There is no doubt, the stock market has been on a tear over the past year as we can clearly see on this chart:
I was a frequent trader,
particularly prior to and during the Great Crisis; my investment strategy in
recent years has tended toward buying when others are selling I looked at the 2008
crisis as a buying opportunity, particularly for good quality preferred shares.
Right now, I don't like the market; it is frothy and, in my opinion, is
not based on any fundamentals that I understand. That said, apparently
many investors would disagree with me and, in a hunt for return in this
prolonged near-zero interest rate environment, desperation for yield reigns supreme.
What is most surprising is that one
group of investors is increasingly turning to equities to boost the portfolios
that they manage; central bank reserve managers.
Let's start by looking at what has
happened to the trend in global central bank reserves since
1980:
Over the past ten years, total
reserve holdings have risen by over 500 percent to approximately $11 trillion
in 2013. Official bank reserves are expected to increase from 29 percent
of OECD government debt in 2011 to 38 percent by 2016 if current trends hold.
At this point, reserves amount to the equivalent of one-third of OECD
bond markets.
A study by the IMF that polled 67 central
banks around the world shows that over the past five years, reserve managers
have had increasing difficulty with liquidity problems in their reserve
portfolios with just over half of the 67 central banks expressing liquidity
concerns. As a result, nearly three-quarters of the reserve managers were
forced to change their asset allocation by:
1.) reducing the level of commercial
bank deposits.
2.) reducing their exposure to
unguaranteed bonds.
3.) reducing their holdings of
long-term AAA bonds.
This rebalancing of assets and low
returns on bond portfolios has resulted in 31.8 percent of reserve managers in
advanced economies exposed to equity markets and one in seven of those surveyed
are investing in equities, an investment that was considered completely unacceptable for
central banks just a few short years ago. These managers are hoping that
a rise in the value of their equity portfolios will offset a decline in the
value of their bond portfolios as interest rates rise. Interestingly, of
middle-income nation central banks, only 8.7 percent are investing in equities
and among low-income nation central banks, none are investing in equities.
Let's look at an example. A
relatively large purchaser of equities is the Bank of Japan, holder of the
world's second largest reserves. On November 30, 2013, the BoJ held the following
assets:
The Bank of Japan held ¥1.360
trillion ($13.33 billion) in stocks, ¥2.419 trillion ($23.7 billion) in
index-linked ETFs and ¥139 billion ($1.36 billion) in real estate investment
trusts out of total assets of ¥224.1 trillion ($2.197 trillion). At the end of 2009, the Bank of Japan held only
stocks with a value of ¥1.335 trillion and no equity ETFs or REITs.
Obviously, the Bank of Japan is like the rest of us; seeking yield.
Back in April, the Bank announced that it will pump an additional $1.4
trillion into Japan's economy over the next two years through asset purchases.
Over that period, it will be doubling its investments in equity
exchange-traded funds.
Other central banks that invest in
equities include the Swiss National Bank (SNB) which states the following on its website:
"The equity portfolios are made
up of shares from medium-sized and large corporations in advanced economies.
The SNB takes care to ensure that its equity management, too, has no impact on
the markets. Furthermore, it does not regard itself as a strategic investor.
Thus, equities are managed passively and according to a set of rules, and on
the basis of a strategic benchmark comprising a combination of equity indices
in various currencies."
Nowhere on its website, could I find
the actual size of the SNB's equity portfolio although according to Bloomberg, in the first quarter of 2013, the SNB had about 15 percent of its
assets held in passive funds that track equity indices. Other central banks with substantial equity investments include the Bank of Israel, the Czech National Bank and the Bank of Korea.
It is interesting to see that low
returns on bonds have changed how even the most conservative central bank
reserve managers invest. Low returns are forcing both individuals and
central bank reserve managers to invest in riskier and more volatile asset
classes. Even though central banks state that they are passively
investing in equities, the message that is being sent to retail and wholesale
investors can easily be misconstrued, leading to unintended upward
pressure on equity prices, something that the world's stock markets may be
experiencing right now.
It's all part of the signals that the world's central banks are sending to the so-called "free market".
It's all part of the signals that the world's central banks are sending to the so-called "free market".
The economic recovery that the media and talking heads have been bantering around does not exist and is just a myth. A manipulated stock market distorted by recent economic policy hides and mask the real truth, in many ways the stock market has become ground zero in the war to convince us all is well.
ReplyDeleteThe huge weakness in the economy was confirmed recently by Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve when they failed to cut back QE by even the slightest amount. Fact is if QE or the massive government deficit spending that props up our economy is removed it will fold like a cheap umbrella. More on this subject below,
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/10/myth-of-economic-recovery.html
Presently the American major stock indexes are the most overvalued in history as accounting rules have changed over time. This should end with the major indexes falling around eighty percent like what happened to the NASDAQ in the dot com crash. A crash is guaranteed the only question that remains is when.
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