Friday, May 22, 2009

Economics 22/05/2009: Tumbleweed Brain?

Imagine a high desert scene outside Los Angeles - vast expanse of nothingness, sandy patch of a road and a massive, prickly and menacingly fast advancing tumbleweed rolling at you, kicking up dust of sand every time it bumps over a rock or a hillock. Thus, the picture of devastation complete, the sense of stable equilibrium achieved, the landscape is all but a sign of devastation.

Would you call it an image of hope?

Well, Brian Cowen does.

Today reports claim that Mr Cowen told FF gathering that the Government had taken necessary decisions to ensure the Irish economy could bounce back next year. So what can go wrong? Jobless and about to lose your home? Pay-up to the Revenue and shut up, for FF has taken the necessary decisions. We are but the roadkill for Cowen and Co on the road to his recovery.

Mr Cowen also decided that the high cover achieved in the last auction for 5-year bonds was a sign of investors regaining confidence in Ireland Inc.

This blog has long argued that the demand for Irish bonds is similar to a Ponzi pyramid due to Irish banks rolling over Government debt to the ECB and monetizing it. Yesterday's Irish Times editorial finally bowed to the facts and agreed. Last week, Michael Somers of NTMA has "pointed out that 85 per cent of Ireland’s debt is held abroad but that in recent bond sales, Irish banks were significant buyers of Government debt" to be used as collateral to borrow from the ECB. This was not, he said, “a genuine end investor result". How much did the latest bond auction success depend on investment by Irish banks which have already received some €7 billion from the Government to help secure their survival? The NTMA should ease investor concerns and set out the details," said the Irish Times.

I think it is time we ask a hard question about our bond market revolving door to the ECB. Is it true that:
  • as Brian Lenihan takes our taxes, we are hit once; then
  • as Brian Lenihan issues bonds, we are hit again with the debt to be repaid in the future; and
  • as the banks buy these bonds and go to the ECB to borrow against them, we are saddled with the banks-held debt that will have to be repaid to the ECB at some point in time and which is, in the end, our - taxpayers - liability too? so that
  • the entire scheme requires continuous borrowing to sustain itself...
And what is all of this Ponzi pyramid used for? To finance early retirements of the civil servants and to pay their increments? This, indeed, is what Mr Cowen calls 'the necessary decisions'.

Cowen also stated that "we have a way out that is working". Remember the brilliant German movie Downfall about the last days of the Third Reich? (See a reminder/spoof here). Say no more... our unbeloved leader is in a state of delusion that is equivalent to awaiting the arrival of a miracle weapon (which does not exist) as the real enemy tanks are crushing your city.

What plan does Mr Cowen have? Brian Cowen claimed that economic recovery will be based on 4 pillars:
  1. Banking crisis resolution;
  2. Public finances gap closure via revenue increases and spending cuts;
  3. Jobs protection; and
  4. Investing in the unemployed to return them to work.
Brian Cowen has produced not a single policy to address any of the four pillars. Not a single one.

The entire country now is aware that NAMA cannot be made to work. Brian Cowen is in denial of this.

The entire country knows that he has not cut public spending (his own Government Budget shows increasing public current expenditure in every year through 2013). Brian Cowen is in denial of this.

The entire country knows that his Government is drawing blood out of taxpayers to raise revenue and that it is not working. Brian Cowen is in denial of this.

The entire country sees jobs being lost in thousands week, after week, as Brian Cowen and his Government choke enterprises, workers, investors and entrepreneurs with higher and higher taxes and charges. Brian Cowen is in denial of this.

The entire country knows that it was Brian Cowen as Minister for Finance who raised our social welfare rates to such a level that no programme that FAS can run will ever turn former construction workers off the welfare. The entire country knows that FAS should be renamed FARCE because it is one of the most wasteful and least productive Government organizations. Brian Cowen is in denial of this.

It is my sincere hope that his own party colleagues stop listening to the man for two reasons:
  1. Brian Cowen no longer speaks for the people, about the people and with the people; and
  2. No one listens to Brian Cowen anymore.
Brian Cowen is in denial of reality.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Economics 21/05/2009: Moscow's Greening Pastures?

Russian stock markets are enjoying some recovery - in line with the US and firmer oil prices. Since January, MSCI EM - a broader index of emerging markets shares - rose roughly 25%, while MSCI Russia appreciated 30%. Domestic RTS index was up 48% and MMVB +62%, implying that Russia is now in the top three most profitable markets. JP Morgan note reflected this by lifting their assessment of the Russian market from 'Negative' to 'Neutral'. This, of course, is a lagging indicator, catching up with the rally enjoyed to date.

Although oil prices are much firmer now at $62.04 last night (July delivery) - the highest level since November 10, 2008, the latest price increase was driven by lower inventories, not by rising fundamentals or falling output. Demand for Russian oil and gas remains weak and production and exploration costs are not necessarily falling. If anything, in the long run, these costs are going to rise as new discoveries are being pushed deeper and deeper into Eastern Siberian domain, characterized by much more complex geology and smaller fields.

Likewise, industrial production continues to contract: -16.9% in April 2009 y-o-y, more than double on -8.1% fall in March. Overall Q1 GDP fell 9.2% in y-o-y terms, but there is no deflation in the economy (inflation moderated to around 10% annualized rate). Ruble devaluation expectations fell, but many experts still see some room for the currency to fall in months ahead. At the retail level, even with a span of the last two days Ruble rose from ca 43.30-43.35Rb/Euro to 43.00-43.10Rb/Euro, but majority of the businesses I spoke to expect the retail rates to test 44.00-46.00Rb/Euro before year-end.

JP Morgan note gave some support to the theory that Russian Government response to the crisis has been exemplary to date, but what is really interesting from our, Irish, point of view is the continued pressure from Kremlin to restrict corruption in the public sector.

While our own politicians and bureaucrats enjoy very low transparency over the sources of their incomes, Russian President has signed into law a decree requiring all top Government, political and public sector employees, politicians and even the top management of the public enterprises (commercial and non-commercial) to declare all sources of their own and their family members' income, covering:
  • combined annual income from all sources;
  • all property holdings (including the size of each building, land parcels and the country where the property is located);
  • all cars and other transport owned.
This information will be published on the web and will be accessible to public. Confidential information will also include:
  • addresses of property held; and
  • banking accounts.
These declarations will be subject to audit and false declaration of income will be punishable by immedeiate dismissal from the job and can lead to a criminal conviction.

And in contrast with the Irish Government, Russians are pumping state cash into SMEs - on Tuesday, Russian Government announced a 3-year $23bn fund for SMEs with a new target to increase SMEs employment levels from 14% of the total private sector employment today to 33% in 2012. Funds will be used to improve SMEs access to credit, reduce the cost of credit to the SMEs, some direct subsidies, increasing the share of state purchasing allocated to SMEs and reducing the 'red tape'.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Economics 20/05/2009: Moscow, US Green Shoots

Is Alan Ahearne being paid to write Irish Times political infomercials? Today's Irish Times editorial from Alan Ahearne (here) is a marked departure from the long-standing tradition that the civil servants should stay on their main jobs (in Alan's case - that is, apparently to advise Minister Lenihan on matters of Economic policy - not Finance or PR) and not spend public money-financed time on addressing the media. Talking to the electorate is Minister Lenihan's job, as a politician and a member of the Government, not Alan Ahearne's.

That said, Alan's opinion fall flat on a number of other, more substantive points.

"
These bonds will add to the gross stock of public debt, but so long as the valuation of loans is roughly correct, there will be no change in net public debt. Nama’s assets and liabilities will roughly match," says Alan. Great. We couldn't have imagined this intricacy of accounting without Alan pointing it out to us. But hold on - Alan does not give a figure in his article as to what the expected returns to NAMA can be, or which assumptions he uses to compute such a return. Not a single number! 'Roughly match' may mean a shortfall of Euro 20bn or a gain of Euro20bn, or anything in between, or indeed anything above these numbers. Again, Alain is silent on the matter.

"This approach to fixing banks’ balance sheets has a proven track record. The asset management model has been supported and recommended by banking experts across the globe and used successfully in many countries in the past as part of the work-out process of problem loans. Done properly, investments in the banking system using this approach have eventually been recovered in full," says the article. Ok: which experts? where has NAMA-style model been successful in the past, under what conditions and to what extent? Crucially, how do successful past NAMA-style models compare in terms of underlying fundamentals to Ireland's case? Not a word from Alan on these issues.

Alan Ahearne goes into a lengthy challenge to the German plan for banks rescue. This is irrelevant to his article, as we are not asking our Government officials to provide us with the news stories analysis for Germany. His job and the job of his masters is to deal with NAMA, not with Germany. In this context, it appears that Alan simply uses an argument against the German plan as an argument in favour of NAMA. This, if so, would be fallacious, since Germans making a mistake with their plans does not validate NAMA fundamentals in any way.

In short, I am simply amazed by the political nature of Alan's article, its lack of clarity and rigor, its complete lack of respect for the taxpayers who expect official Government opinion to be grounded in factual evidence. This is hardly an article one can expect from an economist, but rather an article one can expect from a politician. Too bad the Irish Times editorial staff didn't ask Alan to re-write it before accepting for publication...


Moscow is still all sun and cool...
Yesterday was a good and productive day for the mission, meetings between companies and a great dinner in the National Hotel, overlooking the Red Square entrance and the Kremlin. There are some good news on companies front, which I hope to report in the Sunday Times article later, so no preview here. But I was impressed by one Irish company sealing a deal (long time under negotiations) in software area. I was also positively impressed by the Irish delegation head, Billy Kelleher, TD - his first official visit and he has been very good so far. As someone remarked couple of days ago (no names here) - he might be a much better choice of a delegation head. Mike Hogan of EI and the rest of EI team are doing great work on the ground - this is not new as I always known Mike and his team to be really first class point of contact to the Russian market.

Night out on town proved that Moscow is still very much abuzz with life, despite the slowdown. Couple relatively hip places (a Mexican dive with, strangely enough, a very loud rock band playing right in the entrance door, and a can-be-anywhere-else-in-the-world pricey beer joint) all had a calm, but busy, atmosphere. Confidence seems to be unshaken, as far as normal businesses go, but construction is dead and finance people are in hiding.

I was briefing a group of the Moscow Bar Association lawyers yesterday over a friendly coffee on some developments out there in the broader world. The main issue they wanted to know about was the whole mess of the EU/US financial services regulations. Not so much the banks, but the hedge funds etc. Hedgies are in the news in Russia because of the Chrysler story (when they refused an offer of $0.30 on the dollar of the company bonds and got hammered by the Communist-in-Chief in the White House of betting on a taxpayer bailout of the company. Well, there is a point to be made - has there been a single hedge fund in the US which received any bailout money? No. How many US automakers received such funds? All. Spot any difference? Of course, the automakers are all unionized and the unions are the cronies of the Democratic Party. Trace the line to Obama. Aside from politics, my view is that trying to regulate international (as opposed to domestic) financial markets is like squeezing water - should the US/EU try to put any severe measures in place, funds will move off-shore. We will see some measures passed and paraded as a dramatic departure from the status quo, but in the end they will be purely cosmetic. Much more under threat are domestic bankers, who have little choice when it comes to packing suitcases and moving to the Bahamas. In the end, costs will rise for all service providers - hedgies will see the rise much less than domestic bankers, implying that rates of return will fall, but the returns to international financial services will fall less (in the short run) than to domestic financial services. This situation will drive more competition into international finance and will lead to consumer-damaging decline in competition in the domestic sectors. Over a number of years, returns to international finance will fall and returns to domestic banking and finance will rise. As more and more banking clients move off-shore to follow lower cost international finance, EU and US economies will slow down in growth. So all regulatory risk talk is really a cost/return argument in my view. Let's see who is the most daft in regulation - the US Democrats or the EU - in a couple of years time...

US Green shoots just had a massive set back as the US housing starts fell a record low of 458,000 in April. Calculated Risk blog is predicting that we are going to see US house prices falling 40-50% relative to the peak by the end of 2010. Yeah, Davy guys, eat your shorts on US housing market improvements... And of course the inflation story is still out there (here), don't forget.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Economics 18/05/2009: Wealth-destruction, Moscow, Ireland's Green Shoots

Here (hat tip PMD) is a superb article from WSJ on how to destroy thy country's wealth... too bad the US policymakers have not figured the Brian-Brian-Mary solution to the same problem. Possibly, they are not being advised by the wealth loathing, ever-State-loving ESRI?

On a personal note - I am in Moscow: sunny +25 degrees and the city is blooming (chestnut trees, apple trees, cherry trees and lilacs). Construction sites with no workers in sight, but traffic jams are as bad as ever. Ruble is down and prices are up, but on the net, I would not be surprised if there is a real deflation (prices seem to be up about 15%, while ruble is down ca 34%. They are fretting the latests stats from Europe: EU27 gas imports from Russia down 61% in Q1 2009 and exports of gas to CIS down 50%.

Closer to home problems/solutions: LA Times has a very interesting report (here) on solar energy potential. I will it to you to judge the commercial feasibility of what is being discussed (especially given the business-focused bits at the end of the article), but mark my words - within 10-15 years time we will see the end of the fossil fuels era and the start of a new era. It won't be driven by the environmental considerations (although those will form a secondary return on new technologies). Instead it will be driven by two major factors:
  1. Generally prohibitive cost of energy in the long run; and
  2. Higher induced volatility (risk) of energy costs when you factor in the pesky nasty regimes around the world who control most of our oil and gas.
Need an illustration of the latter point - see here.

On Green Shoots theory: here is a good commentary from Martin Feldstein (ex NBER) - he is spot on about Europe's prospects (see my earlier, 2008-dated, comment on WSJblogs exactly to the same point). This, of course, is not as optimistic as Peter Orszag's latest drone about US economy not being in a 'free-fall', but... (here). Then again, recall that Orszag is the director of the President's Office of Management and Budget, so how can things be in a free-fall after Mr Orszag pumped more debt into the US economy within the span of just few months than Alan Greenspan managed to do in years? But care to read more? Here Nouriel Roubini (Dr Doom) and Ken Rogoff (Dr Financial Crises) muse as to why the 'Green Shoots' are a delusion. I don't give any heed to Merkel's comments on German economy (here) - I'd rather trust our bankers than politicians when it comes to reading the tea leafs of global economics.

But here is my own contribution to the debate (for those of you who missed in last Sunday Times issue) - this is an unedited version of the article that appeared in The Sunday Times.

“Despair ruins some, presumption many,” said Benjamin Franklin some 250 years ago.

If despair haunted Ireland’s policy and media circles since last Summer, in recent weeks, much of the economic commentary started focusing on the emergence of the ‘green shoots’ in our economic environment. Even abysmal, by any measure, unemployment and Exchequer data for April are being spun as showing signs of improvement.

Are we seeing the proverbial ‘light at the end of the tunnel’? And if yes, do we know at what rate will the conditions improve in months and years to come? Regrettably, these claims may be erring on the presumption side of Franklin’s quote.

First, there is the alleged stabilization in the rate of decline in the Exchequer revenue. The problem with this assertion is that it ignores the other side of the budgetary equation – the expenditure side. Current spending was up 4.5% in the first four months of the year. Factoring deflation, this is a hefty increase. At this rate the
real difference between economic growth and public sector expansion in 2009 can reach some 16%, before the vast NAMA commitments. In household finances this is equivalent to being insolvent and reckless about it at the same time.

Another issue is the rising cost of servicing public debt (up 21.4% in year on year terms in April). In the longer term, our growing over-reliance on less than 1 year maturity borrowings to finance current expenditure simply means that instead of taking a quick dose of painful medicine today we risk ending up on a drip therapy of minor cost adjustments. This would make the disease of overspending immune to future policies. Should interest rates rise in 2010-2012, as any sane market observer would expect, the Exchequer will be forced to
refinance a mountain of fresh borrowings at an even higher cost to the taxpayers.

Another recent sighting of ‘green shoots’ relates to the unemployment data. While it is true that the pace of increases in the Live Register is abating, the pace of jobs destruction remains furious. And, given the dynamics of rising layoffs in the services sectors, just as the previous wave of unemployment might be subsiding a new one is already heading our way.

Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) for April, published by the NCB Stockbrokers, shows employment in services bouncing around the bottom and in manufacturing contracting at a pace only slightly slower than in January – the worst month on record. Layoffs in Business Services accelerated in April, extending the current decline to fourteen consecutive months. Financial Services companies shed jobs at the sharpest pace in history last month.

So things are getting worse, not better on the unemployment front and its now the better quality higher-paying jobs that are being destroyed the fastest. If a loss of an average construction sector job implies a net loss to the economy of some €60,000 per annum, an average Business and Financial services job destroyed takes some €140,000 out of the economy.

At the aggregate unemployment data level, if January-April ‘stabilized’ pace of jobs losses continues to the end of the year, we are looking at 515,000 or more on Live Register by 2010 well above the 384,113 currently. Even more worryingly, this week’s data from CSO, discussed in the box-out below, is showing that the long-term unemployment is rising at an accelerating rate.

Following a marginal improvement in March, April current consumer confidence index fell to 75.1 from 76.2, although the expectations index rose to 27.7 compared to 22.5. Again, as with other ‘stabilizing’ indices this is temporary correction, not a lasting improvement. The so-called consumer ‘misery’ index – a standard measure of forward-looking indicators determining future consumer confidence – went deeper into red in April and is now poised for a further decrease in May based on the data to-date.

When it comes to the PMI data, April business activity in services recorded “an acceleration in the pace of decline”, according to the NCB Stockbrokers. In fact, April figures were so bad, that only February 2009 showed a deeper contraction. The steepest fall-off occurred in the highest value-added sector of the Irish economy – Business Services – down for the eleventh month in a row and falling at the fastest pace since January. Financial Services posted the steepest contraction in its history. And companies are expecting further drops in demand for their services in months ahead.

The story is not that much different in manufacturing. April manufacturing sectors PMI showed a further considerable deterioration of operating conditions. Output in the sector continues to contract at a near-record rate while jobs were cut sharply and new purchasing fell off the cliff. Any ‘green shoots’ in the cycle must involve an increase in planned future purchasing activity by companies and a restart of the investment cycle. This is clearly not on the minds of the majority of Irish managers.

So in the short run, there is no evidence of significant signs of improvement or stabilization in the downward spiral of our real economy.

This does not bode well for our future growth capacity. On Friday, ESRI published an excellent paper titled Recovery Scenarios for Ireland looking at the prospects for our economy through 2015. Under optimistic assumptions, the ESRI forecast is for the Irish income per capita to reach 2007 levels by 2015 implying a round-trip to the peak of 8 years.

Even more significantly, ESRI concluded that “as a consequence of the recession, the potential growth rate of the economy is likely to have fallen from 3.6 % per annum to 3% per annum”.

For all its merits, the paper assumes no changes in the long-run trend for the foreign direct investment inflows into Ireland. This issue is non-trivial. With vast majority of our exports generated by the MNCs, we simply cannot ignore the changing nature of the future international investment cycles on our economy. Looking over the recent years, vast majority of Ireland-based MNCs have chosen not to locate new products and services here. Only a handful elected to put higher value-added R&D and management activities in Ireland. This is a problem, as many MNC-produced goods and services are nearing the end of their life cycle. In time, failure to attract new products and services will spell an irreversible decline of the large share of our trade flows.

My own analysis, based on parameterising a recent IMF model of economies experiencing simultaneous shocks to housing markets, GDP growth and credit creation, predicts that the ongoing contraction in the Irish economy will bottom out at ca 16-18% decline in GDP per capita by the beginning of 2011. My estimates also show that it will take the economy until the middle of 2017 to fully regain, the levels of income per capita enjoyed in 2007.

Over 60% of the recession-related fall-off in our output will be captured by domestic factors: the property markets bust, fiscal policy debacle and rising structural unemployment. Adding to this a possibility that our multinationals-dominated sectors can experience a severe contraction in future investments can reduce our potential GDP growth rate to below 2.5% per annum. In this case, a recovery to 2007 income per capita levels might take us well into 2020.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Economics 16/05/2009: NAMA Week & Irish Banks

Having been up to my ears in planning for next week’s trip to Moscow, I missed the excitement of the NAMA finally imploding on Thursday and Friday. So here is a recap (for those of you who are in the know already – my analysis is below).

This note is structured as follows: first, I cover Michael Somers' very revealing and honest testimony to the PAC, then I review Friday Davy note on NAMA, lastly, I provide complete estimates of expected losses for NAMA.

Michael Somers - some fresh air on NAMA
On Thursday NTMA ceo Michael Somers told the Public Accounts Committee that putting valuations of the bad loans will present “an enormous dilemma”. Of course in logic, ‘dilemma’ always leads to two undesirable alternatives – in other words, it cannot be resolved within the same logical reasoning chain that leads to it. In layman’s terms, this means that the only way to resolve NAMA problems is to dump the idea alltogether.

So what is this ‘dilemma’ that the country has learned about only this week?

It turns out to that "there will be arguments down the courts if we don’t get it right. The implications of this thing are enormous and the legislation will be very complex,” Mr Somers said. Hmmm… this is hardly new. This blog and many well publicised articles, some written or co-written by me plus a massive wave of media reports that certain big developers are preparing to challenge NAMA - all were well ahead of Mr Somers. But Mr Somers’ testimony is so news worthy now because it is no longer the dirty scoundrels in media and academia who are beating up Lenihan’s dream baby, but one of the Golden Public Circle’s own.

Mr Somers also said that he believed up to 5,000 officials in the main banks “were currently examining bad loans. …At the moment, we really have no feel for how Nama will operate. But my preference would be a core group of between 30-40 people.” Now, wait a second. 5,000 banks officials cannot get the loans right, but 30-40 NTMA/NAMA folks will? This is after Mr Somers admitted that NTMA has not experience in managing distressed assets whatsoever. Of course, Mr Somers was saying 30-40 NAMA officials on top of 5,000 banks officers already in place will manage NAMA, but in such a scecnario, any final cost of NAMA will have to include the cost of those 5,000 bankers as well...

Mr Somers said the NTMA paid its 170 staff a total of €19.4 million in 2008 – “an average of almost €90,000 per person” as Irish Times puts it. Well: 170 staff at €19.4mln is €114,118 per person in pay. Including secretaries and other auxiliary staff, NTMA is now the best paid state entity on the record – ahead of ESB. But hold on, further €8.9 million was paid out in expenses. So total compensation (inclusive of expenses) came to €166,471 per head.

The 30-40 people that Mr Somers would like to have for NAMA is about 20-times smaller than normally is required to run a €90bn fund. Now, given that NAMA will be a distressed assets fund with less active management, say 600-700 people specialising in asset management, portfolio structuring, risk pricing etc would suffice. If the NTMA wage bill were to apply (and there is absolutely no reason as to why it won’t) – we, the taxpayers, are looking at paying something to the tune of €100mln in wages and expenses for these ‘servants’ of the state annually.

Another dilemma, clearly of unresolvable variety, is that NAMA “is expected to pay for the bad loans through the issue of Government bonds to the lenders.” (Quote per Irish Times). Apart from not being new (first disclosed back in April) and being banal (the state has to borrow cash and issue bonds to pay for its day-to-day spending, let alone NAMA), this claim is rather sterile.

In reality, the Government hopes that it will be able to borrow directly and at reasonable terms, but of course, it might run into some tight spots asking the markets to lend money
  • to a half-backed bad bank to be run by 30-40 inexperienced staff;
  • mired up to its chin in the mud of court challenges in our notoriously costly and slow legal system;
  • operating under the umbrella of our Guinness-serving bond issuing authority;
  • in a country whose Government cannot balance its own books;
  • with economy managed so poorly, that we are now presented internationally as the worst case scenario possible; and
  • the Government so grossly clientelist that it can't even manage its own employees without having to run crying to the 'mommy' of the Social Partnership;
  • add to it that NAMA has no popular or political support; and
  • that the same Government is doing everything possible to make certain Irish private economy will not come out of this recession with any strength left
and you really have to ask a question: Are they eating some magic Amsterdam brownies in the land of NTMA/Irish Times/DofF and the rest of the ‘policy’ circle when they claim that this Government/NTMA will be able to borrow cheaply to finance NAMA? (see more on this below).

Irish Times also told us that “Profits from the eventual sale of the loans will be given to the state which may be used to service the €54.2 billion national debt.” Ok, what national debt do they have in mind? €90-110bn or more debt we will have once Mr Lenihan ends his current deficit financing of the public sector employees lifestyles? In fact, the same Irish Times reported as a comment from NTMA chief that he expects Irish debt to top 100% of our GDP in 2010 (see below). So, does anyone in the Times editorial have a calculator at hand?

It's all down to the cost of NAMA
“However if Nama makes a loss, the Government said it will apply a levy on banks to recoup the shortfall.” Ireland’s stockbrokers decidedly focused on this statement much more than on anything else that Mr Somers said. Why? Because this is the real unknown unknown for banks shareholders. This is, of course, ultimately the question of how big the loss will be.

So let’s do some counting of the beans… shall we?

First what the financial markets analysts say: per Davy note assumption, “costs for NAMA will be covered by interest income from the performing loans. Taking a conservative view that only 50% of the €30bn investment loans to be transferred are performing, this could generate initial income of c.€1.2bn as yields are currently at 8%. This would cover the coupon (assumed to be in line with the borrowing rate on ECB liquidity facility) of the bonds issued to the banks in return for their €80-90bn of loans transferred to NAMA. Income will likely be higher because the investment loans to be transferred to NAMA are not bad loans in themselves but are selected due to cross-collateralisation with development loans. An investigation of staff costs as a percentage of properties under management for large real estate trusts suggests that staff costs will be covered, especially given the greater operational leverage due to NAMA's size. Legal costs are less certain as the legality of the agency is one of the greatest obstacles to its performance.”

... And then, the pigs are soaring high in the sky…

Suppose that NTMA goes out to the markets with two suitcases worth of bonds – government bonds and NAMA bonds. Do you think they can price NAMA debt:
  1. at a discount to current public debt issues (a scenario that Davy suggests); or
  2. at a rate that is equivalent to Government bonds, say ca 4.5%; or
  3. at a rate that is higher than Government bonds, say a premium of 20% to Government debt – for 5.4%, while the Government debt remains priced at 4.5%; or
  4. as the markets look at two piles of paper, they tell NTMA: “Ok, we’ll take Government bonds at a premium to previous issues to account for vast number of these things being floated in the market – say 5%, and NAMA bonds at a 20% premium on that – at 6%”?
Reality check – NAMA will not borrow at ECB liquidity facility rates, so (1) is out of the window.
For (2): at 4.5% pa (a very optimistic scenario), buying €90bn worth of loans at 15% discount (as Davy suggest) on their face value will cost us €3.44bn annually in coupon payments. But wait, let’s also look at the downside scenarios: (3) implies €4.13bn price tag, and under scenario (4) the cost of annual NAMA financing alone rises to €4.59bn, or ca 15.3% of the entire Exchequer tax revenue in 2009...

Hmmm... back to that 'country whose Government cannot balance its own books' bullet point above, anyone?

Per debt financing assumptions, Somers said Ireland would be “lucky” to hold on to its sole remaining top AAA credit rating, as its low debt levels could surge to more than 100 per cent of GDP next year, from about 41 per cent in 2008, after the State completed the transfer of the banks’ bad loans. Hmmmm… remember that Irish Times statement that NAMA can be used to pay down €54.2bn debt quoted above? Apparently, NTMA chief expects the debt in excess of €170bn by the end of 2010 - somewhat higher than Irish Times journos do. And, apparently, he does not expect to price any debt (Government or NAMA-issued) at ECB discount facility rates (as Davy assume).

Of course, it is a trite statement to say that NAMA will be able to cover its staff costs, so no dwelling on this, but as far as legal costs uncertainty goes, despite Davy's rather neutered murmurs on this, there is no downside protection for the taxpayers. In other words, once committed to the transfer of a loan, NAMA implicitly assumes that no matter what the legal costs might be, the loan will be moved.

Somers was lethal on this last week: “I see great potential for arguments down in the courts if we don’t get this right,” saying further that he heard “people down in the courts were delighted” about the setting up of NAMA as they were in line for “a bonanza”. He said there would be “eating and drinking” at the committee for decades over the set-up of NAMA. But Davy folks didn't listen, apparently.

Davy goes on to pour more fuel on the NAMA pyre: “…the fear of the unknown has also led developers to call for consultation with the government over NAMA, with many saying that they can be part of the solution. Engagement with developers would arguably help reduce legal challenges and secure buy-in. The NTMA itself has stated that it lacks sufficient skills for setting up NAMA, but many developers will be both skilled and, more importantly, incentivised to work out their projects/loans under NAMA.”

Indeed, NAMA is at a severe risk of getting into bed with developers. Not because developers are ‘evil’ (I certainly do not believe this), but because NAMA should be independent from developers interests and free from their influences. And yet, Davy does not even see the lunacy of its own suggestion that NAMA should engage developers in the management process. This is really worrisome.

Doing the final sums on NAMA cost
Davy’s “simple NAMA model shows that taking our 15% haircut assumption for the sector and assuming no profits on disposal of NAMA assets across a 15-year work-out period implies a present value loss of €4bn. Apportioning this fee on an annual basis over 20 years (similar to Insurance Corporation of Ireland) implies that this fee would be only c.3-4% of normalised profits. However, given the long-term nature of the agency, there is every chance that it can turn a profit similar to that which we have seen in past banking crises such as in Sweden. A more positive outlook, with greater performance from investment assets under NAMA and a 5% profit in aggregate across asset disposals, would result in a present value profit on wind-up of €3bn to the taxpayer from NAMA.”

I do not have Davy’s model at hand to see what assumptions they force into it to get these numbers. Judging by their assumptions on pricing NAMA bonds (above), I have no confidence in any of their numbers. Their concluding scenario in the quote above is so far out there, that the aforementioned Amsterdam brownies come to mind again.

But my own simple model goes as follows (with my assumptions listed transparently for all of you to see and to challenge, unlike Davy):

So, net impact is a loss of €33-68bn.

Remember, Mr Somers said he was “aghast” at the scale of development loans advanced to a small number of borrowers which emerged after the NTMA reviewed the banks’ books. He called the review “a huge eye opener for us”. This is not a statement from a man who expect loans losses to be in 5% category (as my ‘Near Davy’ scenario above assumes).

So turning back to that original concern that investors should have about NAMA - what share of these losses can be recovered through a 3-4% shave on future profits of the banks?

Friday, May 15, 2009

Economics: 15/05/09: Ned 'Homer' O'Keeffe & ESRI's latest trip

So we have Ned O'Keeffe as Irish Politics answer to Homer -
except the former's daftness is actually intended as political and economic view points... read here...

"What has Tesco offered us since they came over to Ireland?" said Deputy O'Keeffe. "I think we would be better off if Tesco were to leave Ireland altogether. Their absence from the Irish market would be taken up by other supermarkets who would fill the gap and hopefully it would lead to less exploitation of Irish food suppliers. We’ve already seem the damage that foreign banks have done to Ireland and how the Irish banks were forced to make up for their mistakes. Well the same could happen in the retailing sector with the foreign retailers such as Tesco ruining the Irish supermarket industry and putting thousands of people out of work around the country", Deputy O'Keeffe concluded.

This is either delusional or clinically mad. And it comes from a sitting TD. In fact, the statement is so historically, economically and socially illiterate, Mr O'Keeffe deserves no comment on this blog other than one word: FRIGHTENING!


And in case you are not scared enough by Ned 'The Belching Brain' O'Keeffe, look no further than the latest trip-to-the-light-fantastic from ESRI: Recovery scenario for Ireland in the medium term, calling for 6.5% GDP growth. Yes, you are reading it right - 6.5%!

How did they got so high? Well, they estimated that Irish potential GDP growth post-crisis will be 3.0% (down from their previous estimate of 3.6%). Then, they slapped on top of this an additional 3.5% to account for the severity of the downturn we are currently experiencing. So the logic is - the further you fall in a recession, the steeper will be the climb on the way up. Ah, if only the world evolved according to the ESRI model.

Per IMF earlier studies (including the one I covered in several previous posts and in my column in Business & Finance), current recession, globally and in specific countries, like the US, is likely to lead to a flat-line recovery in output. But don't trust my words - see in the excellent note from NCB's Brian Devine (here):
So ESRI is in effect assuming that Ireland will be unique in the world in experiencing stronger recovery post-crisis than other economies, including those that will drive Irish recovery - i.e. the US and UK.

Alternatively, you can read ESRI's 'forecast' as being driven by the rate of FDI inflows into Ireland outstripping in the rate of growth the US/UK domestic capital investment expansion post recession 2:1.

As Brian put it in his Friday note: "The ESRI have assumed that this catch-up process will cause Irish economic growth to average 6.5% over the period 2011-2015. We would be highly cautious of this growth rate because of: a) The difficulty in measuring potential output especially in light of the current shock to the domestic and global financial system. b) The uncertainty surrounding the pace of global growth, again because of the difficulty in assessing the potential output of our main trading partners arising from the damage to the global financial system. c) The uncertain effects on consumption of further tax hikes. We also believe that consumption will remain subdued because of the rise in the level of real indebtedness."

Well argued, although I would have put it in less polite terms.

Per NCB note, the summary of ESRI 'forecasts' and NCB latest forecast, alongside with my own estimates are shown in the following table:
The difference between NCB's forecast, my estimate and ESRI's absolutely acid-sharp predictions is in assumptions...

As NCB note explains: "The conventional view of economic growth is that business cycle fluctuations in GDP represent temporary deviations from trend. In other words the economy eventually returns to a path determined by the potential of the economy. It is not abundantly clear that the current deviation from trend is transitory in nature. In other words it is quite possible that the problems in the economy are more structural in nature i.e. there has been a permanent loss of output relative to previous potential. The ESRI have acknowledged this and lowered the potential growth rate from 3.6% to 3.0% over the period 2005-2020 (driven by a significant part of the capital stock being rendered obsolete, the increase in taxes, the risk premium on borrowing and the reduction in global output potential). As a result of the current recession the ESRI estimate that there will be a permanent loss of the level of output relative to previous potential of 10%."

Ok, but... is 3.0 a relevant figure for the future? What reasons can ESRI bring about to set our potential growth rate close to the US and well above our main Eurozone competitors? Superior education system? Super-human entrepreneurship drive? Low cost base? Low tax rates? Fit and efficient public sector? Effective and pro-market Government? Workers who are accustomed to giving that extra effort and not expecting to be paid for it on the double? Competitive domestic service providers ensuring low cost of doing business in Ireland? Not likely. Shamrocks planted on a White House garden patch from the last Taoiseach's visit for Paddy's Day? More like it.

But here is more from NCB note: "As the ESRI note “In considering how the Irish economy is likely to exit from the current recession the key lies with the timing and nature of a world recovery.” Most of the world’s economies are forecast to grow at rates close to potential over the period 2011-2015 in the ESRI forecast." So why, again, does the ESRI assume that Irish economy will grow at more than double its potential GDP?

NCB also highlights timing issues in ESRI forecast: "Despite the fact that the pace of the decline in global downturn is likely behind us ...things are only getting less worse not better and the outlook remains highly uncertain, with the possibility of policy error large. The ESRI do take this into account by running an alternative scenario in which global growth does not recover until 2012 – in this case GDP growth in Ireland averages 5.5% over the period 2011-2015." So feel free to wonder - the world will still be in a recession in 2012, but ESRI's Ireland will be looking at a growth of 5.5% pa over 2011-2015? Let's take it apart: suppose 2012 the world is still in a recession, with growth of -1% - for the sake of an assumption. In 2011, obviously, things wouldn't be much better either, so let's say GDP growth is at -1.5% then. Now, to post average growth rate of 5.5% over 2011-2015 as ESRI predicts, Ireland would have to grow at a cumulative compounded rate of 34% between 2013 and 2015, or at an average annual rate of 10.25%! The ESRI use this as their pessimistic scenario...

So why are these unrealistically high numbers? Why now? Why from the ESRI? We can only speculate.

NCB's note says: "We think the greatest domestic risk to economic recovery is that the fiscal consolidation which has begun is not seen through or that taxes bear even more of the adjustment than currently envisaged (ironically the ESRIs document could halt the process of adjustment as unions/ government point to the fact that the economy is forecast to average growth of 6.5% in the future). This would have a major knock effect on consumption, competitiveness and borrowing costs and as such GDP growth."

That is, as far as I can understand it, a hint at something that I completely agree with. ESRI is a quasi-Governmental organization with no real independence in sight. In fact, what passes for 'independent' thinking in the ESRI's usual policy work is a mix of Labour's leftism in social policy department and Garret Fitz FG's legacy in taxation thinking (i.e the inherent inability of the ESRI to actually think rationally about tax burden and the damage it does to our economy). Hence, ESRI saying today that 'look - things are going to be just fine in couple of years' can be interpreted as their masters' signal to the unions and the social partners that the discomfort they might feel to be will be rewarded out of the spoils of the growing economy once again tomorrow. The timing of this rosy forecast - close enough to the elections is also, at the very best, an unfortunate coincidence.

Which brings us back to NAMA - why isn't the Government pre-committing itself to disbursing NAMA proceeds (if any gains occur) in the future to the taxpayers? Why isn't it ringfencing these proceeds? Perhaps, the NAMA upside is being held back to pay off the unions in the future through a compensatory wages increases after the crisis to the public sector workers for the income reductions they have suffered? or perhaps such a commitment has already been made? After all, the Bearded Men of the unions are not exactly fighting against NAMA, are they?..

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Economics 14/05/09: Economy bottoming out?

Per Davy note today: "pace of decline of activity has slowed: January-February was the worst point of the recession. All available indicators suggest that the Irish recession is past the most acute point. It is becoming clear that January-February was the most intense phase."

This statement is conditional on two assumptions - not explicitly identified -
  1. Irish fiscal position remains sustainable underpinned by relatively easy borrowing, despite the demand for new and massive volume of funding under NAMA; and
  2. Global economic stabilization is going to spill-over into Irish growth.
"Consumer confidence bottomed last summer," says Davy. I would not be impressed by this statement too much. Consumer confidence can be volatile. Underlying fundamentals are still weak and even assuming consumer confidence is on an upward trend (I am yet to see this happening), consumer spending might not resume, as jobs losses fear and taxation increases expectations are still there. It will take a NAMA-induced budgetary hit on households after-tax income to send confidence tumbling down to historic lows, but this is on the books for H2 2009 anyway.

"Core" retail sales are rising says Davy note. Hmmm, rising? Latest data for retail sales ex motor (core) we have shows that in February 2009 core sales rose 1.3% after contracting 1.1% in January and rising 1.1% in December after falling 2.3% in November... A saw-like pattern at the very best. If Davy want to stake their claim on February numbers, why not call for the 'bottoming out' in December?

"Survey indicators for services, manufacturing and construction have improved". Now, don't tell that to PMI survey administrators at Markit and NCB...

"Unemployment claimants are increasing more slowly". I am stunned to see Davy economics team actually looking at month-to-month dynamics for something so rich in lags and various degrees of severity by unemployment type as unemployment figures. Presuming they are referring to the Live Register data, what we do know is the following:
  • the pace of overall increases in Live Register data have slowed down from a destructively high level in January-February 2009;
  • this does not tell us anything about a trend, but can either signal a temporary bounce or indeed a reversal in trend;
  • I prefer the former explanation to the latter because I can clearly see a new wave of layoffs rising - construction sector jobs destruction is by now complete. But financial services and business services jobs and retail sector workers are probably going to see rising rate of layoffs. If I were working for Davy, I would explained to the 'masters ordering the music' for this note that laying off a financial services worker is 6-8 times more expensive for the economy than laying off a low-skilled construction worker. I would also explain that the probability of a laid off construction worker leaving this country is probably 10-15 times greater than the probability of a laid off Financial or Business Services worker going elsewhere. I would further add that our banks have issued much larger and more stretched mortgages to the latter, not the former and thus their impairments on mortgages side is, guess what, much more adversely impacted by the next wave of layoffs than by the former one.
"Meanwhile, the fact that Irish exports outperformed during the collapse in global trade late last year and in early 2009 received little attention". I agree with this statement. The problem is can we hold on to this performance and also, how much of the good news is driven by the resilient and competent MNCs and how much is driven by the lower value-added domestic exporters? One only needs to look at the combination of sectors with rising imports (inputs) and exports (outputs) to see where the answer to this question lies.

Having told us the half-baked story of the 'green shoots' Davy forecast the economy will bottom in Q1-Q2 2010. Now, this is puzzling. If we are seeing reductions in the rates of decline in some series today, while other are, according to Davy recording an outright improvement, what will be happening to the economy between Q3 2009 and Q2 2010? Bouncing at the bottom? No - Davy say that it will bottom out in Q1-Q2 2010. So things will be deteriorating then through Q4 2009. But hold on a second. The same Davy note also says - in its title - that "Ireland is probably past the worst of the recession"...

Anyone to spot a blatant contradiction here?

Well, Davy didn't:

"Consumer spending may trough in six to nine months due to the savings ratio peak and slower income declines" - so we are not past the worst yet in terms of consumer spending?

"The risks to our forecasts are evenly balanced: the economy may hit the floor sooner if we are too pessimistic about the fragile recovery in the global economy, but a double-dip recession is possible if the reaction of households to the recent Budget is negative". So again, under both scenarios, we are not past the worst point yet.

And as a side bar - how far detached from the reality do you have to be to presume that the household reaction to the recent Budget can be anything but negative?

I am simply amazed at the lack of consistency or basic logic in the Davy's arguments! But enough on this - there is an article of mine coming out on Sunday on the issue of 'green shoots'... so until then the topic shall rest.

But here is a good analysis of 'green shoots' theory for the global economy that folks in Davy might want to read.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

A fresh candidate for City Council

Those of you who know me are aware that I extremely rarely support political candidates. Not because I do not share their views - although most of the time, I do not. And not because I do not find some of them to be honest and well-meaning enough to deserve a public office - although often that is the case. I simply never find their passion for independent thinking and existence to be sufficient enough to warrant my honest support. I treasure independence of my own thinking and my own passion for living enough to do something halfheartedly.

There were and are exceptions to the rule:
  • David Norris commands my admiration. Not because I agree with him on most issues, but because he is a person I truly respect for being original and true to himself.
  • Michael McDowell has won my support as a politician who tried to do what he promised to the best of his ability - and I am happy to hear that he is going to run again for the Dail in the next contest.
That was pretty much it, until today, when by a sheer accident I have learned that Mannix Flynn is running as a New Independent for Dublin City Council. Again, as with Senator Norris, I find myself in disagreement with some things Mannix advocates. But I think I know this man to be a truly independent thinker and a person with great real passion for what he feels to be right.

Check out his website www.votemannixflynn.ie. Don't come telling me that his ideas are wrong. They might be. It's your own call. But in our depreciated age when virtually every politico (add the same for academics, journalists and so on) is a carbon copy of the other, Mannix offers something different from the tired parade of the councilors who, come elections, fake passion better than the Eurovision contestants and then spend years in the City Council dividing the spoils.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Economics 12/05/2009: housekeeping & AIB

For those impatient to see analysis of the AIB Interim Results H1 2009 - scroll down to the last entry.


We are launching Ireland Russia Business Association tomorrow - the official D-day. Invitation is here. The website is next and we are currently getting this built, alongside a separate blog for IRBA. Of course, from next week on I will be in Moscow (with our trade mission) and later in St Petersburg in June for St Petersburg Economic Forum. I will be blogging from there - occasionally - so stay tuned...

And upon my return back to Dublin, I will be hosting a round table discussion on Sustainable Finance: Academic-Practitioner Interface at the Infinity Conference in TCD, June 8. The round table will be dealing with issues of facilitating a research interface between industry and academia in the area of sustainable (IIIrd generation sustainability concept) finance.


Here is an excellent article on how Schengen Visa Regime is turning Eastern European border into a new 'Velvet' Curtain. Of course, one can also add that in Ireland's case, lack of Schengen harmonization is resulting a ridiculous situation whereby people from non-EU states working in this country cannot travel on business to the rest of EU or the UK without having to spend days applying and queuing for visas and paying for these. Hours and days of work are being lost, businesses are paying for this and workers are wasting health and time doing needless pages upon pages of applications and documents collecting...


And here is another interesting thingy - for the upcoming European elections, you can actually see the records and votes, and attendance, and days worked, and more... for all our MEPs - here: http://www.votewatch.eu/.

I am not going to do detailed analysis, but Proinsias De Rossa ranks second in the entire Parliament in terms of Parliamentary Questions tabled and 43rd in terms of speeches delivered. I might not agree with most of what the man has to say, but at least he deserves a credit for asking questions.

Eoin Ryan ranked 35th in terms of Motions for Resolutions. Ryan was ranked 456th in terms of Reports Amended by him, above De Rossa - ranked 492nd. In terms of reports drafted, De Rossa ranked 101st, Ryan 170th. In terms of opinions issued, De Rossa ranked 208th, but Ryan ranked 25th. Attendance to plenary meetings: De Rossa scored 499th (97.85% loyalty to political group in voting, 73.21% loyalty to the member state, 85.23% attendance record); Ryan's stats were slightly poorer (82.26% - making him more independent than De Rossa, 87.95% - making him more focused on Ireland's votes, with attendance of 83.22%) giving him a ranking of 553. Mary Lou MacDonald failed to register on the radar at all, although her specific record is there as well: here.


AIB Interim Management Statement (available in full: here) my analysis in blue, IMS original text in black.

Operating Profit: Profit before bad debt provisions has been good in the year to date and up on the corresponding period in 2008. However, this outcome benefited from base period effects, most notably higher costs in the early part of 2008.

Read: the cost base has been trimmed and there isn’t much else we can do from here on. Of course, AIB won’t admit it, but it basically has the same number of employees on its books as at the peak of the growth cycle. In exchange for taxpayers’ money, the three banks have not laid any staff, so it is the taxpayer who is paying wages for over-bloated staff ranks in the Big 3 Irish banks.

The outcome reflects the very strong performance of Capital Markets and Global Treasury in particular, driven by interest rate management activities. Performance in our other operating divisions is in line with our expectations ...down relative to the same period last year.

It does appear that AIB is lending out to other banks and is borrowing from ECB – this is the rates wedge that can be exploited by the Treasury via ‘interest rate management activities’.

Costs are being very actively managed and are down by a higher percentage rate than income at this point. Downward pressure on income is expected as the year progresses due to a continuation of poor economic conditions and dislocated funding markets.

One would presume this is due to management efforts to extract value out of operations?.. Ah, nope, it is more likely due to the positive impact of the following factors:
  • Lower ECB rates spilling over into lower financing costs;
  • Declining spreads due to taxpayers’ guarantee and capital injection;
  • Lower financing rates on property and other operating credit lines;
  • Lower cost of physical capital and capacity;
  • Lower bonuses.
All of this has very little to do with banking.

Loan and deposit volumes: ...loan balances remain broadly in line with the end of last year in each division [so no pay down of loans?]. In our Republic of Ireland business there has been a recent pick up in home mortgage applications but no material increase as yet in drawdowns. This increased activity reflects an attractive customer offering and very weak competitor presence in the market. [So why no drawdowns then, if AIB’s offer is so strong? may be because AIB is not originating any mortgages, despite giving pre-approvals? See their statement on the direction of loan to deposit ratio below...]

Customer deposits have stabilised in recent weeks following some outflows earlier in the year [How much in outflow?]. In the current recessionary conditions balances in current (money transmission) accounts have reduced. Customer resources, which include deposit and current accounts, are down by around 10% in the first four months of this year. This mainly reflects seasonal factors and outflows from our foreign institutional deposit base earlier in the year and a reduction from what was a very strong position at the end of 2008. Customer resources were up c. 9% year on year at the end of the first quarter.

I wonder if any of this is Irish wealth fleeing the Land of Brian (see here). I like, in particular the reference to a 'very strong position at the end of 2008'. Per 9% increase in y-o-y terms in customer resources in Q4 2008, how much of this is due to redundancy payments lodgements? How much is due to precautionary savings? and How much of it is due to a flight from other - weaker - Irish institutions, e.g Nation-vile and Anglo?


Margins: In highly competitive markets and a low interest rate environment, customer deposit margins continue to contract. The elevated price of wholesale market funding is also having an adverse effect on the net interest margin. Though negative effects are being partly offset by better margins on our lending, overall the net interest margin is expected to reduce this year.

Margins contraction is not surprising, given they are forced to pay higher rates to customers to retain deposits. What is surprising, however, is that lending margins are up. This could mean three things:
  1. Elevated charges on new loans - AIB doing their 'patriotic duty to lend' bit for the economy;
  2. Increased roll-over of debt at higher rates; and
  3. They are lending out cash to other banks - see the Treasury operations results above - and loving it.
Asset Quality: At our 2008 results announcement on 2nd March we outlined a base case and a stress scenario. The bad debt charge in the first quarter of 2009 of close to n800m was a little ahead of the upper end of that base case. Conditions across our markets have worsened and there will be further pressure on the bad debt provision charge for full year 2009.

Read this as: S***t is hitting the fan and we are in a 'stress' scenario now. For a bank whose chief executive just 9 months ago was raising dividends, this is really an admission that takes courage.

...our key macro assumptions for Ireland are now more negative than in the stress scenario presented at our results announcement. The pace of change is increasing loan impairment and bad debt charges. This continuing factor means that the previous stress scenario charge is likely to be exceeded and we now expect our bad debt charge for 2009 to be around n4.3 bn, c. 325 basis points of average loans.

This is still a denial case scenario. AIB's book is heavily geared toward property-related loans and its business lending is also heavily tied into Irish economy. With companies going bust at a rate rising some 400% since 2007 and accelerating, with house prices hurling toward -50% contraction on 2007 levels, land values heading for -70% and commercial propety values falling toward -50% mark, and with unemployment threatening to reach more than 3 times 2007 level, does anyone believe an impairment charge of 3.25%? In my view, they will face impairments of at least 6% across the entire book, or 3.5% on post-NAMA book.

Group criticised loans (watch, vulnerable and impaired) have increased in the first quarter to c. n24.3 bn, an increase of close to n9 bn [or a whooping 37%]. Republic of Ireland division represents over 70% of the increase and c. 75% of the group bad debt charge. Increases continue to be heavily influenced by downgrades in the property, building and construction sector [so, looking ahead, expect construction sector to flatten out in late 2009, but other sectors pick up the slack in exerting downward force on loans performance: households, personal & motor loans, business investment loans etc].

Informed by the deteriorating environment and evidenced by the increase in criticised loans, we are aggressively recognising impairment as it arises.

It will be important to see how aggressively they do this. Remember - the more they write down today, the heavier will be the total discount that they will face post-NAMA. How? Suppose you have a loan valued on your books at €100 today. Scenario 1: write down the loan value on the books by, say 10% - remaining face value is €90. Here comes NAMAsaurus - with an offer at 25% discount - you get €67.5 on the loan that originally stood at €100. Scenario 2: pretend nothing is wrong with the loan. NAMAsaurus takes a bite at the same discount (they'll have to, simply because they are short talent or staff numbers or both to examine every loan) - you have €75 on your hands. So tell me if you can spot a rational reason for AIB to take 'aggressively' to 'recognizing impairment'?

Increases in the levels of criticised loans in other sectors are now more evident in the Republic of Ireland. Mortgage arrears stand at c. 2.0% of total mortgages at the end of March up from c. 1.5% in December 2008 and impaired loans have increased to n234m [that is a 33% increase in mortgage arrears and this is just the beginning as it takes time for these to build up due to redundancy payments cushion and savings cushion - both of which have to be exhausted before mortgage payments stop. Now, average tenure on the job in Ireland is ca 5 years. This means average statutory redundancy is 10 weeks pay. Add to this consolation 'bonuses' some lucky souls are getting - say we are at 12 weeks pay. Take tax out and spread over existent balances - you are getting closer to that 9% increase in y-o-y terms in Q4 2008 customer resources mentioned above. So we have: potentially, redundancy payments have been inflowing into customers accounts. These are sufficient to cover mortgages with a cushion of, say, x1.5 times the pay length covered - i.e. 18 weeks or 4 months, roughly. That spike in unemployment in January-February 2009 will be felt in mortgage default terms only around May-June! So expect the numbers to nose dive rapidly in months to come. Even more revealing in the light of this is the subsequent fall of 10% in January-April 2009 in customer deposits - this, given inflow of redundancy payments can mean that some (those who can?) are shifting money out of AIB... and they might be doing this by B&B-ing cash abroad... away from Genghis Brian Khan...]

Capital: Our capital remains well in excess of regulatory requirements. Our core tier one capital ratio was c. 5.5% at the end of March and will be strengthened in the event that the n3.5 bn Government recapitalisation proposal is approved at the Extraordinary General Meeting on 13th May. We have previously announced our aim to further increase our core tier one capital by n1.5 bn and will advise progress on this initiative as it takes place. [With recapitalization in place AIB should have just around 10% T1 - 2-4 percentage points shy of the international industry standard. And this is before fresh writedowns... In absence of that €1.5bn capital injection, I fear AIB will not be able to retain 8% core ratio post Y2009 writedowns - let alone post-NAMA. Although this is my suspicion at this time as we await for more detailed statement at EGM].

Funding: ...Market conditions improved during April and we successfully increased our existing Government guaranteed issue maturing in September 2010 by n1 bn to n3 bn. There was good demand for the issue and overseas investors subscribed for 78% of the additional amount. We have also recently seen very good demand for private placements. [I wonder how much of this latest issue is contingent on the markets expectation that the Government guarantees will have to be extended beyond 2010. In fact, AIB, by piling on the debt that it will have to roll over comes September 2010 - for it won't have funds to simply repay it -is, willingly or not, you judge, creating the emergency conditions for the Government to extend the guarantee scheme... Oh, and by the way - do they mean the ECB discount window when they are talking about 'private placements'?]

Over time, we continue to target a reducing loan to deposit ratio although the already referred to reduction in customer resources since the end of 2008 has subsequently increased that ratio.

So, as deposits are down, loans/deposit ratio can fall only if... loans fall even more than deposits. How can this be achieved with a AIB offering "attractive customer offering and very weak competitor presence in the market" for mortgages? Ah, you say - by aggressively attracting new deposits. Indeed, that would be the case, except then, of course, you are offering higher rates than your competitors, e.g the Anglo, which in turn shrinks your margins... which you have just promised to protect (above)...

And the conclusion to all of this is - AIB's statement to the economy: "We love you, man, but we've got numero uno problem of getting these pesky loans to deposits ratios down... so bugger off, you would-be-borrower!"

The unravelling of the core?

The latest report (here) from Switzerland is claiming that the Swiss are considering imposition of limits on the admission of the migrants from the EU15 + Malta & Cyprus. First, background, then conclusion:

Per EUObserver report, "under bilateral accords signed with the EU, the Swiss government is entitled to limit the number of workers entering the country" from the original EU15 states, plus Cyprus and Malta, whenever Swiss unemployment rises above a certain threshold.The threshold is not an absolute level of unemployment, but a rate of increase in jobless of more than 10% in a year "compared to the average rate in the previous three years". The latest data shows that Swiss unemployment reached a new three-year high of 3.5% in April - a 35.5% increase y-o-y. EU27 is now forecast to reach 9.7% unemployment in 2009 and 10.9% in 2010.

Currently there are no restrictions on the number of EU15+2 workers that can take jobs in Switzerland. "If the clause is activated", says EUObserver, "immigration from the EU15, plus Cyprus and Malta, will be limited to the average migration rate of the previous year plus five per cent for a maximum of two years.

So what is my analysis of this development? Access to the Swiss market - within a broader EEA community - is a legitimising point for EU in so far as it shows that European Union has attraction as a trading, capital and migration partner for countries which, unlike Eastern Europe, cannot be either bought or bullied into submission. Norway, Iceland, Lichtenstein (EEA members) and Switzerland are, at this point in time, the only countries that can claim such a status, although in the past the EU tried to 'compel' all of these states in relation to various aspects of their internal regulations.

Should Switzerland put in place even symbolic restrictions on the EU citizens' ability to gain work there, one of the three legs of this pillar will be gone. The questions to be asked in this context are:
  1. Should Swiss authorities limit inward migration from the EU15+2, will this trigger a push within the EU15 to further restrict access to their own labour markets for the EU12 Accession states?
  2. Should the Swiss elect to enact the restrictions clause, what signal on the integrity of EEA+ does this send out in the context of the future EU enlargement? Are we risking losing Switzerland as an investment and jobs market partner in order to gain Turkey? Albania? and so on?
  3. Will Swiss-imposed restrictions signal an alternative 'Third' way for countries currently finding themselves in a difficulty within the harmonized EU monetary and FX policies - e.g. Austria - for distancing themselves from the full EU membership into an Association-style treaty Swiss-style?
In an opposite, but widely anticipated move, Iceland is now swinging in favour of full EU membership - a dubious win for Brussels, considering the state of general economic collapse in that country.

A disclaimer: applicable to anything I write on the EU - I do not advocate any of the above measures. This post is simply about presenting an argument as to what might be possible.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Economics 10/05/2009: Next Budget and other business

Given the latest Exchequer results - i.e lack of any improvement in performance - and a combination of (anecdotally evident) acceleration of lay-offs in the financial, legal and accountancy services, recently on NewsTalk 106FM I predicted that we are going to see a July mini-Budget.

My logic was based on the following confluences of 'stars':
  1. Local elections will be over;
  2. H1 Exchequer returns will be in;
  3. Tax and Spend an boards will have some papers on the table by then, so a host of new taxes will be ready to roll out, while a host of new measures to evade cutting public spending (i.e various buy-outs and hand-outs and 'fairness' proposals) will also be at hand.
Some internal sources (hat tip to B) are now indicating that this indeed is being considered - or 'lightly penciled in' as I was told. In other words, we are in the stage of contingency planning for another raid by Genghis Brian Khan. The problem is that all the indication I am getting is that our an board chainsaw/snip is coming back with a whimper: to the question "Can we save some dosh?" the snappers will answer Bob-the-Builder-like "Yes we can", but to the question "How much?" they will have a goldfish-like response "O*o*p*o*gh*ph" and a bubble of air emanating out of the fat lips. The reason for this is that An Board Snip-identified 'savings' are now rumored to amount to nothing more than cutting temp contracts, which have to be honoured until maturity. In other words, not much of saving is possible in 2009...

Of course, to save big one needs: political will to break the unions and a reform plan to break the hysteresis in spending. But who has that? Brian? The other Brian? of Mary? In the mean time, there will be plenty of small scratches - €1-5mln here and there, but with a hole of some €30bn to be plugged this year alone, you have to do something BIG.

Now comes another new rumor - that a birdie chirped at my windowsill: the Revenue are now starting to worry that smelling the (rotten) rat from the Upper Merrion Street, our wealthy (what's left of them) are moving assets off-shore faster than Brian can shout 'Tax!" There is a rumor now, allegedly at the Dublin Castle gates, that CGT might come in at or near zero in the nominal terms in H2 2009 and this might even imply - considering bookings on CGT losses for 2008 - a negative CGT return! Now, that would be a nice lesson for the Government and for the likes of Fintain O'Toole and Vincent Browne - tax liquid wealth and see it evaporate.

Here's how it might turn out to be: charts below show my projections for CGT and CAT heads under 3 scenarios.

Scenario 1 assumes that the rest of 2009 will see replay of the same changes as happened between 2007 and 2008. This is a clearly optimistic scenario for H1 2009 projections (remember, H1 2008 fall-off relative to H1 2007 was much smaller than what we are already seeing in Jan-April 2009 relative to Jan-April 2008), but it is probably pessimistic for the last 2 months of 2009
. So it might be a wash then across the year.

Scenario 2 assumes that the 2007/2008 dynamics apply to the trend that was established in 2009 to date. This is more pessimistic for CAT, and the intermediate scenario on CGT.

Scenario 3 assumes the same as Scenario 1 except I also consider the possibility of zero monthly returns on CGT in October-December 2009. How can I justify this assumption? Well, in 2008 for the same period, the Revenue collected €626.4mln in CGT. Suppose that this year, by October 2008 some €3.13/2=€1.55bn of Irish capital were to be 'B&B'ed abroad, with owners declaring a loss on these, writing off some €311mln. This will drive the CGT revenue to zero, even if the last year's performance were to be repeated.

Now the two charts for the picture is worth a 1,000 words...
Of course, the problem could have been avoided should we chose to tax illiquid/immobile asset base - i.e land... in the long run, or should we have cut the idiocy of raising taxes in a recession... in the short run.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

An interesting chart: destruction of wealth

Here is an interesting set of charts I came across in doing some work recently. All are for the US and all showing some very disturbing long run trends:

First chart: US CPITwo things are worth noticing here:
  1. The absolutely scary rate of inflation since the end of WWII through today, and
  2. The absolutely scary length of deflationary periods.
It is worth focusing in a bit more depth on the second point (the first one being obvious to all).

In general, there were 3 periods of persistent deflation since 1774. These are plotted in the chart below.
Guess what - all three lasted more than 14 years before bottoming out and two managed to last 29 and 32 years. Scary stuff, if you believe deflation is bad.
Now, consider the real cost of unskilled labour over time. Chart below plots the time series since 1774, showing that starting with the late stages of the Great Depression on through roughly early 1970s the real (CPI-deflated) cost of unskilled labour was rising at an unprecedented rate. This cost peaked in the early 1980s and fell into the early 1990s. Ironically, as President Clinton battled the harbinger of the 'Giant Sucking Sound from the South' - Ross Perot - in US Presidential elections, the unskilled labourers of America were about to get a boost in their wages. The cost of unskilled labour has risen since 1994 through 2003 - just as the US economy was evolving skills-intensive sectors (IT and finance) and expanding trade with Mexico. Irony has it - the period of active low-skilled jobs creation of 2003-2007 (construction boom) saw real wages of the same fall!

Looking at the raw (nominal) cost of unskilled labour, there is a clear pattern of correlation between the wages of the lowest earners and the CPI. Chart below illustrates. Again, really dramatic stuff is the rate of rise in the nominal cost of labour that takes place from the late 1960s through today.
Scatter plot below shows the same in more detail. There are 2 clear periods in the US history in the relationship between inflation and unskilled labourers real wages. The first period - 1774 through roughly 1969/1970 is the period of a positive relationship, with real wages rising at a faster rate than CPI. Of course, this is the age of industrial might of the US. Post 1970, the relationship is that of a gently declining real unskilled wages relative to CPI.
What about other measures of purchasing power? Taking the value of the standardized consumer bundle of goods, chart below plots the dollar cost of purchasing such a basket alongside the CPI. There is a close relationship between the two series, but in general, the value of consumer bundle underlies the CPI. Convergence of the two series is achieved in 1967-1972, to be broken down following the oil shocks of the 1970s, and then again since 2004.

The following chart highlights long-term trends in the co-movements between the cost of unskilled labour and the cost of the consumption bundle. As with real unskilled labour wages vs CPI, there are broadly speaking two distinct periods in the relationship between the wages and consumption costs. In the period prior to 1970 increases in wages outpaced the rise in the cost of consumer basket. Since 1970, however, the relationship reversed, with wages rising, while the cost of consumer basket falling.Hence, overall, although real wages have declined in the recent years, the average consumption basket cost has declined faster than the unskilled labour costs. This implies that while wage disparity between the skilled and unskilled labourers (the driver of the CPI) might have risen, the unskilled labourers are still better off today than ever before, thanks to the WalMart effect of driving down the cost of the average consumption bundle.

The chart below plots the awesome power of value destruction in the US dollar purchasing power.

These charts present an interesting evolution of the US economy, from my point of view. They also suggest that:
  1. The current deflationary period might last much longer than many of us, including myself, anticipate, although there is an added component to the above equation - the role of the exchange rates. Should dollar appreciate from its currently relatively low levels, the international dimension of the US deflation will be erased.
  2. The inflationary trend - measured either as a function of CPI, or a function of PPP, is unlikely to reverse from its long-run upward trend.