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Eye on the Market I
March 2, 2011
J.P.Morgan
Topics: The global recovery vs the Ides of March: the Middle East, European sovereign debt and Asian inflation
The latest manufacturing surveys show a global economy that is still expanding, particularly in the developed world. This is
what "zero cost of money" policies were supposed to create, but nevertheless, it is still reassuring to see it. Improvements
include continued strong manufacturing and export data in the US, and a better than expected manufacturing outlook in both
Italy and Ireland. In Germany. unemployment has fallen to the lowest rate since Reunification.
Manufacturing surveys: the G-3 takes center Stage
Index, sa
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
Jan•06
Jan-07
Jan-08
Source:E.Morgan Securities LLC.
Developed markets
EM Asia
Jan-09
Jan•10
La ta m
Jan•11
Cost of money = zero
Policy rates adjusted for inflation, percent
6%
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
•1%
1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008
Source:. Morgan Securities LLC.
EM countries
We are mindful, however, of The Ides of March, which begins earlier than the 15th this year. We believe we will get through
the Ides better than Caesar, but that's a very low bar given what happened that day in the Roman Senate (Emperor: bludgeoned).
While profits and balance sheets are in good shape, and while there's still a glut of cash looking to invest (from households,
corporations and Sovereign Wealth Funds), 2011 looks to be the end of the free money train, and a more volatile year for
markets. The situation in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia and Bahrain is also on edge, with tanks rolling into Qatif as I
write this. We consider the median
500 forecast of 1425 to be too high; we're at 1350-1375. Preferred portfolio exposures:
large cap US growth; private lending to real estate/mid-sized corporates; merger arbitrage; distressed European bank loans.
March 11th & 20th Saudi nationwide "Days of Rage", and minority Shi'a protests tomorrow March 3"I in oil-rich Qatif
Opinions on the Middle East are as diverse as the consultants, State Department officials, journalists, think-tank residents,
economists and historians on your TV. The differences between Saudi Arabia and Egypt may be more important than
their similarities at this stage; the table below puts some of them in high relief. We would be surprised to see combustion in
Saudi Arabia on March 11 similar to what is occurring in North Africa. But to be clear, this view reflects both a more generous
Saudi entitlement system, and more effective and pervasive policing. Figuring out which is the more dominant factor is the
hard part. It is an odd society that generates enormous oil wealth but cannot create jobs for young people (youth unemployment
estimates range from 25%-40%); where massive amounts are spent on education, but where 8th grade science and math scores
are among the lowest in the world; and where non-Saudis account for 90% of all private sector jobs.
The stability of Saudi Arabia is important to investors, given reliance on the Saudis to compensate for declines in Libyan
and Algerian oil exports (see more on page 3). Estimates of spare Saudi capacity are subject to debate, but it appears that the
Saudis now produce less than what they did in 2005-2008 (lower demand), and have increased their capacity through new
Khurais and expanded Shaybah fields. So, we consider the trend shown below of spare Saudi capacity to be quite feasible.
Rank out of 110 countries (1 =best. 110=worst)
au"
Arabia
Egypt
; mess an. • vemment orruption
7
48
Perceived Job Availability
8
85
Efforts to Address Poverty
9
23
Trust in Others
13
67
Good Environment for Entrepreneurs
16
109
Confidence in the Judicial System
18
59
Perceptions of Social Support
23
96
Human Flight (Emigration)
27
67
Gross Secondary Enrollment (Education)
38
73
]
Health Problems
Political Rights
96
102
73
93
epress Political Opinion without Fear
103
89
Personal Freedom Sub-Index Scores
103
109
Civil Liberty and Free Choice
105
97
Tolerance for Ethnic NInorthes
105
103
Separation of Powers
106
82
rce•
h h ega um
Spell
X. oga m site
Saudi Arabia spare capacity
Thousands barrels per day
3.500
3.000
2.500
2.000
1.500 -
1.000
500
0
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
Source: Bloomberg.
EFTA00603096
Eye on the Market I
March 2, 2011
JP Morgan
Topics: The global recovery vs the Ides of March: the Middle East, European sovereign debt and Asian inflation
We are having a client call on March 15 to review Saudi Arabia, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain (where the Shi'a majority are poorer
than their Saudi counterparts), etc, with a focus on oil markets. Details to follow from your.. Morgan representative. As you
absorb the analyses of what is taking place (depending upon what you read, Egypt is turning into either Turkey, Iran, Indonesia
or Belgium), keep in mind that this region has been hard to forecast, with some very inapt projections in the past (see Notes).
March 11 Eurozone summitMarch 14-15 Eurogroup meeting
There are two tensions at work: how much austerity can the Periphery take, and how much are the Germans willing to help in
exchange? As Caesar did, European political elites have crossed the Rubicon, committing to doing "whatever it takes" to save
the European project. Whether the citizenry will follow them over the long run is another question entirely. In mid-March,
Eurozone members will meet to discuss what else the German bloc will do regarding Ireland (e.g., lower interest rates on
multilateral loans) and Portugal (force them to borrow from the EFSF and stop relying on ECB purchases); and what kind of
"governance" and "competitiveness adjustments" the Periphery will sign up for. While we don't know how these back-room
discussions will play out, our contacts in Germany indicate the following two core beliefs among senior Christian Democrats
(CDU), Social Democrats (SPD), regulators and economic advisors:
1. Germany will do what is necessary to stabilize the system, and a disruptive debt restructuring is undesirable right now
2. Germany will confront its parliament with amendments and extensions to existing multilateral financing agreements only if
and when it is established that there is an immediate, imminent need to do so (reactive rather than pro-active)
As a result, we ascribe a low probability to an unraveling that would severely disrupt financial markets, and expect compromise.
Given Germany's exposure to the Periphery and low levels of bank capital (see first 2 charts), borrowing countries might have
as much negotiating power as Germany (e.g., the power of large debtors). Merkel's recent electoral defeats have been ascribed
more to local factors rather than to bailout fatigue. We'll see; upcoming elections in Baden-Wurtemburg and Sachsen-Anhalt
may reduce Merkel's ability to offer a lot of concessions. On economics, debt markets have been receptive to Spain, which is
borrowing much less from the ECB (see below). But with Periphery growth still stuck in neutral (last chart), there are still a lot
of unanswered questions. The European growth outlook was "upgraded" to 1.6% by the European Commission, but now the
ECB faces rising inflationary pressures (highest manufacturing input and output price surveys in more than a decade).
Core bank claims on Portugal, Greece, Ireland and Spain
Billions, USD
$700
$600 -
$500 -
$400 •
$300 -
$200 •
$100
$0
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
Bank capital and reserves to total assets
Percent
10
German
9
banks
8
7
6•
5•
•
French
3
2
banks
1
4
Source: Bank for International Settlements.
Spanish bank net borrowing from the ECB
Billions, Euros
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
-20
2007
2008
Source:Banco do Espana.
2010
2009
2010
2011
1
4'
0
4P, Pre
19/:••
Ot
4,1m
- to
oj,
ti?
ethan e%
o
'b
se
ares% ritrow% efice 6,4 •fr
Source:European Can Pal Bank.
Euro area real GOP
Index - 01 2008= 100
102
101
100
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
Ma -08
Aug -08
Jan-09
Jun-09
Nov-09
Apr-10
Sep-10
Source:M. Morgan Securities LLC. Data th rough O4 2010 - reported
figures used where available. estimates utii zed otherwise.
Core ex-
Germany
Germany
Periphery
2
EFTA00603097
Eye on the Market I
March 2, 2011
JP Morgan
Topics: The global recovery vs the Ides of March: the Middle East, European sovereign debt and Asian inflation
What is interesting about Germany: most credible alternatives to Merkel's CDU are in support of the European Union.
The SPD, which defeated Merkel in Hamburg, lobbied for more generous support for Greece, and is more pro-Europe than the
center-right CDU. So far, the political elites of Germany appear to be in agreement that 2011 (and perhaps 2012) is not the year
for destabilizing debt restructurings, and risks around the longevity of the European project.
March 15 US Federal Reserve Open Market Committee Meeting
The Fed meeting which takes place on the Ides of March is actually not the hurdle
here; it's the meetings held by their counterparts in other countries. Bernanke
made it clear in recent testimony that the Fed Funds rate will likely remain low
for an extended period. He expressed only mild concern about rising commodity
prices, noting that in recent decades, pass-through to core inflation has been low
(the Fed's success in relying on empirical history is mixed; see "We've never had
a decline in house prices on a nationwide basis", Bernanke, July 2005). As long
as private sector wages and employment are weak, the Fed is likely to stay put.
While the Fed is inclined to ignore pass-through risks from higher commodity
prices, it seems riskier for the developing world to take the same approach, given
much higher food and energy weights in their respective consumption baskets.
Yet many of these countries are removing monetary stimulus at a very slow pace.
Despite recent rate hikes by many EM Central Banks, policy rates in the
developing world are not far off their 2009 lows, while their economies have
recovered sharply since that time. In China, non-food inflation is at its highest
level of the last 13 years. Equity markets are likely to be nervous about the
outcome of EM Central Bank meetings until they can get on top of inflation risks
and demonstrate that they are under control.
Something not happening in March: em ergency OPEC meeting
On paper, Saudi Arabia's spare capacity is roughly twice the level of total Libyan
and Algerian oil exports (which total 1.8 mm barrels per day). Furthermore, the
International Energy Agency could coordinate with its members to release 4 mm
bpd for an extended period, drawing on each country's Strategic Petroleum
Reserve. As a result, OPEC ministers have indicated that there is no need for an
emergency meeting before its next scheduled meeting in lune.
But isn't there an oil emergency? Some commentators say that absent the spike in
2008, oil prices are now at their highest level in real terms since 1864. While this
might be the case, comments like this ignore the sharp decline in oil intensity (oil
2.0
consumption per unit of GDP) since 1980. Oil intensity has fallen by 80% in the
OECD. This may explain why the oil-driven wage-price spirals of the 1970s
have not recurred since. The ability of the global economy to withstand an oil
shock is higher today than in the 1970s. However, at around $120 oil (and $4
gasoline), a threshold was reached a couple of years ago in the US which
destroyed demand and economic output. The synchronous global manufacturing
recovery shown on the first page could be at risk if oil prices rose another $10-
0.0
Japan
$20 per barrel and stayed there. The highest levels of GDP sensitivity to rising oil
Nov-10
Dec-10
Jan-11
prices: most of Asia, and Emerging Europe.
Source:. Morgan Securities11C.
Headline inflation high or rising
everywhere but Japan, % change - YoY
10.0
9.0
8.0
7.0
6.0
5.0
Russia
Indonesia
L
Brazil
Michael Cembalest
Chief Investment Officer
4.0
3.0
1.0
Singapore
EM Asia
China
UK
Euro
area
US
Middle East Time Capsule, 1979
Princeton's Richard Falk on Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979: "The depiction of Khomeini as fanatical, reactionary and the bearer of
crude prejudices seems certainly and happily false. What is also encouraging is that his entourage of close advisers is uniformly
composed of moderate, progressive individuals
Having created a new model of popular revolution based, for the most part, on
nonviolent tactics, Iran may yet provide us with a desperately needed model of humane governance for a third-world country."
3
EFTA00603098
Eye on the Market I
March 2, 2011
JP Morgan
Topics: The global recovery vs the Ides of March: the Middle East, European sovereign debt and Asian inflation
CDU
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands (Christian Democratic Union)
SPD
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (Social Democratic Party)
ECB
European Central Bank
EFSF
European Financial Stability Facility
OPEC
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
The material contained herein is intended as a general market commentan. Opinions expressed herein are those of Michael Cembalest and may differ from those of others
Morgan employees and affiliates. This information in no way constitutes.. Morgan research and should not be treated as such. Further. the views expressed herein may
differ from that contained ins Morgan research reports. The above summary/prices/quotes/statistics have been obtained from sources deemed to be reliable. but we do not
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provider. O 2011 JPMorgan Chase & Co
4
EFTA00603099
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