Saturday, August 30, 2014

The Next Market Bubble

Bulls and bears alike wonder when the next market bubble will emerge and pop.  In recent years, major stock market downturns have come from bursting bubbles.  Recessions, threats of war, terrorist attacks and other disturbances have caused market ripples.  But the big gut wrenchers--the nosedives that wrecked your retirement--have come from the popping of asset bubbles.  The gross over-valuation of tech stocks in 2000, the ridiculous real estate lending of 2005-07, those are the events that clobbered equities.  What does the future portend?

Today, the mess in the Middle East grips our attention.  Medieval atrocities by the Islamic State, a mosh pit with weapons in Gaza, mind-numbing slaughter in Syria and sectarian strife in Iraq appall and fascinate.  But none of them will significantly drive down stock valuations.  They just don't have the economic impact.  The Ebola epidemic is now raging out of control in West Africa.  But America's economic exposure to West Africa is miniscule.  And the disease isn't likely to present a major threat to the industrialized world.

Is there an impending market bubble that could burst and dynamite the world's financial system?  The answer is maybe, in Europe.   The European economy is slowing.  Growth is seen only on alternating Sundays.  The EU stays afloat on a cushion of sovereign and bank debt--a lot of it.  With Europe's slowing economy, it will be tough to pay down this debt and expedient to refinance by issuing even greater amounts of debt.  Risks to larger members like Italy and France are rising.  The EU is a financial and currency union without a unitary government.  Thus, it is tailor made to borrow in bulk without governmental controls to interfere.  We in America know from the 2007-08 mortgage crisis what happens when you bulk up on debt that can't be easily repaid.  The vast amount of European debt presents potential systemic risk, just like the vast amount of American mortgage debt outstanding in 2007.

Exacerbating Europe's problems is the war between Ukraine and Russia.  As Russia's direct involvement in combat is becoming increasingly clear, the war is likely to have ever greater impact on Europe.  Sanctions by the West will probably be heightened, and Russia's retaliation will likely hit Europe harder than America.  Europe's financial system could begin to totter as the EU is pushed into recession and capital flees the Old World.  (Indeed, part of the buoyancy of U.S. stocks can be attributed to the arrival of capital now fleeing Europe.)  A run on the Euro could be the straw that breaks the bubble's back.

The European Central Bank, as always, does a fan dance about how accommodative it will be.  While it's become much more interventionist in the past couple of years, it remains constrained by its anti-inflation charter and the stolid, ever-frowning Germans. Maybe the ECB will save the day.  Or maybe not.

Europe's economy, as a whole, is larger than America's.  A tummy ache there could affect the rest of the world.  if you're worried about where the next bursting asset bubble could come from, keep your eye on Europe.

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