16 October 2013

The Silly Season: Why Economists Go Wrong...


While economics started its life as a branch of moral, and some would say managerial, philosophy, it has evolved these days into a somewhat technical, and too often rather narrow, area of specialization that focuses inwardly on itself and its semi-private, academic squabbles.

Not that this is all bad, because it does keep economists employed and out of other mischief, as John Galbraith had observed.

But it sometimes causes them to get things wrong, because they tend to lack the overall vision of how real things fit together. Incorrect assumptions that compress the life out of reality are the Achilles' heel of all models, especially when they become self-referential and self-perpetuating. One has only to look at Eugene Fama's efficient market hypothesis to see how far this can go, and how damaging it can become.  Well, at least he has recently obtained a consolation prize for establishing a 'benchmark.'

Granted, this is a monumental challenge because economics spans so many areas of life and commerce. But when economists weigh in on policy and moral issues, one would think that they might give an extra special effort to rise out of their own deep wells of subjectivity and models, and at least have a go at understanding the impacts that their thoughts may have on the broader discussion, especially if they hold a public platform.

As the regular reader may recall, I picked on Paul Krugman when he dismissed the ability of the futures markets to influence commodity prices, because as he postulated, those prices are really set on a 'spot market' which ignores the futures prices, which are solely about derivatives on the future.

Now anyone who has spent any time at all trading in commodity markets knows this to be utter nonsense. Price discovery is a much broader activity. The price of a commodity today does incorporate some intelligence about what the price might be next week, for example.

And in the specific case of the metals, the prices in the futures front month have an enormous impact on the going price of a metal. Although that does seem to be diminishing a bit these days, with premiums over 'spot' as set by the futures front month hitting all time high premiums of one hundred dollars. But that is a symptom of a long term abusive price rigging and an unfortunate market divergence, and certainly not the norm.  Although it is amazing how many economists cannot see it even as it is unfolding. 

Today James Kwak weighed in with a few thoughts from the liberal economist point of view.
"Why does anyone think that anyone cares about what a rating agency has to say about Treasury debt? Credit ratings matter for obscure companies because they represent new information that is not otherwise available to investors. In the case of the U.S. Treasury, all the information you need to know is plastered across the front page of the world’s newspapers, all the time. Your not going to change your opinion because of something that Fitch says."
The reason for this should be well known to anyone who might have traded in the bond markets. Certain institutions are required to buy only instruments rated at a certain level, by a consensus of a handful of ratings agencies:  Moody's, SP, and Fitch. 

If Moody's or Fitch were to join SP in downgrading US debt, I guarantee you that there were be a significant reaction in bond market prices, without regard to what any economist might think from their reading in the newspapers. Those institutions who are required to hold only AAA rated debt would be prohibited from buying, and might even become forced sellers.

Is the Ratings Agency system sound and efficient? Hardly. But that is not the point. We have to deal with what is, and then change it if it makes no sense. The sad truth is that the Ratings Agencies are not objective and serenely detached computers processing facts without bias, but instruments of people, with biases, that sometimes become instruments of policy and conflicts of interest.

But this is a little example, fairly straightforward, and one can hardly blame someone for getting it wrong. I can get things like this wrong more than I might like, and often depend on the good grace of expert readers to set me right.

In the next bullet point James says that a holder of Treasuries ought not to care if the interest payment is delayed, because the principal is secure. He may not care, but certain institutions have to care quite a bit about this sort of thing.  A missed interest payment is a consequential event.  But again, it is a detail.

The example that stirred me to write is the next one, which goes far beyond knowing some market rules.
"I am probably one of the few liberals who don’t think the Tea Party caucus is engaged in irresponsible hostage-taking. Sure, I disagree with their policy objectives, and they are risking economic catastrophe by trying to force the government into default. But they are also fighting for a principle, misguided as it may be: Obamacare is evil, and should be stopped. The debt ceiling is an absurdity that should not exist. But since it does exist, it is leverage that conservatives can use to try to achieve their policy goals."
This surely sounds like a fine piece of liberal thought. Something exists, and someone is using it 'on principle.'  And while I may not agree, whom am I to judge in my fog of liberal relativism?  I admire their adherence to principle, in the same way that the diffident often admire the forceful.

Here is where I think James Kwak goes wrong in his moral reasoning.

Just because something exists does not mean that any use of it is a moral use, and one cannot blame or object to anyone's use of it as long as it is 'for principle.' I presume James would balk at the use of the debt ceiling to obtain large personal bonuses for the Congressmen for merely doing their jobs. After all, they are not completely like Wall Street, yet.

What if, in his angst over wanting to save the American people the painful experience of the Affordable Healthcare Act, Senator Ted Cruz were to stand on the roof of the Dirksen Senate Office Building, and vow not to get down from it until the ACA was repealed, eschewing all food and drink. We might question his frame of mind and judgement, but that might well be viewed as an act of principle, a symbolic action of great personal consequence and example.  Gandhi used the  principled hunger strike to influence political actions on several occasions and to great effect. 

But what if Senator Cruz used his office and influence to gather a group of hapless tourists, and hold them on the top of the building without food or nourishment, unless the ACA was repealed? And further, what if he set a date of October 17, and threatened to push them over the edge of the roof unless he was given his way?

Would that be an act of admirable adherence to principle?

No, of course it would not be.  

This relates to the long established moral principle that civil disobedience and demonstrations of principle are admirable if they are peaceful, and if those who take that action place themselves in the path of consequence, and accept that consequence for themselves.  More simply, an act that accepts negative consequences for oneself can be a commitment to principle.  An act that visits the negative consequences on an innocent third party is an act of extortion.

This is the difference between a hunger striker, a pepper-sprayed peaceful demonstrator, and a kidnapper or terrorist bomber.   Personal actions might have a broader consequence as well, as in the case of a transit strike, but I think the difference here is apparent.  The union strike is directly related to the activity, and is usually germane and proportionate.  And the strikers endure a shared hardship with the customers.  Although this too can be abused, obviously.

Now I would not want to engage in dark humour, but I will.   I suspect that if certain elements of the Congress or Wall Street were to gather on the tops of their office buildings and threaten to jump if they did not receive outsized personal bonuses and more power for merely doing their jobs, one might suspect that a less than insignificant element of the public would voice their encouragement, and urge them to go ahead. And the media would sell tickets.

This is the silly season. And people are saying lots of silly things. But there is some need to maintain our common sense, and view things as they are, and not where our and political enthusiasms might wish to take them.

I know, this is a bit of schadenfreude, and I do not wish to pick on James Kwak because I like this writings for the most part and often link to them.  And by comparison the 'liberal economists' are like Solons compared the more venal of the so called 'conservative economists' who will say anything for their employers.

But I mean, come on. Being a liberal does not require one to engage in I'm OK You're OK relativism so that we lose sight of the practical foundations of civic duty and moral behaviour.    This might be a difference between a liberal and a progressive but I have never cared enough to think about it much. 

The practice of Wall Street and the Congress in holding the nation hostage to dire economic consequences, just to get their way when they lack a democratic consensus, has gone too far for too long.  

If they wish to protest, they should place themselves at risk, peacefully, in demonstrating their commitment to their beliefs, and not hold the innocent public hostage by furloughing the government and impeding important civic functions while they continue to enjoy their gymnasium, draw their paychecks,  and enjoy their customary perks in comfort.

15 October 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Cap, Cap, Cap...


There was very little movement in the Comex warehouses yesterday. The spreadsheet is included below.

This interview with Jim Rickards at Goldbroker is worth reading.
"The signs that the manipulation is coming to an end will include depletion of warehouses, price spikes and notifications from banks that they will no longer allow the conversion of gold forward contacts into physical gold."
The gold chart and silver charts are set up for a 'pop higher' if they can ever get some traction. That may not occur until the gold starts flowing out of the warehouses again. The registered (deliverable) inventories in the Comex warehouses are very thin. It will take higher prices to move more inventory out of storage and into the market.

Gold premiums in India have hit a record $100 per ounce this week. Nothing to see here, move along.

As a reminder this is a stock option expiration week.  The 28th is a Comex precious metals option expiration.

Until then, things are what they are.  Try not to allow the histrionics and hysteria to fill your sails.

After the bell Fitch put the US credit rating on negative watch.  tra la.

I spent the day straightening out some medical bills.  For those of you who are unfamiliar with its gorier details, the healthcare industry in the US is like a protection racket.  You have to pick some group to belong to, in order to obtain protection from financial ruin.

Forget paying the bill, the first benefit of health insurance here is that the specialist office visit that bills out at $550 gets reduced to $120, and then the insurance company pays some portion, and you pay the rest.  And when it comes to larger bills like hospital stays, the numbers get exponentially ridiculous.  And with certain pharmaceuticals, we enter the Land of Oz.

I think the only people who really like the US healthcare system are those who have rarely or only lightly used it, and who comfortably keep some ideologically based model of it in their heads.  Until they are old enough to have to use it and are covered by Medicare, and then they seem to love that.  But only for themselves, for they alone are the deserving and without sin.

The doctors and hospital people are fine and decent.  The financials of the system are barking mad. 

Have a pleasant evening.





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Making Sausage


"Laws are like sausages, it is better not to see them being made."

Otto von Bismarck

The histrionics are flowing heavily from Washington. And the pity is that the 'news programs' do such a poor job of setting out the issues and the mechanics of what is going on.

Typically they set one talking head against another, who spin at each other while the 'moderator' chimes in as their own political bias may prompt them.

The markets will tend to follow this US budget news.

Have a pleasant evening.





The Plan for Conquest and Pacification: Hitler's Britain


"Patriotism is proud of a country's virtues and eager to correct its deficiencies; it also acknowledges the legitimate patriotism of other countries, with their own specific virtues. The pride of nationalism, however, trumpets its country's virtues and denies its deficiencies, while it is contemptuous toward the virtues of other countries. It wants to be, and proclaims itself to be, 'the greatest', but greatness is not required of a country; only goodness is."

Sydney J. Harris

This documentary is based on the written plan for the conquest and occupation of Britain.

I found it to be quite interesting. I do object to the naming of specific individuals, since no one really knows what they would have done, despite what the Germans thought they might do.

People who are entranced with exceptionalism will find this entire documentary unthinkable. I think that is a mistake, given the experience in so many other countries and the Channel Islands themselves.

If there had been resistance, the conquest could have been utterly ruthless and brutal as it was in Poland, for example.  I remember a lady telling me that the Poles welcomed the Nazis 'with open arms.'  Nothing could be further from the truth. 

But people get these thoughts and can become attached to them for various reasons.  Just as some might think that Britain, or the US for the matter, can never change what is perceived as its national and natural character. 

I hate to single out Britain here, but we do have the plan as it was written.  We do not have access to any similar plans as complete for the US, either by the Germans or the wealthy financiers who have sought to capture the government for their own ends.

The lack of knowledge of US history amongst some of its people is appalling.  The actions of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920's, and the attempted coup d'état by wealthy financiers and industrialists in the 1930's, seems like a fiction to many, easily dismissed.   If only civilization was so robust and indestructible as that.  This complacency is often due to pride and ignorance, a sense of exceptionalism, rather than a sound understanding of human nature with both its strengths and weaknesses.

In his powerful documentaries done with the BBC, Laurence Rees outlines the charismatic power of an unscrupulous and fanatical leader, and how they can use exceptionalism and stereotypes of 'the other' to tap the inner darkness of an otherwise educated and civilized people, who view themselves as both good and practical.

The documentary below is instructive in general because it outlines how one might conquer a large and developed country either by exterior force or through an internal rising. 

I don't wish to alarm anyone.  What is possible is not inevitable.  But it is good to remember that possibility demands good sense and vigilance.   None are immune to evil that comes draped in the appearance of practicality and expediency.   I have seen this in otherwise good people I have known personally.  They can lose their way, and stop thinking in the face of uncertainty, and rationalize themselves into doing terrible things.   

None are exceptional except as individuals, and only to the extent that they can grasp something greater than their own needs and desires in order to save themselves from becoming hopelessly lost.