There may never be a letter to shareholders quite like it. When Martin Taylor, the highly successful hedge fund manager at Nevsky Capital, announced he was shutting down the hedge fund at the beginning of this year, he showed both an uncanny ability to foretell the future and to make us afraid of it. Mr Taylor, who has by a wide margin consistently outperformed the Morgan Stanley emerging markets index over the 15 years he ran the Nevsky Fund, said he was closing it in part because trying to decipher what was happening in China and India was increasingly difficult and also because companies were also releasing as little data as they could get away with to avoid excessive scrutiny by investors and regulators. "Currently, stated Chinese real GDP growth is 7.1 per cent and India's is 7.4 per cent. Both are substantially over stated," Mr Taylor wrote in a letter released in early January. "This obfuscation and distortion of data, whether deliberate or inadvertent, makes it increasingly difficult to forecast macro and hence micro as well, for an ever-growing share of our investment universe."
Right on cue, Beijing made Mr Taylor's decision to call it quits seem eminently sensible by beginning the year with incomprehensible missteps in its management of China's currency and stock market, sending both tumbling and the world markets with them. We had barely caught our breath and it was time for Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda to cut interest rates to negative 0.1 per cent. This desperate attempt to fight deflation in Japan, and to force its companies to give employees larger raises in wage negotiations in the spring, skidded off-track when the yen rose in response instead of falling - putting both the Abenomics goals of sparking inflation and boosting corporate growth in peril. This week, Japan announced that its fourth-quarter GDP had shrunk by 1.4 per cent.
The move to negative rates territory by such a bellwether as the Bank of Japan and expectations of further cuts in the euro zone have sent bank share prices across the world into a frightening downward spiral. Negative or very low interest rates and the unprecedented flattening of the yield curve have made the business of running a bank very difficult. In Japan, yields on 10-year bonds turned negative last week for the first time, falling to as low as negative 0.0007 per cent, though they are now positive - barely.
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Back on terra decidedly infirma, which is to say China and India, the bewildering lack of economic logic is everywhere. On Tuesday, China's lending data for January showed that lending had increased to 2.5 trillion renminbi ($385 billlion) - an increase by more than 1 trillion over the same period last year. Some of this is because Chinese corporates and banks are rapidly retiring foreign currency debt after being singed by the depreciation of the currency; foreign loans declined by 859 billion renminbi in the last seven months, according to the Financial Times' James Kynge. But almost half of the new loans appear to be going towards infrastructure, which suggests that Beijing is unwisely opting for fast growth instead of reducing debt, which is more than 250 per cent of GDP.
By contrast to the economic behemoths Japan and China, India is a sideshow, but what a show. Who could have predicted that members of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's party and its supporters would conspire to push the successful if irrationally exuberant Make in India summit off the front pages by first accusing university students of sedition and then physically attacking them, even in court? Or that a tax inspector in the revenue department would go after Vodafone again, even while the issue is in arbitration? Again, Mr Taylor deserves the last word. "Obviously we accept politics can trump economics and political analysis has always been a very big part of our process, but surely never has so much of the world been governed by leaders where the logic of that peculiarly parochial yet multi-headed beast - nationalism - trumps all," he wrote, pointing at China, India, Russia and Turkey. "Almost by definition, the path of logic within nationalism is difficult for 'outsiders' to follow with any confidence, leading to highly unpredictable and potentially dysfunctional modelling outcomes."
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