Monday, September 2, 2013

2/9/2013: Sunday Times August 25: Construction Sector Revival?

This is an unedited version of my Sunday Times article from August 25, 2013.


Not a week goes by without a new report on the property market and construction sector digging up disparate shreds of evidence to suggest yet another turnaround in the property sector fortunes. Some of these are based on the real data, albeit often selectively interpreted; others, on desperate hodgepodge of hearsay and industry anecdotes.

Spin and marketing talk aside, the data itself can be highly unpredictable and hard to interpret. Between Q1 2010 and Q4 2011, Irish Construction sector Purchasing Manager Indices (PMIs) published by Markit and the Ulster Bank were signalling what looked like a stabilisation. CSO’s building and construction sector activity index also posted a quarter-on-quarter rise in Q3 2011. The sector promptly reverted into the red from there.

Faced with past false starts in the data and promotional advertorials in the media, we may be tempted to write off the building and construction sector altogether. This would be a mistake for at least three reasons.

Firstly, traditionally, the building and construction sector acts as one of the leading indicators of real, sustained economic recovery. In particular, in normal recessions, the recovery is led by the early return of firms to capital investment, including in buildings and structures, usually closely followed by an increase in residential investment by the households. Both the US and the UK are showing this pattern over the last two years. While Ireland's recession is driven by deeply structural factors, one can expect any sustained growth momentum to occur only on foot of renewed domestic investment.

Secondly, based on real factor costs calculations, Irish building and construction sector contributes directly 1.6 percent of Irish GDP today. This is a significant contribution, although it is just a half of the average contribution recorded over Q1 1997 - Q1 2013 period. Furthermore, building and construction contribution to GDP rose by 7.3 percent in Q1 2013, while the overall GDP at factor costs declined 1.3 percent. Bringing Ireland's building industry to the long-term sustainable levels in volume and value implies increasing its direct contribution to the GDP by over EUR1.5 billion on current levels to EUR3.8-3.9 billion.  Reaching this level of activity will put Irish building and construction sector output ahead of that by the agriculture, forestry and fishing.

Thirdly, some of the recent data on building and construction sector does warrant extremely cautious optimism.

Let's take a look at the main sources of information on the state of our construction industry. These include, CSO's quarterly reports on volume and value of output in the building and construction sector, as well as more forward-looking planning permissions through Q1 2013. We also have more current Purchasing Managers Indices (PMI) covering data through July 2013. Monthly CSO data on property markets indicates, albeit imperfectly, the trends in the demand for residential investment. Last, but not least, we have international forecasts and data from the Eurostat, ECB and Euroconstruct.

On the surface, the data concerning the building and construction output points to some improvements in the sector activity and dynamics. Per CSO, year-on-year, the volume of output in building and construction increased by 10.7 percent in Q1 2013.  There was an increase of 9.5 percent in the value of production in the same period. The annual rise in the volume of output reflects year-on-year increases of 26.8 percent and 2.4 percent respectively in civil engineering and non-residential building work. Alas, output in residential building decreased by 2.5 percent. Not exactly the growth breakdown one would expect from a building investment recovery.

The above weak positives, however, are further undermined by the fact that the levels of activity in the sector remain extremely low by historical and international comparatives.

Building activity in residential construction sub-sector back in Q1 2006 stood at 107.9 as measured by value index. In Q1 2013 the same stood at 7.8. The latter number represents an increase of just 0.5 points above the all-time low. Non-residential building sub-sector posted shallower peak-to-trough declines, although these still are well in excess of anything seen in normal recessions and in other euro area countries. Despite the shallower contraction, the non-residential construction also showed poor pick-up dynamics: the sub-sector output is now up just 2.6 points relative to the absolute low in Q2 2012.

Truth is, most of the recent gains in CSO’s building and construction indices to-date have been driven not by the organic private sector investment, but by civil engineering activities. Forth quarter running, this trend suggests that although, the construction sector might have stabilised, this stabilisation appears to be driven simply by the unprecedented fall in sector activity to-date, rather than by any sizeable pick up in demand for traditional building and construction investment.

The rosy projections from Euroconstruct, envisioning Irish construction sector expanding some 16% out through 2015 is case in point. As robust as this forecast growth number might appear, if it were to materialise, Irish construction sector will only return to 2011 levels of activity by the end of 2015.

Instead of a U-shaped recovery, we are currently witnessing a continued L-shaped disaster.

More forward-looking indicators, such as the construction sector PMIs strangely contradict the data on the actual sector activity reported both by the CSO and by the Eurostat. Since around mid-2009, civil engineering PMI persistently signaled sharper contraction than overall construction sector PMI and its housing and commercial sub-sectors. More ominously, PMIs across all sub-sectors of construction industry remain in a contractionary territory every month from January 2012 through July this year. One exception is a weak expansion signaled by the housing sub-index in July this year. No matter how one spins the PMI data, however, the indicator continues to show the sector shrinking, not expanding across all quarters since the onset of the crisis, including Q1 and Q2 2013.

This points to the deeper, structural problems in the sector.

Demand for new construction remains exceptionally low, outside the small sub-pockets of activity, such as premium segment of Dublin City apartments and houses, and the highly tailored top quality office space suitable for the booming services-exporting MNCs. The former trend is clearly evident in this week's residential property prices figures published by the CSO. It is further confirmed by the data showing continued weakness in demand for residential properties based on the volume of transactions in the markets. The latter is evident in industry reports and in aggregate shift in exports growth away from manufacturing and professional services toward ICT services.

All-in, investment in buildings and construction remains effectively nil across the economy and without a significant pick up in this investment, the sector performance is going to be highly volatile and concentrated in specialist areas, such as agricultural facilities and wind farms, to be accurately reflected in the high-level data.

This month, ECB Monthly confirmed that the malaise affecting the building trade in Ireland is similar in drivers to the demand-induced recession in the euro area. The ECB linked construction industry slump in Europe to weak macroeconomic conditions, debt-stricken households and dysfunctional banking system. All factors present in the euro area case for the building sector continued decline are also at play in Ireland.

Which brings us to the last piece of evidence necessary to complete the puzzle: the planning permissions. CSO data showed that the number of planning permissions for houses actually fell 9.3 percent year-on-year, reaching the second lowest level in history of the data series. Number of permissions for apartments also fell, by 18.4 percent on Q1 2012. More ominously, aggregate activity in the construction sector, as measured by the new permissions granted, shrunk across the board and hit an absolute lowest point for any quarter since Q1 1975.

In summary, there is little evidence to-date of a sustainable and robust uptick in Irish construction sector activity, while there is plenty of evidence that the sector output is close to stabilising at the extremely low levels. After six and a half years of ongoing declines, we now have a construction industry showing ‘bouncing at the bottom’ pattern of output. Alongside the rest of the economy, Irish building firms are desperately searching some catalyst for the restart of the investment cycle.

This realisation, coupled with the recognition of the overall importance of the sector to the Irish economy in the long run and as a potential driver for the recovery should lead to a significant re-think in the policy stance toward the sector.

Targeted tax incentives for construction sector have not worked and will not work in the current environment of subdued demand. Instead, we need to push for a more aggressive deleveraging of the households and development-related property sector firms. The former means re-thinking our approach to mortgages arrears to include mandatory and enforceable restructuring and rebalancing of the household debt to deliver sustainable and quick resolution of the debt crisis. The latter implies a re-drawing of the property tax to cover land holdings.

While we might like to stimulate the demand side of the investment equation in building and construction sector, such stimulus is simply not on the cards for the Exchequer struggling with excessive fiscal deficits and debt and for the economy suffering from severe private sector debt overhang. Focusing on dealing with the household debt problems, and holding the course on fiscal targets while trying to avoid tax increases and capital spending cuts is all we’ve got as the potential tools for spurring some recovery in the construction sector.





BOX-OUT:

This week, the IMF published a research paper co-authored by the fund own researchers with participation from the University of Geneva that looked at multi-annual fiscal consolidations planned across the 17 OECD economies in the period between 1980 through 2011, including those covering the current crisis period. The researchers asked a simple, but highly contentious question: are sovereign debt markets pressures responsible for forcing the governments into adopting austerity programmes.

The study has found the only in a third of all cases of past and current austerity programmes, the plans for fiscal consolidations were driven by market pressure. In the nutshell, markets are important, but by far not the main sources of pressure on the highly indebted and/or deficit-stricken governments. The authors further found that markets exerted pressure on the governments in the cases where fiscal and macroeconomic fundamentals have deteriorated more severely than in an average crisis. In other words, the markets are not the culprits behind the severe austerity, but rather a reflection of the underlying crises present in the first place.  Per authors: “If history is a guide, the absence of market pressure will not inhibit fiscal consolidation in advanced economies with currently weak fundamentals, such as high debt ratios, adverse debt dynamics or below trend growth.”

The researchers also concluded that the current crisis is different from the previous ones, primarily because the current crisis involves “…increased policy uncertainty, monetary union in the euro area, and unprecedented monetary accommodation.”

So the fabled ‘bad wolves’ of the bond vigilantes so frequently evoked by the austerity-planning Governments in the popular media and on election trails are nothing more than the ordinary messengers conveying the reality of fiscal and monetary mismanagement.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

1/9/2013: WLASze Part 2: Weekend Links on Arts, Sciences and Zero Economics

This is the second WLASze: Weekend Links on Arts, Sciences and zero economics post for this weekend, with the first post linked here.


An interesting article about the dramatic change in the relationship between knowledge ownership, knowledge delivery platforms and knowledge acquisition models as exemplified by the Oxford English Dictionary:
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/aug/23/oxford-english-dictionary-future-digitally
Strangely, this is similar to travel and tourism.

There is a sense of superficiality in discovery driven by travel and tourism - the sense that is quite rightly justified. Tourism is a form of voyeuristic discovery, based on superficial bounds of presence (longer trip - more knowledge; less structured trip, less organised by the travel agent, more spontaneous - more knowledge acquisition, etc.). To some, more structure, less spontaneity leads to more discovery. The key, however, is that tourism-driven discovery runs from the planning stage of the trip, through the period of physical presence in the given location, and there after such interest decays at a rapid rate, as we might continue to show desire in information about the location we visited, but such an attention is probably more anchored to reinforcing the perceptions and experiences we acquired during the actual trip. In short, tourism-driven discovery is bounded by time of presence in the location. In contrast, a book sitting on a bookshelf at home can be visited any number of times, with discovery and learning being unbounded by the constraints of expensive travel. This is a less-bounded form of discovery.

The new mode - of renting access to the book, rather than owning physically its contents - is an entirely different platform for learning. For example: time and number of visits to the book is thus limited by the duration of subscription, log-in times etc. Secondly, a rented book is not conducive to carrying permanent notes and marginalia.

There are, of course, obvious benefits: updating of content is instant and available to all users, without requiring a re-purchase at some specific intervals; reader-publisher feedback is instant (which also raises questions of ownership of 'notes' and 'marginalia'), etc. In summary - this is not a trivial issue, folks. Thoughts?..


From changing how we 'own' a book to changing how we 'see' a book:
http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2013/aug/25/buildings-of-books-matteo-pericoli?CMP=twt_gu


A very interesting example of visualising across distinct modes of expression: from verbal to physical, from multidimensional to three-dimensional, from unbounded (writer<->reader aesthetic and ethical values flows) to bounded (physical, unalterable form), etc.


Nicola Samori is showing at RLB Kunstbrucke in Innsbruck: http://www.rlb-kunstbruecke.at/, Samori's own site is here: http://www.nicolasamori.com/ An interesting artist with a wide range of techniques and media:

(2011, oil on copper, 70 x 50 cm)
and
2011 wax, pigment, plaster, iron, 250 x 50 x 50 cm

Amazing grasp of classical representational techniques and compositions, contextualised in modern narratives.


Returning to the world of books, the news coming out the US is that J.D Salinger - the author of The Catcher in the Rye - one of America's greatest writers of all times, is going to publish 5 new books starting with 2015… The pesky issue is that Salinger is now 3 years and 7 months dead and the last time the author published anything new was 48 years ago…
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-08-26/j-dot-d-dot-salinger-will-publish-five-more-godd-no-mn-books#r=hp-lst
Salinger's last published work, "Hapworth 16, 1924", appeared in The New Yorker on June 19, 1965. Ever since, Salinger did not publish a single piece of new work.


Staying on the topic of books and publishing: More than 50 years after one of the greatest novels ever written about the WW2: Vasily Grossman's “Life and Fate” was confiscated by the KGB, Russia's Federal Security Service has transferred the complete archives and original manuscript of the novel to the State archives, where they are now open to researchers. Full article here.


The documents were seized by KGB back in 1961. Grossman's novel ranks as one of the most important works of literature in the 20th century and is an absolute 'must' for anyone even remotely interested in either history, or literature or both. It is a sublime work of art, a deeply psychological study of humanity and an immense historical record.


Shifting from books to science,  a massive volcanic eruption was captured on Jupiter's moon Io: http://phys.org/news/2013-08-major-volcanic-eruption-jupiter-moon.html
And this is hardly the first one: a link to some older Io eruptions news is here.


The biggest eruption observed on Io so far took place in 2001, when a lava flow was observed, reaching over hundreds of square kilometres across Io's surface - a link here.


 Good compilation of Io images here.


Amazing set of photographs, showing the Niagara Falls completely drained of water back in 1969 - link here. More of a curiosity than science, and certainly not art, but still - amazing set of images...


Neither art, nor science, but as above - fascinating images come from California's Sierra Nevada mountains: http://preview.reuters.com/2013/8/24/gallery-yosemite-wildfire
One thing to keep in mind: California Redwoods regenerate by fire…

And the latest update on these is here. The fire causes are suspected to be entirely man-made, rather than natural: "Todd McNeal, fire chief in the town of Twain Harte, west of Yosemite, said at an Aug. 23 community meeting that officials "know it's human caused, there’s no lightning in the area. … (We) highly suspect that it might be some sort of illicit grove, marijuana grow-type thing."


As a former sergeant in firefighting unit (yep, 2 years in Soviet Army) I can tell you - this is a certifiably terrifying sight.


Enjoy the above and stay tuned for more WLASze.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

31/8/2013: WLASze Part 1: Weekend Links on Arts, Sciences and Zero Economics

This is the first WLASze: Weekend Links on Arts, Sciences and zero economics post for this weekend, so enjoy and stay tuned for more.


Random complexity arising out of the hand-drawn patterns virtually freely visually narrated by Marlene Huissoud are creating interesting, dynamic textures in these drawings and textiles:



Artist website: http://www.marlene-huissoud.com/ It is an object of utilitarian design (hence the 'shop' section of her website), but in my opinion it is an expression of art - non-conceptually driven compositional flow that explores dynamic of line and space absent a premeditated attempt at a composition.

Cy Twombly being the pioneer here, and there are indirect parallels to Lucio Fontana. In a distinct approach, the line drawings of Egon Schiele were actually figurative, hence non-random. Yet they are all united by the simple difference between human error / deviation that distinguishes them from replicative mathematical chaos and makes each line uniquely determined when it is created by a person.


Returning back to last week's theme of the Venice Biennale: some additional links relating to previous notes on the exhibition:
Russian pavilion: 


Spanish rock garden:


Retrospective of national pavilions: 



Out of the Biennale's 'rock halls' into rock sculpture project by the Next Fab Studio by Gabriel Boyce and Preston. The duo constructed a "simple, organic rock" "using digital fabrication equipment". NextFab "developed a Rhino model of the rock, which was digitally divided into sections and cut from acrylic on NextFab's laser cutter. Gabriel and Preston then assembled the 150-plus sections into the complete ROCK sculpture." Daft? Not really - rather quite striking:




An interesting story from the city that is currently assessing its art collection for sale: Detroit. Detroit's brilliant DIA (I cited its excellent collection earlier here) has digitalised its world-famous Diego Rivera murals. The story of digitalisation is here.

Digitalising works of art is a superbly challenging technical and mathematical problem, even though it seems like a relatively simple task. The most fascinating story of digitalisation of art was written up back in 2005 by the NewYorker: http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2005/04/11/050411fa_fact. It tells the story of two applied mathematics geniuses you won't hear much about, David and Gregory Chudnovsky:

The duo have pioneered the algorithmic approach to large scale digitalisations. Humorous take on their fascination with visualising mathematics is the floor of the Chudnovskys' lab at Brooklyn Polytechnic University which bears an orbital pattern mapping of mathematical equations


What a brilliant link: from the decay of the fractal definition to the decay of the entire city and onto eternity of mathematics and art… to large scale numerical computations… from Communist Ukraine to Communist murals… See more on the two: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/3210/04-chud-06.html and at http://www.math.poly.edu/people/faculty.phtml. Oh, and the murals, of course: http://it.phaidon.com/agenda/art/articles/2013/august/08/detroit-digitizes-its-diego-rivera-murals/

Do note, Chudnovsky's worked extensively on 'pi'. I covered the visualisations of 'pi' before here.  So for some additional images: pi, fi, e, combined from the above-linked posts by Martin Krzywinski (http://mkweb.bcgsc.ca/pi/art/):






Now on to science: the geeks have been armed with a HD camera and a submarine… outcome: live broadcast of an eruption of the underwater volcano. Here are the videos (H/T to ‏@alexwitze): http://www.interactiveoceans.washington.edu/story/Visions%2713+Videos. They'll be back with live stuff in 2014… smokey stuff… maybe they can roast some marshmallows on that Axial Caldera next.


In case you need a dose of laughter after all this heavy heady maths, here's some humorous take on the subject: http://mathwithbaddrawings.com/2013/08/21/five-math-experts-split-the-check/


Geeks with cameras and formulas above, followed by geeks with computer codes next: an amazing story about the Israeli army tech-intelligence unit that is behind some major ICT innovations and entrepreneurs. The story really goes to the heart of learning-by-doing models of training (via @GPIngersoll and @BI_Defense): http://www.businessinsider.com/best-tech-school-is-israels-unit-8200-2013-8. The story also highlights the non-linear nature of human capital formation. Military leadership has always been at a premium in the civilian business life, but now direct skills are also becoming marketable.

And to further illustrate the same points, here's the 'governmentorial' - a promotional site for NASA claims of contribution to civilian everyday world: http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/technologies/spinoffs.html
Est Cool… But not to get too futuristic with all of this tech: although the space age might be relatively young, our capacity innovate in relation to space is not… back in ancient Egypt, meteorites were deemed to be valuable enough to make it into jewellery:
http://scinewsblog.blogspot.ie/2013/08/ancient-egyptian-iron-beads-were-made.html


Stay tuned for more WLASze links later.

Friday, August 30, 2013

30/8/2013: Hypo-Depfa Saga

One of the best articles on Hypo-Depfa fiasco I've seen to-date anywhere!

http://www.irishtimes.com/business/sectors/financial-services/near-collapse-of-german-bank-and-its-irish-subsidiary-shrouded-in-mystery-1.1509849r via @DerekinBerlin and @IrishTimes

Key quotes (for me, personally):
"Sitting in his Frankfurt office, in the shadow of Deutsche Bank’s twin towers, the 75 year-old Bavarian says the mainstream view in German finance circles – that Depfa sank HRE – is not strictly correct. “HRE would have gone down on its own, because of its own business,” he says, a view he formed during a hectic year studying HRE’s books."

It was clear from the beginning of the Hypo collapse that aside from Depfa, German lender was all over the shop in terms of loans it was issuing, its own funding was no different from the market consensus model, which relied on a toxic mix of medium term and short term funding sources exacerbating maturity mismatch risk with liquidity risk.

"Six months before the end, in early 2008, German financial regulator BaFin asked experts at the Bundesbank to conduct a full audit of all HRE operations. Its final audit report warns about “serious deficits” right across the group’s structures – from Dublin to Munich – particularly in the division supposed to assess risk of investments worth around €400 billion. ...employees were often unable to answer questions about the bank’s activities. ...HRE executives had no idea what was going on at their bank – either in Germany, or in their Dublin subsidiary, Depfa – because they had “no adequate, timely presentation of the actual financial situation”."

You have to just love the incompetence of the German financial authorities. Having received a report listing 49 breaches of regulations by Hypo-Depfa, in July 2008 (amidst already raging liquidity crisis worldwide), German BaFin "demanded quarterly progress reports on remedial action. Six weeks later, HRE and Depfa went over the edge."

A sense of BaFin being run by Dublin's FinReg or their equivalent is ever present.

30/8/2013: Some Good Stats on Travel to Ireland: July 2013

Some decent numbers on travel to Ireland: http://www.cso.ie/en/media/csoie/releasespublications/documents/tourismtravel/2013/overseastravelmayjuly2013.pdf

Summary table:

Particularly encouraging are the following data points:

  1. May-July figures are up 5.24% on same period 2011, and this is in excess of January-July increase of 4.60%. The significance here is that in May-July we had fewer EU Presidency activities in Ireland, thus trips to Ireland during this period are more likely reflective of tourism, rather than of bureaucravel from Brussels.
  2. North American visits are up solidly +16.5% for May-July 2013 on same period 2011 and +13.4% for January-July 2013 on same period in 2011.
  3. Trips to Ireland from areas other then EU, Other Europe, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Other Oceania are up in May-July on 2011 and 2012 levels, though they are still slightly down for H1 2013 compared to H1 2013.

30/8/2013: Retail Sales Dynamics: July 2013

Retails sales stats for July 2013 were released yesterday amidst a torrent of data releases for Ireland this week. With slight delay, here's my take on the core numbers. All referencing seasonally-adjusted data.

Core (ex-Motors) retail sales improved in value in July on seasonally-adjusted based, posting a rise of 2.32% m/m and 1.46% y/y.

  • Current 3mo MA is at 95.9 - which means that value of sales is running at 4.1 percentage points below 2005 levels of activity. Previous 3mo MA was 95.5, which means the over the last 3 months there was virtually no growth in the value of retail sales compared to 3 months prior.
  • Current 6mo MA is at 95.7 and this compares to higher 6mo MA for the previous period which stood at 96.8. In other words, last 6 months activity in retail sales, as measured by value, was lower than previous 6 months period.

Core (ex-Motors) retail sales improved in volume in July on seasonally-adjusted based, posting a rise of 1.31% m/m and the same y/y.

  • Current 3mo MA is at 99.9 - which means that volume of sales is running at 0.1 percentage points below 2005 levels of activity. Previous 3mo MA was 99.2, which means the over the last 3 months there was some growth in the volume of retail sales compared to 3 months prior.
  • Current 6mo MA is at 99.6 and this compares to higher 6mo MA reading for the previous period which stood at 100.5. In other words, last 6 months activity in retail sales, as measured by volume, was lower than previous 6 months period.
Meanwhile - a reminder - Consumer Confidence, measured by the ESRI has deteriorated m/m by 3.40% and there was a marginal rise of 0.74% y/y.
  • Current 3mo MA is at 66.7 - which means that consumer confidence over the last 3 months period is running ahead of previous 3mo MA of 59.4. Broadly-speaking Consumer Confidence indicator moved in-line with core retail sales in value and volume over the 3mo periods.
  • Current 6mo MA reading for Consumer Confidence is at 63.1 and this compares to lower 6mo MA reading for the previous period which stood at 59.8. In other words, Consumer Confidence continues to countermove vis-a-vis retail sales indices on 6mo average basis.
Couple of charts. First one illustrates three core indicators:

 
Chart above continues to show generally negative correlation between actual retail sales and Consumer Confidence indicator, as well as the general flat-line trend in the retail sales series for both indices over the last 20-21 months.

Next, relationship between Consumer Confidence and retail sales indices:



Lastly, my own Retail Sector Activity Index (RSAI) that take into the account dynamics and levels of all three indices: CSO's Retail Sales Indices (Value and Volume) and ESRI's Consumer Confidence index:


Per above, RSAI continues to run within the broad confines of the flat-trend average, with uptick in July being much flatter than in previous months.

Note: here are correlations between all four measures of retail sector activity health:

Summary conclusion: things are improving, but the sustainability of improvement is questionable, with 3mo averages divergent from 6mo averages. Consumer Confidence remains largely irrelevant to actual outcomes delivered by the sector. The base of activity remains low and we are now into 5 years-plus of effectively unchanging 'bouncing along the bottom' activity. 

30/8/2013: How's that 'credit supply' to the economy promise going?

On foot of my analysis of the credit extended to Irish Private Sector Enterprises and to SMEs (see PSEs analysis here and SMEs analysis here), I was asked if I can pool together the two datasets to provide a summary of the 'Government performance table' on both.

Here it is. All changes are referenced to Q2 2011 in levels (Euro millions) and the colour codings are: bold green marks expansion on Q2 2011, bold red - contraction.


As you can see, only two sectors of the economy experienced an overall increase in credit levels: Manufacturing and Human Health & Social Work.

As I noted in the previous post: Truth be told, neither this nor any other Government can stop the deleveraging in the Irish private sector economy and this deleveraging will have more adverse impact on SMEs than on larger enterprises. But, truth be told, the Irish Government is not exactly keen on this truth and is insisting that it can 'unlock' credit flows... Two years in, we are still waiting...

Thursday, August 29, 2013

29/8/2013: Credit to SMEs in Ireland: Q2 2013

Earlier today, I debunked the myth that we are experiencing any sort of significant uptick in private sector enterprise investment on the foot of poor credit supply figures for Irish private sector enterprise. You can read my analysis on this here: http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2013/08/2982013-credit-to-private-enterprises.html. However, let us recall that the current Government came into the office rattling sabres on the high goals of setting banks straight on SMEs credit.

How are we doing on this front?

Here's a handy summary for Q2 2013 changes in credit outstanding to the SMEs (green bold marks sectors where there has been any improvement - either quarterly or annual):


Spotting any significant improvements in access to credit? Me neither.

What about longer trends? Here are the charts:


Total credit is down.


Manufacturing credit is up and off the bottom levels, but the overall levels are tiny, minuscule, irrelevant to the aggregate economy. Primary sectors credit is down over longer time range and flat since ca Q2 2011.


No love from the banks for property, construction, and now less love for financial intermediaries too.


No need to describe what's going on in wholesale, retail and hospitality sectors.


Education faring better, but at insignificant levels of activity to start with. Health is at the bottom of the empty swimming pool and not even flapping arms...


Even the 'white knights in shining armour' that are exports drivers and generators and the darlings of our development agencies: business services and ICT are starving of credit.

So run by me again: what are the banks doing to respond to the Government loud calls to do their bit for the economy, to support recovery etc? Oh, here's a table showing what happened in SME credit per sector since Q2 2011 (in bold red - sectors that saw decline in credit, in bold green - those where there was an increase in credit):

Truth be told, neither this nor any other Government can stop the deleveraging in the Irish private sector economy and this deleveraging will have more adverse impact on SMEs than on larger enterprises. But, truth be told, the Irish Government is not exactly keen on this truth and is insisting that it can 'unlock' credit flows... Two years in, we are still waiting...

29/8/2013: Broader Unemployment & Underemployment in Ireland: Q2 2013


On foot of the latest data from the QNHS (broad trends analysis here), let's take a look at the broader measures of unemployment, as reported by the CSO (with the last measure: PLS4+STP being compiled by myself based on CSO data from the Live Register and QNHS).

Here are the core definitions, used:


And the numbers are:



  • PLS1 - unemployed persons plus discouraged workers - rose from 14.6% in Q1 2013 to 14.8% in Q2 2013, but declined 1.3 percentage points on Q2 2012. Relative to peak (16.2% in Q3 2011), the indicator is now down 1.4 percentage points, which is a pretty poor performance, when you think of it: 1.4 ppt down in 7 quarters).
  • PLS2 is at 16.2% in Q2 2013, up on 16% in Q4 2012 and Q1 2012. Year on year, indicator is down 1.0 percentage points and it is down 1.1 percentage points on peak attained in Q3 2011. Again, poor performance relative to peak.
  • PLS3 is at 18.2%, up on 18.0% in Q1 2013 and down 0.7 ppt on Q2 2012. Relative to peak the indicator is down 1.0 percentage points with the peak at Q3 2011.
  • PLS4 is at 24.7%, which is down on 24.9% in Q1 2013 and is also down 1.1 ppt y/y. Q2 2012 was the peak reading for indicator, so PLS4 is down now 1.1 ppt on peak too - decline delivered over 4 quarters.
  • Finally, adding State Training Programmes participants to PLS4, we have PLS4+STP indicator at 27.8%, down on 28.9% in Q1 2013 and down only 0.5 ppt on Q2 2012. Indicator peak was attained in Q3 2012, so the indicator is now down 1.1 ppt on peak.
Summary of y/y and relative to peak changes recorded in Q2 2013 is here:



Lastly, gains in the labour force illustrated:


The above marks a nice increase in the labour force participation out to 2,170,700 in Q2 2013 from 2,137,500 in Q1 2013 and 2,159,100 in Q2 2012. The increase, however, comes off the low base to begin with and basically returns labour force numbers to the levels where they were back around Q3 2011.

Summary: Broader unemployment and underemployment metrics are improving y/y but not q/q. The broadest measure PLS4+STP down very marginally y/y by just 0.5 percentage points. This is hardly encouraging. On a positive side, all metrics are showing signs of stabilisation, albeit at very high levels of unemployment and underemployment. In most basic terms, with 27.8% of our broader potential workforce either unemployed, underemployed or in state training programmes, we have a real problem on our hands, still, and it is not getting better at any appreciable rate of improvement.

29/8/2013: Some positives v negatives from QNHS data: Q2 2013

Latest QNHS figures from Ireland are encouraging. Actually, given much of the tough news on the front of employment and jobs creation prior, these are heart warming. Here are the headlines:

Employment:
  • "There was an annual increase in employment of 1.8% or 33,800 in the year to the second quarter of 2013, bringing total employment to 1,869,900. This compares with an annual increase in employment of 1.1% in the previous quarter and a decrease of 1.3% in the year to Q2 2012." This is good. Employment is up against adverse demographic effects, which is good, but it is also up due to superficial effects of reclassifications of some categories (see warning below).
  • Even better news: "Full-time employment increased by 21,600 or 1.5% in the year to Q2 2013 while part-time employment increased by 12,100 or 2.8% over the year." So levels of increase in full-time employment are outstripping increases in part-time employment, implying that average jobs pool quality is not declining anymore.
  • This marks third consecutive quarter of q/q increases in employment: "On a seasonally adjusted basis, employment increased by 9,600 (+0.5%) in the quarter." There was a seasonally adjusted increase in employment of 9,000 (+0.5%) in Q1 2013 and 12,100 (+0.7%) in Q4 2012.
  • Employment increases and decreases composition are not sending a good signal, with higher value-added sub-categories of employment up: "Employment fell in five of the fourteen economic sectors over the year... The greatest rates of decline were recorded in the Administration and support service activities(-7.9% or -5,000), Transportation and storage (-5.4% or -4,900) and Public administration and defence; compulsory social security (-4.5% or -4,500) sectors. The largest rates of increase were recorded in the Agriculture, forestry and fishing (+18.7% or 16,300) and the Accommodation and food service activities(+8.0% or 9,600) sectors. 
  • Here is a warning shot on the above figures: "In the case of the Agriculture, forestry and fishing sector it can be noted that estimates of employment in this sector have shown to be sensitive to sample changes over time." So, wait... +16,300 'new' jobs in Agriculture etc are really old jobs reclassified... or at least a large share of these are... Oops.. Note that this exactly matches decrease in the 'Not in the labour force' category (-16,300 y/y) and this knocks out quite a bit of wind out of the 'jobs creation' figures sails...

Unemployment:
  • "The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate decreased from 13.8% to 13.7% over the quarter while the number of persons unemployed fell marginally by 500 persons, again on a seasonally adjusted basis." This is news in so far it is 'official' QNHS reading, but we knew 13.7% figure back in May when we had the standardised rate of unemployment estimate from Live Register.
  • "Unemployment decreased by 22,200 (-6.9%) in the year to Q2 2013 bringing the total number of persons unemployed to 300,700. This is the fourth quarter in succession where unemployment has declined on an annual basis." Which is good news, indeed, except, wait... what about the 16,300 'new' jobs in Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing flagged above? Marginal decline of just 500 in terms of q/q seasonally-adjusted unemployment is a poor reading, to be honest. Better than an increase, but still, very weak. This weakness suggests that the bulk of 22,200 declines in unemployment rosters is due to exits and reclassifications of workers, not due to jobs creation.
  • "The long-term unemployment rate decreased from 9.2% to 8.1% over the year to Q2 2013. Long-term unemployment accounted for 58.2% of total unemployment in Q2 2013 compared with 61.8% a year earlier and 56.1% in the second quarter of 2011." What we do not know here is whether this decrease was due to exits from benefits or entries into jobs or move to state-run training programmes. I will do analysis on these later, so stay tuned.

Labour force participation:

  • Good news: "The total number of persons in the labour force in the second quarter of 2013 was 2,170,700, representing an increase of 11,500 (+0.5%) over the year. This compares with an annual labour force decrease of 19,600 (-0.9%) in Q2 2012." 
  • The above is a good bit of news and it is made even better when we consider that increases in labour force were driven by increased participation rather than by demographic effects. In Q2 2013 there was a negative demographic effect cutting -16,300 from the overall labour force. This was more than offset by "a positive participation effect of 27,800 on the size of the labour force over the year.
  • There was "an increase in the overall participation rate from 60.1% to 60.5% over the year to Q2 2013." Which is excellent news.
  • "The number of persons not in the labour force in Q2 2013 was 1,415,600, a decrease of 16,300 (-1.1%) over the year." This seems to be related to reclassifications into Agriculture, etc. sector.
To summarise:
We have some positive news above, but overall, numbers remain obscured by reclassifications, changes in composition and lack of clarity on flows in- and out- of unemployment. 

Analysis of broader measures of unemployment, more indicative of underlying quality and nature of changes in the aggregate figures, is to follow, so stay tuned.

29/8/2013: Credit to Private Enterprises in Ireland: Q2 2013

Credit supply figures for credit extended to Irish businesses are out and make a depressing reading, once again.

Taken from the top, here's the summary of all latest (Q2 2013) changes:

I marked in green bold only those observations where there has been any sort of a positive movement either y/y or q/q. There are only five such subsectors: Water, Sewage & Waste Treatment, etc (although q/q the sector is again down on credit), Transport & Storage (although the sector is down y/y), Information & Communication (solid y/y rise, with a big question as to whether the credit increase is accounted for by the Eircom going back into leveraging up), Education (solid y/y gain, weak q/q growth) and Health and Social Work (down q/q, but up y/y).

We hear much about the fabled revival of fortunes in the construction sector and property investment sector. I am afraid there is none visible in the credit supply data:



Unless Russian oligarchs with suitcases of cash are rolling into town, where's the fabled 'pick up of building activity' being funded from? Mars? Or cash piles of our farmers?

Total credit is still shrinking, most critically, in the sectors excluding Financial Intermediation and Property:

Credit in Primary Industries and Manufacturing has flat-lined some 33-39 months ago and is showing no life since, which is sort of suggests that the PMIs (Manufacturing) 'boom' is a signal of skewed PMI metric, capturing more of the MNCs than of domestic activity:


When it comes to the 'brighter' spot of Transport - credit pick up is off extremely weak position:


In short, as credit is linked directly to investment activity, the above suggests continued deep-freeze in the economy through H1 2013. There seem to be no signs of revival so far, albeit caveats to this apply - this is just one indicator and it is an indicator that does not tell us much about new loans issuance as opposed to old loans expirations/maturing etc. Still, to get investment-driven growth, we need credit figures to rise. Not fall...

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

28/8/2013: Islamic Finance in Ireland? Few questions...

Anyone residing in Ireland needs no introduction to the nearly boundless supply of stories from the Irish financial services sector that are just begging to be converted into a menacing thriller replete with villains and victims and clueless asleep-on-the-job 'enforcement' authorities.

Well, here's another one of such stories: http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/international/2013/08/23/302671.htm citing Ireland's example of allegedly Sharia-compliant financial fund that .

Lest we forget, Islamic finance is one of the cornerstones of Irish Government strategy for stimulating inward FDI and growing the IFSC. Back in 2012, the Journal.ie asked a handful of simple questions about this new 'knight in the shining armour' riding into town to save us. You can see more up-to-date stats on this here: http://www.pwc.ie/asset-management/islamic-finance.jhtml.

I am more than open to comments on this topic, as I am not an expert on Islamic finance. I am also absolutely neutral to the Islamic finance just as I am neutral toward a bunch of other services I neither research nor consume... but... have we bothered to ask some core questions about all this Sharia-compliant financial engineering in Ireland before jumping into the waters we know little about?
  1. Ireland has no practical or cultural experience in any of the basic tents of Islamic finance.
  2. Ireland has a society rooted in ownership of assets and profit-extracting considerations of ownership - a notion that is directly contradictory to the principles of the Islamic finance.
  3. Where are the skills sets required for conducting Islamic finance transactions coming from in Ireland? There are some training facilities now available, including those provided by law firms and financial advisories. But the programmes are nascent and hardly present a critical mass (or capability to deliver such in foreseeable future) of skills.
  4. Where is the certification infrastructure on the ground (as opposed to offshore) to certify the Islamic finance products? Who are the Islamic scholars approving the products domiciled into Ireland? Who monitors them? Who are the requisite Sharia-compliant directors? How many of them reside in Ireland? Notice that per article in the Insurance Journal - there is a shortage of Islamic scholars necessary to provide cover for Islamic finance in one of the largest Muslim countries: Malaysia. But, obviously, not in Ireland.
  5. Irish regulatory environment relies on low-burden of regulation (and in the past also relied on low-burden supervision, which is changing, but the process of change is not yet completed) applied across standardised sets of products (services). This conceptual framework is potentially not aligned with the highly regulated and regimented, Sharia-compliant structures of the Islamic finance, reliant often on specific judgements and decisions, rather than explicit processes.
There is even a curious case of something called the Islamic Financial Regulator in Ireland (http://islamic-chamber.org/divisions-2/islamic-finance-ireland-2), despite the fact that it appears it is the Central Bank of Ireland that carries out the regulatory functions in relation to the Islamic finance. At least the Revenue Commissioners seem to be sure of that: http://www.revenue.ie/en/practitioner/tech-guide/guidance-notes-islamic-finance.pdf.

Having contacted the Central Bank, I received a confirmation that

  1. The Central Bank acts as a regulatory body overseeing all financial products domiciled into Ireland and in this capacity it also oversees Islamic finance products; 
  2. Islamic finance products are not treated differently from other products by the Irish regulatory frameworks; and 
  3. The Central Bank of Ireland has no relationship with IFR or the Islamic Financial Regulator (Ireland). 

So here's a follow up question: Do you think it would be ok for, say, an average Joe to call himself a 'XYZ' Financial Regulator (Ireland) and then publicly market himself as such?

And now a follow up question: Should we be concerned with what is going on in the Islamic finance sub-sector in Ireland?