Showing posts with label bubble. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bubble. Show all posts

Thursday 26 November 2009

Bubbles: From Inception to Crash (4 phases)

 
Market Bubbles
Proponents of market irrationality have pointed to market bubbles as a primary exhibit in their case against efficient markets. Through the centuries, markets have boomed and busted, and in the aftermath of every bust, irrational investors have been blamed for the crash. As we will see in this section, it is not that simple. You can have bubbles in markets with only rational investors, and assessing whether a bubble is due to irrational investors is significantly more difficult than it looks from the outside.

 
A Short History of Bubbles
As long as there have been markets, there have been bubbles. Two of the earliest bubbles to be chronicled occurred in the 1600s in Europe. One was the amazing boom in prices of tulip bulbs in Holland that began in 1634. A single Tulip bulb (Semper Augustus was one variety) sold for more than 5000 guilders (the equivalent of more than $ 60000 today) at the peak of the market. Stories abound, though many of them may have been concocted after the fact, of investors selling their houses and investing the money in tulip bulbs. As new investors entered the market in 1636, the frenzy pushed up bulb prices even more until the price peaked in early February. Figure 7.11 presents the price of one type of bulb (Switzers) in January and February of 1637.[1]

 

 
Note that the price peaked on February 5, 1637, but an investor who bought tulip bulbs at the beginning of the year would have seen his or her investment increase almost 30 fold over the next few weeks.

 
A little later in England, a far more conventional bubble was created in securities of a firm called the South Seas Corporation, a firm with no assets that claimed to have the license to mint untold riches in the South Seas. The stock price was bid up over the years before the price plummeted. The crash, which is described in vivid detail in Charles Mackay�s classic book titled �Extraordinary Delusions and the Popular Madness of Crowds�, left many investors in England poorer.[2]

 
Through the 1800s, there were several episodes of boom and bust in the financial markets in the United States and many of these were accompanied by banking panics.[3] As markets became broader and more liquid in the 1900s, there was a renewed hope that liquidity and more savvy investors would make bubbles a phenomenon of the past, but it was not to be. In 1907, J.P. Morgan had to intervene in financial markets to prevent panic selling, a feat that made his reputation as the financier of the world. The 1920s saw a sustained boom in U.S. equities and this boom was fed by a number of intermediaries ranging from stockbrokers to commercial banks and sustained by lax regulation. The crash of 1929 precipitated the great depression, and created perhaps the largest raft of regulatory changes in the United States, ranging from restrictions on banks (the Glass-Steagall Act) to the creation of a Securities Exchange Commission.

 
The period after the second world war ushered in a long period of stability for the United States, and while there was an extended period of stock market malaise in the 1970s, the bubbles in asset prices tended to be tame relative to past crashes. In emerging markets, though, bubbles continued to form and burst. In the late 1970s, speculation and attempts by some in the United States to corner the precious metals markets did create a brief boom and bust in gold and silver prices. By the mid-1980s, there were some investors who were willing to consign market bubbles to history. On October 19, 1987, the U.S. equities market lost more than 20% of their value in one day, the worst single day in market history, suggesting that investors, notwithstanding technological improvements and more liquidity, still shared a great deal with their counterparts in the 1600s. In the 1990s, we witnessed the latest in this cycle of market bubbles in the dramatic rise and fall of the �dot-com� sector. New technology companies with limited revenues and large operating losses went public at staggering prices (given their fundamentals) and kept increasing. After peaking with a market value of $ 1.4 trillion in early 2000, this market too ran out of steam and lost almost all of this value in the subsequent year or two. Figure 7.12 summarizes the Internet index and the NASDAQ from 1994 to 2001:

 

 
The chart again has the makings of a bubble, as the value of the index internet index increased almost ten fold over the period, dragging the tech-heavy NASDAQ up with it.

 
Rational Bubbles?
A rational bubble sounds like an oxymoron, but it is well within the realms of possibility. Perhaps the simplest way to think of a rational bubble is to consider a series of coin tosses, with a head indicating a plus day and a tail a minus day. You would conceivably get a series of plus days pushing the stock price above the fair value, and the eventual correction is nothing more than a reversion back to a reasonable value. Note too that it is difficult to tell a bubble from a blunder. Investors in making their assessments for the future can make mistakes in pricing individual assets, either because they have poor information or because the actual outcomes (in terms of growth and returns) do not match expected values. If this is the case, you would expect to see a surge in prices followed by an adjustment to a fair value. In fact, consider what happened to gold prices in the late 1970s. As inflation increased, many investors assumed (incorrectly in hindsight) that high inflation was here to stay and pushed up gold prices accordingly. Figure 7.13, which graphs gold prices from 1970 to 1986, looks very much like a classic bubble, but may just indicate our tendencies to look at things in the rear view mirror, after they happen.


 
Note that the surge in gold prices closely followed the increase in inflation in the late 1970s, reflecting its value as a hedge against inflation. As inflation declined in the 1980s, gold prices followed. It is an open question, therefore, whether this should be even considered a bubble.

 
Bubble or Blunder: Tests
There are some researchers who argue that you can separate bubbles from blunders by looking at how prices build up over time. Santoni and Dwyer (1990), for instance, argue that you need positive two elements for a bubble �
  • positive serial correlation in returns and
  • a delinking of prices and fundamentals as the bubble forms.
They test the periods prior to 1929 and 1987 crashes to examine whether there is evidence of bubbles forming in those periods. Based upon their analysis, there is no evidence of positive serial correlation in returns or of a reduction in the correlation between prices and fundamentals (which they define as dividends) in either period. Therefore, they argue that neither period can be used as an example of a bubble.

 
While there is truth to the underlying premise, these tests may be too weak to capture bubbles that form over long periods. For instance, Santoni and Dwyer�s conclusion of no serial correlation seems to be sensitive to both the time periods examined and the return interval used. In addition, detecting a delinking of prices and fundamentals statistically may be difficult to do if it happens gradually over time. In short, these may be useful indicators but they are not conclusive.

 
Bubbles: From Inception to Crash
One or the more fascinating questions in economics examines how and why bubbles form and what precipitates their bursting. While each bubble has its own characteristics, there seem to four phases to every bubble.

 
Phase 1: The Birth of the Bubble
Most bubbles have their genesis in a kernel of truth. In other words, at the heart of most bubbles is a perfectly sensible story. Consider, for instance, the dot.com bubble. At its center was a reasonable argument that as more and more individuals and businesses gained online access, they would also be buying more goods and services online. The bubble builds as the market provides positive reinforcement to some investors and businesses for irrational or ill-thought out actions. Using the dot.com phenomenon again, you could point to the numerous start-up companies with half-baked ideas for e-commerce that were able to go public with untenable market capitalizations and the investors who made profits along the way.

 
A critical component of bubbles building is the propagation of the news of the success to other investors in the market, who on hearing the news, also try to partake in the bubble. In the process, they push prices up and provide even more success stories that can be used to attract more investors, thus providing the basis for a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the days of the tulip bulb craze, this would have had to be word of mouth, as successful investors spread the word, with the success being exaggerated in each retelling of the story. Even in this century, until very recently, the news of the success would have reached investors through newspapers, financial newsmagazines and the occasional business show on television. In the dot.com bubble, we saw two additional phenomena that allowed news and rumors to spread even more quickly. The first was the internet itself, where chat rooms and web sites allowed investors to tell their success stories (or make them up as they went along). The second was the creation of cable stations such as CNBC, where analysts and money managers could present their views to millions of investors.

 
Phase 2: The Sustenance of the Bubble
Once a bubble forms, it needs sustenance. Part of the sustenance is provided by the institutional parasites that make money of the bubble and develop vested interests in preserving and expanding the bubbles. Among these parasites, you could include:

 
Investment banks: Bubbles in financial markets bring with them a number of benefits to investment banks, starting with a surge in initial public offerings of firms but expanding to include further security issues and restructurings on the part of established firms that do not want to be shut out of the party.
Brokers and analysts: A bubble generates opportunities for brokers and analysts selling assets related to the bubble. In fact, the ease with which investors make money as asset prices go up, often with no substantial reason, relegates analysis to the backburner.
Portfolio Managers: As a bubble forms, portfolio managers initially watch in disdain as investors they view as naive push up asset prices. At some point, though,, even the most prudent of portfolio managers seem to get caught up in the craze and partake of the bubble, partly out of greed and partly out of fear.
Media: Bubbles make for exciting business news and avid investors. While this is especially noticeable in the dot.com bubble, with new books, television shows and magazines directly aimed at investors in these stocks, even the earliest bubbles had their own versions of CNBC.
In addition to the institutional support that is provided for bubbles to grow, intellectual support is usually also forthcoming. There are both academics and practitioners who argue, when confronted with evidence of over pricing, that the old rules no longer apply. New paradigms are presented justifying the high prices, and those who disagree are disparaged as old fashioned and out of step with reality.

 
Phase 3: The Bursting of the Bubble
All bubbles eventually burst, though there seems to be no single precipitating event that causes the reassessment. Instead, there is a confluence of factors that seem to lead to the price implosion.
  • The first is that bubbles need ever more new investors (or at least new investment money) flowing in for sustenance. At some point, you run out of suckers as the investors who are the best targets for the sales pitch become fully invested.
  • The second is that each new entrant into the bubble is more outrageous than the previous one.
Consider, for instance, the dot.com bubble. While the initial entrants like America Online and even Amazon.com might have had a possibility of reaching their stated goals, the new dot.com companies that were listed in the late 1990s were often idea companies with no vision of how to generate commercial success. As these new firms flood the market, even those who are apologists for high prices find themselves exhausted trying to explain the unexplainable.

 
The first hint of doubt among the true believers turns quickly to panic as reality sets in. Well devised exit strategies break down as everyone heads for the exit doors at the same time. The same forces that created the bubble cause its demise and the speed and magnitude of the crash mirror the formation of the bubble in the first place.

 
Phase 4: The Aftermath
In the aftermath of the bursting of the bubble, you initially find investors in complete denial. In fact, one of the amazing features of post-bubble markets is the difficulty of finding investors who lost money in the bubble. Investors either claim that they were one of the prudent ones who never invested in the bubble in the first place or that they were one of the smart ones who saw the correction coming and got out in time.

 
As time passes and the investment losses from the bursting of the bubble become too large to ignore, the search for scapegoats begins. Investors point fingers at brokers, investment banks and the intellectuals who nurtured the bubble, arguing that they were mislead.

 
Finally, investors draw lessons that they swear they will adhere to from this point on. �I will never invest in a tulip bulb again� or �I will never invest in a dot.com company again� becomes the refrain you hear. Given these resolutions, you may wonder why price bubbles show up over and over. The reason is simple. No two bubbles look alike. Thus, investors, wary about repeating past mistakes, make new ones, which in turn create new bubbles in new asset classes.

 
Upside versus Downside bubbles
Note that most investors think of bubbles in terms of asset prices rising well above fair value and then crashing. In fact, all of the bubbles we have referenced from the tulip bulb craze to the dot-com phenomenon were upside bubbles. But can asset prices fall well below fair market value and keep falling? In other words, can you have bubbles on the downside? In theory, there is no reason why you could not, and this makes the absence of downside bubbles, at least in the popular literature, surprising. One reason may be that investors are more likely to blame external forces � the bubble, for instance � for the money they lose when they buy assets at the peak of an upside bubble and more likely to claim the returns they make when they buy stocks when they are at the bottom of a downside bubble as evidence of their investment prowess.

 
Another may be that it is far easier to create investment strategies to take advantage of under priced assets (in a downside bubble) than it is to take advantage of over priced assets. With the former, you can always buy the asset and hold until the market rebounds. With the latter, your choices are both more limited and more likely to be time limited. You can borrow the asset and sell it (short the asset), but not for as long as you want � most short selling is for a few months. If there are options traded on the asset, you may be able to buy puts on the asset though, until recently, only of a few months duration. In fact, there is a regulatory bias in most markets against such investors who are often likely to be categorized as speculators. As a consequence of these restrictions on betting against overpriced assets, bubbles on the upside are more likely to persist and become bigger over time, whereas bargain hunters operate as a floor for downside bubbles.

 
A Closing Assessment
Based upon our reading of history, it seems reasonable to conclude that there are bubbles in asset prices, though only some of them can be attributed to market irrationality. Whether investors can take advantage of bubbles to make money seems to be a more difficult question to answer. Part of the reason for the failure to exploit bubbles seems to stem from greed �even investors who believe that assets are over priced want to make money of the bubble � and part of the reason is the difficulty of determining when a bubble will burst. Over valued assets may get even more over valued and these overvaluations can stretch over years, thus imperiling the financial well being of any investor who has bet against the bubble. There is also an institutional interest on the part of investment banks, the media and portfolio managers, all of whom feed of the bubble, to perpetuate the bubble.

 
 
 

****Insightful analysis of stock market surge since March 2009

Another Stock Market Bubble?


C. P. Chandrasekhar
September 14, 2009


India’s stock market recovery over the last six months is a bit too remarkable for comfort. From its March 9, 2009 level of 8,160, the Sensex at closing soared and nearly doubled to touch 16,184 on September 9, 2009. This is still (thankfully) well below the 20,870 peak the index closed at on September 1 2008, but is high enough to cheer the traders and rapid enough to encourage a speculative rush.


There are two noteworthy features of the close to one hundred per cent increase the index has registered in recent months. First, it occurs when the aftermath of the global crisis is still with us and the search for “green shoots and leaves” of recovery in the real economy is still on. Real fundamentals do not seem to warrant this remarkable recovery. Second, the speed with which this 100-percent rise has been delivered is dramatic even when compared with the boom years that preceded the 2008-09 crisis. The last time the Sensex moved between exactly similar positions it took a year and ten months to rise from the 8,000-plus level in early 2005 to the 16,000-plus level in late 2007. This time around it has traversed the same distance in just six months.


With firms just looking to exit from a recessionary phase, this rapid rise in stock prices cannot be justified by movements in sales and profits. In fact, as the Business Line noted in its editorial on September 9, 2009 [ http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2009/09/09/stories/2009090950560800.htm ], the price earnings ratio of Sensex companies now stands at 21, which is much higher than an average of 17, which itself many would claim is on the high side. Those comfortable with the market’s rise would of course argue that investors, expecting a robust recovery, are implicitly factoring in future earnings trends, rather than relying on earnings figures that are the legacy of a recession.


That would be stretching the case. Once the next round of arrears has been paid, the once-for-all component in the stimulus that the Sixth Pay Commission’s recommendations provided would wane. With the deficit on the government’s budget expected to reach extremely high levels this fiscal, a cutback of government expenditure is likely. Further, exports are still doing badly and the global recovery is widely expected to be gradual and limited. That would limit the stimulus provided by India’s foreign trade. And, finally, a bad monsoon threatens to limit agricultural growth and accelerate inflation. This would dampen the recovery in multiple ways. Given these circumstances, excessive optimism with regard to corporate earnings is hardly justified. The change in perception from one in which India was a country that weathered the crisis well to one that sees India as set to boom once again is not grounded in fundamentals of any kind.


This implies that the current bull run can be explained only as the result of a speculative surge that recreates the very conditions that led to the collapse of the Sensex from its close to 21,000 peak of around two years ago. This surge appears to have followed a two stage process. In the first, investors who had held back or withdrawn from the market during the slump appear to have seen India as a good bet once expectations of a global recovery had set in. This triggered a flow of capital that set the Sensex rising. Second, given the search for investment avenues in a world once again awash with liquidity, this initial spurt in the index appears to have attracted more capital, triggering the current speculative boom in the market.


While these are possible proximate explanations of the transition from slump to boom, they in turn need explaining. In doing so, we have to take account of the fact that, as in the past, foreign investors have dominated stock market transactions and had an important role in triggering the current stock market boom. As compared to the net sales of equity to the tune of $11.97 billion by foreign institutional investors during crisis year 2008, they had made net purchases of equity worth $8.75 billion in the period till September 11 during 2009. According to the Securities and Exchange Board of India, net purchases were negative till February, but turned positive in March with the net purchases figure being high during April ($1.3 billion), May ($4.1 billion), July ($2.3 billion) and August ($1 billion).


It is not surprising that foreign institutional investors have returned to market. They need to make investments and profits to recoup losses suffered during the financial meltdown. And they have been helped in that effort by the large volumes of credit provided at extremely low interest rates by governments and central banks in the developed countries seeking to bail out fragile and failing financial firms. The credit crunch at the beginning of the crisis gave way to an environment awash with liquidity as governments and central bankers pumped money into the system.


Financial firms had to invest this money somewhere to turn losses into profit. Some was reinvested in government bonds, since governments were lending at rates lower than those at which they were borrowing. Some was invested in commodities markets, leading to a revival in some of those markets, especially oil. And some returned to the stock and bond markets, including those in the so-called emerging markets like India. Many of these bets, such as investments in government bonds, were completely safe. Others such as investments in commodities and equity were risky. But the very fact that money was rushing into these markets meant that prices would rise once again and ensure profits.


In the event, bets made by financial firms have come good, and most of them have begun declaring respectable profits and recording healthy stock market valuations.


It is to be expected that a country like India would receive a part of these new investments aimed at delivering profits to private players but financed at one remove by central banks and governments. However, India has received more than a fair share of these investments. One way to explain this would be to recognise the fact that India fared better during the recession period than many other developing counties and was therefore a preferred hedge for investors seeking investment destinations.


The other reason is the expectation fuelled by the return of the UPA to government, this time with a majority in Parliament and the repeated statements by its ministers that they intend to push ahead with the ever-unfinished agenda of economic liberalisation and “reform”. The UPA II government has, for example, made clear that disinvestment of equity in or privatisation of major public sector units is on the cards. That caps on foreign direct investment in a wide range of industries including insurance are to be relaxed. That public-private partnerships (in which the government absorbs the losses and the private sector skims the profits) are to be encouraged in infrastructural projects, with government lending to or guaranteeing private borrowing to finance private investments. That the tenure of tax concessions given to STPI units and units in SEZs are to be extended. And that corporate tax rates are likely to be reduced and capital gains taxes perhaps abolished.


All of this generates expectations that there are likely to be easy opportunities for profit delivered by an investor-friendly government in the near future, including for those who seek out these opportunities only to transfer them for profit soon thereafter. These opportunities, moreover, are not seen as dependent on a robust revival of growth, though some expect them to strengthen the recovery. In sum, whether intended or not, the signals emanating from the highest economic policy making quarters have helped talk up the Indian market, allowing equity prices to race ahead of earnings and fundamentals.


Once the speculative surge began, triggered by the inflow of large volumes of footloose global capital, Indian investors joined the game financed very often by the liquidity being pumped into the system by the Indian central bank. The net result is the current speculative boom that seems as much a bubble as the one that burst a few months back.


There are three conclusions that flow from this sequence of events. 
  • The first is that using liquidity injection and credit expansion as the principal instrument to combat a downturn or recession amounts to creating a new bubble to replace the one that went bust. This is an error which is being made the world over, where the so-called stimulus involves injecting liquidity and cheap credit into the system rather than public spending to revive demand and alleviate distress.  
  • The second is that so long as the rate of inflation in the prices of goods is in the comfort zone, central bankers stick to an easy money policy even if the evidence indicates that such policy is leading to unsustainable asset price inflation. It was this practice that led to the financial collapse triggered by the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the US.
  •  Third, that governments in emerging markets like India have not learnt the lesson that when a global expansion in liquidity leads to a capital inflow surge into the country it does more harm than good, warranting controls on the excessive inflow of such capital.

Rather, goaded by financial interests and an interested media, the government treats the boom as a sign of economic good health rather than a sign of morbidity, and plans to liberalise capital controls even more. In the event, we seem to have engineered another speculative surge. The crisis, clearly, has not taught most policy makers any lessons.





Comments:
Well laid-out analysis presentation. In your analysis this surge is not at all based on fundamentals but through the liquidity injection the world over. You have not mentioned when this bubble could burst e.g. current PE all the way to 25? What would be the criteria, either local event or global event, for this bubble to burst/party to be over?


from: Ranga Srinivasan
Posted on: Sep 14, 2009 at 13:25 IST
If there is a bubble in the stock market and it bursts, it will be the speculators and the greedy common investors who will suffer. But while the bubble is being created by foreign investors everyone suffers because too much money gets pumped into the country's monetary system creating inflationary pressures which drive prices through the roof. The government and the opinion makers worry only about a burst but remain unconcerned when the bubble is being created. Bubble or no bubble, a stock market boom is always considered a feather in the cap of the government.


from: K.Vijayakumar
Posted on: Sep 15, 2009 at 01:30 IST
The article has covered most of the facts about the current happenings. But it did not consider a simple fact that Indian equity markets did not crash on their own. We never reduced our stock values because of internal reasons. If it had taken that into the analysis then the whole dimension of this analysis would have been changed. And yes there can be a crash if the PE moves over and above 25 in short term but we may consolidate and our companies will maintain their PE at around 21-23.


from: Deepan R
Posted on: Sep 15, 2009 at 14:06 IST
The government should keep a close watch on the FIIs who are taking stock markets to dizzying heights and then booking profits, leaving small investors with deep wounds to lick for a long time. By no account the rising stock prices can be taken as an indicator of prosperity of the economy. It may, sure it will, cause more harm than good to the economy. Any government which takes the rising stock market indices as signs of economic growth is bound to witness the people being pushed to the ills of inflation.


from: N S Shastri
Posted on: Sep 15, 2009 at 16:58 IST
The stock market level cant be considered as an indicator of improvement in economy.because agricultural sector is in trouble and it has large share ateleast in indian economy on which FIIs are betting on.


from: girish
Posted on: Sep 16, 2009 at 10:10 IST
Many companies cleaned up their balance sheets in the last year. This should lead to much higher earnings in the next two years. I feel that is also factored in the current bull run of sensex.


from: Kaushik
Posted on: Sep 16, 2009 at 19:24 IST
As Deepan pointed out the question of whether the current upward spiral is a bubble or simply a correction depends on how you see the original crash -as a panic reaction not justified by fundamentals or a bubble that went bust. Common sense tell us that the inflated property values, inflated stock markets and a world awash in cash were not normal by any sense of the term, so the earlier crash was a bubble-burst. Part of it could have been a panic effect but most of it was bubble. Which brings us to the current surge, which is yet another bubble this time financed not by greedy investors but by equally greedy govts keen on showing they have slayed the recession dragon.





from: Ganesh
Posted on: Sep 17, 2009 at 14:18 IST
Whenever there is a recovery in the Indian economy, foreign investors always played this game. They invest in bulk unless the shock market reaches an unbelievable peak, and then they suddenly withdraw. It is the poor investor whose hard earned money is put in the stock market not in billions or millions but in thousands, most often, their life-time savings. Yes, the government should keep a track of FIIs.


from: Umesh
Posted on: Sep 17, 2009 at 15:45 IST
A very informative piece indeed. I do agree with the point of impending bubble burst the author has made. We, Indians, in general, have a propensity to get excited with the outside results and seldom ponder over the process that goes into manifesting itself in the way it does. We should focus more on the intricacies of the matter and not just have a superficial perspective on things of such critical importance.


from: Subhash Jha
Posted on: Sep 18, 2009 at 21:25 IST
Everybody who watch NDTV Profit would have seen erstwhile Finance Minister saying that " FII money is hot money " But, why he or his successor have not taken any steps to curb its volatile inlows and outflows is a mystery. It is the Indian retail investor who is left to hold the baby after each bubble burst. They lose much more money in the subsequent fall than what they made in the preceding rally


from: Chockalingam
Posted on: Sep 18, 2009 at 21:51 IST
It is good to be proactive! I am a novice and this article makes a good reading.


from: G.L.N. Reddy
Posted on: Sep 21, 2009 at 09:38 IST
A very good article about the dynamics of our stock exchange.I am only watching this daily as I have put most of my retirement funds into various Mutual funds.
By the way, is the peak date mentioned not Jan 13 2008 instead of September 2008?


from: Shankar
Posted on: Sep 22, 2009 at 17:44 IST
The stock market improvement in India can be considered a short-term swing. The FII investors seem to divert their funds to India since the direction of U.S market is not yet fully known. Till the U.S market recovers, India or BRIC countries for that matter would be considered a safe-haven for the FII's.


from: Satish
Posted on: Oct 5, 2009 at 06:56 IST
You mention the bubble to burst, but I think this process, would take at least 3-4 years, and till then FII's will change their direction of investment to other markets, because by that time recession would have gone. So the bubble which keeps expanding will start contracting. Inflation problem will not occur. The stimulus packages given by the central banks are intended only for a short period. So as our banks stop those packages, the liquidity problem might also get solved.


from: Santosh
Posted on: Oct 8, 2009 at 11:41 IST
The virtual economy of which the Stock Markets are an index impacts only a small fraction of India's population. Stock market bubbles worry only the privileged few. What really matters is the real economy and stimulus spending is needed to keep up infrastructure development at a pace that prevents economic depression and loss of human resources. Krugman has pointed out that unthinking withdrawal of stimulus was precisely what led to the Great Depression of the 1930s. The Government must be wary of this possibility notwithstanding the sorrow that it might bring to some of the speculators on the bourses hoping to double their capital overnight.


from: Taffazull
Posted on: Oct 24, 2009 at 10:58 IST


http://beta.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/article19895.ece

Also read:


http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4ec41a1a-d616-11de-b80f-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1
Germany warns US on market bubbles
By Ralph Atkins in Frankfurt
Published: November 20 2009 19:48 | Last updated: November 20 2009 19:48

Germany’s new finance minister has echoed Chinese warnings about the growing threat of fresh global asset price bubbles, fuelled by low US interest rates and a weak dollar.

Wolfgang Schäuble’s comments highlight official concern in Europe that the risk of further financial market turbulence has been exacerbated by the exceptional steps taken by central banks and governments to combat the crisis.

Are markets reaching bubble proportions?

At the end of each month, BBC World News business presenter Jamie Robertson takes a look at the world's major stock markets. This month he considers how long the rally in global markets can continue.


So how long can this go on for? As the markets race ahead, and investors bob along with them through the rapids, the sound of the waterfall ahead gets louder and louder, but no one knows exactly around which bend it will appear.

At the moment investors are driven by a frenetic desire to catch the bull market which many ruefully admit to having missed out on.

Others agonise over when the fall will come so they can jump aboard immediately afterwards, safe in the knowledge that the big drop is behind them.

There are plenty of institutional investors sitting on the sidelines. But there is a weight of money in these markets desperate for returns in a world of negligible interest rates.

Research group Compeer reported that the number of deals placed through retail stockbrokers rose to more than four million in the three months to June, a number surpassed only in spring 2000.

For many that is a sign that a market is reaching bubble proportions, the point at which, in the parlance of 1929, the bellboys are handing out stock tips in the lifts.

Economic optimism

Can we really have reached such a point so soon after the market hit rock bottom?

Yes, we can. The bear market of the 1990s in Japan was marked by many such moments. The crash of 1929 was followed by a 48% rally over six months - followed by another precipitous crash.

That bear market rally was fuelled by economic optimism at the very top. US Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon said in December 1929: "I see nothing in the present situation that is either menacing or warrants pessimism."

Today's rally can hardly be based on ignorance of the economic facts. Scarcely a day goes by without an economist/politician/journalist explaining how weak the global economy is. And yet the rally continues.

Stimulus packages

Much of this can be put down to the stimulus packages, which have been without question enormously successful in preventing, easing, or perhaps just deferring recession.

Withdrawing those packages will require all the delicacy and finesse of extracting a royal flush from the bottom of a house of cards - which is why the G20 was so keen to assure the markets that nothing gets withdrawn until the recovery is well in place.

That may be some time. The Europeans have been celebrating the fact that Germany and France are out of recession. Yet there are some serious reasons to be concerned about future growth, and most of them lie to the east.


“ Germany may well not be in recession but the nature of the recovery and the scant prospects for its corporate base hardly justify a 34% gain in the Dax since March ”

Six months ago there was a real fear that the Baltic states, Ukraine and several of their neighbours could go into meltdown. The International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank stepped in with ready cash and disaster was averted.

The stock market response to the crisis was justified. The Ukrainian market, for example, fell 83% from its peak. The response to the recovery (in Ukraine's case a 183% rise from the trough in March), is less so. Then again one expects such volatility from emerging markets.

What one expects less is such a strong rebound in markets that have extensive links with these fragile states. The IMF pointed out this week that European banks have written down only 40% of their bad loans. That failure to recognise dodgy debt lies largely in continental Europe, among banks that have heavy exposure to Eastern European economies.

Drop in lending

"Eastern Europe is in the throes of a very deep downturn, and European banks are still exposed to them, even if the loan losses are related to deep recession rather than to a crisis, as was feared six months ago," says Ken Wattret, Europe economist at BNP Paribas in London.

Wattrett points out that even if banks in Germany, Austria and Italy stay solvent, lending to the corporate sector across Europe is down 6% year-on-year and there is every indication that it will be reduced still further.

And there's more. For the last decade or so Eastern European economies have provided a ready and growing market for German goods.

"That's not coming back," says Wattret, "not for a long time. And that means one of the key drivers of the European economy, the German exports to the east, is severely curtailed."

Germany may well not be in recession but the nature of the recovery and the scant prospects for its corporate base hardly justify a 34% gain in the Dax since March, while a 43% gain in the Italian MIB Index, and a 50% gain in the Austrian market are starting to starting to take on a distinctly bubbly appearance.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/8285470.stm


Published: 2009/10/02 09:05:55 GMT

© BBC MMIX

How to Distinguish Stock Market Bubbles?

The formation of a bubble starts with the clear and continuous rise of share prices caused by an exogenous shock affecting the economy. This initial displacement influences future outlook in a positive way, generating expectations of further rise. If share prices distinctly begin to rise, uninformed investors, partly due to the deduction problem, take this as a positive signal. Share of particular industries and companies may become popular. New buyers appear in the market and the proportion of shares increases within portfolios causing a surge in trading volume. As many investors are pursuing a positive feedback strategy, this coupled with the lack of relevant information will amplify noise trading.

A stock market boom can be described as a bubble if there is high probability of a large scale fall in share prices. Stock market crash is not triggered by fundamental news or by a certain level of share overvaluation. Instead, it happens because of a drastic change in the behavior of market players. This is why the necessary and sufficient conditions for the bursting of a given asset price bubble, applicable in practice, cannot be provided with the tools of mathematical economics. A market crash will ensue with a high likelihood if noise trading becomes dominant, the signals of which are to be found in the following stochastic factors:

• Increasing effect of leverage. As a direct consequence, more money is at the disposal of investors. If investors borrow to buy shares, have the opportunity to postpone payment, or making a purchase without full financial cover, it is impossible for them to realize long-term profit on  that particular stock, i.e., they are unable to make dividend payment. This means a short sale constraint shortening the average investment period. The due date of debt repayment is private information incurring, on the one hand, deduction problem and noise trading. On the other, if there is an increasing pool of leveraged shareholders, repayment date and a short sale constraint will more likely be due at a given moment, amplifying the degree of the price fall.

• Increasing activity on part of the economic policy. Economic policy, and monetary policy in particular, can directly influence the conditions of credit, bond and money markets connected to stock markets, thus making the state a protagonist in the stock market. Intended monetary expansion or restriction is always a signal, as it attempts to stimulate or curb the rise of prices. For example, the frequent and tendentious revisions of the base rate convey a series of signals towards market players. In theory, the opportunity cost of shares (the rise in bond yields) prompts investors to lower the share of stocks in their portfolios. Sometimes, however, investors are late and inaccurate in integrating signals of the economic policy into their expectations, increasing the volume of noise in the market.

• Increasing number of corporate scandals, fraud and corruption. Share price rise augments the power and influence of executives, while directly affecting their wealth through managerial stock options. Information asymmetry enables them to use methods verging on fraud to maintain the trust of owners-shareholders if corporate performance is not contributing positively to the share price. The disclosure of such cases may undermine trust, causing a change in investor behavior and prompting the sales of the shares of other companies.

• Fundamentally unjustifiable co-movement of share prices. The co-movement of different shares or investments may signal a dominance of noise trading. When investors do not evaluate a given asset based on its expected future yield, i.e., do not evaluate an enterprise based on the probability of its future success, and instead they make simplifications and use rules of thumb, a fundamentally unjustifiable share price co-movement may ensue. If this co-movement increases, price fluctuation may signal a dominance of noise trading, forecasting a stock market collapse.

The last characteristic of stock market bubbles is that the boom and subsequent crash must have an impact on the economy. Only then will the natural instability of stock markets become a factor affecting economy, without which the concept of a bubble would be weightless. By negative impact we mean a slowdown in economic growth or a decline in consumption and/or investment.

However, a bubble may carry positive impacts as well which display themselves either during the boom or following the crash, in the long run. One such effect is the facilitation of capital issue for a given industry allowing a better financing of riskier solutions and developments. After a crash, the framework surrounding the stock market may also change, bringing about legal, regulatory and institutional evolution as a consequence of the collapse. If a stock market boom has no impact on the economy of a country or on related regulation and institutional structure, we contest such a phenomenon can be called a bubble.

Initial displacement, distinct price rise, new buyers (increasing trade volume) all are direct traits of a bubble, while leverage, the large number of economic policy signals, corporate scandals, fraud and corruption are indirect indicators of the phenomenon.


http://www.stockmarketbubbles.com/anatomy.pdf
Chapter 2.2 Page 79

One possible cause of bubbles is excessive monetary liquidity in the financial system

Liquidity

One possible cause of bubbles is excessive monetary liquidity in the financial system, inducing lax or inappropriate lending standards by the banks, which asset markets are then caused to be vulnerable to volatile hyperinflation caused by short-term, leveraged speculation. For example, Axel A. Weber, the president of the Deutsche Bundesbank, has argued that "The past has shown that an overly generous provision of liquidity in global financial markets in connection with a very low level of interest rates promotes the formation of asset-price bubbles."  According to the explanation, excessive monetary liquidity (easy credit, large disposable incomes) potentially occurs while fractional reserve banks are implementing expansionary monetary policy (i.e. lowering of interest rates and flushing the financial system with money supply). When interest rates are going down, investors tend to avoid putting their capital into savings accounts. Instead, investors tend to leverage their capital by borrowing from banks and invest the leveraged capital in financial assets such as equities and real estate.

Simply put, economic bubbles often occur when too much money is chasing too few assets, causing both good assets and bad assets to appreciate excessively beyond their fundamentals to an unsustainable level. Once the bubble bursts the central bank will be forced to reverse its monetary accommodation policy and soak up the liquidity in the financial system or risk a collapse of its currency. The removal of monetary accommodation policy is commonly known as a contractionary monetary policy. When the central bank raises interest rates, investors tend to become risk averse and thus avoid leveraged capital because the costs of borrowing may become too expensive.

Advocates of this perspective refer to (such) bubbles as "credit bubbles," and look at such measures of financial leverage as debt to GDP ratios to identify bubbles.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_bubble

A rising price on any share will attract the attention of investors.

Positive feedback

A rising price on any share will attract the attention of investors. Not all of those investors are willing or interested in studying the intrinsics of the share and for such people the rising price itself is reason enough to invest. In turn, the additional investment will provide buoyancy to the price, thus completing a positive feedback loop.

Like all dynamical systems, financial markets operate in an ever changing equilibrium, which translates into price volatility. However, a self-adjustment (negative feedback) takes place normally: when prices rise more people are encouraged to sell, while fewer are encouraged to buy. This puts a limit on volatility. However, once positive feedback takes over, the market, like all systems with positive feedback, enters a state of increasing disequilibrium. This can be seen in financial bubbles where asset prices rapidly spike upwards far beyond what could be considered the rational "economic value", only to fall rapidly afterwards.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_market_bubble

Market bubbles and individual stock bubbles are investor traps

Bubbles are not caused by fundamental events. It is investors themselves who create them. Investors come to believe some things that are not true or not rational and thus create a mania in a stock, in an industry, or in the overall market. If the mania goes on for a time, a bubble is created, and that builds until its inherent instability leads it to break.

One of the interesting differences between bubbles and bear markets is that in a bear market, there are plenty of bulls and bears. In a bubble, the few bears are drowned out by the loud and almost universal bullishness. This happened with the Internet, because a mania is normally caused by a belief in something that is supposed to be new and amazing, even though this cannot be proved.

It is natural to like momentum and money, but if investors have no disciplines and no sense of bubbles, then they are headed not for the big money, but for quite the opposite.
 
There are market bubbles once in a great while, perhaps once in a life-time, but individual stock bubbles are more common. All bubbles have some similarities that concern how perceptions, emotions, and a lack of accurate information combine to set an investor trap.
 
 
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2009/06/bubble-trouble.html
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2009/09/markets-in-government-fuelled-bubble.html
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2009/11/stock-market-bubble-to-end-morgan.html

Tuesday 3 November 2009

Stock market ‘bubble’ to end, Morgan Stanley says

Stock market ‘bubble’ to end, Morgan Stanley says

Tags: Credit bubble | Global stock market rally | James Paulsen | JPMorgan Chase & Co | Latin American markets | Mark Mobius | Morgan Stanley | MSCI Emerging Market Index | MSCI World Index | Ruchir Sharma | Templeton Asset Management Ltd | Wells Capital Management

Written by Bloomberg
Friday, 30 October 2009 11:14

MUMBAI: The global stock market rally, which resembles the bull run between 2003 and 2007, will end as government spending slows after so-called easy money boosted asset prices, according to Morgan Stanley.

“Such echo rallies are never as big as the original one and we will see it fading away,” Ruchir Sharma, 35, who oversees US$25 billion (RM85.75 billion) in emerging-market stocks at Morgan Stanley, said in an interview. “The rally will end as the effects of the stimulus begin to fade and the credit bubble caused by easy money disappears.”

The MSCI Emerging Market Index, which tracks shares in developing markets, has surged 60% this year, set for its biggest annual advance since 1993, as governments poured in US$2 trillion and central banks cut interest rates to near zero to kick-start their economies.

Last year, the measure dropped 54%, its worst run in the gauge’s 20-year history.

A new rally globally needs to be driven by new industry groups, he added, while the current advance is led by the same sectors, such as commodities, as the ones in the bull market that ended in 2007. That’s not a good sign, he said.

The emerging-market index lost 1.7% to 901.41 as of 12.26pm in Mumbai, a six-week low, after the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 2% to 1,042.63 on Wednesday, the steepest drop since Oct 1.

Sharma, the New York-based head of emerging markets, said he expects the S&P 500 to trade in a “long-term” range of 800 to 1,200 in the next couple of years.

Markets globally dropped last year following the biggest financial crisis since the 1930s as the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc and writedowns from subprime debt caused a seizure in lending.

Only 31% of respondents to a poll of investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers in the US, Europe and Asia see investment opportunities, down from 35% in the previous survey in July. Almost 40% in the latest quarterly survey, the Bloomberg Global Poll, say they are still hunkering down.
US investors are even more cautious, with more than 50% saying they are in a defensive crouch.

“The doubt and the pessimism just won’t go away,” said James Paulsen, who helps oversee US$375 billion as chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management in Minneapolis. “They’re still so shell-shocked by what they went through despite the improvement in the market and the economy.”

Sharma predicted in May 2006 that emerging markets will post further gains. The index for developing nations has risen 20% since then, compared with a 16% drop in the MSCI World Index.

The commodity-producing nations will be the hardest hit when the current rally ends, Sharma said. The Latin American markets of Brazil and Chile are the most expensive, he said, and Morgan Stanley is also underweight on Taiwan, Malaysia, Israel and Russia.

Commodity prices are rising even as economic fundamentals are deteriorating, he added, a sign that the rally may be fizzling.

“Commodities are at the centre of this echo bubble,” he said, adding that they are “in substantially overvalued territory, way above fundamentals”.

Inventories of oil, copper, aluminum have risen over the past few months even though demand hasn’t picked up, Sharma said, adding that the price of oil is inversely correlated to the US dollar. Increasing buying of commodities as a hedge against the decline in the US dollar has resulted in the commodity rally, he said.

“The greatest degree of irrationality is in commodities,” Sharma said. Morgan Stanley owns a lower percentage of commodity stocks, including metals, materials, energy and industrials, compared with the benchmark index. It holds a higher percentage of financial and consumer stocks including automobiles, retailers and beer companies.

Some brokerages are predicting further gains in equities. The emerging markets benchmark stock index may retest its “life high” by next year, helped by economic growth and gains in credit markets, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The optimism is shared by Mark Mobius, who oversees about US$25 billion as executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management Ltd. The investor said this month he expects developing nations’ shares to surpass previous records, predicting a continued rally with “corrections along the way”.

Emerging markets make up all 10 of the world’s best-performing markets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Russia’s dollar-denominated RTS Index has been the world’s best-performer this year after climbing 117%.

Morgan Stanley is overweight on India, Indonesia, Poland, Czech Republic, Turkey and Thailand, as it’s betting on economies that are driven by domestic demand. — Bloomberg


This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, October 30, 2009.

Wednesday 21 October 2009

Tulipomania: A tulip bulb priced an equivalent of 12 acres of good land became as worthless as an onion

17th century Holland.

Belonging to the onion family, the tulip flowers are grown from bulbs.  Propagation is very slow for it takes a season for a plant to reproduce itself. 

The 17th century Dutchmen developed a great passion for tulips and rich people showed off their tulip collection with as much pride as their rare paintings.l 

As is usual for all speculative manias, there were sound economic reasons to begin with.  Tulips are indeed beautiful flowers and were in much demand all  over Europe.  Growing tulips was indeed a very profitable industry.  However, as with all manias, the profits of the pioneers attracted more and more people into the business.  (Reminds me of the MLM model too.)  The latecomers, not willing to undergo the long period necessary for the establishment of a nursery, bidded up the price of the existing limited supply.

By the 1620s, some of the rare varieties were beginning to command astronomical prices.  Semper Augustus (a beautiful white and blue flower with red stripes) were being sold for 1,200 florins.  In perspective, this was equivalent to the cost of 10,000 pounds of cheese or 120 sheep!  At this price level, the earlier entrants to the business were making incredible profits and tales of such gains naturally pulled in even more people.  By 1634, the race among the Dutch to cultivate tulips was so great that the ordinary businesses of the country were neglected.  The same Sempler Augustus had by then reached an incredible price of 5,500 florins, an equivalent of 12 acres of good land. 

By 1636, the trade in tulips became so great that regular markets were established for them in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Harleem, Leyden, Alkmar and other towns.  For the first time, symptoms of gambling became apparent.  The stock brokers, always alert for a new speculation, switched to tulips and used every means at their disposal to cause fluctuations in  prices. 

As in all manias, confidence and prices soared to their highest just before the collapse of the market.  Everyone imagined that the passion for tulips would last forever.  Wealthy people from all over the world sent in large sums of money to Holland to invest in the boom.  Houses, land, and valuables were sold at ruinously low prices so that their owners could take part in tulip speculation. 

However, the seed of its destruction had by then been sown.  The huge increase in money supply and the sense of prosperity created by populace's holding of tulip bulbs caused the prices of everyday necessities to increase by considerable degrees.

Like all wonderful dreams or delightful parties, good things do eventually come to an end.  On a day in February 1637, about FIFTEEN years after the beginning of the mania, a speculator bought a bulb and found that he could not resell it for a higher price.  He was then forced to reduce its price to dispose of it.  This move caused a panic among all other speculators and the rush to sell became increasingly intense.  The prices fell drastically and within a short time, tulips which once commanded the price of houses became as worthless as onions.

Ref:  Stock Market Investment in Malaysia and Singapore by Neoh Soon Kean

Tuesday 13 October 2009

One buys in a bear market and sells in a bubble.

One of the interesting differences between bubbles and bear markets is that in a bear market, there are plenty of bulls and bears. In a bubble, the few bears are drowned out by the loud and almost universal bullishness.

It is natural to like momentum and money, but if investors have no disciplines and no sense of bubbles, then they are headed not for the big money, but for quite the opposite.

With bear markets, one wants to use buy and sell disciplines and buy when prices and fundamentals would dictate that.

There are market bubbles once in a great while, perhaps once in a life-time, but individual stock bubbles are more common. All bubbles have some similarities that concern how perceptions, emotions, and a lack of accurate information combine to set an investor trap.

Beware of individual stock bubbles

With bubbles, there is an element of mystery. To cope with that, start with the first step, knowledge, and combine that with your disciplined buy and sell strategies, since in a bubble it is likely that the beliefs of the crowd cannot be supported by real knowledge.


Yet the entire crowd thought in this way about many companies because of incorrect and incomplete information. Emotions temporarily filled that void. A disciplined buy and sell strategy helps you control your emotion.

Behavioral economics supplies a framework for investing

Behavioral economics has gone beyond just trying to provide explanations for why investors behave as they do. It actually supplies a framework for investing and policy making to help people avoid succumbing to emotion-based or ill-conceived investments.

“Adhering to logical, rational principles of ideal economic choice may be biologically unnatural,” says Colin F. Camerer, a professor of behavioral economics at Caltech. Better insight into human psychology gleaned by neuroscientists holds the promise of changing forever our fundamental assumptions about the way entire economies function—and our understanding of the motivations of the individual participants therein, who buy homes or stocks and who have trouble judging whether a dollar is worth as much today as it was yesterday.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-science-of-economic-bubbles

Wednesday 23 September 2009

Pound slides again as markets enter Bank of England-fuelled 'bubble' stage

Pound slides again as markets enter Bank of England-fuelled 'bubble' stage


The pound slid closer to parity with the euro on Monday, as one of London's leading hedge fund managers warned stock markets are in a Government-fuelled bubble.



By Edmund Conway and Jamie Dunkley

Published: 6:26AM BST 22 Sep 2009





Pound slides closer to parity with euro as it hits a five-month low against the single currency. Photo: CHRISTOPHER PLEDGER "Markets are now entering a bubble phase [which may last] until the end of the year," said Crispin Odey of Odey Asset Management.



However, the bubble is almost entirely dependent on the Bank of England's quantitative easing (QE) policy, through which it is creating £175bn and pumping it into the system by buying Government debt, he added.



Mr Odey's comments came as the pound fell further against other leading currencies after a report from the Bank warned of the effect of the financial crisis on sterling's long-term value.



Mr Odey told clients in a note: "Individuals and institutions are stampeding into real assets – eager to have anything but cash or government bonds... The latter are expensive because of the QE which has caused that bubble.



"At some point the QE will have to come to an end but, until it does, this bull market is sponsored by HMG and everyone should enjoy it."



FTSE breaks six-day winning streak

Katherine Garrett-Cox, chief executive of Alliance Trust, said: "I think the recent stock market rally has been driven by sentiment rather than fundamental facts.



"In 2008 markets were driven by fear; this year they have been driven by greed.



"I'm sceptical about the market recovery given the fiscal environment we are in. Public spending is falling, consumer spending is down and unemployment will rise."



Although many central banks have taken on a QE policy, the Bank has committed to creating and spending more than any other, arguing that the alternative outcome is severe deflation. However, this is thought to have sparked a gradual exodus from UK investments by overseas asset managers fearful that the policy may generate inflation.



This has pushed the pound lower against most other currencies. The euro hit a five-month high against sterling yesterday before slipping back to 90.58p. Citigroup said yesterday that sterling would drop to parity against the euro in the coming months.



The bank's analyst Michael Hart said: "Tight fiscal policies and easy money is about as negative a policy mix as it is possible to get for the currency and we expect sterling to exceed parity with the euro."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/6216874/Pound-slides-again-as-markets-enter-Bank-of-England-fuelled-bubble-stage.html

Markets 'in Government-fuelled bubble'.

Markets 'in Government-fuelled bubble', says hedge fund manager Crispin Odey
Stock markets are in a Government-fuelled bubble, one of London's leading hedge fund managers said, as the pound slid closer towards parity with the euro.

By Edmund Conway and Jamie Dunkley
Published: 7:43PM BST 21 Sep 2009


Katherine Garrett-Cox, chief executive of Alliance Trust, said the recent stock market rally has been driven by sentiment "Markets are now entering a bubble phase [which may last] until the end of the year," said Crispin Odey of Odey Asset Management. However, the bubble is almost entirely dependent on the Bank of England's quantitative easing (QE) policy, through which it is creating £175bn and pumping it into the system by buying Government debt, he added.

The warning came as the pound fell further against other leading currencies, and as Citigroup predicted that sterling would drop to parity against the euro.

Mr Odey told clients in a note: "Individuals and institutions are stampeding into real assets – eager to have anything but cash or government bonds... The latter are expensive because of the QE which has caused that bubble.

"At some point the QE will have to come to an end, but until it does this bull market is sponsored by HMG and everyone should enjoy it."

Katherine Garrett-Cox, chief executive of Alliance Trust, said: "I think the recent stock market rally has been driven by sentiment rather than fundamental facts.

"In 2008 markets were driven by fear; this year they have been driven by greed.

"I'm sceptical about the market recovery given the fiscal environment we are in. Public spending is falling, consumer spending is down and unemployment will rise."

Although many central banks have taken on a QE policy, the Bank has committed to creating and spending more than any others, arguing that the alternative outcome is severe deflation. However, this is thought to have sparked a gradual exodus from UK investments by overseas asset managers fearful that the policy may generate inflation. This has pushed the pound lower against most other currencies.

The euro is now worth 90.58p, with economists from Citigroup saying yesterday that sterling would drop to parity against the single currency in the coming months. The bank's analyst Michael Hart said: "Tight fiscal policies and easy money is about as negative a policy mix as it is possible to get for the currency and we expect sterling to exceed parity with the euro."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/6216138/Markets-in-Government-fuelled-bubble-says-hedge-fund-manager-Crispin-Odey.html

Thursday 6 August 2009

An explanation on what are 'peaks' in a bull market


Thursday August 6, 2009
An explanation on what are 'peaks' in a bull market



IS it time to bail out of the China and Hong Kong stock markets? Are they too frothy already? iCapital says “not by a long shot”.

For one, investor sentiment is still extremely weak and nervous, despite the rally seen in numerous stock markets.

After rising 100% in nine months, the Shanghai Composite index this week plunged 5% in a single day, making investors all nervous and worried that the Chinese government is about to start tightening and cause a hard landing. This is how fragile the current sentiment is.

Peaks in bull markets are made when the markets are unable to continue rising even in the face of continuing positive fundamental news.

Now the situation is such that investors keep buying and worrying that the fundamentals do not improve or would not sustain.

Second, while bank lending in China has been surging, the broad Chinese economy is still not on a sound broad recovery footing. The Chinese government knows that bank loans cannot keep expanding at the current rate.

The leaders and policymakers know that they are navigating a very difficult situation. Too loose a monetary policy for too long a period, China may have an asset bubble in equity and property prices. Too tight a policy too early, one may prematurely short-circuit the current recovery momentum.


China recognises this delicate situation and is also very aware that foreign parties know the fragile state China is in and are ever ready to exploit this to destabilise China.

However, the leaders and policymakers have plenty of experience in handling such types of tight rope situations.

Unknown to most people, China’s unemployment rate has been rising for the last 25-30 years (see chart), thanks to the endless and relentless restructuring of the Chinese economy.

Millions of workers have been retrenched as state-owned enterprises and other organisations restructured. Even the People’s Liberation Army had to downsize.

In view of the restructuring process, the leaders are extremely sensitive to the labour market conditions and are very experienced in handling such delicate affairs. For now, the external demand for China’s products remains weak.

The reliance on domestic sources of growth is of paramount importance. And this will continue to be the case until convincing signs appear that it is time to cool things down.

Many analysts caution on the present market rally, saying that it is all liquidity driven. Meanwhile, the rest of the world is showing more signs of recovery.

Soon, it will be green fields everywhere. When this happens, the depressed earnings will surge and the equity market valuation will look less expensive then.

The same applies to the Hong Kong stock market. Even the initial public offering market is just beginning its frenzied phase.

Even though the Hang Seng index has rallied strongly since its bottom in October 2008, the bull market is still young. No bull market has died at such a young age.

http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/8/6/business/4461929&sec=business



Related:

Bubble Trouble
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2009/06/bubble-trouble.html

Bubbles and bear markets are two separate and distinct things. Investors truly need to understand the differences. You need to understand which strategy to apply when, and not use a hammer when you need a screwdriver. Once you see the straightforward differences, you will know what to do.

Friday 3 July 2009

The Science of Economic Bubbles and Busts

From the July 2009 Scientific American Magazine 41 comments
The Science of Economic Bubbles and Busts

The worst economic crisis since the Great Depression has prompted a reassessment of how financial markets work and how people make decisions about money
By Gary Stix

The worldwide financial meltdown has caused a new examination of why markets sometimes become overheated and then come crashing down.

The dot-com blowup and the subsequent housing and credit crises highlight how psychological quirks sometimes trump rationality in investment decision making. Understanding these behaviors elucidates the genesis of booms and busts.

New models of market dynamics try to protect against financial blowups by mirroring more accurately how markets work. Meanwhile more intelligent regulation may gently steer the home buyer or the retirement saver away from bad decisions.

It has all the makings of a classic B movie scene. A gunman puts a pistol to the victim’s forehead, and the screen fades to black before a loud bang is heard. A forensic specialist who traces the bullet’s trajectory would see it traversing the brain’s prefrontal cortex—a central site for processing decisions. The few survivors of usually fatal injuries to this brain region should not be surprised to find their personalities dramatically altered. In one of the most cited case histories in all of neurology, Phineas Gage, a 19th-century railroad worker, had his prefrontal cortex penetrated by an iron rod; he lived to tell the tale but could no longer make sensible decisions. Cocaine addicts may actually self-inflict similar damage. The resulting dysfunction may cause even abstaining addicts to crave the drug any time, say, the thudding bass of a techno tune reminds them of when they were stoned.

Even people who do not use illicit drugs or get shot in the head have to contend with the
reality that some of the decisions cooked up by the brain’s frontal lobes may lead them astray. A specific site within the prefrontal cortex, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC) is, in fact, among the suspects in the colossal global economic implosion that has recently rocked the globe.

The VMPFC turns out to be a central location for what economists call “money illusion.” The illusion occurs when people ignore obvious information about the distorting effects of inflation on a purchase and, in an irrational leap, decide that the thing is worth much more than it really is. Money illusion may convince prospective buyers that a house is always a great investment because of the misbegotten perception that prices inexorably rise. Robert J. Shiller, a professor of economics at Yale University, contends that the faulty logic of money illusion contributed to the housing bubble: “Since people are likely to remember the price they paid for their house from many years ago but remember few other prices from then, they have the mistaken impression that home prices have gone up more than other prices, giving a mistakenly exaggerated impression of the investment potential of houses.”

Economists have fought for decades about whether money illusion and, more generally, the influence of irrationality on economic transactions are themselves illusory. Milton Friedman, the renowned monetary theorist, postulated that consumers and employers remain undeluded and, as rational beings, take inflation into account when making purchases or paying wages. In other words, they are good judges of the real value of a good.

But the ideas of behavioral economists, who study the role of psychology in making economic decisions, are gaining increasing attention today, as scientists of many stripes struggle to understand why the world economy fell so hard and fast. And their ideas are bolstered by the brain scientists who make inside-the-skull snapshots of the VMPFC and other brain areas. Notably, an experiment reported in March in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA by researchers at the University of Bonn in Germany and the California Institute of Technology demonstrated that some of the brain’s decision-making circuitry showed signs of money illusion on images from a brain scanner. A part of the VMPFC lit up in subjects who encountered a larger amount of money, even if the relative buying power of that sum had not changed, because prices had increased as well.

The illumination of a spot behind the forehead responsible for a misconception about money marks just one example of the increasing sophistication of a line of research that has already revealed brain centers involved with the more primal investor motivations of fear (the amyg­dala) and greed (the nucleus accumbens, perhaps, not surprisingly, a locus of sexual desire as well). A high-tech fusing of neuroimaging with behavioral psychology and economics has begun to provide clues to how individuals, and, aggregated on a larger scale, whole economies may run off track. Together these disciplines attempt to discover why an economic system, built with nominal safeguards against collapse, can experience near-catastrophic breakdowns. Some of this research is already being adopted as a guide to action by the Obama administration as it tries to stabilize banks and the housing sector.


The Rationality Illusion
The behavioral ideas now garnering increased attention take exception to some central ideas of modern economic theory, including the view that each buyer and seller constitute an exemplar of Homo economicus, a purely rational being motivated by self-interest. “Under all conditions, man in classical economics is an automaton capable of objective reasoning,” writes financial historian Peter Bernstein.

Another central tenet of the rationalist credo is the efficient-market hypothesis, which holds that all past and current information about a good is reflected in its price—the market reaches an equilibrium point between buyers and sellers at just the “right” price. The only thing that can upset this balance between supply and demand is an outside shock, such as unanticipated price setting by an oil cartel. In this way, the dynamics of the financial system remain in balance. Classical theory dictates that the internal dynamics of the market cannot lead to a feedback cycle in which one price increase begets another, creating a bubble and a later reversal of the cycle that fosters a crippling destabilization of the economy.

A strict interpretation of the efficient-market hypothesis would imply that the risks of a bubble bursting would be reflected in existing market prices—the price of homes and of the risky (subprime) mortgages that were packaged into what are now dubbed “toxic securities.” But if that were so and markets were so efficient, how could prices fall so precipitously? Astonishment about the failure of conventional theory was even expressed by former chair of the Federal Reserve Board Alan Greenspan. A persistent cheerleader for the notion of efficient markets, he told a congressional committee in October 2008: “Those of us who looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect shareholder’s equity, myself especially, are in a state of shocked disbelief.”

Animal Spirits
The behavioral economists who are trying to pinpoint the psychological factors that lead to bubbles and severe market disequilibrium are the intellectual heirs of psychologists Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, who began studies in the 1970s that challenged the notion of financial actors as rational robots. Kahneman won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002 for this work; Tversky would have assuredly won as well if he were still alive. Their pioneering work addressed money illusion and other psychological foibles, such as our tendency to feel sadder about losing, say, $1,000 than feeling happy about gaining that same amount.

A unifying theme of behavioral economics is the often irrational psychological impulses that underlie financial bubbles and the severe downturns that follow. Shiller, a leader in the field, cites “animal spirits”—a phrase originally used by economist John Maynard Keynes—as an explanation. The business cycle, the normal ebbs and peaks of economic activity, depends on a basic sense of trust for both business and consumers to engage one another every day in routine economic dealings. The basis for trust, however, is not always built on rational assessments. Animal spirits—the gut feeling that, yes, this is the time to buy a house or that sleeper stock—drive people to overconfidence and rash decision making during a boom. These feelings can quickly transmute into panic as anxiety rises and the market heads in the other direction. Emotion-driven decision making complements cognitive biases—money illusion’s failure to account for inflation, for instance—that lead to poor investment logic.

The importance of both emotion and cognitive biases in explaining the global crisis can be witnessed throughout the concatenation of events that, over the past 10 years, left the financial system teetering. Animal spirits propelled Internet stocks to indefensible heights during the dot-com boom and drove their values earthward just a few years later. They were present again when reckless lenders took advantage of low-interest rates to proffer adjustable-rate mortgages on risky, subprime borrowers. A phenomenon like money illusion prevailed: the borrowers of these mortgages failed to calculate what would happen if interest rates rose, which is exactly what happened during the middle of the decade, causing massive numbers of foreclosures and defaults. Securitized mortgages, debt from hundreds to thousands of homeowners packaged by banks into securities and then sold to others, lost most of their value. Banks witnessed their lending capital decline. Credit, the lifeblood of capitalism, vanished, bringing on a global crisis.


Rules of Thumb
Behavioral economics and the related subdiscipline of behavioral finance, which pertains more directly to investment, have also begun to illuminate in more detail how psychological quirks about money can help explain the recent crisis. Money illusion is only one example of irrational thought processes examined by economists. Heuristics, or rules of thumb that we need to react quickly in a crisis, are perhaps a legacy that lingers from our Paleolithic ancestors. Measured reasoning was not an option when facing down a wooly mammoth. When we are not staring down a wild animal, heuristics can sometimes result in cognitive biases.

Behavioral economists have identified a number of biases, some with direct relevance to bubble economics. In confirmation bias, people overweight information that confirms their viewpoint. Witness the massive run-up in housing prices as people assumed that rising home prices would be a sure bet. The herding behavior that resulted caused massive numbers of people to share this belief. Availability bias, which can prompt decisions based on the most recent information, is one reason that some newspaper editors shunned using the word “crash” in the fall of 2008 in an unsuccessful attempt to avoid a flat panic. Hindsight bias, the feeling that something was known all along, can be witnessed postcrash: investors, homeowners and economists acknowledged that the signs of a bubble were obvious, despite having actively contributed to the rise in home prices.

Neuroeconomics, a close relation of behavioral economics, trains a functional magnetic resonance imaging device or another form of brain imaging on the question of whether these idiosyncratic biases are figments of an academician’s imagination or actually operate in the human mind. Imaging has already confirmed money illusion. But investigators are exploring other questions as well; for instance, does talking about money or looking at it or merely thinking about it activate reward and regret centers inside the skull?

In March at the annual meeting of the Cognitive Neuroscience Society in San Francisco, Julie L. Hall, a graduate student of Richard Gonzalez at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, presented research showing that our willingness to take risks with money changes in response to even subtle emotional cues, again undercutting the myth of the steely, cold investor. In the experiment, 24 participants—12 men and 12 women—viewed photographs of happy, angry and neutral faces. After exposure to happy faces, the study’s “investors” had more activation in the nucleus accumbens, a reward center, and consistently invested in more risky stocks rather than embracing the relative safety of bonds.

“Happy faces” were a constant presence during the real estate boom earlier in this decade. The smiling visage and happy talk of Carleton H. Sheets, the late-night real estate infomercial pitchman, promised fortunes to those who lacked cash, credit or previous experience in owning or selling real estate. Lately, Sheets’s pitch now highlights “Real Profit$ in Foreclosures.”

Behavioral economics has gone beyond just trying to provide explanations for why investors behave as they do. It actually supplies a framework for investing and policy making to help people avoid succumbing to emotion-based or ill-conceived investments.

The arrival of the Obama administration marks a growing acceptance of the discipline. A group of leading behavioral scientists provided guidance on ways to motivate voters and campaign contributors during the presidential campaign. Cass Sunstein, a constitutional scholar who wrote the well-regarded book Nudge, which President Barack Obama has reportedly read, was appointed head of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, which reviews federal regulations. Other officials who are either behavioral economists or aficionados of the discipline are now populating the White House.

Sunstein and his Nudge co-author Richard Thaler, the latter one of the founders of behavioral economics, came up with the term “libertarian paternalism” to describe how a government regulation can nudge people away from an inclination toward poor decision making. It relies on a heuristic called anchoring—a suggestion of how to begin thinking about something in the hope that thought carries over into behavior. People, for example, might be prodded into saving more for retirement if they were enrolled automatically in a pension plan from the outset, rather than merely being given an option to sign up. “Employees are enrolled if they do nothing, but they can opt out,” Thaler remarks. “This assures that absentmindedness does not produce poverty when old.” This idea was reflected in the Obama administration’s plans to automatically enroll people in a retirement plan in their workplace.

Decision making can be more complex than simply responding to a gentle push down a given path. In those circumstances, a “choice architecture” is needed to help someone decide among various options. In buying a house, for instance, purchasers need clearer information about money illusion and the like. “When all mortgages were of the 30-year, fixed-rate variety, choosing the best one was simple—just pick the lowest interest rate,” Thaler says. “Now with variable rates, teaser rates, balloon payments, prepayment penalties, and so forth, choosing the best mortgages requires a Ph.D. in finance.” A choice architecture would require that lenders “map” options clearly for borrowers, reducing an imposing stack of paperwork when buying a house into two neat columns, one that lists the various fees, the other that notes interest payments. Captured in a digital format, for instance, these two spreadsheet columns could be uploaded and compared with offerings from other lenders.

Along similar lines, Yale’s Shiller outlines an intricate strategy designed to avoid the excesses of bubble economics by educating against errors in “economic thinking.” Shiller suggests adopting new units of measurement akin to the unidad de fomento (UF) put in place by the Chilean government in 1967 and also embraced by other Latin American governments. The UF is a safeguard against money illusion, allowing a buyer or seller to know whether a price has increased in real terms or is just an inflationary mirage. It represents the price of a market basket of goods and is so commonly used that Chileans often quote prices in these units. “Chile has been the most effectively inflation-indexed country in the world,” Shiller says. “House prices, mortgages, some rentals, alimony payments, and executive incentive options are often expressed in these inflation units.”

Shiller also remains an ardent advocate of new financial technology that could serve as
antibubble weapons. Regulators are now scrutinizing the sophisticated financial instruments that were supposed to protect against default on the mortgage-backed securities that fueled the housing boom. Shiller, however, argues that derivatives (a class of financial instruments that is meant to shield against risk but whose misuse for speculation contributed to the credit crisis) can help guarantee that there are enough buyers and sellers in housing markets. Derivatives are financial contracts “derived” from an underlying asset, such as a stock, a financial index or even a mortgage.

Despite the potential for abuse, Shiller perceives derivatives as prudent “hedges” against dire economic scenarios. In the housing market, homeowners and lenders might use these financial instruments to insure against falling prices, thereby providing sufficient liquidity to keep sales moving.

Can Biology Save Us?
Ultimately, a solution to the current crisis will have to be informed by new ways of thinking about how investors act. One particularly creative approach would correct deficiencies in existing economic theory by melding the old with the new. Andrew Lo, a professor of finance at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an official at a hedge fund, has devised a theory that gives equilibrium economics and the efficient-market hypothesis their due while also acknowledging that classic theory does not reflect the way markets work in all circumstances. It attempts a grand synthesis that combines evo­utionary theory with both classical and behavioral economics. Lo’s approach, in other words, builds on the idea that incorporating Darwinian natural selection into simulations of economic behavior can help yield useful insights into how markets operate and provide more accurate predictions than usual of how financial actors—both individuals and institutions—will behave.

Similar ideas have occurred to economists before. Economist Thorstein Veblen proposed that economics should be an evolutionary science as early as 1898; even earlier Thomas Robert Malthus had a profound influence on Darwin himself with his musings on a “struggle for existence.”

Just as natural selection postulates that certain organisms are best able to survive in a particular ecological niche, the adaptive-market hypothesis considers different market players from banks to mutual funds as “species” that are competing for financial success. And it assumes that these players at times use the seat-of-the-pants heuristics described by behavioral economics when investing (“competing”) and that they sometimes adopt irrational strategies, such as taking bigger risks during a losing streak.

“Economists suffer from a deep psychological disorder that I call ‘physics envy,’ ” Lo says. “We wish that 99 percent of economic behavior could be captured by three simple laws of nature. In fact, economists have 99 laws that capture 3 percent of behavior. Economics is a uniquely human endeavor and, as such, should be understood in the broader context of competition, mutation and natural selection—in other words, evolution.”

Having an evolutionary model to consult may let investors adapt as the risk profiles of different investment strategies shift. But the most important benefit of Lo’s simulations may be an ability to detect when the economy is not in a stable equilibrium, a finding that would warn regulators and investors that a bubble is inflating or else about to explode.

An adaptive-market model can incorporate information about how prices in the market are changing—analogous to how people are adapting to a particular ecological niche. It can go on to deduce whether prices on one day are influencing prices on the next, an indication that investors are engaged in “herding,” as described by behavioral economists, a sign that a bubble may be imminent. As a result of this type of modeling, regulations could also “adapt” as markets shift and thus counter the type of “systemic” risks for which conventional risk models leave the markets unprotected. Lo has advocated the establishment of a Capital Markets Safety Board, similar to the institution that investigates airline accidents, to collect data about past and future risks that could threaten the larger financial system, which could serve as a critical foundation for adaptive-market modeling.

As brain science unravels the roots of investors’ underlying behaviors, it may well find new evidence that the conception of Homo economicus is fundamentally flawed. The rational investor should not care whether she has $10 million and then loses $8 million or, alternatively, whether she has nothing and ends up with $2 million. In either case, the end result is the same.

But behavioral economics experiments routinely show that despite similar outcomes, people (and other primates) hate a loss more than they desire a gain, an evolutionary hand-me-down that encourages organisms to preserve food supplies or to weigh a situation carefully before risking encounters with predators.

One group that does not value perceived losses differently than gains are individuals with autism, a disorder characterized by problems with social interaction. When tested, autistics often demonstrate strict logic when balancing gains and losses, but this seeming rationality may itself denote abnormal behavior. “Adhering to logical, rational principles of ideal economic choice may be biologically unnatural,” says Colin F. Camerer, a professor of behavioral economics at Caltech. Better insight into human psychology gleaned by neuroscientists holds the promise of changing forever our fundamental assumptions about the way entire economies function—and our understanding of the motivations of the individual participants therein, who buy homes or stocks and who have trouble judging whether a dollar is worth as much today as it was yesterday.

Note: This article was originally printed with the title, "Bubbles and Busts."

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-science-of-economic-bubbles