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subject: Shaw Capital Management Korea: Portfolio Recommendations [print this page]


We have made no changes in our portfolios this month.

The latest developments in the government debt

markets have increased the uncertainties about

prospects for both the bond and financial markets.

However, although the pace of the global economic

recovery may be affected, there appears to be enough

momentum to enable it to continue.

We have therefore maintained the level of our exposure

to the equity markets; and we have left 10% of the funds

in the portfolio in cash deposits as a contingency

measure. Bond exposure is zero.

Shaw Capital Management Korea: Portfolio

Recommendations - The UK Hung Parliament

The bond markets are totally calm about the hung

Parliament, as they are about both UK and US bond

prospects, with yields still below 4%, in spite of the

huge deficits both countries are running.

What is going on?

The first point is that both countries are recovering,

and seem set for growth rates in the 23% range.

Such growth is not V-shaped but a V was unlikely

given the shortage of oil and raw materials, which

continues to limit world recovery potential. It does

give a prospect of improving tax revenues and falling

benefit expenditures.

As growth goes forward it will be possible to work out

more accurately how much of the current deficit is

structural i.e. will not disappear with returning

growth.

For the UK the current estimate is that about 8% of

GDP is structural: still requiring a huge programme of

retrenchment.

The second point is that neither the UK nor the US has

ever formally defaulted in modern times.

Indeed for the UK, they can date this from the end of

the Napoleonic Wars when public debt reached around

300% of GDP.

The third point is the new unwillingness to use higher

inflation to bring down the debt in real value. Inflation

(implying an inflation tax on government monetary

liabilities which thereby lose their value) is now

proscribed after the poor experiences of developed

countries during the great inflation of the 1970s.

Electorates have rejoiced at the new inflation targeting

policies that have formally ended governments

experiments with this form of taxation.

The electorates hated the messy and unintended

redistributions of wealth this tax implied often from

the weak such as pensioners to the wealthy and the

unionized.

In this context bond markets have treated Mr. Obamas

delays and the UKs election result as simply policy

deferred.

In that they are likely to be right.

Shaw Capital Management Korea: Portfolio

Recommendations - The state of the eurozone

By contrast the situation in the euro-zone looks

increasingly difficult.

The problem is that Greece and Portugal the two

main current problem cases joined the euro in the

expectation that low interest rates would keep their

public finances under control.

Internally these countries have difficulty in raising

taxes and curbing expenditure but joining the EU and

then the euro gave them the authority to insist on fiscal

discipline as the price of joining.

Now the discipline is becoming harsh and yet interest

rate premia are rising, as the risk of default increases.

Germany and the other euro-zone countries are

unwilling to transfer resources to them and even to

provide loans on terms below these market rates.

Germanys position in particular has hardened

massively under hostile home reactions to perceived

bail-out.

Germany is simply unwilling to make transfers after

the huge costs of its integration policies for East

Germany.

There will come a point where the advantages of being

in the euro are outweighed by the disadvantages for a

country like Greece.

Once interest rate premia get high enough inside the

euro, the attraction of floating the currency down

outside it and still paying similar interest rates will

become overwhelming to governments faced with

public hostility to further sacrifice.

A large devaluation is a way of allowing the economy

to recover and produce extra revenue.

Furthermore reintroducing the local currency will

allow the government to re-denominate the debt in

that new sovereign currency so effecting a de facto

partial default.

These exits would not spell the end of the euro. But

they will remind markets that the euro is bound

together by political convenience only and not by some

deep commitment to European integration.

Up to now there has been a general belief in such a

commitment; however, Germanys recent actions have

destroyed this belief.

It was this belief that kept interest rate premia down

on sovereign debt of euro-zone countries; rather like

the debt of UK local authorities formally underwritten

by the UK government, it was felt that these countries

debt was being implicitly underwritten by other eurozone

members. No longer.

But of course what can happen to Greece could happen

to any other country. If so its risk premia too would

rise and it too would face the same trade-off between

staying in or exiting with the freedom to float at similar

interest rates outside.

Hence the chances of more break-up would get larger

and the system would become gradually closer to a

system of fixed but adjustable exchange rates like the

old European Monetary System.

by: shawcapital




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