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    Investment and the multiple risks of 2022

    Will 2022 go down in financial history as the year the music stopped? After the extraordinary buoyancy in markets in 2021 the risk of a painful downturn is certainly escalating. In weighing that risk, investors face one overwhelmingly uncomfortable fact — central banks continue to rig the markets through their asset purchasing programmes, with important consequences for private portfolios. The expansion of central bank balance sheets started as a response to the great financial crisis of 2007-09 and accelerated when the pandemic struck in March 2020.This monetary activism perpetuates a looking-glass world where supposedly safe assets such as index-linked government bonds yield a negative income. While they may remain safe in the sense that they offer liquidity, they are nonetheless toxic because they ensure a guaranteed loss if the investment is held to maturity. At the same time, most nominal government bonds currently show a negative real yield after adjusting for inflation. One implication is that a traditional well-structured, diversified portfolio — split 60/40 between equities and bonds — has long been unhelpful for retail investors because bonds have lost their traditional insurance quality.Another is that investors have been forced to take on more risk, notably in equities, while risk across many markets is underpriced. In effect, the central banks have subverted the markets’ capacity to establish realistic prices. And as I pointed out in FT Money a year ago, bond investors face reinvestment risk whereby investments providing a good income today cannot be replaced by equally attractive investments when they reach maturity. The flood of central bank liquidity has caused valuations to become stretched, most notably in the US where the cyclically-adjusted price/earnings ratio invented by Nobel laureate Robert Shiller reached 38.3 in autumn last year, fast approaching the multiple of 44.2 notched up at the peak of the dotcom boom. This is the second-highest peak in 150 years, says Chris Watling of Longview Economics, a consultancy. US stock market capitalisation as a multiple of gross national product — a measure favoured by billionaire investor Warren Buffett — hit an all time record of 2.8 in the second quarter of 2021, compared with a dotcom peak of 1.9. 

    The symptoms of an equity bubble are rife in the US: witness the Spac phenomenon where blank cheque companies bring private companies to market while circumventing the protections afforded by conventional initial public offerings. Share prices of money-losing businesses are being ramped up, notably in the tech sector. Boston-based fund manager GMO points out that 60 per cent of the growth stocks in the Russell 3000 index make no money. And this was true even before the Covid-induced recession. Meanwhile, small retail purchases of US equity options have grown explosively in volume and speculation in crypto assets is increasingly frenetic.While some of these bubble characteristics such as Spacs and crypto speculation are now affecting Europe, equity valuations in the eurozone, the UK and Japan are not so conspicuously stretched. The UK, in particular, is shunned by many international investors because of a perceived paucity of growth companies, worries about Brexit-induced lower economic growth and a disproportionate number of fossil-fuel-intensive companies in the indices. Yet the bond markets in Europe and Japan are subject to the same underpricing of risk as in the US. And the rest of the world’s markets will surely feel the backwash when the US equity bubble bursts.Economists and actuaries tend to equate risk with volatility. But for mere mortals the most damaging risk is loss of capital. It is worth noting that the 2021 Credit Suisse Global Investment Returns Year Book records that from the peak of the dotcom boom in 2000 to March 2003 US stocks fell 45 per cent, UK equity prices halved and German stocks fell by two-thirds.What might cause the bond market bubble and the US equity market bubble to burst? A new and devastating variant of the coronavirus is an obvious possibility. But in a market overwhelmingly driven by policy the more predictable catalyst is policy reversal.Having initially argued that the surge in inflation since the pandemic struck in March last year was transitory, central bankers are now edging towards a less sanguine view. The fiscal policy boost in the US since the Covid shock has been huge in relation to plausible guesses about the size of the output gap, which records the amount of slack in the economy.This contributes to demand pull inflation. Meanwhile, companies have found that they can pass on cost inflation arising from supply shortages relatively easily to customers. They are also conceding higher wages in a tight labour market. The same factors are at work in the UK and continental Europe, though the fiscal numbers are on a lesser scale than in the US. There is a strong likelihood, then, that the big increase in money supply arising from ultra-loose monetary policy will be reflected in higher prices of goods and services in contrast to the period after the 2007-09 financial crisis where monetary expansion simply boosted asset prices.In today’s more inflationary environment, the US Federal Reserve and other central banks are reining back, or “tapering”, their asset purchases, which have been an important prop to bond and equity markets. For its part, the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee raised its policy rate by 0.15 percentage points to 0.25 per cent in December. Central bankers have long been anxious to return to a level of interest rates closer to historical norms, which would give them greater ammunition to restimulate the economy in the event of a new financial crisis or recession. Markets appear to be anticipating that normalisation will not cause much pain. While the debate over inflation and policy tightening has raged there has been no “taper tantrum” of the kind that caused markets to fall out of bed in 2013. One explanation could be that investors think the economic recovery since Covid will remain sufficiently robust to absorb any tightening. Another offered by Jeremy Grantham, co-founder of GMO and noted for his prescience in spotting bubbles, is that more than in any other previous bubble investors are relying on accommodative monetary conditions and zero real rates going on indefinitely. This has a similar effect to assuming peak economic performance for ever; it can be used to justify much lower yields on all assets and therefore correspondingly higher asset prices. When will the bubble burst?The problem for those who detect a bubble is that predicting the timing of the burst is notoriously difficult. In addition, moving into cash carries a heavy penalty at today’s rates of inflation. The difficulty for central bankers is that tightening policy may prove more financially destabilising than markets now expect because of an extraordinary accumulation of debt since the financial crisis. This is a direct consequence of the low interest rates which create a huge incentive to borrow. The Institute of International Finance, a trade body, estimates that global debt at the end of 2021 amounted to $295tn, $36tn above pre-pandemic levels. This amounts to just under 350 per cent of global gross domestic product, compared with 282 per cent at the start of the financial crisis.That tells us the extent to which global growth has been debt dependent while also pointing to a vulnerability. Rising interest rates will raise government borrowing costs and hit the large number of so-called zombie companies that are unable to cover debt-servicing costs from long-run profits but have been kept afloat by ultra-loose monetary policy. And if rate rises cause markets to plunge they could expose vulnerabilities in the banking system and among lightly-regulated shadow banks.The problem is compounded because monetary tightening will coincide with a reduction in fiscal support. John Llewellyn and Saul Eslake of Llewellyn Consulting, a UK economic advisory company, point out that whereas in 2020 the general government fiscal balance of the G20 economies supported aggregate demand to the tune of 8.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), the IMF estimates that support in 2021is likely to have fallen back to 7.9 per cent and on present budgetary plans to fall further in 2022 to 5.9 per cent. They worry that with the economic recovery not yet fully assured, this joint fiscal and monetary tightening looks premature and risky. One all too plausible outcome is that financial instability arising from a sudden repricing of risk across the markets will cause central bankers to reverse course for fear of precipitating a harsh recession. That would entrench investors’ belief in a perpetual safety net under the markets and set off a further round of debt accumulation, implying a lesser check on inflation and a bigger crisis down the road.Equally plausible is a prolonged bout of stagflation, which is bad for investors. Looking at bond and equity returns in 17 OECD countries back to the late 19th century TS Lombard’s Dario Perkins has identified episodes of stagflation, defined as years in which per capita GDP grew by less than 1 per cent and the headline CPI inflation rate was above 4 per cent. These episodes threw up significant real losses for investors. On average across the sample stagflation was associated with a 3 per cent real loss for equity holders and a 7.5 per cent real loss for bondholders. Note, too, that in the last serious period of stagflation in the 1970s bonds and equities became positively correlated, so that bonds lost their insurance quality and became an additional source of risk. Of the other risks faced by investors China demands attention. An overheated housing market and overborrowed property sector highlight the unstable nature of the credit fuelled growth model of the world’s second-largest economy. The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, moved before Christmas to ease financial conditions and the authorities still have enough fiscal capacity to stabilise a financial crisis. But flagging economic growth in the lower single figures seems likely in the light of these upsets, which will amount to a headwind for the world economy. That said, a slowdown would lead to lower commodity prices and a weaker currency, which would help the developed world cope with inflation. For foreign investors in China the picture is complicated by Beijing’s punitive recent assault on big tech and private education companies, its arbitrary interventions in markets and its clamp down on offshore financial vehicles through which companies such as Didi Chuxing, Alibaba and Pinduodo listed in the US.As for direct investment in Chinese equities and bonds, they are at a potentially-attractive discount to developed world counterparts. The question for investors is whether the discount is sufficient relative to the risks, which include growing political pressure in the US to decouple from the Chinese economy. Another issue concerns how they feel about human rights abuses in China. Climate risk is rising up the agenda. It poses a threat both through physical disasters such as extreme weather and potential corporate losses from decarbonisation as fossil-fuel-intensive assets have to be scrapped. Companies’ disclosure around plans for the transition to low carbon is exceptionally patchy and there is a widespread perception that climate transition risks are not efficiently priced in the markets. This means that there are opportunities as well as risks for investors. But beware regulatory risk. There could be big losses for companies and investors if governments adopt more widespread carbon pricing. Finally there is geopolitical risk, notably in the renewed assertiveness of Russia and China. History suggests that markets are not good at anticipating adverse geopolitical outcomes — witness the buoyancy of the London stock market before the assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand in June 1914.What should the private investor do?How should investors cope with a more inflationary environment where monetary policy is clearly changing gear and so many assets look overvalued? After years of dreadful underperformance, value stocks should do much better relative to growth stocks in the coming decade. The big US tech stocks now confront rising regulatory risk from competition authorities around the world. It is worth recalling how in the 1960s so-called nifty fifty growth stocks eventually came unstuck. Among the supposedly nifty were the likes of Kodak, Xerox and Polaroid — tech leaders of the day that were brutally disrupted by innovative newcomers.Emerging market equity valuations look very low by historic standards against the US and could offer interesting opportunities. The very depressed ratings of UK equities also look like a potential value opportunity.With bonds losing their insurance quality, finding assets that offer diversification for equities is important. That points to commodities, gold and for some, crypto assets. These offer no income. That said, the first two have defensive qualities against inflation. Whether that is true of crypto is historically untested. It seems questionable whether these super-intangible, ultra-volatile assets should be regarded as diversifiers as opposed to an outright punt. Finally, real assets such as property and infrastructure make sense in an unstable inflationary environment. Since the start of the Covid pandemic, alternative property like warehouses, care homes and student accommodation looks less risky than offices and retail. For retail investors the problem is to find the right fund through which to gain exposure to these asset classes. The biggest challenge for investors is the one identified by GMO’s Grantham, who remarked last year: “The one reality you can never change is that a higher-priced asset will produce a lower return than a lower priced asset. “You can’t have your cake and eat it. You can enjoy it now, or you can enjoy it steadily in the distant future, but not both — and the price we pay for having this market go higher and higher is a lower 10-year return from the peak.” Prepare for the proverbial bumpy [email protected] More

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    3 reasons why Cosmos (ATOM) price is near a new all-time high

    One project that has 2022 off to a bullish start thanks to its focus on facilitating the communication between separate networks is Cosmos (ATOM). This project bills itself as “the internet of blockchains” and seeks to facilitate the development of an interconnected decentralized economy. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Japan's service sector activity growth eases in December -PMI

    The world’s third-largest economy is expected to rebound in the final quarter of last year after COVID-19 cases fell, as it seeks to catch up with other advanced nations in its recovery from the pandemic’s hit.The final au Jibun Bank Japan Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dropped to a seasonally adjusted 52.1 from the prior month’s 53.0, which was the highest reading since August 2019.The figure compared to a 51.1 flash reading.”Japanese service sector businesses signalled a sustained expansion in business conditions at the end of 2021,” said Usamah Bhatti, economist at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey.”The easing of COVID-19 restrictions allowed customer-facing businesses to operate more freely throughout the final quarter of the year.”Firms, however, reported raw material and labour shortages, with employment levels dipping to a 15-month low, while business optimism for the year ahead improved at its weakest pace since September.The private sector as a whole saw cost burdens increase at the year-end amid sustained material shortages and supply chain delays, said Bhatti. “Concerns that disruption would extend into the new year were elevated,” he added.The composite PMI, which is calculated using both manufacturing and services, dropped to 52.5 from November’s final of 53.3. More

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    Bitcoin $100K possible by chipping away at gold’s market share: Goldman Sachs

    In a note released to investors on Tuesday, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) co-head of global FX and EM strategy Zach Pandl hypothesized that if the largest cryptocurrency could overtake 50% of the store of value market share over the next five years, BTC’s price would increase to just over $100,000, marking a compound annualized return of 18%.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Moneygram buys 4% stake in crypto ATM operator Coinme

    In a Wednesday announcement, MoneyGram said it had purchased a roughly 4% ownership stake in Coinme — likely more than $764,000, given its valuation of $19.1 million in June — as part of a strategic investment in the crypto company. The investment follows a May 2021 partnership between the two firms aimed at expanding access to crypto-fiat exchanges. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    XRP Falls 14% In Rout

    The move downwards pushed XRP’s market cap down to $35.97719B, or 1.75% of the total cryptocurrency market cap. At its highest, XRP’s market cap was $83.44071B.XRP had traded in a range of $0.71549 to $0.83655 in the previous twenty-four hours.Over the past seven days, XRP has seen a drop in value, as it lost 9.3%. The volume of XRP traded in the twenty-four hours to time of writing was $1.76815B or 1.75% of the total volume of all cryptocurrencies. It has traded in a range of $0.7155 to $0.8638 in the past 7 days.At its current price, XRP is still down 78.25% from its all-time high of $3.29 set on January 4, 2018.Bitcoin was last at $42,553.4 on the Investing.com Index, down 7.81% on the day.Ethereum was trading at $3,427.23 on the Investing.com Index, a loss of 10.19%.Bitcoin’s market cap was last at $815.90173B or 39.73% of the total cryptocurrency market cap, while Ethereum’s market cap totaled $415.74056B or 20.24% of the total cryptocurrency market value. More

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    Fed warns faster rate rises may be needed to tame soaring inflation

    The Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates “sooner or at a faster pace” than officials had initially anticipated as the central bank seeks to tame soaring inflation, according to minutes from its latest meeting. Minutes released on Wednesday from the December meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee showed officials were fully on board with plans to accelerate the withdrawal of the massive bond-buying programme adopted at the onset of the pandemic. Doing so would give the central bank greater flexibility to raise interest rates this year. The account of the meeting provided additional detail on why the Fed abruptly pivoted in late 2021 to embrace a more aggressive approach to withdrawing its unprecedented support for financial markets.A sell-off in US stocks gathered pace after the minutes were released, with the S&P 500 closing down nearly 2 per cent on Wednesday while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite was 3.3 per cent lower. Short-dated US government bonds also sold off, with the two-year yield at 0.82 per cent, its highest level since March 2020.Kathy Bostjancic, chief US financial economist at Oxford Economics, said the minutes showed “rising discomfort with elevated inflation” among Fed officials, who appeared to be confident that the US economy will recover strongly despite the risk of the Omicron variant. Thomas Simons, an economist at Jefferies, described the minutes as “some of the most hawkish in recent memory”.December’s meeting also featured the first substantive discussion about the Fed’s balance sheet, which has more than doubled in size since early 2020 and now hovers at just below $9tn.The minutes suggest broad support for the Fed to begin reducing the size of its balance sheet after the first interest rate increase. Some said a move could happen “relatively soon” afterwards. “Some participants judged that a less accommodative future stance of policy would likely be warranted and that the committee should convey a strong commitment to address elevated inflation pressures,” the minutes said.According to the so-called dot plot of individual interest rate projections published by the Fed following its December meeting, officials expect to raise interest rates three times next year, with another three moves pencilled in for 2023 and two more in 2024. In September, Fed officials had been evenly split on the prospects of lifting the policy rate this year from today’s near-zero level.Christopher Waller, a governor at the central bank, in December suggested the first rate rise could come as early as March, when the bond-buying programme is set to end. According to the minutes, policymakers stressed the importance of being flexible when it comes to raising interest rates, especially given the speed of the economic recovery.“Participants generally noted that, given their individual outlooks for the economy, the labour market, and inflation, it may become warranted to increase the federal funds rate sooner or at a faster pace than participants had earlier anticipated,” the minutes said.Inflation has been much higher than Fed officials expected in the early days of the recovery from the pandemic, with recent data suggesting that elevated consumer prices could become entrenched. The minutes highlighted concerns that the supply chain bottlenecks and labour shortages that have contributed to rising prices are likely to “last longer and be more widespread than initially thought”.At the press conference following the December meeting, Jay Powell, the Fed chair, said the inflation level was “not at all” what the central bank was looking for when it announced in August 2020 that it would tolerate higher prices in order to make up for prior periods, when the central bank undershot its longstanding 2 per cent target. One of the Fed’s favoured gauges, the personal consumption expenditures price index, registered a 5.7 per cent annual increase in November, the highest jump in roughly four decades.

    Fed officials have raised their inflation forecasts accordingly, with the core measure — which strips out volatile items such as food and energy — now expected to have steadied at 4.4 per cent in 2021 before falling further to 2.7 per cent at the end of 2022. FOMC members and other regional branch presidents also lowered their targets for the unemployment rate, which stands at 4.2 per cent. By the end of 2022, it is expected to dip to 3.5 per cent. The central bank has committed to keep interest rates near zero until it achieves inflation that averages 2 per cent over time and maximum employment. The first threshold was “more than met”, the minutes said, with “several” participants seeing labour market conditions already “largely consistent” with the second goal. Some participants even suggested the Fed could raise rates before maximum employment had been fully achieved, especially if inflationary pressures continue to mount.Investors increased their bets for a March interest rate increase on Wednesday as they digested the hawkish tilt.One concern officials flagged when discussing their plans to reduce the size of the Fed’s balance sheet was the resiliency of the Treasury market, with “several” participants noting “vulnerabilities” that may limit how quickly the central bank can shed assets. Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics expects the Fed to proceed cautiously with any balance sheet adjustments as a result. “Rate increases send a clearer message to the public, and we see no pressing need to take the risks association with shrinking the balance sheet if the inflation numbers head down in the way we expect in the spring,” he said. More

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    Year of sponsorships: Celebrities who embraced crypto in 2021

    In June 2021, Kim Kardashian promoted EthereumMax (EMAX) via an Instagram story shared with her more than 200 million followers. The token, which was used as payment for online ticket purchases for some pay-per-view events, gained 116,000% in just one week following the celebrity’s activity before falling more than 99% and leaving many investors in the red.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More