Sunday, January 18, 2009

Roadmap, what roadmap?

As we travel the winding path of the financial and economic crisis, a recent blog on Seeking Alpha asks: Where are we on the Roadmap? Cam Hui then proceeds to answer:

If history is any guide, given that the U.S. recession began in early 2008, then on average the recession will end in late 2009/early 2010. Reinhart & Rogoff showed that equity prices had an average decline of 55% and the S&P 500 has neared that mark on a peak to trough basis.

This environment suggests that equity markets are in a bottoming, base-building process. We should be prepared for a test or even small breakdown from the lows seen late last year, but the downside is limited. If the average recession ends in late 2009/early 2010, then the timing of the final bottom should occur sometime in 2Q or 3Q 2009.

I’m sorry Cam, but here is a more interesting question: Is there a roadmap? This is not an average decline. It is not even an average nasty recession.

With apologies to Tolstoy, all bull markets resemble one another, each bear market creates misery in its own way.

In terms of timeline, Hugh Hendry from Eclectica suggests a longer period of adjustment. He told CNBC,

Debt of all forms went from a generational low of 110% of GDP in 1974 to 360% of GDP recently. We have supersized everything. In 25 years it will be back at 110% of GDP. That has profound implications on valuations and asset classes. It puts a downward damper on everything.

Closer to the mark is Martin Wolf who opines in a recent blog in the Financial Times that choices made in 2009 will shape the globe’s destiny.

Welcome to 2009. This is a year in which the fate of the world economy will be determined, maybe for generations.

Some entertain hopes that we can restore the globally unbalanced economic growth of the middle years of this decade. They are wrong.

Our choice is only over what will replace it. It is between a better balanced world economy and disintegration. That choice cannot be postponed. It must be made this year.

For those still in denial, this is a sobering trade-off. There is no John Maynard Keynes in the wings, there is no agreed upon strategy that beckons. Myopia and self interest will rule among nations as they always have. Interestingly Wolf does not allow for the most likely outcome, a muddling-through process that will permit extensive disintegration before we achieve a better balanced world economy.

The real question is, can the world and its leaders muddle-through without running the risk of civic unrest in all major countries? Commentators are worried about the risk of civic unrest in China. The real risk is civic unrest in the USA and Europe.
The US in particular is a populace with a low pain threshold. It can no longer fight wars if it means spilling its own blood. Similarly, it is a populace born to spend, it’s own money and that of others. How readily can it learn to save. How long will it tolerate an underperforming economy? Unemployment reached 25 percent in the Great Depression and the country survived. What is the tipping point for the unemployment rate in US and other Western economies? Is it 25 percent or possibly lower, perhaps 10 percent before extremists of left and right, populists and demagogues, emerge on our political doorstep. The real question then is will they be welcomed?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

While I don't begin to understand economic theory, the idea that there might be a deciferable roadmap through these difficult times is somehow reassuring. I just hope that, like the latest GPS devices, it will provide ongoing and immediate adjustments to the emerging potholes, construction, washouts, road to nowhere signs, along the way...