Financial Times Europe - 05.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
Monday5 August 2019 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES 17

B


y the early 1990s in Britain,
verbal insults hurled at the
EU had become common-
place. Margaret Thatcher
warned of a European super-
state. It became normal to associate
Brussels with stifling bureaucracy. And
people imagined a gravy train full of idle
European parliamentariansshuttling
between Brussels and Strasbourg. This
is how Brexit started.
I see something similar going on in
Germany — although the process is at an
early stage. The target is not the EU, but
the European Central Bank and the
eurozone. The language has already got
out of control.
German media habitually refer to
negative interest rates as penalty rates
— a fine levied by the ECB to punish Ger-
man savers.Tagesthemen, Germany’s

candidates such as Pete Buttigieg. A dec-
ade of loose monetary policy has bene-
fited the former, who have seen their
assets appreciate, at the expense of the
latter, who cannot afford to get on the
housing ladder.
One of the big political battles will be
over who gets what share of what looks
to be a slower growing pie in what
appears to be a slower growth economy.
Another battle will be between capital
and labour. Rising wages are taking a
bite out of US corporate profit margins
and, frankly, they should. When con-
sumer spending makes up 70 per cent of
the economy, we need a bit of wage
inflation to ensure that people have
money to spend. That’s particularly true
at a time when governments aren’t
investing, and the shift from a tangible
to an intangibleeconomy has led to
decreased private sector capital
expenditure.
But it has taken trillions of dollars in
unconventional monetary policy to
cook up relatively small wage increases.
And for many Americans the gains are
immediately eaten up by increases in
healthcare premiums or prescription
drug prices, two other hot topics on the
campaign trail. That’s one of the reasons
there’s now broad supportfor higher
taxes on the wealthiest.
It remains to be seen when and what
form tax rises will take. But the age of
wealth distribution is coming and will
have major investment consequences.
The value of US equities has probably
peaked, and hard assets like gold, other
commodities, housing, even art — any-
thing in fixed supply— may benefit rela-
tive to the equity and debt of multina-
tional companies.
This isn’t the end of the world — we’ve
been going through cycles of wealth
accumulation and distribution forever.
But it does mean that the rules of the
road for investors are changing. Some
asset prices may fall, but it’s possible
income growth will be higher. That
would come with an upside of its own,
economically and politically.

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shareholder capitalismand the merits
of industrial policy.
The signs of this new post-supply side
era are all around us. Witness the rise of
the B-corporations, which balance pur-
pose and profit, and the growth of
investing based on environmental,
social and governance factors.
In government, note the growing
bipartisan enthusiasm for tougher anti-
trust scrutiny and calls for trade protec-
tion, as well as efforts to politicise the US
Federal Reserve. It’s not just President
Donald Trump’s tweet seeking rate cuts
but also progressive Democrats who see
“modern monetary policy” as a way to
pay for their priorities without having to
fund them through tax rises agreed
upon by Congress.
These views are increasingly part of
the mainstream. Last week, two sena-
tors introduced a bipartisan bill that
would force the Fed to devalue the dol-

larin order to boost exports and balance
current accounts with China.
This isn’t passing populism, but some-
thing much bigger, argues Kiril Sokoloff,
founder of 13D Global Strategy &
Research, who has been ahead on recog-
nising previous turning points, from
supply side economics and the slowing
inflation that began in the early 1980s,
to the rise of China and the spread of
smartphones. “What we’re about to see
is a backlash against the second gilded
era, and it will have a massive impact on
the world — and the markets.”
One likely impact will be fundamen-
tal changes in who holds wealth. The
Democratic race reflects the growing
conflict between two primary US voting
groups — the baby boomers, repre-
sented by candidates like Mr Biden,and
the millennials, who backed Mr Sanders
in 2016, and now like him and younger

R


oughly four decades ago,
America kicked off the
developed world’s last major
economic paradigm shift —
the supply side revolution.
Capital gains taxes were slashed. Pres-
ident Ronald Reagan and UK prime
minister Margaret Thatcher took on air
traffic controllers and coal miners. The
power of unions faded and that ofcorpo-
rations grew. Some people got very rich.
Butinequality rose, and eventually,
overall trend growth slowed.
Watching the Democratic presiden-
tial primary debates last week, I
couldn’t help but think that we may be
witnessing the next great shift, from an
era of wealth accumulation to one of
wealth distribution. Moderates like Joe
Biden and John Delaney tried to argue
for middle of the road answers on issues
like healthcare and trade.
But the pole positions were set by
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren,
who hold similar views on everything
fromshifting Americans on to a national
healthcare system and relief for
indebted students. Both also seek
higher taxes for the wealthy and
tougher rules for corporations.
While little of this would seem radical
in many other parts of the world, in the
context of US politics, it was truly some-
thing new. The set point for economic
debates, even for Democrats, used to be
how the government could help the
markets work better. Now it’s how the
public sector can rein them in, and slic-
ing the economic pie more fairly.
What’s more, it’s not only Democrats.
Some Republicans are looking for a par-
adigm shift as well. Marco Rubio, an
influential Republican senator who
hopes to be president someday, recently
put out a paper on theproblems with

who is in power. Today they are tinker-
ing with rules around loan losses.
Tomorrow it could be rules around
environmental and social issues.
Regulators have given big banks three
years to phase in the impact of the new
standard on capital. CECL will not apply
to community banks and credit unions
until 2023. Banking supervisors can and
should work with the institutions they
oversee to ensure a smooth transition.
Congress should not intervene.
The Federal Reserve is once again cut-
ting interest rates, citing weaknesses in
manufacturing and business invest-
ment, slowing global growth and trade
tensions. Rainy days may be upon us
sooner than we think. Instead of resist-
ing CECL, banks should be celebrating
the new standard. It will ease the con-
straints they were under prior to the
financial crisis and allow them to ade-
quately prepare for the next storm.

The writer chaired the US Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation from 2006 to 2011

US economy is strong. But these
reserves will need to come out of earn-
ings, meaning that banks will poten-
tially have less money to distribute to
their shareholders. So bank lobbyists
have convinced a handful of people in
Congress to introduce legislation delay-
ing CECL to allow time for more “study”.
Trying to draw elected officials into
this debate is ill-advised. The process of
setting accounting rules is, by design,
insulated from the politics. FASB is an
independent, non-profit organisation of
leading, private accounting experts,
recognised by the Securities and
Exchange Commission as the account-
ing standard setter for publicly traded
companies. FASB spent many years ask-
ing for public and industry input before
finalising CECL in 2016.
Investors rely on good-quality finan-
cial statements and do not want
accounting rules subject to the vagaries
of the election cycle. Getting Congress
more involved in this process could well
backfire on the banks, depending on

market conditions, and the maturity of
the economic cycle.
The new rule has two key benefits.
First, banks will start putting aside
money on day one of each loan so when
trouble hits — as it did in 2008 — they
will not be trying to play catch-up with
their reserves. Second, it should make
bankers a little more cautious in their

lending decisions, as they will have to
account for likely losses when the loan is
made, not kick the can down the road
until the borrower is actually in arrears.
Transitioning to the new rule will
obviously require banks to add to their
loan loss reserves. Now is a good time to
do so, while banks are profitable and the

industry lobbyists want Congress to
help them preserve the status quo.
The rules from 2008, which are still in
place, say that banks can only set aside
money to cover losses that are “estima-
ble and probable”. This essentially
means that borrowers need to be well
past due on their loan obligations before
banks can start reserving for losses. This
is akin to starting your rainy day fund
after you have received a lay-off notice
from your employer. By the time you see
real trouble, it is too late to prepare. This
was the case during the financial crisis,
as bankers were desperately adding to
reserves in 2008 and 2009 just as their
earnings were plummeting.
Now the Financial Accounting Stand-
ards Board, which sets US rules, wants
to switch to a new rule, known by the
name of “current expected credit
losses” or “CECL”. It says that banks
should set aside enough to cover
expected losses throughout the life of a
loan, taking into account a wide variety
of factors, including historic loss rates,

A


s I was growing up, my
Depression-era parents
always preached the
importance of having a
rainy-day fund to deal with
the economic hardships life inevitably
throws at you, such as job loss or illness.
Later, as a bank regulator, I valued the
similar funds banks set aside to cover
losses they would invariably incur on
some loans. Unfortunately, in the lead
up to the 2008 financial crisis, those
funds — called loan loss reserves — were
woefully inadequateprimarily because
of accounting constraints that some
bankers rightfully complained about at
the time.
But now that accounting standard-
setters are trying to improve those rules,

top evening news programme, casually
reported last week that the ECB was
planning to use German taxpayers’
money to fund its asset purchase pro-
gramme. Die Weltrefers to the “expro-
priation” of the German saver — a
phrase with alarming historical conno-
tations. Even liberal newspapers, like
the weekly Die Zeit, accept the view that
the ECB is the cause of low interest rates.
There are clear parallels with the
early history of Brexit. Outwardly, it
appeared that the UK had a wonderful
deal in the EU: it was in the customs
union and the single market, but not in
the eurozone and the Schengen pass-
port-free travel area. It secured policy
opt-outs in a number of areas. And
former prime minister David Cameron
was able to wring further concessions
from the EU before the referendum.
Today, Germany is widely seen as the
main beneficiary of the euro. Like the
British, the Germans have little cause
for complaint.
This may be objectively true. But it is
not the way things are seen inside Ger-
many, where there is a sense that the
monetary union is not working as it
should. There have been hysterical

debates about imbalances in the
Target2 payment systemand negative
interest rates. What these show is that
Germans are uneasy about being locked
into a monetary union with countries
whose leaders they do not trust.
Not all of that unease is irrational.
Germany has large savings surpluses,
which it invests abroad. But it does not
benefit from them. A recent study found
that German returns on foreign invest-

ments are the lowest among all G7 coun-
tries. The assets Germans are investing
in — like car plants in China — are heav-
ily correlated with the domestic econ-
omy. Nor do the investments protect
Germany against demographic risks. It
invests in countries with similar demo-
graphic profiles. So when it rains, it
pours.
Germany will soon be confronting a

confluence of threats. It has been living
for a long time off the inventions of the
late 19th century. The champions of
German industry have been the super-
stars of the analogue age. But now they
face an uncertain future.
For example, none of them is a leader
in battery technology— the technologi-
cal core of the next generation of cars.
Germany has some research capacity in
artificial intelligence, but nothing on the
scale of the US or China. Germany still
has some of the best educated engineers
in the world, but is lacking in cutting-
edge scientists and research. Obsession
with fiscal consolidation has caused
public sector under-investment, even in
areas such as renewable energy.
It is impossible to predict how Ger-
many will confront the dual threat of a
fundamental technology shift and a
monetary union plagued by imbal-
ances. The best solution would be to fix
the problem by doing whatever it takes
to make the monetary union sustaina-
ble; ending the obsession with fiscal sur-
pluses; and increasing investment in sci-
ence, technology, and military infra-
structure. But that would be a triumph
of hope over experience. Germany is

moving in exactly the opposite direc-
tion.
One could have made a similar argu-
ment for the UK: that it is best to con-
front geopolitical and technological
uncertainties inside the EU, and not
become over-reliant on the US. Unfortu-
nately, the Remain campaign failedto
make this case, allowing Leavers to
frame the debate.
The same is happening in Germany,
where it is the Eurosceptics who speak
with greater clarity. Few dare challenge
the consensus on fiscal policy — or say a
nice word about Mario Draghi, the ECB
president. The most radical fiscal pro-
posal I know of comes from the Green
party, which wants to insert a sustaina-
ble investment clause into the balanced
budget constitutional law. But that is
tinkering at the edges.
Pro-Europeans should remember
how the battle was lost in the UK —
through cowardice and bad strategy.
The case for European monetary inte-
gration has yet to be made in Germany.
But it needs to be made, with confidence
and with not a hint ofProjekt Angst.

[email protected]

The age of wealth distribution


For many Americans,
wage gains are eaten up

by increases in healthcare


premiums or drug prices


Eurosceptics speak with
greater clarity and few

dare to challenge the


consensus on fiscal policy


Congress should stay out of new bank rules for loan losses


Sheila
Bair

Investors do not want
accounting rules subject

to the vagaries of


the election cycle


C


limate change has been
framed as an ethical issue
for years now, with mixed
success. But now the calls for
socially responsible invest-
ing to save the planetare increasingly
being reinforced by cold economic logic.
Mainstream institutional investors
are recognising that climate changeis
not just a threat to the health of the
planet, but also a threat to the wealth of
their clients.
The oil industry is on the front lines of
rising investor fears about the long-
term returns of fossil fuel energy
sources. That is partly because of bitter
experience. The Europeanutility sector
has seen hundreds of billions of euros
wiped off its market capitalisation by
the roll out of wind and solar power in
the past decade.
The reason why wind and solar
energy pose such a threat to the energy
system established over the past 100
years is simple: they have a short-run
marginal cost of zero.
In other words, when the wind blows
and the sun shines, the energy itself
arrives for free. Nearly all of the costs of
wind and solar energy are in the infra-
structure required to capture it, and
these capital costs have beenplummet-
ingover the past five years. The same is
not true for oil and gas, so those sectors
will eventually have to recognise that
the economics of renewables are
becoming irresistible.
BNP Paribas Asset Management’s
research into the economics of oil and
renewables as competing energy
sources hammers home the point. We
posited that an investor has $100bn and
must decide whether to invest it in oil or
renewables, knowing that the energy is
destined to power cars and other light
vehicles.
Our analysis found that for the same
capital outlay, wind and solar projects
will produce 3 to 4 times more useful
energy at the wheels than oil will at $

a barrel for diesel-powered vehicles.
For petrol cars, the ratio is even less
favourable — the renewable investment
will produce 6 to 7 times more energy. It
is therefore increasingly difficult to
argue that oil is the superior fuel from
an economic standpoint, let alone when
environmental issues are considered.
As electric vehicles proliferate, the
long-term break-even oil price required
for gasoline to remain competitive as a
source of mobility could fall as low as $
to $10 a barrel.
With nearly 40 per cent of current
demand for oil coming from sources
susceptible to easy electrification, oil
companies should think very carefully
about investing in new long-term
projects that have break-even costs
much above $20 a barrel.
This poses a major strategic problem
for the oil industry, which has tradition-
ally made its highest returns from find-
ing and extracting crude. Indeed, the oil
industry often points to the “profitabil-
ity gap” between investing in renewa-
bles and investing in upstream oil
projects, arguing that for as long as the
returns are better in oil they have no
incentive to invest in renewables.
But this is to miss the key point: over
time the returns in upstream oil projects
will inevitably decline as oil is forced to
compete with an energy source that pro-
duces energy at a much lower cost over
the lifetime of a project. The oil industry
today enjoys massive scale advantages
over wind and solar. But this advantage
is now one only of incumbency and time
limited.
The simple truth is that the oil indus-
try has never before faced the kind of
threat that renewable electricity and
EVs pose to its business model. For the
first time there is a competing energy
source with a short-run marginal cost of
zero, that is much cleaner environmen-
tally and will be able to replace up to 40
per cent of global oil demand once it has
the necessary scale.
The economics of energy are now on
the side of the angels. This should be a
flashing red light on the oil industry’s
dashboard.

The writer heads sustainability research at
BNP Paribas Asset Management

Renewables are


good money, not


just good for


the earth


Mark
Lewis

The oil sector will soon
have to recognise that

the economics are


becoming irresistible


Germany is replaying Britain’s Brexit debate


Opinion


EUROPE

Wolfgang


Münchau





Rana


Foroohar


                   


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