Sunday, June 4, 2023

The Course to Explain Last Week - Weekly Blog # 787

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


The Course to Explain Last Week

 

Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018

  

 

 

Understanding Your Location

Almost all the news events of the last week are better understood if you appreciate the critical functions created by geography. At one time a whole course on geography was part of an early primary education, followed by a course on economic geography in middle school. These courses were pushed out to make room for social topics better fitting the educational establishment’s political views. No wonder so many of the current population were misled by the actions last week.

 

Where the Cities Are?

As populations grew, many benefitted from the values offered by schooling, medical services, education, entertainment, and political practices in towns and cities. Early cities were mostly found around strategic waterways, oceans, seas, lakes, and rivers. It’s no coincidence downtown locations attracted merchants and others. For hundreds of years financial and merchandise centers grew up around seaports such as New York, Boston, London, and Tokyo. To this day, the largest city in most countries and states remain these centers. Not surprisingly, to counterbalance the political powers of these cities, some political forces established state and national government sites away from the commercial centers e.g., Albany, Annapolis, Brasilia, Canberra, Sacramento, and Washington D.C.

 

We are all aware The President of the United States compromised and signed legislation into law on Saturday. He temporarily raised the debt limit and modified the growth and make up of appropriations. The result was only possible because DC has a different power currency than the dollar-based currency driving the rest of the country.

 

The power currency as exercised on Capitol Hill represents votes in the Senate and House, with the occasional interaction of the Presidency and Supreme Court. If their currency was in the commercial world, it would have been fairly easy to measure the dollars to be spent or not to be spent. This weekend both the Democrats and Republicans are claiming great victories. The problem is that the math is questionable, as are the policing impacts on the agreements. Regardless of the academic debate, the value of the concessions were too small.

 

There will possibly be a longer lasting victory benefiting society in the future, as these bills were passed by votes from “centralists” on both sides who resisted the impassioned pleas from the extreme members of their parties. We can build on the small progress made this week to make larger changes in the future, as long as those in the center learn to trust and respect the centrist members of the other party. While I have not done the analysis, my guess is that most who voted to pass these bills came from commercial backgrounds and are used to working to get compromises.

 

A Much Bigger Issue Was Not Discussed

Whether we like it or not, we are all globalists. Most of the threads in our clothes and some of our favorite foods come from overseas. The producers of these goods, as well as the militaries of our allies are paid in US dollars to protect us. We also sell a lot of our products and services to them. The US represents roughly ¼ of world trade. Problem is, the US dollar is the medium of exchange for ½ to 90% of currency exchanges depending on how you measure it. The US dollar is currently the most trusted currency. This translates into the lowest cost to buy products and services relative to other currencies who must pay a premium for the same purchases. This is an extraordinary privilege.

 

The privilege is not granted by an authority, but by the perceived purchasing power of the dollar through a collection of transactions each minute of each day. In general, it is assumed the relative purchasing power is stable compared to other currencies.

 

Perceptions are normally slow to change, but they can move at the speed of communication through transactors in a 24-hour marketplace. In a microcosm of how the market can work, examine the run on the SVB. Most of the loans and deposits were from the “silicon-valley” venture-oriented community. Many of these companies had critical shareholders who were active participants in the community, something the bank and regulators did not fully appreciate. I suspect the run on that bank was started by a few comments within this high-pressure group. The daily foreign-exchange community is much, much larger than SVB’s critical players, although it could follow the same communication, concentration, and contagion pattern. (There is no single Federal Reserve Bank for currencies.)

 

Possible Causes

Most powerful trends initially move at glacial speeds, until they take-off in hypersonic movements. The slow deterioration essentially reflects a slow growing decline in confidence and is often a collection of small actions. Some examples are listed below:

  • A poorly executed withdrawal from Afghanistan by more isolationist new leadership.
  • A shared belief that China permitted COVID to escape.
  • Domestic pump priming and an unwise explosion of cash generation, unleashing inflation on the world.
  • A weak response to a border war, with the inability to rapidly supply US Tanks and F-16 planes for coming offensive in Ukraine.
  • In addition to government management problems, US industry leaders like JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Apple, and even the SEC, have had management issues that led to public errors. These are not confidence builders.

 

Barron’s Suggest Another Concern

In a four-page article in this week’s Barron’s they suggest loosely regulated non-bank financial organizations could have surprising credit issues. If you add up all the credit and equity extended to individuals, businesses, and organizations, it is about equal in size to the assets/liabilities of the regulated banks. Insurance companies, retirement plans, private capital providers, family offices, investment advisers, and brokerage firms have some narrow regulatory oversight. However, there is no single body reviewing the impact of bailout capital on the broader global economy.

 

I am not sure I want to see a super-agency overseeing the non-bank financial sector. However, it might be useful to have coordinated data collection and similar transaction management principles.

 

Conclusion:

I am unclear as to what the intermediate future will look like and appreciate any thoughts.

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: TOO MANY HISTORIC LESSONS - Weekly Blog # 786

Mike Lipper's Blog: Statistics vs. Influences-Analysts vs. AI - Weekly Blog # 785

Mike Lipper's Blog: Insights From a Sleepy Week, Important? - Weekly Blog # 784

 

 

 

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