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I look forward at the beginning of every quarter to receiving the Quarterly
Outlook from Hoisington Investment Management. They have been prominent proponents
of the view that deflation is the problem, stemming from a variety of factors,
and write about their views in a very clear and concise manner. This quarter's
letter is no exception, where they once again delve into the history books
to bring up fresh and relevant lessons for today. This is a must read piece.
Hoisington Investment Management Company (www.hoisingtonmgt.com)
is a registered investment advisor specializing in fixed income portfolios
for large institutional clients. Located in Austin, Texas, the firm has over
$4-billion under management, composed of corporate and public funds, foundations,
endowments, Taft-Hartley funds, and insurance companies. And now let's jump
right in to the essay.
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
Quarterly Review and Outlook - Third Quarter 2009
Ponzi Finance
By Van R. Hoisington and Lacy H. Hunt, Ph.D.
The Federal Reserve reported that as of June 30, 2009 total U.S. debt was
$52.8 trillion. Total U.S. debt includes government, corporate and consumer
debt. Importantly, however, it does not include a few trillion in "off balance
sheet" financing, contingent unfunded pension plans for corporate and state
and local governments, or unfunded liabilities of the U.S. government for such
items as Medicare, Social Security and other programs. Currently GDP stands
at $14.2 trillion, so there is approximately $3.73 in debt for every dollar
of output in the United States, a level unprecedented in our history (Chart
1). Normally, debt levels as a percent of GDP would be uninteresting and immaterial;
however, the current level of debt is unique in two ways. First, the asset
side of the balance sheet purchased by the debt is falling in price. Second,
the money that was borrowed to purchase those assets was often fraudulently
expended. Neither the borrower nor the lender really expected the debt to be
serviced. Rather, each party expected the asset price to rise extinguishing
the debt.

This type of financial arrangement was correctly analyzed by the famous American
economist Hyman Minsky in his paper, "Financial Instability Hypothesis", in
which he described three phases of debt financing. The first is "hedge finance",
where the lender expects a return on both principal and interest. The second
is "speculative finance" where the lender expects to get interest on the loan
but perhaps not the principal. The third case, where the lender expects neither
the principal nor interest to be returned, is referred to as "ponzi finance".
This was typified in the last business cycle by loans issued without documentation,
no down payment home loans, extremely low cap rates on commercial real estate,
and the high leverage borrowing ratio of private equity funds. Even ponzi finance
works as long as asset prices are rising. But once the bubble is pricked, the
debtor is left with declining asset values that preclude the rollover of their
obligations.
Presently, in this worst of all post-war recessions we are witnessing the
collapse of asset prices that were inflated by the speculation of earlier years.
The aftermath of that speculation and its impact on the economy has been thoroughly
studied prior to our present business cycle by the economists of yesteryear
who marveled at the mania in the collective mindset of private citizens and
their elected representatives who produced such bubbles. The most famous of
these economists was Irving Fisher (1867-1947), who in 1933 wrote about this
problem of over-indebtedness (Irving Fisher, 1933, Econometrica, "The
Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions"). He stated flatly that over-indebtedness
was the difference between normal business cycles (recessions), which occur
frequently through "over-production, inventory misjudgment, or commodity price
fluctuations" and extreme business cycle fluctuations (depressions). Based
on his analysis of the great depressions of 1837, 1873, and 1929 he outlined
a pattern of economic developments that will take place when the debt cycle
is broken. Seemingly old news, but it is interesting to apply his sequence
of events to today's economic developments as there are disturbing similarities.
A Downward Spiral
Fisher posited that debt liquidation leads to distress selling, contracting
bank deposits and declining velocity of money, all of which contribute to the
fall in price levels. This accurately describes today's circumstances. Distress
selling is rampant, with home foreclosures reaching all-time highs. Additionally,
rapidly rising foreclosures in commercial real estate are causing the closing
of financial institutions and the liquidation of their portfolios. Money supply
(M2), an imperfect measure of bank deposits, is essentially flat over the last
six months even though the monetary base is 100% higher than it was a year
ago (Chart 2). Further, the velocity of M2 has contracted at a 12.7% rate over
the past two years. The Personal Consumption Expenditure Deflator (goods purchased
by consumers) has fallen from a 2.7% growth rate 12 months ago to a yearly
increase of only 1.3% presently, and appears to be heading for a zero reading
in 2010. GDP has recorded its greatest contraction since the 1930's, and probably
is not yet at its lowest level for this cycle.

Fisher then noticed that this distress selling would lead to a fall in the
net worth of businesses, a decline in profits, and a reduction in employment.
Fisher may have been talking about 1929 and the 1800's, but that is precisely
our present situation. Despite a 19% gain in stock prices this year, the S&P
500 has declined about 30% from its peak and stands lower than it was a decade
earlier. Corporate profits are down approximately 13% on a year over year basis,
and in 2008 S&P 500 profits fell for the first time since 1933. The net
worth of hundreds of banks and other large corporations has fallen below zero,
with some surviving only because of a massive rescue effort by the federal
government. Despite these efforts, consumer net worth has fallen, price levels
of homes are down about 30% from their peak levels, and business net worth
has been impaired by an almost 39% decline in commercial real estate from its
peak levels. Industrial production is down 13.3% since its peak, the largest
20 month decline in the post war period (Chart 3). Including potential revisions,
the U.S. has lost eight million jobs in this recession, and currently 17% of
the labor force is either underemployed, partially employed, or out of work
seeking employment.

Fisher seems to be not so historical as prescient. He states that all the
above problems create disturbances in the rate of interest, particularly the
fall of nominal money rates and the rise of real interest rates. The federal
funds rate is now effectively zero, and yet with the steady downward movement
in price indices, real interest rates are rising. This, of course, is of concern
to debtors.
The uncomfortable conclusion of Fisher's analysis is that major business cycle
fluctuations are, in fact, caused by over-indebtedness and the fall in asset
prices. Our present situation appears to mirror the exact sequence of events
that have occurred in previous depressions. This suggests that our current "great
recession" may morph into a more serious and elongated downward business cycle.
The Impossible Promise
The federal government's promise to extricate the U.S. economy from this recession
involves more spending (increasing public debt) and more subsidies for consumers,
such as car rebates and home buying incentives (more private debt). In other
words, more debt is supposed to solve the problem of over-indebtedness. The
truth is that this policy merely indentures its citizens further without providing
any income for repayment of debt. In previous letters we have discussed the
fact that the government spending multiplier is zero (read Professor Robert
Barro's book, Macroeconomics - a Modern Approach, p. 370). This means
there is no long term income benefit from stimulus programs. According to the
latest academic research, the most recent $800 billion stimulus plan will boost
economic activity in the short run, but will surely depress economic activity
over time. The government problem is complicated by the fact that the tax multiplier
is 3, meaning that a 1% change in taxes will change GDP by about 3% over time.
More recent research (Barro & Redlick, September 2009, "NBER Working
Paper 15369") suggests that a 1% cut in the marginal tax rate would raise
GDP in the ensuing year by 0.6%. With the deficit rising due to a zero spending
multiplier, the tendency will be to try to raise taxes to pay for this higher
level of expenditures, which will further depress aggregate spending and output.
From a fiscal policy perspective the outlook for economic growth appears to
be one of stagnation for several years due to the size of the federal debt,
which is expected to rise 35.7% from 2008 levels to 76.5% of GDP over the next
ten years according to the Office of Management and Budget (Chart 4). This
exercise in government spending is, of course, an exact replica of the Japanese
experience from 1989 to the present. Their debt to GDP ratios have gone from
about 50% in 1988 to about 178% today, and yet their nominal GDP is no higher
than it was 17 years ago, and their employment stands at twenty year ago levels.
It is somewhat unsettling that as of the last employment report the United
States employed 131 million people, a level that was first reached in 2000,
which means the United States has had no net job gains for almost ten years.
Indeed, it appears that the fiscal chain around the free market neck is sufficiently
onerous to restrain growth for several years. The promise of the government
to revive growth through increased indebtedness is, indeed, an impossible promise.

The Hesitant Fed
As Fisher stated, the write-down of debt and distress selling tends to destroy
money deposits and lower the velocity of money. Despite the historical evidence
of that fact, our current Fed authorities appear to be oblivious to the lessons
of the past. Their initial reaction to the liquidity crisis has to be applauded
for their heavy work in insuring the liquidity of the financial system. Similarly,
the expansion of their bank balance sheet to $2.1 trillion from $1 trillion
was the precise reaction needed to counter the emerging deflation of asset
prices. However, their actions increased inflationary expectations, and they
have encountered a plethora of critics. In responding to this criticism the
most recent statistics suggests they are beginning to lose the fight against
the deflationary impulses. Consider that the monetary base rose 1000% in the
three months ending December 2008, but has been held essentially flat since
then (Chart 5).

The Fed's purchases of assets to increase this base automatically created
deposits that positively charged the money supply growth to a 15.2% six-month
growth rate (Chart 2). If the economy were operating near full capacity, a
healthy banking system would take these deposits and multiply them roughly
nine times; that circumstance could be inflationary. Unfortunately the banking
system is not healthy, as evidenced by the fact that we have closed 95 banks
this year, more than the cumulative total of the past 15 years, and another
416 banks are on a list destined to become extinct. With consumers' asset prices
falling so rapidly and banks increasingly afraid of failure, banks are more
interested in collecting loans than in lending. So with fewer consumers now
credit worthy, loan volumes are collapsing. As loans are paid off, deposits
are destroyed, and the money multiplier that should stand at nine has gone
to zero. This is evidenced by the fact that the six-month change in M2 has
fallen to a 1% growth rate, meaning that monetary stimulus is on hold. Get
set for negative GDP in 2010.
Dollar Weakness
The inflation outlook from the monetary and fiscal standpoint looks truly
deflationary, yet some believe that dollar weakness will reverse this circumstance
and create inflation. This is unlikely. First, our imports are about 13% of
GDP, and even if the dollar were to halve in value, the price of imported goods
would not only have to compete with U.S. producers, but also their price adjustment
would have to offset the other 87% of factors included in the pricing indices.
Second, unlike the 1930's a 50% decline in the dollar would be difficult to
engineer. Fisher recommended to Roosevelt that the U.S. should exit the gold
standard, which he did in April of 1933. That was a fixed exchange rate system,
and within three months the dollar lost more than 30% against the gold block
countries and fell to 60% of its former value within the next five months.
This spurred our exports and provided some price inflation (2.9% per year,
GDP deflator) for the next four years. Then, in 1937 the tax increases (the
next policy mistake) reversed the positive growth rate of the economy and drove
price levels and economic activity downward again. However, even with that
small period of price increases the overall price level never recovered from
the 25% decline that occurred from 1929 to 1933, and thus deflation reigned.
Today the declining dollar is a good thing in terms of our trade balance, but
the modest change will be insufficient to offset the negative forces of insufficient
domestic demand.
Next year the core GDP deflator will fall to zero, with the possibility of
negative levels. Likewise, long-term interest rates, which are highly sensitive
to inflation, will continue to move toward lower levels. As stated in previous
letters, we see no reason why longer dated Treasury interest rates will not
mirror those of Japan, which provides a modern signpost for a deflationary
environment. Currently the Japanese ten-year note stands at 1.3% with their
thirty-year bond yielding 2.1%.
Van R. Hoisington
Lacy H. Hunt, Ph.D.
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John Mauldin
Frontlinethoughts.com
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