Friday, July 23, 2010

June inflation rate rises to highest level since May 2009

Thursday July 22, 2010
By FINTAN NG
fintan@thestar.com.my


PETALING JAYA: Malaysia’s June inflation rate rose 1.7% to 113.7 from a year ago, reaching the highest level since May 2009 as prices began to normalise from last year’s low base.

The consumer price index (CPI) gained 1.6% in May 2010.

The Statistics Department said in a report that the CPI for June increased 0.2% compared to this May and rose 1.4% for the January to June period compared to the previous corresponding period.

The rise in the CPI was within economists’ expectations and also in line with a Bloomberg survey.

Economists who spoke to StarBiz recently said the CPI was expected to rise gradually although price increases for the year were expected to be moderate.

In June compared to a year ago, the food and non-alcoholic beverages index added 2.7%.

The indices for non-food increased 1.2%, transport gained 1.3%, housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels added 0.8% while the services index rose 1.7% compared to a year ago.

The health and education indices added 1.6% and 1.8% respectively while the clothing and footwear index saw a 2% decline year-on-year.

The alcoholic beverages and tobacco index was up 3% and the restaurants and hotels index gained 1.8%.

The durable goods index increased 1.1%, the semi-durable good index declined 1.3% while the non-durable goods index rose 2.1%.


For detailed reports and charts from the Statistics Department click here


Thursday, July 15, 2010

Commodity and asset prices are up

The Star Online > Business
Saturday May 22, 2010

WHAT ARE WE TO DO BY TAN SRI LIN SEE-YAN

IN a previous column, I wrote on how ironically the sovereign-risk “shoe” is now on the other foot (“The Kiss of Debt”, Feb 27). Historically, sovereign-risk concerns reflected profligacy in emerging market economies – Russia, Argentina and Pakistan were notable examples. Today, the money printing machines in the United States, Euro-zone, UK and Japan are running overtime to assume the “crown.” We all know there is no such thing as a free lunch. This time, severe crisis took their toll on those with a history of high living and fiscal indiscretion, ignoring reforms in good times. What a difference a generation makes.

The contrast is provided by BRIICs (Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia & China). A year ago, with their fiscal and financial houses in good order, BRIICs were busy stimulating their economies. Their main worry then was to push for a “fairer global economic order.”

But, one year on, their situation is ironic: they share 3 things – they are big and growing fast, they have inflation, and they have strengthening currencies thrust upon them. These days, their concerns are on rising commodity prices, overheating, asset bubbles and inflation.

Workers dry cocoa beans in Makassar, Indonesia’s South Sulawesi province. Last year, cocoa prices were at a 30-year high. — Reuters
Paradox of a symmetrical recovery

Now more than ever, the Greek tragedy points to gathering risks in the global economic outlook. As of now, global recovery remains anaemic, uneven, and in need of policy support. It is as though the world is still dichotomised but with a big twist. In developed economies, recovery is there but growth remains modest with high unemployment and large fiscal deficits. Having been at the epicentre, sluggish growth in the US can gather strength, but Europe will now come out of recession more slowly.

Of concern is excess global liquidity which will now grow even more, lifting commodity prices, bloating risky assets, and adding to inflationary pressure. Worse, scars of battered consumers remain in the face of strained and stressed fiscal dilemmas.

In emerging economies, especially BRIICs, the picture is amazingly different. Most are in a V-shaped recovery and many approaching normalcy. Asia ex-Japan is slated to grow 8% this year and prospects are for good times to continue. Despite it all, they have recovered with impressive speed.

China persisted and grew by 8.7% in 2009 (13% in ’07); and by the 1Q’10, growth was already back up to 11.9%, prompting concerns of over-heating. India - the more self-contained of the lot, managed 7.2% in ’09 and should comfortably clear 8% this year. As a result, inflation is gathering strength in many parts of Asia ex-Japan and in other BRIICs. Inflation in India is already up 10%; China, 3%; Brazil, 10%; Russia, 8%; Indonesia, 4%. Asset prices have also surged, earning the attention of policymakers especially in China and India. China would do well to keep inflation no higher than 5% in ’10, and India, less than 8%.

Yet, in the lead-up to recession, emerging economies were already becoming increasingly hitched up to the US and European “shopping cart.” Asia’s exports share of output rose to 47% (from 37%) over 10 years pre-crisis. This shows their growing dependence on external demand, not less. When much of this demand disappeared overnight at end ’08, it didn’t take Asia too long to be back exporting again. So much for decoupling. But this time, Asia found options.

Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia, Russia & Australia, and commodity-importers, China, Japan, Europe and South Korea, found opportunities to reinforce one another. Such feed-back loops built greater interdependence. It seems Asia was only unruffled – not shaken, just stirred.

Commodities

Commodities posted in 2009 the biggest annual gains in four decades, led by doubling in copper, sugar and lead prices. Oil prices gained 78%. The S&P Index of 24 raw materials rose 50% in 2009, the highest since at least 1971. Many attribute this rapid price rise to the “super-cycle”, fanned by abundant global liquidity & strong demand from China and India in the face of 20 years of under-investment in raw materials production. The weak US dollar also played a part. Good times ended abruptly with the financial crisis. But the conundrum became more complicated when prices rebounded strongly, lifted by higher production costs and strong economic growth in BRIICs.

Prices of food commodities were also higher. According to experts, the food crisis has moved, from lunch and dinner to breakfast. Among the “breakfast commodities” only milk prices remained low. Last year saw tea prices at all time high; cocoa at 30-year high; sugar, 29-year high; coffee, near 11-year high; and orange juice, highest in 18 months. Sharp increases in these “soft commodity” prices contrast with relatively depressed prices for most agricultural commodities, including wheat, rice, soyabean and corn. Price divergences reflected fundamentals at play. Supply disruptions, not demand, were driving the rally. But longer term, food prices are on a rising trend, driven by compelling fundamentals: years of under-investment because of low prices prior to early 2000s; structural rise in demand because increased population demanded a diet richer in meat; and onslaught of biofuels.

With economic recovery, high food prices are here to stay. Unlike oil and base metals, supply response of agricultural commodities to high prices is speedy: farmers react each planting season. Farmers say there is no better fertiliser than high prices. In 2008, farmers prompt response was aided by good weather; consequently wheat, corn and soyabean output expanded and prices halved!

Until May this year, the Economist’s overall commodity price index was up 22%, with food prices staying quite flat. Industrial commodities had risen 61%, non-food agriculture, 74%, and metals, 56%. The Greece crisis temporarily halted the rising trend. Experts say that over the next 18 months, commodity prices will resume rising with economic recovery, lots of cheap money, and rapid BRIIC growth. Like it or not, high commodity prices will persist.

Asset bubbles

In emerging countries, there is growing concern about too much liquidity (domestic and global) driving asset prices, which can lead to bubbles and inflation. So much so Brazil and Taiwan introduced capital controls to better manage capital inflows. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had since concluded advanced countries may be responsible for creating bubbles in stock markets in emerging nations: its studies found (i) a positive link between domestic liquidity (money) and stock values; and (ii) an even stronger relationship between stock values and global liquidity (hot money). There is also a strong link between liquidity (money) and house prices in all countries. However, role of foreign money inflows doesn’t appear significant. Hot money has little to do with China’s frothy property market; it’s homemade, it seems.

As someone who knows the going-ons in China, my friend Prof Fan Gang (National Economic Research Institute, Beijing) expressed concern about rising commodity prices and food supply disruptions, even though he views the inflation outlook with limited immediate risk. Consumer prices rose 2.2% in 1Q’10 and 2.8% in April. But real estate prices are more worrisome – land prices more than doubled in 2009 and property prices, up 12.8% in April 2010. China’s massive stimulus plus explosive credit expansion resulted in a 31% rise in money supply in April. Even so, liquidity conditions are expected to remain easy. Simply because balance sheets of consumers and enterprises remain healthy, with prudent leverage, even though more savings have moved into real estate. Most observers regard properties as not yet bubbly.

Even so, Chinese authorities raised banks’ reserve requirements (ratio of deposits kept at central bank) three times to moderate bank lending. Also, directives were issued to calm markets, including prohibiting developers from accepting deposits on uncompleted properties. China is not alone in this. Countries like Canada, Australia, India and Singapore have similar concerns. In emerging economies, central banks readily use non-traditional “macro-prudential tools” to do the job, including credit allocation, arm-twisting (moral suasion), and favouring some with credit and discriminating against others. There is no shortage of ideas to fix property bubbles.

Inflation and the quantity theory of money

Over the past 30 months, the global economy has been subject to two major shocks: (i) the build-up of enormous unutilised capacity. Global output had fallen by 5%-6% since 2008. As expected, inflation in developed nations fell from about 4% in ’08 to less than 1% in ’09. It has since started to act up with rises in commodity prices. IMF still thinks global inflation will remain low in ’10. (ii) But, the crisis also injected enormous amounts of low-cost liquidity (money) into the global system. Fiscal stimuli and quantitative easing (printing money) in the United States, Europe, Japan, China and India together pumped-in liquidity estimated at 4%-5% of global GDP. Isn’t all this money inflationary?

Many are familiar with the Quantity Theory of Money (QTM) – this principle states simply that the general price level will rise in proportion to the increase in supply of money (i.e. cash and bank deposits in private hands). So if money supply rose by (say) 5% last year, inflation is likely to increase by about 5% this year (i.e. with a lag). But Lord Skidelsky (a noted Keynes biographer) reminds us that QTM only works at full employment. If there is unutilised productive capacity, part of the rise in money supply is absorbed to produce new goods and services, instead of spending on existing output. That is non-inflationary.

Furthermore, flooding the economy with lots of central bank money does not necessarily mean private deposits (generated from spending or bank lending) will rise by the same proportion. Japan in the 1990s had lots of money pumped into the economy; yet, money supply rose by only 7%-8%. Hence, the lost decade of no growth and no inflation (even deflation). We see similar trends in recent experience with quantitative easing in the United States and Europe.

The lesson is clear: what matters is not the printing of money but spending it. Once spent, the bundle of paper money is activated to produce goods and services. Any central bank can create money but it can’t ensure money will be spent or loan-out. Private money locked up in banks doesn’t increase the needed money supply; new money simply replaces the old sterilised by recession. So, pump priming should be allowed sufficient time to work through the real economy; first, to use up existing capacity (hence, little or no inflation) and then, build new capacity to propel new growth. That is why any premature exit of fiscal stimuli just damages the recovery process.

We already see results of successful money creation in BRIICs and many others. Asymmetrical recovery demonstrated that, away from the epicentre, emerging economies were able to translate money they print into money spent. At this stage of the growth cycle, presence of significant output gaps means there is little pressure on resources, since firms can readily raise output and look to higher volumes instead of prices. Rising Asia is experiencing the “sweet spot” of the cycle as output and profits rise, while inflation remains under wrap.

As recovery proceeds, monetary policy needs to tighten, removing loose policy settings put into place during recession. Rising interest rates should not constrain the performance of risk assets driven in an improving economy. As I see it, risk of policy error tends to be “too little too late,” erring on the side of policy that is too loose for fear of choking off recovery prematurely, or unsettling markets (and vested interests) ill equipped to handle change.


>Former banker Dr Lin is a Harvard educated economist and a British chartered scientist who now spends time writing, teaching & promoting the public interest. Feedback is most welcome; email: starbizweek@thestar.com.my.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Commodity and asset prices are up

The Star Online > Business
Saturday May 22, 2010

WHAT ARE WE TO DO BY TAN SRI LIN SEE-YAN

IN a previous column, I wrote on how ironically the sovereign-risk “shoe” is now on the other foot (“The Kiss of Debt”, Feb 27). Historically, sovereign-risk concerns reflected profligacy in emerging market economies – Russia, Argentina and Pakistan were notable examples. Today, the money printing machines in the United States, Euro-zone, UK and Japan are running overtime to assume the “crown.” We all know there is no such thing as a free lunch. This time, severe crisis took their toll on those with a history of high living and fiscal indiscretion, ignoring reforms in good times. What a difference a generation makes.

The contrast is provided by BRIICs (Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia & China). A year ago, with their fiscal and financial houses in good order, BRIICs were busy stimulating their economies. Their main worry then was to push for a “fairer global economic order.”

But, one year on, their situation is ironic: they share 3 things – they are big and growing fast, they have inflation, and they have strengthening currencies thrust upon them. These days, their concerns are on rising commodity prices, overheating, asset bubbles and inflation.

Workers dry cocoa beans in Makassar, Indonesia’s South Sulawesi province. Last year, cocoa prices were at a 30-year high. — Reuters
Paradox of a symmetrical recovery

Now more than ever, the Greek tragedy points to gathering risks in the global economic outlook. As of now, global recovery remains anaemic, uneven, and in need of policy support. It is as though the world is still dichotomised but with a big twist. In developed economies, recovery is there but growth remains modest with high unemployment and large fiscal deficits. Having been at the epicentre, sluggish growth in the US can gather strength, but Europe will now come out of recession more slowly.

Of concern is excess global liquidity which will now grow even more, lifting commodity prices, bloating risky assets, and adding to inflationary pressure. Worse, scars of battered consumers remain in the face of strained and stressed fiscal dilemmas.

In emerging economies, especially BRIICs, the picture is amazingly different. Most are in a V-shaped recovery and many approaching normalcy. Asia ex-Japan is slated to grow 8% this year and prospects are for good times to continue. Despite it all, they have recovered with impressive speed.

China persisted and grew by 8.7% in 2009 (13% in ’07); and by the 1Q’10, growth was already back up to 11.9%, prompting concerns of over-heating. India - the more self-contained of the lot, managed 7.2% in ’09 and should comfortably clear 8% this year. As a result, inflation is gathering strength in many parts of Asia ex-Japan and in other BRIICs. Inflation in India is already up 10%; China, 3%; Brazil, 10%; Russia, 8%; Indonesia, 4%. Asset prices have also surged, earning the attention of policymakers especially in China and India. China would do well to keep inflation no higher than 5% in ’10, and India, less than 8%.

Yet, in the lead-up to recession, emerging economies were already becoming increasingly hitched up to the US and European “shopping cart.” Asia’s exports share of output rose to 47% (from 37%) over 10 years pre-crisis. This shows their growing dependence on external demand, not less. When much of this demand disappeared overnight at end ’08, it didn’t take Asia too long to be back exporting again. So much for decoupling. But this time, Asia found options.

Commodity exporters like Brazil, Indonesia, Russia & Australia, and commodity-importers, China, Japan, Europe and South Korea, found opportunities to reinforce one another. Such feed-back loops built greater interdependence. It seems Asia was only unruffled – not shaken, just stirred.

Commodities

Commodities posted in 2009 the biggest annual gains in four decades, led by doubling in copper, sugar and lead prices. Oil prices gained 78%. The S&P Index of 24 raw materials rose 50% in 2009, the highest since at least 1971. Many attribute this rapid price rise to the “super-cycle”, fanned by abundant global liquidity & strong demand from China and India in the face of 20 years of under-investment in raw materials production. The weak US dollar also played a part. Good times ended abruptly with the financial crisis. But the conundrum became more complicated when prices rebounded strongly, lifted by higher production costs and strong economic growth in BRIICs.

Prices of food commodities were also higher. According to experts, the food crisis has moved, from lunch and dinner to breakfast. Among the “breakfast commodities” only milk prices remained low. Last year saw tea prices at all time high; cocoa at 30-year high; sugar, 29-year high; coffee, near 11-year high; and orange juice, highest in 18 months. Sharp increases in these “soft commodity” prices contrast with relatively depressed prices for most agricultural commodities, including wheat, rice, soyabean and corn. Price divergences reflected fundamentals at play. Supply disruptions, not demand, were driving the rally. But longer term, food prices are on a rising trend, driven by compelling fundamentals: years of under-investment because of low prices prior to early 2000s; structural rise in demand because increased population demanded a diet richer in meat; and onslaught of biofuels.

With economic recovery, high food prices are here to stay. Unlike oil and base metals, supply response of agricultural commodities to high prices is speedy: farmers react each planting season. Farmers say there is no better fertiliser than high prices. In 2008, farmers prompt response was aided by good weather; consequently wheat, corn and soyabean output expanded and prices halved!

Until May this year, the Economist’s overall commodity price index was up 22%, with food prices staying quite flat. Industrial commodities had risen 61%, non-food agriculture, 74%, and metals, 56%. The Greece crisis temporarily halted the rising trend. Experts say that over the next 18 months, commodity prices will resume rising with economic recovery, lots of cheap money, and rapid BRIIC growth. Like it or not, high commodity prices will persist.

Asset bubbles

In emerging countries, there is growing concern about too much liquidity (domestic and global) driving asset prices, which can lead to bubbles and inflation. So much so Brazil and Taiwan introduced capital controls to better manage capital inflows. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had since concluded advanced countries may be responsible for creating bubbles in stock markets in emerging nations: its studies found (i) a positive link between domestic liquidity (money) and stock values; and (ii) an even stronger relationship between stock values and global liquidity (hot money). There is also a strong link between liquidity (money) and house prices in all countries. However, role of foreign money inflows doesn’t appear significant. Hot money has little to do with China’s frothy property market; it’s homemade, it seems.

As someone who knows the going-ons in China, my friend Prof Fan Gang (National Economic Research Institute, Beijing) expressed concern about rising commodity prices and food supply disruptions, even though he views the inflation outlook with limited immediate risk. Consumer prices rose 2.2% in 1Q’10 and 2.8% in April. But real estate prices are more worrisome – land prices more than doubled in 2009 and property prices, up 12.8% in April 2010. China’s massive stimulus plus explosive credit expansion resulted in a 31% rise in money supply in April. Even so, liquidity conditions are expected to remain easy. Simply because balance sheets of consumers and enterprises remain healthy, with prudent leverage, even though more savings have moved into real estate. Most observers regard properties as not yet bubbly.

Even so, Chinese authorities raised banks’ reserve requirements (ratio of deposits kept at central bank) three times to moderate bank lending. Also, directives were issued to calm markets, including prohibiting developers from accepting deposits on uncompleted properties. China is not alone in this. Countries like Canada, Australia, India and Singapore have similar concerns. In emerging economies, central banks readily use non-traditional “macro-prudential tools” to do the job, including credit allocation, arm-twisting (moral suasion), and favouring some with credit and discriminating against others. There is no shortage of ideas to fix property bubbles.

Inflation and the quantity theory of money

Over the past 30 months, the global economy has been subject to two major shocks: (i) the build-up of enormous unutilised capacity. Global output had fallen by 5%-6% since 2008. As expected, inflation in developed nations fell from about 4% in ’08 to less than 1% in ’09. It has since started to act up with rises in commodity prices. IMF still thinks global inflation will remain low in ’10. (ii) But, the crisis also injected enormous amounts of low-cost liquidity (money) into the global system. Fiscal stimuli and quantitative easing (printing money) in the United States, Europe, Japan, China and India together pumped-in liquidity estimated at 4%-5% of global GDP. Isn’t all this money inflationary?

Many are familiar with the Quantity Theory of Money (QTM) – this principle states simply that the general price level will rise in proportion to the increase in supply of money (i.e. cash and bank deposits in private hands). So if money supply rose by (say) 5% last year, inflation is likely to increase by about 5% this year (i.e. with a lag). But Lord Skidelsky (a noted Keynes biographer) reminds us that QTM only works at full employment. If there is unutilised productive capacity, part of the rise in money supply is absorbed to produce new goods and services, instead of spending on existing output. That is non-inflationary.

Furthermore, flooding the economy with lots of central bank money does not necessarily mean private deposits (generated from spending or bank lending) will rise by the same proportion. Japan in the 1990s had lots of money pumped into the economy; yet, money supply rose by only 7%-8%. Hence, the lost decade of no growth and no inflation (even deflation). We see similar trends in recent experience with quantitative easing in the United States and Europe.

The lesson is clear: what matters is not the printing of money but spending it. Once spent, the bundle of paper money is activated to produce goods and services. Any central bank can create money but it can’t ensure money will be spent or loan-out. Private money locked up in banks doesn’t increase the needed money supply; new money simply replaces the old sterilised by recession. So, pump priming should be allowed sufficient time to work through the real economy; first, to use up existing capacity (hence, little or no inflation) and then, build new capacity to propel new growth. That is why any premature exit of fiscal stimuli just damages the recovery process.

We already see results of successful money creation in BRIICs and many others. Asymmetrical recovery demonstrated that, away from the epicentre, emerging economies were able to translate money they print into money spent. At this stage of the growth cycle, presence of significant output gaps means there is little pressure on resources, since firms can readily raise output and look to higher volumes instead of prices. Rising Asia is experiencing the “sweet spot” of the cycle as output and profits rise, while inflation remains under wrap.

As recovery proceeds, monetary policy needs to tighten, removing loose policy settings put into place during recession. Rising interest rates should not constrain the performance of risk assets driven in an improving economy. As I see it, risk of policy error tends to be “too little too late,” erring on the side of policy that is too loose for fear of choking off recovery prematurely, or unsettling markets (and vested interests) ill equipped to handle change.


>Former banker Dr Lin is a Harvard educated economist and a British chartered scientist who now spends time writing, teaching & promoting the public interest. Feedback is most welcome; email: starbizweek@thestar.com.my.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Fuel, sugar prices up as subsidy cuts start

UPDATED @ 08:23:09 PM 15-07-2010July 15,

2010KUALA LUMPUR, July 15 — The Najib administration will begin cutting subsidies tomorrow by raising the prices of petrol, diesel, natural gas and sugar in a move which could see the ruling Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition vulnerable to political challenges and risks.

The government announced tonight that RON95 petrol and diesel prices will go up by five sen a litre. Tomorrow's pump price will be RM1.85 per litre for RON95 and RM1.75 per litre for diesel. Subsidies for RON97 have been removed completely and its price will be subject to market forces.

Natural gas (LPG) will rise by 10 sen per kilogramme to RM1.85.

The price of sugar will also be increased, by 25 sen per kilogramme to RM1.75.

In a statement tonight, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak said the move to cut subsidies on fuel and sugar would save the government RM750 million a year.

"The readjustment of fuel and sugar prices are minimal compared to the proposals submitted because the government wants to balance between maintaining the people's interests and the need to manage the country's deficit," he said.

The Malaysian Insider understands that this is the first stage of subsidy cuts and it is expected to be reviewed every six months.

Sources said that subsidies on electricity are also expected to be cut but no decision has been made yet on when that will happen.

By raising prices of fuel and sugar, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak is signalling he is prepared to rebuild support for BN and implement economic reforms which could include the eventual introduction of an unpopular Goods and Services Tax (GST) and further market liberalisation.

The government’s reluctance to upset voters had led to reversal of government decisions and reform pullbacks that fuelled talk Najib was readying for a snap election.

Najib’s government was forced to reverse a decision recently to issue a gambling licence to quell mounting public anger.

This came after the GST was called off in February together with a scheduled fuel price hike in May.

The decision to begin spending cuts also suggests Najib has accepted the arguments of Datuk Seri Idris Jala.

Jala, the minister in the prime minister’s department, had controversially predicted Malaysia could be bankrupt by 2019 if it did not begin to cut subsidies for petrol, electricity, food and other staples, which he said cost the country RM74 billion last year.

Najib also recently braced Malaysians for the possibility that the economy could slow down in the second half of the year, in a development which would put his government’s economic growth targets at risk.

The prime minister said the possible slowdown was due to external factors.

Malaysia’s economy grew by an impressive 10.1 per cent in the first quarter of this year, marking two straight quarters of growth and three straight quarters of serious contraction last year.

Malaysia’s FDI rates have fallen faster than other regional players like Singapore and China, and at the same time capital outflows have dampened private domestic investments. Net portfolio and direct investment outflows had reached US$61 billion (RM197 billion) in 2008 and 2009 according to official data.

The government will allocate between RM90 billion and RM91 billion for expenditure in the first two years of the 10th Malaysia Plan (10MP) Najib’s government has set among the key challenges of the 10MP the stimulation of the private sector investments to grow at 12.8 per cent annually or RM115 billion.

It was reported that the country may not be able to achieve the six per cent gross domestic product (GDP) growth target if the 12.8 per cent growth is not achieved within five years.