How Equity And Currency Markets
Behave After Financial Crisis
 |
By John Lee, CFA
Jun 4 2009 12:34PM
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Debt-based monetary systems are inherently unstable. Money
is created out of thin air by the banks and lent to government, consumers
and businesses. In order to service and replay those debts, the borrowers
take on more debts. Asset prices are inflated, and the vicious cycle
continues until the debtors are unable to borrow or the banks are unwilling
to lend. At that point the system snaps, everything is sold off, and we
have a financial crisis at hand. In this paper we examine what happens to
equity and currency markets in the aftermath of financial crisis.
1998 Russia
Declining productivity, an artificially high fixed exchange
rate between the ruble and foreign currencies to avoid public turmoil, and
a chronic fiscal deficit were the background to Russia’s financial
meltdown in 1998. The economic cost of the first war in Chechnya that is
estimated at $5.5 billion was also a cause.
Prior to the culmination of the economic crisis, the
government-issued GKO bonds policy had been described as similar to a Ponzi
scheme, with the interest on matured obligations being paid off using the
proceeds of newly issued obligations.
Two external shocks, the Asian financial crisis that had
begun in 1997 and the following declines in demand for (and thus price of)
crude oil and nonferrous metals, impacted Russian foreign exchange
reserves. A political crisis came to a head in March when Russian president
Boris Yeltsin suddenly dismissed Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and his
entire cabinet in March.
The Asian crisis and political event rattled investor
confidence caused foreign investors to sell off Russian stocks, bonds, and
took a flight out of rubles.
The amount of GKO at some $150 billion was not a cause of
concern for a $1 trillion economy. But with over 30% of GKO owned by
foreigners, the foreign selloff caused havoc in equity, bond and the ruble.
Russian broad equity index down 90%+
from late 1997 to October 1998
Ruble went from 5 to 1 USD to 30 to 1
USD in June 1999
After the equity panic bottom in October 1998, Russian
equity index, measured in rubles rebounded strongly in part thanks to the
depreciating ruble.

However, measured in US dollars, Russian stocks
didn’t make full recovery till some 5 years later.
2001 Argentina
In 1998, Argentina officially entered a recession,
which lasted for three years and ended in a collapse as fears of the
devaluation of the peso led to bank runs. This brought about grave amounts
of protest and violence affecting many people and companies, causing
several deaths.
In 2001 Argentina had US $100 billion of national
debt, which is approximately 40% of its GDP. While the amount is
containable relative to its GDP, the Argentines made a mistake of
denominating its debt in US dollars. With shrinking current account
surplus, the country wasn’t able to raise dollars to pay debt
principal and interests in 2001 and eventually repudiated on the foreign
debts. The fixed exchange rate was removed and the peso was quickly
devalued. The exchange rate was then left to float, causing further
devaluation (about 4 pesos per dollar).


Argentine equity index dived 60% in
2001

Peso went from 1 to 1 USD to 4 to 1 USD
in early 2002 after the government allowed the Peso to float.

Although Argentine Equity Index recovered fully in 2002
in nominal terms, it wasn’t till 2004 before the stocks come back to
pre-crisis level in US dollar terms.
Today USA
The US just experienced the biggest debt blowup known to
man. Trillion dollar plus mortgage debts had to be bailed out. Lehman
Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Countrywide, Fannie/Freddie’s
have all become history. Even the American icon Citibank was brought to its
knees at $1 before the government bailout. S&P500 was halved in 12
months.

America is privileged to have its dollars
serving as the world’s reserve currency. America’s debt is
denominated in dollars, which can be printed at will by the Fed. And
printing is what the Fed did.

The Fed has printed over 1.5 trillion
dollars to bail out various groups.
S&P500 responded positively to monetary
easing as it rose 40% since March in nominal terms. It shouldn’t be
surprising to see the index recover to pre-crisis level. Equities have to
rise as in Russian and Argentine cases, when currencies had been massively
devalued.
In real terms however, when S&P500 is
measured in gold in the chart below, it likely takes many years before the
index recovers.

Where does the dollar go from here?
When foreign investors took flight from
Russian rubles and Argentine pesos, the dollar was the beneficiary. When
global investors took flight from the dollar, which currency benefits?

Gold is the ultimate antithesis to the dollar.
Gold is liquid, universally recognized, limited in quantity. Just like
Russians and Argentines trying to anchor their currencies to the dollar,
the US government devised various ways to slow down the rise of gold prices
to maintain dollar’s soundness. However the massive money printing by
the Fed and fast-eroding confidence in the dollar by international
investors might just be the key to drive gold past the all illusive
$1,000/oz level and not look back.
As we saw in the past crisis in Russia,
Argentina, Thailand, and Brazil; equity markets eventually do return while
the devalued currency never regained strength. The US case is no different.
Further rebound by the equity market in nominal terms can be seen albeit
with extreme volatility, and we will likely witness a 4-digit gold price in
2009 that will never look back. As the Chinese saying, crisis is spelled
danger + opportunity. There is still time to diversify out of dollars
before the world recognizes the dollar’s permanent debasement and
demotion of status. Visit goldmau.com and sign up for our free market and
stock updates.
John Lee,
Mau Capital
Management
+1 800.965.6404
****
John Lee is the founder and principal of
Mau Capital Management and the portfolio manager of a mining equity hedge
fund. He is a CFA charter holder and has degrees in Economics and
Engineering from Rice University. Mr. Lee has a keen interest in the
history of money and economics, and has previously studied under Mr. James
Turk, a renowned authority on the gold market.
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