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Roubini Says ‘Perfect Storm’ May Threaten Global Economy

By Shamim Adam - Jun 12, 2011

A “perfect storm” of fiscal woe in the U.S., a slowdown in China,
European debt restructuring and stagnation in Japan may converge on
the global economy, New York University professor Nouriel Roubini
said.

There’s a one-in-three chance the factors will combine to stunt growth
from 2013, Roubini said in a June 11 interview in Singapore. Other
possible outcomes are “anemic but OK” global growth or an “optimistic”
scenario in which the expansion improves.

“There are already elements of fragility,” he said. “Everybody’s
kicking the can down the road of too much public and private debt. The
can is becoming heavier and heavier, and bigger on debt, and all these
problems may come to a head by 2013 at the latest.”

Elevated U.S. unemployment, a surge in oil and food prices, rising
interest rates in Asia and trade disruption from Japan’s record
earthquake threaten to sap the world economy. Stocks worldwide have
lost more than $3.3 trillion since the beginning of May, and Roubini
said financial markets by the middle of next year could start worrying
about a convergence of risks in 2013.

The MSCI AC World Index has tumbled 4.9 percent this month on concern
recent data, including an increase in the U.S. unemployment rate to
9.1 percent in May, signal the global economy is losing steam. U.S.
Treasuries rose last week, pushing two-year note yields down for a
ninth week in the longest stretch of decreases since February 2008, on
bets the Federal Reserve will maintain monetary stimulus.

Bond Market ‘Revolt’

World expansion may slow in the second half of 2011 as “the
deleveraging process continues,” fiscal stimulus is withdrawn and
confidence ebbs, Roubini also said.

Easing growth may spur demand for dollar assets as a “safe haven,” he
said in response to questions after a speech in Singapore today. The
Dollar Index, which gauges the U.S. currency’s value against a basket
of six counterparts including the euro, yen and British pound, rose
0.1 percent as of 11:35 a.m. in Singapore, bound for a fourth straight
daily increase.

Roubini is among [the few] analysts who predicted the global financial
crisis of 2007-2009 that was triggered by a collapse in the value of
U.S. mortgage securities.

Some of his other predictions haven’t panned out, including his call
on July 4, 2010, for “market surprises on the downside” in ensuing
months and a weakening in economic growth. The MSCI World Index
rallied 23 percent in the second half of last year, while U.S. gross
domestic product gains accelerated to 2.6 percent in the third quarter
and 3.1 percent in the fourth quarter from 1.7 percent in the
April-to-June period.

U.S. Bonds

Roubini said two days ago that in the U.S., a failure to address the
budget deficit risks a bond market “revolt.” President Barack Obama’s
administration has been negotiating with Republicans, who control the
House of Representatives, over cutting the federal government’s
long-term shortfall and raising the debt ceiling.

“We’re still running over a trillion-dollar budget deficit this year,
next year and most likely in 2013,” Roubini said in a speech in
Singapore on June 11. “The risk is at some point, the bond market
vigilantes are going to wake up in the U.S., like they did in Europe,
pushing interest rates higher and crowding out the recovery.”

In Europe, officials need to restructure the debt of Greece, Ireland
and Portugal, and waiting too long may result in a “more disorderly”
process, Roubini also said.

European officials are racing to find a plan to stem Greece’s debt
crisis by June 24 while sharing the cost of a new rescue with
bondholders. Saddled with the euro area’s heaviest debt load, Greece
is seeking additional loans after last year’s 110 billion-euro ($159
billion) bailout.

Japan’s Contraction

Japan’s economy, the world’s third-largest, slid into a recession last
quarter, using the textbook definition of consecutive quarterly
declines in GDP, after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami and ensuing
nuclear crisis. The government is spending an initial 4 trillion yen
($50 billion) to clean up from the disaster, which is estimated to
have caused as much as 25 trillion yen in economic damage.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said on June 1 that supply
constraints are easing faster than expected as companies rush to
repair their facilities. The risk in Japan is “if growth fizzles out
after a short-term reconstruction stimulus,” leading to a renewed
struggle to maintain expansion around 2013, Roubini said.

China’s economy may face a “hard landing” after 2013 as government
efforts to boost growth through investment cause excess capacity,
Roubini told reporters after his June 11 speech.

‘Overcapacity’ in China

“China is now relying increasingly not just on net exports but on
fixed investment” which has climbed to about 50 percent of GDP, he
said. “Down the line, you are going to have two problems: a massive
non-performing loan problem in the banking system and a massive amount
of overcapacity is going to lead to a hard landing.”

A record $2.7 trillion of loans were extended in China over two years,
pushing property prices to all-time highs even as authorities set
price ceilings, demanded higher deposits and limited second-home
purchases.

The nation’s current challenge is to maintain growth and curb price
gains ahead of a leadership change next year, Roubini said. Officials
may use administrative steps and price controls, as well as raising
rates further and allowing currency appreciation, if inflation becomes
a bigger problem, he said.

Political Transition

“The policy challenge through next year, where you have a delicate
political transition of the leadership, is to maintain growth in the 8
to 9 percent range while pushing inflation below what it is right
now,” said Roubini, the co-founder and chairman of New York-based
Roubini Global Economics LLC.

After next year, the bigger challenge in China is “to reduce fixed
investment and savings and increase consumption. Otherwise after 2013,
there will be a hard landing,” he said.

The risk of “outright” deflation and the probability of another
recession in the U.S. are lower now than a year ago, and output in
Japan could rebound in the second half of the year, Roubini said two
days ago. “High-grade” corporations have “very strong” balance sheets,
he said.

Roubini in July 2006 predicted a “catastrophic” global financial
meltdown that central bankers would be unable to prevent. The collapse
of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in 2008 sparked turmoil that led to
the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at
[email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at
[email protected]

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