The Second Phase of The Global Financial Crisis? Five Interconnected Black Holes

Dear Friends

Recent movements in financial markets in regard to China, Dubai, PIIGS, Flying Yen and the Commodities Bubble may portend a second phase of the global financial crisis. Rising volatilities suggest that the ‘bird and animal’ behaviour crowds are fleeing certain asset classes and congregating at other havens as if in anticipation of several tremors! However, the rapidly unfolding interconnected five black holes suggest a potentially explosive mixture with extremely unpredictable events — Black Swans — in the offing that are totally unanticipated by the psychologies of the global investment crowds.

1. China’s banking regulator is signalling that it is tightening the reins on banks as concerns mount about their capital adequacy ratios. Sometimes the signals are public, like the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) statement and sometimes they are not so public at all. The CBRC is urging top Chinese banks to beef up their capital adequacy ratio and limit new loans for the rest of the year. Is that the end of the asset bubble music generated by the $1.2 trillion monetary stimulus applied since the start of the year alongside the near $600bn fiscal stimulus? Note that the asset bubbles spawned by Chinese lax lending have also spread outside of China especially into global commodities. As Shanghai and Hong Kong casino financial markets correct in response to the severe contraction in future lending, the global commodities bubble is also in danger of being pricked.

2. Little Dubai is in poor financial shape and is, basically, insolvent without a bailout from its neighbour Abu Dhabi. Whilst the rulers of the two nations are related, the bailout may come only after an example is made of the smaller nation. The more relevant question: Whether a technical default on Dubai’s debt may prove to be a trigger for something bigger in the sovereign debt markets? Whether or not this default takes place, it may lead to other sovereign risk events by way of domino effects. Basically, investors have priced emerging market debt as almost less risky than US Treasuries (T-bonds) and other major countries government debt. The Dubai default is likely to trigger a flight to quality and that means bad news for emerging market sovereign debt and good news for the US and a few other members of the G7.

3. PIIGS: Within the Euro-zone, government bonds of Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain — the PIIGS — are falling in value, yields are rising and spreads against German and French bonds are rising dramatically. Black Swan events that may come out of a developing sovereign debt crisis are also most likely in Eastern Europe where currency devaluations and real sovereign defaults are actually happening and have been happening since the start of the financial crisis in late 2007. As a result of the European black swans, the US dollar may end up rising and not falling against the Euro!

4. Flying Yen: Japan is increasingly concerned over the Yen’s strength as it hits a 14-year high against the US Dollar. The Yen is up about 10% against the Dollar in recent weeks, which is an issue for the Japanese since they export significantly more goods than they import. At this rate, the second largest economy in the world will not remain competitive with the attendant consequence that corporate and citizen tax revenues will fall dramatically in the coming 12 months. The national debt to GDP ratio which is approaching 200% will jump significantly higher. In comparison the US and UK national debt to GDP ratio, at below or near 100%, looks positively attractive. How long before the flying Yen becomes the sinking Yen?

5. Commodities Bubble: Essentially, food, fuel and metal prices — including oil and gold — are being dictated by global fund managers, investors and speculators and not the principles of Demand-and-Supply any longer. Note the significant gyrations in all commodity asset classes on a weekly and sometimes daily basis. This suggests the time may be ripe for the pricking of the global commodities bubble as a result of 1, 2 and 3. Note that oil and gold futures took a tumble after Dubai moved to delay repayment on billions of dollars of debt as the first step to restructuring, sending a shudder through globally intertwined financial markets.

What happens next? Is this the start of a second phase of the global financial crisis? Recently stock markets across the world and commodity markets including food, fuel and metals, have become increasingly correlated. As one asset class goes up so do the others including equities, oil and gold. Will all asset classes go down together as well or break away from their recent tight coupling? Early indications are that they may go down together as there is a flight to liquidity from illiquidity in the process of global deleveraging.

[ENDS]

We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. To reflect further on this, please respond within Twitter, Linked and Facebook’s ATCA Open and related discussion platform of HQR.

All the best

DK Matai

Chairman and Founder: mi2g.net, ATCA, The Philanthropia, HQR, @G140

To connect directly with:

. DK Matai: http://twitter.com/DKMatai

. Open HQR: http://twitter.com/OpenHQR

. ATCA Open: http://twitter.com/ATCAOpen

. @G140: http://twitter.com/G140

. mi2g: http://twitter.com/intunit

– ATCA, The Philanthropia, mi2g, HQR, @G140 –

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

About dk.matai

DK Matai is an engineer turned entrepreneur and philanthropist with a keen interest in the well being of global society. DK founded mi2g in 1995, the global risk specialists, in London, UK, whilst developing simulations for his PhD at Imperial College.

DK helped found ATCA - The Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance - in 2001, a philanthropic expert initiative to address complex global challenges through Socratic dialogue and joint executive action to build a wisdom based global economy. ATCA addresses opportunities and threats arising from climate chaos, radical poverty, organised crime, extremism, informatics, nanotechnology, robotics, genetics, artificial intelligence and financial systems.  ATCA has 5,000+ distinguished members from over 100 countries: including several from the House of Lords, House of Commons, EU Parliament, US Congress & Senate, G10's Senior Government officials and over 1,500 CEOs from financial institutions, scientific corporates, NGOs and 750+ Profs from academic centres of excellence. ATCA Open is active on Facebook and LinkedIn.

Philanthropy - DK co-founded The Philanthropia in 2005 - to include the Trinity Club, Syndicates and Ethical Investment Funds - with 1,000 leading philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks, NGOs and specialist advisors to resolve complex global challenges through collaborative & sustained efforts. DK's other voluntary interests are Sant Bani (Voice of Saints), a culturally diverse fellowship dedicated to the unity of humankind; World Future Council's Board of Advisors and Donors; The Shirley Foundation; Oxford Internet Institute at University of Oxford; Tomorrow's Company and The Trinity Forum, where he advises on a pro bono basis.

Honours - DK was selected to present knowledge management to The Queen in 1998 and mi2g won The Queen's Award for Enterprise in the category of Innovation for Bespoke Security Architecture in 2003. This led to a visit to Buckingham Palace, a celebration hosted at Lloyd's of London, and by The Lord Mayor at Mansion House, followed by a joint visit to Zurich, Switzerland.

Innovation - DK spends about half of his time innovating with mi2g teams focused on digital banking, digital risk management and bespoke security architecture for major financial institutions, government agencies and multi-nationals in Europe, America and Asia. DK believes passionately that the next generation of private and corporate banking involves the global safe custody of valuable data and intellectual property alongside financial deposits with "guaranteed security". D2-Banking is holistic and includes the online vaulting of genomic maps and medical records; art, photo, music and video collections; digital messages and personal files including wills, deeds and memoirs; and other intellectual property alongside traditional financial services.

Authority - DK is an authority on countering complex global threats; strategic risk management & visualisation; contingency planning; Information Operations (IO); electronic defence; biometric authentication; secure payment systems and Open Source hardened kernel solutions. He is an invited contributor to defence and global security analysis in the UK, USA, EU, Canada, Switzerland, Japan and India. mi2g intelligence has been cited by several government agencies including NISCC in the UK, FBI in the US and United Nations agencies in New York and Geneva.

Background - DK is a British subject, a Freeman of the City of London, a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists, and a member of the Institute of Directors and The Institution of Engineering and Technology. He has worked formerly in the R&D labs of IBM, Inmos, ST Microelectronics and Helvar Electrosonic on Massive Parallel Processing and supercomputing applications. He enjoys meeting people, sharing thoughts, reading history and learning languages. He is vegetarian, teetotal and an optimist. He has lived in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and North America and he now lives with his family in Europe, with London as hub.

4 Responses to The Second Phase of The Global Financial Crisis? Five Interconnected Black Holes

  1. stan November 29, 2009 at 1:21 pm #

    Hi DK

    It sounds like you are now suggesting that gold could have a serious decline. How is this possible in light of your previous estimates that gold could go to 5 or 10,000 per oz based on the potential decline of the major currencies relative to their excessive money printing, and the 1,400 trillion dollars worth of dubious paper assets in the world banking system?

    Kind Regards,

    Stan

  2. dymty November 30, 2009 at 5:21 pm #

    So DK, what do we do? If you have the inside track on the banking system, hopefully you have some suggestions. Just curious…

  3. stan December 2, 2009 at 6:32 am #

    Hi DK,

    Well it looks like the decline in Gold was short lived. We now are setting new highs! The drop was probably a knee jerk reaction, caused by Dubai investors selling the only thing they had a profit….5-10 thousand an OZ here we come!

    Cheers,

    Stan

  4. alfa1 December 2, 2009 at 7:11 am #

    Stan you are right