Submitted by Damon Coley
Written by Bill Gross -
Janus Monthly Investment Outlook
Given an endless pool of “chips”, the theory is nearly
mathematically certain to succeed, and in today’s global monetary system,
central bankers are doing just that.
More breaking news – this
time on the investment side: central banks are casinos.
They print money as if they were manufacturing endless numbers of chips that
they’ll never have to redeem. Actually a casino is an apt description for
today’s global monetary policy. There is a well-known “foolproof” system in
gambling circles that is sophisticatedly called the “Martingale”. I used to
call it “double up to catch up” at my fraternity’s poker table where I was
consistently frustrated (loser) – not because I used Martingale but because I
wasn’t a good bluffer. Today’s central bankers use both tactics to their
success – at least for now. They bluff or at least convince investors that they
will keep interest rates low for extended periods of time and if that fails, they
use Quantitative Easing with a Martingale flavor. Martingale theorizes that if
you lose one bet, you just double the next one to get back to even, but if you
lose that one you do it again and again until you win. Given an endless pool of “chips”, the theory is nearly
mathematically certain to succeed, and in today’s global monetary system,
central bankers are doing just that. Japan for years has doubled down on its QE
and Mario Draghi’s statement of several years past, “Whatever it takes” – is a
Martingale promise in disguise. It vows to get the Euroland economy back to
“even” and inflation up to 2% by increasing QE and the collateral it buys until
the Euro currency declines, the EZ economy improves, and inflation approaches
target. Currently the ECB buys nearly 55 billion Euros a month,
and this Thursday they will up the ante – Martingale or bust!
How long can this keep
going on? Well, theoretically as long as there are financial assets (including
stocks) to buy. Practically the limit is really the value of the central bank’s
base currency. If investors lose faith in a reasonable range for a country’s
currency, then inflation will quickly hit targets and then some. Venezuela,
Argentina, and Zimbabwe are modern day examples. Germany’s Weimar Republic is a
great historical one. Theoretically, if the whole
developed global economy did this at the same relative pace and stopped at the
right time, they could successfully reflate and produce a little bit of
inflation and a little bit of growth and save the globe from the dreaded throes
of deflation. That is what they are trying to do – Quantitative
Easing, Martingale style – and so far, so good, I guess – although no rational
observer would call these post Lehman efforts a success.
If investors lose faith in a reasonable range for a country’s
currency, then inflation will quickly hit targets and then some.
That they haven’t really succeeded is a testament to what I and
others have theorized for some time. Martingale QE’s and resultant artificially
low interest rates carry distinctive white blood cells,not oxygenated red ones, as
they wind their way through the economy’s corpus: they keep alive zombie
corporations that are unproductive; they destroy business models such as
insurance companies and pension funds because yields are too low to pay
promised benefits; they turn savers into financial eunuchs, unable to reproduce
and grow their retirement funds to maintain expected future lifestyles. More sophisticated economists such as
Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart label this “financial repression”.
Euthanasia of the saver is the result if it continues too long.
But this is theorizing much like Schrödinger’s cat. How many
people care about the existence of a quantum feline? (A few, thankfully, but
not many.) Market observers say “show me the money” and when they look inside
the box, they want to see some, so let’s get down to business.
How does all this play out? Timing is the key because as
gamblers know there isn’t an endless stream of Martingale chips – even for central
bankers acting in unison. One day the negative feedback loop on the real economy will halt the ascent of stock
and bond prices and investors will look around like Wile E. Coyote wondering
how far is down. But when? When does Martingale meet its inevitable fate? I
really don’t know; I’m just certain it will. Doesn’t help you much, does it.
Except to argue that much like time is relative to the speed of light, the
faster and faster central bankers press the monetary button, the greater and
greater the relative risk of owning financial assets. I would gradually de-risk
portfolios as we move into 2016. Less credit risk, reduced equity exposure,
placing more emphasis on the return of your money than a double digit return on
your money. Even Martingale casinos eventually fail. They may not run out of
chips but like Atlantic City, the gamblers eventually go home, and their doors
close.
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