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Thursday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Multinationals hoarding massive cashpiles; Tensions growing between politicians and generals in China; Brazilian central bankers want 23% pay rise; Mr Creosote in China; Dilbert

Thursday's Top 10 with NZ Mint: Multinationals hoarding massive cashpiles; Tensions growing between politicians and generals in China; Brazilian central bankers want 23% pay rise; Mr Creosote in China; Dilbert

Here's my Top 10 links from around the Internet at 2 pm today in association with NZ Mint.

As always, we welcome your additions in the comments below or via email tobernard.hickey@interest.co.nz.

See all previous Top 10s here.

My must read today is #6. I love a good Mr Creosote analogy.

1. Hoarding cash - FT Alphaville reports on a note from the National Bureau of Economic Research showing large US multinationals have more than doubled their cash holdings as a percentage of assets to 12% over the last decade.

The big question is: why aren't they investing it in new production/hiring/resarch (or giving it back to shareholders)?

This is one of the mysteries of the global financial crisis.

Why is all this cash being hoarded?

How can it be mobilised?

What happens if these companies won't or can't invest it in new capacity? The world has a problem where increasingly multinational firms (who often don't pay much tax) are taking a larger and larger share of the income pie and hoarding it in government bonds and guaranteed deposits. The cash is not circuulating to workers to consume or to other companies to pay for new capital goods. It's just sitting there, pressing down on interest rates.

2. Tensions in China - The New York Times reports on growing tensions between politicians and generals in China.

The details are extraordinary and unsettling. HT Bill Bishop.

During a holiday banquet for China’s military leadership early this year, a powerful general lashed out in a drunken rage against what he believed was a backhanded move to keep him from being promoted to the military’s top ruling body. The general, Zhang Qinsheng, vented his fury in front of President Hu Jintao, according to four people with knowledge of the event. At the banquet, he even shoved a commanding general making toasts; Mr. Hu walked out in disgust.

The general’s tirade was one of a series of events this year that have fueled concerns among Communist Party leaders over the level of control they exercise over military officials, who are growing more outspoken and desire greater influence over policy and politics.

3. China's weapons of mass (financial) destruction - Further to the excellent Reuters report on 'Golden Elephant No 38' I linked to in Tuesday's Top 10, the Globe and Mail reports on the explosive growth of China's WMPs (Wealth Management Products).

This is not going to end well.

Some China-watchers see a striking resemblance between these risky syndicated loans and the mortgage-backed securities that caused the U.S. financial crisis. Collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) bundled together mortgages and other debts, then sliced them into tiered levels of debt to appeal to different buyers, many of whom had little idea of what they were purchasing.

“Like in the United States, these [wealth management] products ultimately maximize lending to the property market,” writes Andy Xie, an independent economist formerly with Morgan Stanley. “The [packaging] techniques are really marketing ploys to suck in financial investors with [the appearance of] low risk. I’m afraid something bad will happen in this market soon.”

Wealth management products appeal to the average Chinese saver because the country’s government has kept interest rates artificially low to spur the nation’s economy. Bank deposits typically pay 3 per cent interest, far below the 6 per cent rate of inflation. In contrast, wealth management products pay 6 to 8 per cent a year.

4. They should know - Slate's Matthew Yglesias reports Brazil's central bank staff are going on strike because they say their wages are falling behind inflation.

The workers at Brazil's central bank are on strike today, demanding a 23 percent pay increase to compensate for inflation that's occurred since June 2008.

Irony aside, the broader issue here is that on the one hand the Brazilian government is trying to reduce the amount of inflation in the economy while on the other hand Brazilian public employee unions writ large are trying to get higher wages in order to stay ahead of inflation. If they get their raises, it'll be that much harder to contain economy-wide inflation. But if inflation isn't controlled, it'll be that much harder to contain militant labor action.

5. Unintended consequences - The New York Times reports on how a UN plan to reduce damage caused by a particularly nasty form of greenhouse gas (HFC 23) used in the production of air conditioning coolant has instead encouraged even more production of other dangerous greenhouse gases. HT @samfromwgtn

Since 2005 the 19 plants receiving the waste gas payments have profited handsomely from an unlikely business: churning out more harmful coolant gas so they can be paid to destroy its waste byproduct. The high output keeps the prices of the coolant gas irresistibly low, discouraging air-conditioning companies from switching to less-damaging alternative gases. That means, critics say, that United Nations subsidies intended to improve the environment are instead creating their own damage.

6. Yum cha economics - Michael Feller writes well at Macrobusiness.com.au about China's strangely mixed economic model and what might happen next. He seems to like writing about food.

China’s shadow banking system – made up of under-regulated wealth management firms, opaque trust companies, local government investment vehicles, commodity-collateralised loans and informal credit networks – hosts a huge amount of off-balance sheet debt, economist like Pettis affirm, and the rescuing of these liabilities by China’s government may eat up the resources that would otherwise be deployed to stimulus; a concern also expressed by Tsinghua professor Patrick Chovanec on Bloomberg television recently.

Further, China has challenges that Europe and America either don’t have or are already in the process of solving. China is a poor country with rich-world levels of resource dependency. China is also a relatively unequal economy with few social safety nets and a degree of environmental degradation that even Dickens or Blake would find difficulty in comprehending. Finally, its centralised and undemocratic political economy – for all its abilities to make quick decisions and generate rapid results – is vulnerable in an age of social media and globalised youth culture. As Japan found before Meiji or Russia before Glasnost, the Great Firewall of China cannot keep the world out or the Chinese in forever.

For as much as China has enjoyed economic policy flexibility, as Singapore-based academic Gang Chen has written, it suffers from social policy paralysis. And although optimists can point to a kind of reform by stealth – including attempts to devalue the Yuan or relax controls in the capital markets – China is still ultimately pursuing rescue rather than rebalance and for as long as one part of the policy dynamic remains rigid, flexibility in the other part will count for less. Small, trade-based economies like Singapore and South Korea may have been able to achieve this balancing act (though not without their share of crisis too), but it is unlikely that China will be able to do so forever.

With yum cha economics and plenty of liquidity to wash it down with, China is likely to stimulate where Europe and America fear to tread, meaning that growth in Asia will continue for at least another year. But like Monty Python’s Mr Creosote, the voluminous quantities of caviar, quails eggs, jugged hare, Chateau Latour and Grand Mariner may work for a while, but if offered a wafer-thin mint at just the wrong time, it could all blow up.

7. Divisions in Germany - FT.com reports there may be a rift opening up between the Bundesbank and Angela Merkel's coalition government over whether to support ECB bond buying and ultimately form a Euro-zone fiscal union. It also reports there are also gaps opening up inside the coalition. This is crucial because Germany will decide the future of the euro. The common currency needs the Germans to guarantee everything for it to survive. The trouble is the German public are in no mood to do it.

Battle lines are opening between the leading political parties in the country over the need for the largest economy in the eurozone to play a more generous role in supporting its debt-laden partners, as the main contenders seek to break a stalemate in the polls 13 months ahead of next year’s general election.

The Social Democratic party has floated proposals for a European fiscal union that would require changes to the German constitution, ratified in a referendum, in exchange for the introduction of jointly guaranteed eurozone bonds or some other form of German-backed debt.

The liberal Free Democrats and the Christian Social Union, the two junior partners in the centre-right coalition government of Angela Merkel, German chancellor, have countered by issuing stark warnings against plans for the European Central Bank to return to buying sovereign bonds, in order to reduce interest rate spreads for countries such as Spain and Italy.

They have denounced Sigmar Gabriel, SPD leader, as a “danger to society”, hell-bent on introducing “debt socialism” by making German pensioners and other taxpayers finance the borrowing of its spendthrift eurozone partners.

8. Caterpillar starts exporting Chinese-made equipment - Reuters reports Caterpillar's sales of Chinese made construction equipment are so weak it has started trying to export them to the Middle East. This isn't a good sign the Chinese construction sector is ramping up investment, as many had hoped would happen again.

9. A chart for everything - I love this one from The Economist on the average times of 100 metre sprinters over the last 120 years or so. It puts Usain Bolt's amazing efforts into context.

10. Totally Jon Stewart on Mitt Romney's amazing deal for Bain and Co in Italy. Bain bought yellow pages company PagineGialle from the Italian government and sold it two years later for 25 times more. It seems he then funneled the profits through Luxembourg to avoid paying taxes...

Mitt Romney's business practices are seen as too sharp, even by the Italians...

 

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21 Comments

Well my brother made an interesting comment the other day that relates to number 6. You are only ever 3 days away from chaos. Take away the food supply and you will see another side to people.

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#1.  I can't quite see the problem Bernard sees.  You would think from the item the Corporations have this huge pile of dollar notes in a room somwhere.  And somehow that is being mean to everybody.

It might indicare the corporations are becomiing more like financial institutions.  So?  We have a lot of those already.  But it just doesn't follow that it produces the effect Bernard describes. 

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I think the logic is when the money is not circulating daily through local level commerce, the 90% out there just keep getting squeezed, bringing about collapse/deflation. Low interest rates are a sign of how much money is parked/hoarded via instruments in market maker economies. It's creating asset bubbles elsewhere though (like AKL real estate). A self-reinforcing conundrum for sure. This article nails it.

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Theoretically then (this is not my view) those who propose government economic manipulation (eg Bernard) would get Governments to stop borrowing - or indeed repay debt.  Corporations would be thus forced to invest in activities in the absence of anything else.  And we would all be rolling in Moohlah.  Ummmh.

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There's just no pleasing you ,  is there , Bernard ! ..... multi-nationals and non-multi-national companies are deleveraging , cleaning up their balance sheets .....

 

.... it's not " hoarding cash " ...... it's prudent behaviour ......

 

Dude , you whitter on about overleveraging , about indebtedness , but now you're belly-aching at the fiscal responsibility being demonstrated by private sector businesses ?

 

 

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Actually Gummy, there is a subtle difference between hoarding and deleveraging. You could say that these guys are simply under-paying dividends in fact.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_v._Ford_Motor_Company

Obviously this case shows Henry Ford was a closet socialist.

 

 

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..... it appears to me to have been  a deliberate strategy by Henry Ford to prevent the establishment of a rival car production plant , Dodge .

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Doesn't that imply the share holders were none to bright and not in on it? 

Face it most capitalists who are any good quickly get bored with the contest and turn to socialism. Its just the inept ones and hangers on who want the game to continue (because they think they are winning). Its like asking the question 'are you wealthy', you get way more yes's than is objective.

 

 

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This is one of the mysteries of the global financial crisis.

 

This is my theory.

 

We created a condition where the symbiotic relationship of finance and business became parasitic to business.  When the crunch came we pumped money without first removing the parasite, who prompted sucked up that money.

 

We are now in the great recession and the two major sources of investment have little reason to do so.  Finance makes more money outside of investing in business (the real economy) and business is facing an economic squeeze and the unresolved global structural problems.

 

This seems the inevitable price of the bailout in the way it was done.

 

Turn it around and ask yourself what you would invest $1 billion in today if you had to show an 8% return in 12 months.

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Hello Bernard, hello readers.... Big Corporations have a money fetish - they are not interested in Research and Development – although they happily cash in on scientific advances funded from the public purse and then sit on it.

With the exception of pharmaceuticals, corporations do sweet diddely squat in terms of R&D. In short Bernard, they are very much like Honey Badger – they don’t give a %$#@... Check this out… - in your mind swap “Honey Badger” for “Corporations”, “Honey Bees” for “Workers” and “King Cobra” for “IRD” and you have a synopsis of Capitalism… - well nearly its is a least a funny as the Daily Show... 

http://youtu.be/4r7wHMg5Yjg

 

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What is the mystery about #1? Obviously they are hoarding cash due to a lack of demand (demand for their products). If they were to invest it would in many instances be counter productive, leading to surplus due to over-production, and later dropping of their prices.

No mystery there at all, this has been identified by a number of prominent economists.

 

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#9 Makes you wonder if he is legit, he is smashing times of previous drug induced feats hmmmm

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I have a book in the shelf by Dr Michael Colgan, "The Optimum Sports Nutrition". Colgan is an expat kiwi that runs a sports institute in Canada. Basically what he says is that those that caught cheating with drugs didn't get a good enough doctor. Lol. However he points out that there is always a price to pay for using drugs. Look at the state of Jonah and Joeli.

 

On that basis the olympics are a farce. Still maybe they will get Rugby in there next.

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Coupla good links BH:  AEP in usual chirpy form, and MaxedOutMama with a grim survey of the US (she's an analyst for an East Coast bank and is always worth a read.)

And of course to anyone in software, the Knightmare is a good dose of schadenfraude....oops - Freudian slip there, shurely I meant schadenfreude?

What it all means for Godzone is the real issue:  not good for the paying customers for dairy and meat exports, perhaps?

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George Friedman blames Germany for the EU's problems:

Merkel's policy under these circumstances was imposed on her by reality. Germany was utterly dependent on its exports, and its exports in Europe were critical. She had to make certain that the free trade zone remained intact. Secondarily, she had to minimize the cost to Germany of stabilizing the system by shifting it onto other countries. She also had to convince her countrymen that the crisis was due to profligate Southern Europeans and that she would not permit them to take advantage of Germans. The truth was that the crisis was caused by Germany's using the trading system to flood markets with its goods, its limiting competition through regulations, and that for every euro carelessly borrowed, a euro was carelessly lent. Like a good politician, Merkel created the myth of the crafty Greek fooling the trusting Deutsche Bank examiner.

Read more: Financial Markets, Politics and the New Reality | Stratfor 

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George Friedman blames Germany for the EU's problems:

Merkel's policy under these circumstances was imposed on her by reality. Germany was utterly dependent on its exports, and its exports in Europe were critical. She had to make certain that the free trade zone remained intact. Secondarily, she had to minimize the cost to Germany of stabilizing the system by shifting it onto other countries. She also had to convince her countrymen that the crisis was due to profligate Southern Europeans and that she would not permit them to take advantage of Germans. The truth was that the crisis was caused by Germany's using the trading system to flood markets with its goods, its limiting competition through regulations, and that for every euro carelessly borrowed, a euro was carelessly lent. Like a good politician, Merkel created the myth of the crafty Greek fooling the trusting Deutsche Bank examiner.

Read more: Financial Markets, Politics and the New Reality | Stratfor 

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Nigel Farage (UKIP) on HARDtalk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gu4FyOv2hUg

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Manchester United ( NYSE : MANU ) is publicly listed in America , for all you fans of the red devils !

 

...... well , truth be told , the Glazers who own the English footy firm have sold a 10 % stake for $US 235 million , and pocketed the cash .... not a penny goes back into shoring up the be-leaguered balance sheet of Man-U ......

 

And the Glazers retain 97 % voting power over the company !

 

Gummy's advice : Unless you're a die-hard fan , do a rooney on this one , roon away as fast as your little legs will carry you .

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The best gaffes are the ones where the commentator is oblivious to his blooper , such as Brian Johnston's effort at the Oval in 1976 , when Englishmen  Willey had come in to bowl at West Indian tail-end batsman  , Michael Holding .. ....

 

" The batsman's Holding , the bowler's Willey . "

 

........ got 'em by the googlies , apparently ......

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