper from now and next year,” Luo said in an interview.

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Copper, used in pipes and wires, has more than doubled in London this year as China’s 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus spending,
increased state stockpiling and a lack of scrap material boosted imports to a record. That’s helped to drive Chinese prices below London’s sinceat least July.

Xi’an Maike has had to re-route some bonded copper to London Metal Exchange warehouses in South Korea because the company was unable to find buyers in China, said Luo, who spoke yesterday in Shanghai. The effect of the stimulus package was wearing off and local scrap supply was improving, he said.

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Luo’s estimate of the bonded-zone stockpiles compares with 60,000 tons by Macquarie Group Ltd.  in July. It’s also more than triple the
inventory in Shanghai Futures Exchange warehouses, which stood at 104,275 tons as of the week of Nov. 2. A bonded zone holds imported goods before duty has been paid.

                     Copper’s Rally

Three-month copper in London traded today at $6,548 a ton compared with $3,070 at the end of last year. Futures in Shanghai have also more than doubled this year to a high of 51,580 yuan ($7,554) a ton today.

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Still, buying the metal from overseas to sell in the Chinese market has not been profitable since at least July, according to Bloomberg
calculations. Prices in Shanghai were more than 1,300 yuan a ton lower than London yesterday, after accounting for China’s 17 percent value
added tax.

In addition to the bonded-zone stockpiles, China may also hold 150,000 tons in the Shanghai area, including in exchange- monitored
warehouses; 235,000 tons at the State Reserve Bureau, which maintains government holdings; and 200,000 tons with fabricators and private
investors, Luo said.

Refined-copper exports by China were 10,705 tons in September, 70 percent more than a month ago and the highest this year, according to data by the Beijing-based customs office. Refined-copper imports in the first nine months were 2.58 million tons, 165 percent more than a year ago.

Xi’an Maike’s inbound shipments of refined copper may total about 400,000 tons this year, ranking among the top three importers by volume, according to Luo. The country’s imports of refined copper may halve to 1.6 million tons in 2010 from an estimated 3 million tons this year, he said.


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German October Consumer Prices Unexpectedly Decline


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Headlines all negative today.  

Soft prices indicate soft demand.

Weakness and calls for deficit cuts heightens stresses on vulnerable national govt finances.

The eurozone remains the one part of the world with systemic risk built into its institutional structure.  

Highlights:
German October Consumer Prices Unexpectedly Decline
German Investor Confidence Drops in November on Weaker Outlook
Germany to Observe EU Call for Deficit Cuts, Schaeuble Says
French Economic Recovery Probably Strengthened in Third Quarter
Italian Industrial Output Fell More Than Forecast in September
EU to Give Spain Extra Year to Trim Budget Deficit, ABC Reports


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China hopes U.S. keeps deficit to appropriate size


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Translation:  China threatens to liquidate it’s dollars to keep the dollar weak so China can peg to it and increase global exports??? 

China hopes U.S. keeps deficit to appropriate size

(Reuters) – China hopes that the United States will keep its deficit to an appropriate size to ensure basic stability in the U.S. dollar exchange rate, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said on Sunday.

“We have seen some signs of recovery in the U.S. economy … I hope that as the largest economy in the world and an issuing country of a major reserve currency, the United States will effectively discharge its responsibilities,” Wen told a news conference in Egypt.

“Most importantly, we hope the United States will keep an appropriate size to its deficit so that there will be basic stability in the exchange rate, and that is conducive to stability and the recovery of the global economy,” he added.

The premier had expressed concern in March that massive U.S. deficit spending and near-zero interest rates would erode the value of China’s huge U.S. bond holdings.

China is the biggest holder of U.S. government debt and has invested an estimated 70 percent of its more than $2 trillion stockpile of foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest, in dollar assets.

“I follow very closely Chinese holdings of U.S. assets because that constitutes a very important part of our national wealth. Our consistent principle when it comes to foreign exchange reserves is to ensure the safety, liquidity and good value of the reserves,” Wen said.


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