Xi’s Heart Was Broken

The Taiwanese people have spoken
And President Xi’s heart was broken
The DPP won
Convergence is done
And Xi’s wrath has like been awoken

The results of the first presidential election around the world in 2024 are in and Lai Ching-te, the ruling Democratic Progressive Party’s candidate, and sitting vice-president, has won.  This is absolutely not the outcome that Chinese President Xi Jinping was looking for as his administration apparently orchestrated a great deal of election interference in order to get the opposition candidate into the seat.  Overall, the DPP does not have a majority in the Legislature so getting things done will be a challenge for Mr Lai, but as sitting VP, he is clearly quite politically capable.  It is important to know that he has not advocated for independence, which is the brightest red line President Xi sees, but his attitude is quite interesting now with his view that Taiwan is already, de facto, a state, and therefore doesn’t need to declare independence.

At this time, it doesn’t appear as if there will be any change in the status quo in the Taiwan Strait.  I imagine that Xi will continue to order periodic harassment of Taiwanese shipping and encroach on their airspace, but it strikes that the odds of invasion, at least currently, remain extremely low.  If Xi learned nothing else about war from the Russian invasion of Ukraine, it is that things don’t always work out as assumed.  Add to this lesson Xi’s recent purging of numerous high-ranking military officers on corruption and incompetence charges, and I suspect that the stalemate here will continue.  As such, I don’t anticipate any economic impact of note from this particular situation going forward.  At least not this year or next.

In Iowa, temps are sub-freezing
In Davos, it’s not as displeasing
The difference is stark
As both places mark
Their efforts, control, to be seizing

As it is Martin Luther King Day here in the US, so banks and the stock market are closed, I thought it might be a good time to discuss two events that are occurring in very different parts of the world and with very different views of the world, namely the Iowa caucuses and the beginning of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland.

Starting with Iowa, this is the official beginning of the Presidential election cycle in the US with the first votes and the first delegates to be allocated.  This year, for the first time, it is only the Republicans caucusing as it appears President Biden, who came a weak 5th there in 2020, decided that he didn’t want to be embarrassed and so essentially canceled the vote.  As to the Republicans, they will be braving sub-zero temperatures throughout the state with the latest polls I have seen, courtesy of Five thirty-eight.com showing former President Trump with 52.7% of the vote, followed by Nikki Haley (18.7%), Ron DeSantis (15.8%) and Vivek Ramaswamy (6.4%).  This result is in line with the national polls and certainly indicates that, as of now, President Trump is going to be the Republican nominee.

That prospect is anathema to the entire Democratic Party, as well as to many Republicans, but even more interesting is how the rest of the world finds the prospects so alarming.  In fact, it seems to be a major topic at WEF as President Trump was essentially dismissive of the WEF agenda when he was last in office and if we have learned anything about WEF, it is they cannot stand being dismissed, especially by world leaders.

I might argue that the biggest problem WEF has is their agenda is running into the realities of physics and economics.  It turns out that many people are not willing to give up material progress that requires the use of fossil fuels or farming, and that seems to run contra to the WEF stated goal of, you will own nothing, and you will be happy.  For now, despite the vast amount of wealth that individual members of WEF control, its direct impact on the macroeconomy has been felt through government policies.  In fact, it seems clear these policies have been a driving force in the rise in populism around the world completely to oppose those policies, and that is not about to change.  At least not until the other 39 elections due this year around the world have been completed.  This is a key reason I believe we are going to see far more populism in many places, and that will have real economic consequences.

Consider for a moment, what populist policies might look like.  They are very likely to increase government spending on things like healthcare and retirement to the detriment of spending on things like energy and defense.  There will be an increase in the amount of reshoring manufacturing and buy local programs and I suspect that there will be more isolationism as a theme.  One of the things all these policies have in common is they will all be inflationary.  And that is something which will need to be considered in both investment and hedging decisions going forward.

Ultimately, the one thing of which I am confident is that the idea of a secular deflation makes very little sense.  Rather, a combination of current and potentially populist future policies is much more likely to result in higher inflation across the board.  Governments will find this convenient as it will help depreciate the real value of their growing debt piles and encourage them to continue to spend on these populist policies.  However, viewing this from a business’s point of view, it will require a focused approach on managing costs and pricing products and services appropriately.  Keep your eyes on the big picture, not just the most recent result.

Despite the fact that the holiday is a US holiday, it seems that most markets have decided to take the day off as well.  While European equity markets are drifting lower, that seems to be in response to the fact that Germany fell into official recession last year and its prospects remain dim for 2024.  Japanese equities continue their run as interest rates in Japan are drifting lower as all the talk of the end of ZIRP slowly fades away alongside fading inflation in the country.

Arguably, the one place where things are moving is European bond markets where yields have risen between 6bps and 8bps across the board despite what appears to be weaker than forecast Eurozone IP data.  On the surface, the data today would have indicated a bond rally, not sell-off, but it seems inflation remains a concern there as well.

Oil prices have slipped a bit overnight but remain in the middle of their recent trading range despite the escalation of tensions after the US and UK bombed Houthi sites in Yemen at the end of the week.  More and more shipping companies are avoiding the area driving up shipping costs, extending lead times, and adding to upward inflation pressures.  As to the metals markets, gold is little changed, and copper and aluminum are acting independently with copper higher and aluminum lower although there are no obvious catalysts for either.

Finally, the dollar is a bit stronger this morning, with JPY (-0.6%) continuing its recent slide as the market removes higher interest rates from its collective bingo card.  But the buck is strong pretty much everywhere with a few EMG currencies also falling by -0.5% or more (BRL, KRW, TWD).  However, with the US out, I don’t anticipate much further activity.

There is no data today nor Fedspeak so for those of you who are working today, it should be quiet in markets overall.

Good luck
Adf