Note the soruce.
Not
even two steps away from New Zealand
‘It’s
too late’: Seven signs Australia can’t avoid economic apocalypse
AUSTRALIA has missed its chance to avoid a potential “economic apocalypse”, according to a former government guru who says that despite his warnings there are seven new signs we are too late to act.
7
July, 2017
The
former economics and policy adviser has identified seven ominous
indicators that a possible global crash is approaching — including
a surge in crypto-currencies such as Bitcoin — and the window for
government action is now closed.
John
Adams, a former economics and policy adviser to Senator Arthur
Sinodinos and management consultant to a big four accounting firm,
told news.com.au in February he had identified seven signs of
economic Armageddon.
He
had then urged the Reserve Bank to take pre-emptive action by raising
interest rates to prevent Australia’s expanding household debt
bubble from exploding and called on the government to rein in welfare
payments and tax breaks such as negative gearing.
Adams
says he has for years been publicly and privately urging his
erstwhile colleagues in the Coalition to take action but that since
nothing has been done, the window has now closed and Australia is
completely at the mercy of international forces.
“As
early as 2012, I have been publicly and privately advocating that
Australian policy makers take pre-emptive policy action to deal with
the structural imbalances within the Australian economy, especially
Australia’s household debt bubble which in proportional terms is
larger than the household debt bubbles of the 1880s or 1920s, the
periods which preceded the two depressions experienced in Australian
history,” he told news.com.au this week.
“Unfortunately,
the window for taking pre-emptive action with an orderly unwinding of
structural macroeconomic imbalances has now closed.”
Former
Coalition economic adviser John Adams.Source:The
Daily Telegraph
Adams
has now turned on his former party and says both its most recent
prime ministers have led Australia into a potential “economic
apocalypse” and Treasurer Scott Morrison is wrong that we are
heading for a “soft landing”.
“The
policy approach by the Abbott and Turnbull Governments as well as the
Reserve Bank of Australia and the Australian Prudential Regulation
Authority, which has been to reduce systemic financial risk through
new macro-prudential controls, has been wholly inadequate,” he
says.
“I
do not share the Federal Treasurer’s assessment that the economy
and the housing market are headed for a soft landing. Data released
by the RBA this week shows that the structural imbalances in the
economy are actually becoming worse with household debt as a
proportion of disposable income hitting a new record of 190.4 per
cent.
“Because
of the failure of Australia’s political elites and the policy
establishment, the probability of a disorderly unwinding,
particularly of Australia’s household and foreign debt bubbles,
have dramatically increased over the past six months and will
continue to increase as global economic and financial instability
increases.
“Millions
of ordinary, financially unprepared, Australians are now at the mercy
of the international markets and foreign policy makers. Australian
history contains several examples of where similar pre conditions
have resulted in an economic apocalypse, resulting in a significant
proportion of the Australian people being left economically
destitute.”
Following
his landmark seven signs of the economic apocalypse, which was read
by a quarter of a million people, Adams has now identified seven
signs that it is too late for Australia to take action. Here they are
in his own words:
SIGN
1: TIGHTENING MONETARY POLICY
The
US Federal Reserve has raised interest rates. Picture: Andrew
Caballero-ReynoldsSource:AFP
A
cycle of global monetary tightening has begun. For example, the US
Federal Reserve has raised short term interest rates in December
2016, March and June 2017 with more forecasted increases to come. The
US Federal Reserve also announced a program, expected to commence
within months, which would shrink its balance sheet (i.e.
quantitative tightening) by selling its holdings of $US6 billion a
month from Treasuries and $US4 billion a month from mortgage bonds,
increasing each quarter until the Fed’s balance sheet is being
reduced by a total of $US50 billion a month or $US600 billion per
year.
Market
expectations are now being set by officials at the Bank of Canada and
the Bank of England for higher interest rates in both Canada and the
UK in the near future.
Due
to Australia’s record high foreign debt, increases in the
international cost of credit are being passed onto Australian
borrowers through the banking system, particularly on interest-only
and investor loans.
SIGN
2: INVERTED AND FLATTENING YIELD CURVES
Chinese
officials kick off trading on the long awaited Bond Connect link.
Picture: Vincent YuSource:AP
In
May 2017, the Chinese Government bond market recorded its first ever
inverted yield curve. Also, the US Government bond yield curve, over
the past 6 months, has significantly flattened as some market
analysts anticipate an inverted US yield curve in late 2017.
Inverted
yield curves (or where long-term debt instruments have a lower yield
than short-term debt instruments of the same credit quality) are
known as a market predictor of a coming market crash or broader
economic recession.
SIGN
3: SOVEREIGN AND CORPORATE DEFAULT
Corporate
defaults are emerging around the world. Picture: Bryan R.
SmithSource:AFP
Sovereign
government and corporate defaults in both developed and developing
economies are beginning to emerge. For example, China has registered
in 2017 its highest level of corporate defaults in the first quarter
of a calendar year on record. Delinquencies and charge-offs in the
United States soared to $US1.4 billion in the first quarter of 2017,
the highest recorded level since the first quarter of 2011.
Also,
in May 2017, creditors to the International Bank of Azerbaijan
(Azerbaijan’s biggest bank) were forced to take a 20 per cent
haircut (i.e. a partial default) which was upheld in June by a US
Bankruptcy court in New York.
SIGN
4: FALLING CONFIDENCE AND CREDIT DOWNGRADES
In
May 2017, six major Canadian banks were downgraded by Moody’s
Investor Service (Moody’s) as concerns rise over soaring Canadian
household debt and house prices leave lenders more vulnerable to
losses. Moody’s also downgraded China’s sovereign debt in May
2017 for the first time since 1989 and has warned of further
downgrades if further reforms are not enacted.
In
May 2017, S&P has downgraded 23 small-to-medium Australian
financial institutions as the risk of falling property prices
increases and potential financial losses start to increase. In June
2017, Moody’s downgraded 12 Australian banks, including Australia’s
four major banks.
Standard
and Poor’s and Moody’s downgraded bonds for the US State of
Illinois down to one notch above junk bond status as the state has
over $US 14.5b in unpaid bills. Despite a new budget deal passing the
Illinois state legislature which raises more revenue through higher
taxes, Moody’s this week has placed the state government’s bonds
under review for possible downgrade.
SIGN
5: EMERGING CHINESE CREDIT CRISIS
There
could be big trouble in big China. Picture: Keith TsujiSource:Getty
Images
Significant
concerns among international observers are now being discussed
publicly regarding the $US4 trillion Chinese Wealth Management
Product (WMP) market as Chinese bank regulators are now taking
significant interventionist steps to drain liquidity and reduce
financial risk. As a result of recent interventionist steps, the
one-year Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate hit a two year high at 4.30%
in May 2017.
The
Chinese WMP market has, in the past few years, experienced
significant growth involving long term asset acquisition funded
through the use of short term liabilities. Evidence is emerging that
the long-term assets within WMPs are not performing consistent with
expectations resulting in difficulties meeting short term debt
obligations.
The
WMP market represents approximately 10% of the Chinese banking system
whereas the 2006 07 subprime mortgage backed securities crisis only
represented 2% of the US banking system.
SIGN
6: SIGNIFICANT GROWTH IN VALUE OF CRYPTO CURRENCIES
Bitcoin
is on the rise, which is not comforting news. Picture: Roslan
RahmanSource:AFP
In
the past five months, the crypto currencies industry (especially the
leading five internationally recognised cryptocurrencies) have
experienced tremendous growth in market capitalisation indicating
that investors are seeking to escape the formal banking and financial
system as well as government mandated fiat currencies.
This
is particularly acute in Japan where Japanese businesses and citizens
have been pouring into Bitcoin given the Bank of Japan’s
unconventional monetary policy measures, such as negative interest
rates, as well as that Bitcoin has become legal tender in Japan in
April 2017.
For
example, Bitcoin has experienced growth in market capitalisation by
approximately 170% in the past 4 months, while Ethereum has grown by
an approximate 2504%, Ripple by an approximate 4025%, NEM by an
approximate 3194% and Litecoin by 1236%.
SIGN
7: DISCREDITED AUSTRALIAN FISCAL AND MONETARY POLICY
Australian
policy makers have failed to address economic imbalances. Picture:
Stefan PostlesSource:Getty
Images
The
2017-18 Turnbull Government Budget, as well as recent decisions by
the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority (APRA), have failed to address the structural
imbalances and impediments plaguing the Australian economy.
For
example, many of the assumptions underpinning the Turnbull
Government’s 2017-18 Budget, including assumptions relating to
growth in real Gross Domestic Product, non-mining investment, wages
and household consumption, are highly questionable and almost certain
not to eventuate, placing significant risk that the Federal
Government will not deliver a budget surplus in FY2020-21 as
currently projected.
Moreover,
despite the introduction of new macro prudential rules by APRA,
artificially low interest rates by RBA driven by a flawed monetary
policy framework, has seen Australian household debt as a proportion
of disposable income continue to climb to a new record high and now
stands at 190.4%.
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