The First Truly Global Bubble predicted by cranky financial wizard Jeremy Grantham


Monday, May 7th, 2007

WILLIAM PESEK
Sun

You’d expect someone whom the famously dour Dick Cheney entrusts with millions of his dollars might have a gloomy view of the world. Jeremy Grantham does indeed.

“ From Indian antiquities to modern Chinese art; from land in Panama to Mayfair; from forestry, infrastructure and the junkiest bonds to mundane blue chips — it’s bubble time,” he writes in Grantham, Mayo, Van Otterloo & Co.’ s latest quarterly letter titled The First Truly Global Bubble.

Grantham, 68, is chairman of the Boston- based company that, according to financial disclosure reports, in 2005 managed as much as $ 6.1 million for U. S. VicePresident Cheney. And if his own recent actions are any guide, he’s quite the multitasker.

The money manager is a critic of the U. S. energy policies for which Cheney bears considerable responsibility. In February, Grantham donated $ 23.6 million ( all figures US) to Imperial College London to establish an institute on climate change.

Perhaps these multitasking skills helped Grantham make one of the gutsiest market calls in recent memory: That pretty much every asset class, everywhere, is in the midst of a bubble.

It would be comforting if we could dismiss such negativity. After all, isn’t the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbing to all time highs at a time when Japan and Europe are growing, China, India and much of the rest of Asia boom and all’s well in the global financial system?

Sure, and that’s just what worries Grantham. He points to the U. S. in the late 1990s and Japan in the late 1980s — periods when investors thought asset rallies would continue indefinitely.

“ Most bubbles, like Internet stocks and Japanese land, go through an exponential phase before breaking, usually short in time, but dramatic in extent,” Grantham argues, and he has a point.

Bubbles generally require two dynamics: the perception of near- perfect economic conditions and an abundance of cheap credit.

The Bank of Japan left its overnight lending rate at 0.5 per cent last week, giving traders a green light to put on more “ yen– carry trades.” Borrowing cheaply in yen and moving those funds into higherreturning assets overseas has been a oneway bet and markets have little reason to think that’ll change. China’s unprecedented buildup of currency reserves — $ 1 trillion and counting — also may constitute a bubble of sorts.

The amount of liquidity zooming around the globe has Grantham wondering if risk is really as negligible as many investors seem to think.

Looked at from that perspective, perhaps China’s wacky stock rally isn’t so disconnected from the world after all. Modern history offers few better examples of a Ponzi scheme than Chinese shares. The CSI 300 Index, which tracks yuan- denominated A shares listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges, gained 75 per cent already this year and has tripled in the past 12 months.

In that time, China’s fundamentals changed little. It’s still growing faster than 10 per cent; officials in Beijing still can’t figure out how to slow things down; a lack of transparency still makes it hard to know what’s going on in corporate boardrooms; and Asia’s No. 2 economy still faces risks of overheating, pollution, social unrest and trade wars.

All that’s changed is the amount of attention paid to Chinese stocks, creating a gold rush.

A similar dynamic may be playing out across the global economy. Everyone, as Nouriel Roubini, chairman of Roubini Global Economics in New York, has been warning, is reading about how great things are and throwing caution to the wind. It’s more titillating to read about hedge fund managers making over $ 1 billion a year than about global imbalances.

What makes today’s global financial boom different is that past bubbles came amid lofty claims of new eras. In the 1980s, the new era featured a Japanese business model many said couldn’t go wrong. In the 1990s, the U. S. was awash with similar hubris.

“ This time, everyone, everywhere is reinforcing one another,” Grantham argues. “ Wherever you travel, you hear it confirmed that ‘ they don’t make any more land,’ and that ‘ with these growth rates and low interest rates, equity markets can keep rising,’ and ‘ private equity will continue to drive the markets.’ To say the least, there has never been anything like the uniformity of this reinforcement.”

Markets’ success in withstanding September’s $ 6.6- billion implosion of Amaranth Advisors LLC and more recent turmoil among subprime mortgage lenders prompted talk of another new era. This latest one seems centered on China producing infinite amounts of cheap labour, U. S. deficits being sustainable, major economies growing in synch and deep, diversified markets being able to multitask whatever comes their way.

The trouble, Grantham says, is that the bursting of this bubble “ will be across all countries and all assets, with the probable exception of high- grade bonds. Risk premiums in particular will widen. Since no similar global event has occurred before, the stresses to the system are likely to be unexpected.”

 



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