Home Insights Features 10 Outrageous Predictions For 2014: Saxo Bank Predictions range from an EU wealth tax to a plummeting Brent crude price as the market becomes awash with oil. by Aarti Nagraj December 17, 2013 Trading platform Saxo Bank has released its annual ‘outrageous predictions’ for the year ahead. While not official, the forecast outlines the biggest risks to capital preservation, and aims to encourage investors to prepare for the worst-case scenario. “Although the probability of any one of the predictions coming true is low, they are deduced strategically by Saxo Bank analysts based on a feasible – if unlikely – series of market and political events,” the firm said in a statement. Steen Jakobsen, chief economist at Saxo Bank, said: “This isn’t meant to be a pessimistic outlook. This is about critical events that could lead to change – hopefully for the better. After all, looking back through history, all changes, good or bad, are made after moments of crisis after a comprehensive failure of the old way of doing things. “As things are now, global wealth and income distribution remain hugely lopsided which also has to mean that significant change is more likely than ever due to unsustainable imbalances. 2014 could and should be the year in which a mandate for change not only becomes necessary, but is also implemented.” However, most financial experts are optimistic about the global economy in 2014. “We expect a better 2014, with world economic growth picking up and inflation staying benign,” Standard Chartered Bank stated in a recent research report. Global growth should increase to 3.5 per cent in 2014 from 2.7 per cent in 2013, helped by improvements in the US and Europe, it predicted. ”A pick-up in growth in the West is good news for the rest of the world, and we expect emerging economies’ growth to outpace G7 growth by 3.8 percentage points. The outperformance of emerging economies is unlikely to subside,” it said. Investment firm PIMCO also posted a similar outlook for 2014. In a research note, it said: “The new year promises to be a better year. Many of the challenges faced during 2013 have either progressed toward a point of self-exhaustion or are being overcome via alternatives to yield a brighter outlook for global growth in 2014. PIMCO expects the global economy to grow between 2.5 per cent to three per cent next year,” it said. “The Eurozone should finally emerge from recession in 2014, and Japan is likely to continue to grow with the continued assistance of extraordinarily expansive policies,” it added. SAXO Bank’s 10 Outrageous Predictions EU wealth tax heralds return of Soviet-style economy Panicking at deflation and lack of growth, the EU Commission will impose wealth taxes for anyone with savings in excess of USD or EUR 100,000 in the name of removing inequality and to secure sufficient funds to create a “crisis buffer”. It will be the final move towards a totalitarian European state and the low point for individual and property rights. The obvious trade is to buy hard assets and sell inflated intangible assets. Anti-EU alliance will become the largest group in parliament Following the European Parliamentary elections in May, a pan-European, anti-EU transnational alliance will become the largest group in parliament. The new European Parliament chooses an anti-EU chairman and the European heads of state and government fail to pick a president of the European Commission, sending Europe back into political and economic turmoil. Tech’s ‘Fat Five’ wake up to a nasty hangover in 2014 While the US information technology sector is trading about 15 per cent below the current S&P 500 valuation, a small group of technology stocks are trading at a huge premium of about 700 per cent above market valuation. These ’fat five’ – Amazon, Netflix, Twitter, Pandora Media and Yelp – present a new bubble within an old bubble thanks to investors oversubscribing to rare growth scenarios in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Desperate Bank of Japan to delete government debt In 2014, the global recovery runs out of gas, sending risk assets down and forcing investors back into the yen with USDJPY dropping below 80. In desperation, the Bank of Japan simply deletes all of its government debt securities, a simple but untested accounting trick and the outcome of which will see a nerve-wracking journey into complete uncertainty and potentially a disaster with unknown side effects. US deflation: coming to a town near you Although indicators may suggest that the US economy is stronger, the housing market remains fragile and wage growth remains non-existent. With Congress scheduled to perform Act II of its “how to disrupt the US economy” charade in January, investment, employment and consumer confidence will once again suffer. This will push inflation down, not up, next year, and deflation will again top the FOMC agenda. Quantitative easing goes all-in on mortgages Quantitative easing in the US has pushed interest expenses down and sent risky assets to the moon, creating an artificial sense of improvement in the economy. Grave challenges remain, particularly for the housing market which is effectively on life support. The FOMC will therefore go all-in on mortgages in 2014, transforming QE3 to a 100 per cent mortgage bond purchase programme and – far from tapering – will increase the scope of the programme to more than $100 billion per month. Brent crude drops to $80/barrel as producers fail to respond The global market will become awash with oil thanks to rising production from non-conventional methods and increased Saudi Arabian ouput. For the first time in years hedge funds will build a major short position, helping to drive Brent crude oil down to $80/barrel. Once producers finally get around to reducing production, oil will respond with a strong bounce and the industry will conclude that high prices are not a foregone conclusion. Germany in recession Germany’s sustained outperformance will end in 2014, disappointing consensus. Years of excess thrift in Germany has seen even the US turn on the euro area’s largest economy and a coordinated plan by other key economies to reduce the excessive trade surplus cannot be ruled out. Add to this falling energy prices in the US, which induce German companies to move production to the West; lower competitiveness due to rising real wages; potential demands from the SPD, the new coalition partner, to improve the well-being of the lower and middle classes in Germany; and an emerging China that will focus more on domestic consumption following its recent Third Plenum. CAC 40 drops 40% on French malaise Equities will hit a wall and tumble sharply on the realisation that the only driver for the market is the greater fool theory. Meanwhile, the malaise in France only deepens under the mismanagement of the Hollande government. Housing prices, which never really corrected after the crisis, execute a swan dive, pummeling consumption and confidence. The CAC 40 Index falls by more than 40 per cent from its 2013 highs by the end of the year as investors head for the exit. ‘Fragile Five’ to fall 25% against the USD The expected tapering of quantitative easing in the US will lead to higher marginal costs of capital from rising interest rates. This will leave countries with expanding current account deficits exposed to a deteriorating risk appetite on the part of global investors, which could ultimately force a move lower in their currencies, especially against the US dollar. We have put five countries into this category − Brazil, India, South Africa, Indonesia and Turkey. 0 Comments