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Impotence, Leverage and Central Banking





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Some of our readers have been wondering why we spend so much time covering the situation in Europe. The relevance of the European situation is not perhaps immediately obvious to those geographically far removed, with a temptation to ascribe the problems of the European periphery to locally-specific conditions.

However, the global economy is exceptionally integrated, and what happens in one location all too readily leads to financial contagion - the spread of fear, from one asset class to another, or from one country to another in the case of sovereign debt risk.

Europe is the epicentre of phase II of the credit crunch, from which waves of financial contagion can be expected to emanate for the next several years. Several member states are effectively at, or near, sovereign debt default, with the potential to trigger credit events in the credit default swap market. Banks are over-leveraged, often highly disproportionate in comparison with their host economies and intertwined with the sovereign debt issue.

In many EU member states there are housing bubbles far larger than the American one that began to burst in phase I of the credit crunch (October 2007-March 2009). Bubbles in some states have already burst, while in other countries, housing markets are going illiquid and prices are beginning to decline. As the value of collateral falls, and economies slide deeper into recession and high unemployment, the leveraged debt will be unsupportable. Personal debt is often sky-high, even in countries which are currently considered wealthy and stable.

What is unfolding in Europe is highly relevant to the future of the whole global financial system, and where Europe is leading - into debt deflation, liquidity crunch and depression - many other countries will follow over the next few years. We are in the process of crashing our global operating system, as we did on a smaller scale in the 1930s. Our global credit bubble has peaked, and the debt created in the expansion years - excess claims to underlying real wealth - will not be able to be repaid.

The gargantuan pile of interlocking human promises will become nothing more than dashed expectations. The resulting credit collapse will crash both the money supply and the velocity at which the remaining money circulates in the economy, leaving too little money in circulation to support much economic activity. Credit bubbles bring forward demand by artificially stimulating it, but when they burst, the demand borrowed from the future must be repaid.

Under such circumstances, economic systems, both public and private, seize up. This is what we have been predicting at The Automatic Earth since its inception, and we are now watching it unfold. As we wrote back in June, we are already seeing what a liquidity crunch looks like in practice in places like Greece, where the creeping paralysis in essential services continues to spread:


In every one of Thessaloniki’s 13 hospitals, in Greece’s second largest city, doctors are “playing God,” as Leta Zotaki, head of the radiology service of Kilkis Hospital in the north of the city, puts it. "When we start running out of x-ray films, we have to decide who needs to be examined first; we trade with other hospitals or ask the patients to pay for the film,” explains this trade unionist, who saw her 4,000 euro salary cut by half, and whose night shift hours have not been paid since May.

Some nurses have put up a note on the door of one of the hospital rooms: "When visiting your relatives, don’t bring chocolates, buy them toilet paper,” the note reads. There is a shortage of everything: latex gloves, cold pads, reagents for blood tests and catheters. The only upshot is the fact that public hospital workers have not yet been laid off yet – like they have in other public service sectors. But the doctors who are leaving – who have either retired, or left for private hospitals or abroad – are not being replaced: in Kilkis, the number of doctors has gone from 160 to 125.


The single currency has acted as a straight-jacket, binding disparate economies together and treating them as equivalent from a risk perspective. Bond spreads reflected this perception from shortly after the introduction of the euro until the financial crisis of 2008, but the fiction of equivalence has since come under increasing pressure.


 


Internal tensions have been building as the disparities between centre and periphery become increasingly apparent, and national interests increasingly diverge - not just between centre and periphery, but also between core states France and Germany. Germany preaches austerity for the periphery and suggests it for France, which resents the interference and makes a last futile attempt at stimulating growth in an era of deleveraging.

When national interests are paramount, there is no real defence of the collective, and when the pie is shrinking, rancorous internecine conflicts become increasingly probable. We are already seeing the blame game begin in earnest in Europe, notably on the European Day of Action on November 14th. The rest of the world does not appear to realize either how serious the situation in Europe is becoming, or that a similar dynamic will take hold in many other places.


 

November 14, European Day of Action, Madrid, Spain

 

November 14, European Day of Action, Rome, Italy (AFP Photo/Filippo Monteforte)

 

November 14, European Day of Action, Lyon, France (AFP Photo/Jeff Pachoud)

 

November 14, European Day of Action, Lisbon, Portugal (AFP Photo/Miguiel Riopa)

 

November 14, European Day of Action, Athens, Greece (AFP Photo/Louisa Gouliamaki)

 

November 14, European Day of Action, Madrid, Spain (AFP Photo/Javier Soriano)

 

The immutable centralizing force that the single currency represents has allowed tensions to build as disparities have grown. Its rigidity prevents accommodating those disparities with devaluation, while the leverage and interconnectedness of the banking system preclude restructuring the unrepayable debt. Austerity appears to be the only remaining option, and yet by forcing economic contraction, it hastens, rather than avoids, default.

The fundamental problem is the debt exceeds the capacity for either repayment or for bailout by prospective lenders of last resort. This is the issue that much of the rest of the world is also facing. European attempts to deal with it by generating ever greater amounts of debt foreshadow the failure that other governments will face as the same situation engulfs them.

Following a long series of limited and ineffective bailouts, the ECB has promised unlimited bond buying to support sovereign debtors (in exchange for a major hand over of sovereignty). Promises of unlimited intervention issue a challenge to markets to call the bluff, leaving a substantial vulnerability with no back up plan. In the not too distant future, the markets will be trying to discover where the real limits of intervention lie. Other countries, notably the US, which have made similar 'unlimited' promises, should take note. Nothing is ever truly limitless.

The long countertrend rally has been relatively kind to governments and central banks. US-style quantitative easing and European stability funds have appeared to make a difference thanks to the temporary suspension of disbelief. Resurgent optimism - the primary driver of the rally - has reached a crescendo rivalling previous market peaks. Previously bearish commentators are capitulating to the erstwhile uptrend and thanking central authorities for saving the global financial system. This irrational euphoria is typical of market tops, and provides a good contrarian indicator that the rally in the last holdouts is finally over.

Governments and central banks are actually powerless to prevent an epic deleveraging. They may appear omnipotent during expansions and rallies, but this is an illusion. The lesson of history is that once a very large bubble has developed, generating excess claims to underlying real wealth for many years, those excess claims will be rapidly and messily extinguished in a period of deflation. Smaller bubbles may not exceed the capacity of a lender of last resort, but this one - the largest in human history - most certainly does. The fall, when it comes, will be one for the record books, as contractions are typically proportionate to the scale of the excesses in the preceding bubble era.

Congratulations given to central authorities are highly premature, and their reputations are set to take a very large beating over the next few years. It is dangerous to encourage people to think one all-powerful and in control. It may be a confidence booster in the short term, but in the longer term it only leads to people thinking one could and should have done more, when in fact there are no solutions to deleveraging running its natural course following a bubble of this magnitude.

One look at the unedifying spectacle unfolding in the US in response to the looming fiscal cliff is enough to illustrate the petty powerlessness of governments. To review for non-Americans, the fiscal cliff refers to the expiration on January 1st 2013 of a $500 billion package of tax cuts and emergency spending measures amounting to perhaps 4% of GDP. A bipartisan agreement is necessary if the can is to be kicked further down the road. Another would be necessary to raise the debt ceiling again shortly afterwards. Of course achieving an agreement would amount to a temporary stop-gap measure rather than a solution, but it appears a highly polarized group of legislators might even be incapable of that.

The division between parties, and increasingly within, in the US is reminiscent of the divisions at the national level in Europe. When the pie is shrinking, the larger picture, and the interests of the larger group are lost. Functional entities are smaller than before, with narrower scope of interests and therefore much less overlap with each other. The Republican Party in particular is tearing itself apart over its recent election loss, and retreating into factionalism. Bipartisan compromise is rapidly becoming impossible in a highly charged political environment where compromise is seen as betrayal of partisan interests.

Fiscal tightening is inevitable this coming year in the US whether or not a deal is reached at the federal level. States and municipalities are also reaching limits, as we covered early last year, and many are on the verge of bankruptcy. They have made too many promises, and now those promises that cannot be kept, will not be kept. A wave of both public and private debt default at all scales is coming, and the US will be following Europe as liquidity crunch morphs into depression.

This is not what recovery looks like, either in the US or in Europe. Recovery will only be possible once deleveraging has run its course, and at this point it has barely begun. Quantitative easing has never made a meaningful difference to the real economy. The numbers, large as they appeared, were not significant in comparison with the outstanding debt, and funds were not being lent out. The fear has been that 'money printing' would lead to hyperinflation, but deleveraging can occur much more quickly than any central bank can monetize debt.


 


When bubbles burst, there is always an undershoot. 2008 was nothing more than a warning shot across the bow. The main deflationary event is underway, but has not yet reached a tipping point and substantial pick-up of momentum. It will do, and when it does, markets and economies could find themselves in freefall. Europe is leading the way this time. Others would do well to be forewarned.


 

Posted: 5 months, 4 weeks ago by Nassim #6354
@gurusid

The documentary that you mentioned - "The Great Spanish Collapse" - is now the subject of a ZeroHedge article:

www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-12-20/great-spanish-crash-documentary

Showing the full, high-definition version, on TV did make an impression on my wife. She was a student when the Russian economy collapsed and depended on her parents to send her food parcels. Of course, the boys on her course swapped their parental food parcels for vodka.
Posted: 6 months ago by chrisj #6338
I recently sold some of my precious metals based on your views which I agree with. However I worry about getting them back in a environment of chaos. There still seems to be lots of retail buyer at auctions ect. and I dont see how pm can go down much without a large stockmarket crash and a rise in interest rates. What do you think
Posted: 6 months ago by Nassim #6332
I was able to download a high-quality version of "The Great Spanish Crash" ("This World" BBC2, 16th Dec 2012) and to watch on TV - I had to show it to my wife.

Here is how I did it:

1- I downloaded and installed the free program BitTorrent (www.bittorrent.com)

2- I found a torrent by searching for "The Great Spanish Crash"

3- I let it download slowly over a period of 6 hours.

4- I copied it to USB - my TV can handle files

It is a shame that the BBC - which used to be so good with its "World Service" on short-wave - does not let one download interesting programs.
Posted: 6 months ago by Glennda #6331
I may not agree with much of Zero Hedges politics, but they don't pull any punches on the economic future.

Their guest post from Brandon Smith at alt-market.com, while somewhat alarmist about direct impact of the melt-down, has good evidence with the Dry Baltic chart near the end of this piece.

www.alt-market.com/articles/1226-global-economic-slowdown-signals-sad-new-year

Hmm, maybe Santa can bring me some non-GMO seeds for Xmas.
Posted: 6 months ago by Gravity #6330
Gravity is AAA recursive algorithm.
Posted: 6 months ago by ilargi #6329
Nicole, what do you make of S&P raising Greece's credit level, for its sovereign debt, by 6 levels?

1) That ratings are now evidently based no longer on numbers but on faith; in this case, the faith that austerity hit Germans and Dutch will gladly give up their benefits going forward to bail out those of their banks that are neck deep in Greek debt.

2) That S&P fails/forgets to explain why they lowered the rating as much as they did. Those reasons are all gone now?

3) That S&P et al. are less relevant today than they ever were before. Given their performance in rating MBS and related derivatives, that is a remarkable feat. S&P is part of the financial system that closes ranks on the back of its continued and expanding access to public funds.
Posted: 6 months ago by TonyPrep #6328
Nicole, what do you make of S&P raising Greece's credit level, for its sovereign debt, by 6 levels?

S&P said:
The upgrade reflects our view of the strong determination of European Economic and Monetary Union (eurozone) member states to preserve Greek membership in the eurozone.

The outlook on the long-term rating is stable, balancing our view of the government's commitment to a fiscal and structural adjustment against the economic and political challenges of doing so.


Link
Posted: 6 months ago by davefairtex #6326
jal -

I was not making a comment on the morality of the move or the intervention or who benefits, I am simply observing what seems to be happening. I'm guessing that another market high is likely to occur - like a weather forecaster who looks at clouds and pressure zones and predicts "80% chance of rain tomorrow."

Its not only the US and ECB that are printing. Here's a chart of the foreign currency reserves of the various exporting nations. To keep their currencies from appreciating (and their people employed) they print their own currency and buy dollars and euros.

money-printing-fcr.png
Posted: 6 months ago by jal #6322
@ davefairfax

I assume that you realize that its "Anything goes to save the rich"
Of course, the average person will be the ones suffering.

Geeee!
Look at Greece.
The printing press will keep operating for the benefit of the rich.
Posted: 6 months ago by davefairtex #6320
Based on what I see right now, I think it is probable that the SPX will make a new high either by the end of this year or early 2013.

The relief stemming from the probable fiscal cliff fix coupled with some good news from the european bond markets driving the euro higher and the Fed signing up to effectively monetize ALL US Treasury debt issuance going forward "until things improve" should really help US equities.

I'm seeing more money moving out of the safe havens now and into the PIGS bonds and the equity market. Spain had a decent bond auction today, although they were all short term bonds which are seen as low risk.
Posted: 6 months ago by alan2102 #6319
kcl6750 wrote:

The US $ is fast becoming a joke ! Even drug dealers in Colombia are reluctant to take payment in $ ! What does that tell you?


It tells you that the average Colombian drug lord is smarter than the average American -- and probably than the average currency trader. But then I would expect drug lords to be pretty bright. What is surprising is that the average Asian peasant is smarter than the average American, at least in this respect. Indians in particular, but Chinese and others as well. They hold physical gold and silver. They don't trust paper currencies or banks. Smart. Very smart.
Posted: 6 months ago by davefairtex #6317
@Nassim

All of scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Finland) look pretty good from a government debt and budget balance standpoint. They're all either in balance or have a surplus, and their debt/GDP stands at 44%, 38%, and 49% respectively. Their bonds are trading in that "safe haven" area where the 10 year is yielding in the 1.5-2.2% range.

Switzerland has been successful to date keeping their currency appreciation in check by printing money (and buying euros, mostly) whenever the Swiss Franc looked like it was getting too high. However this has left Switzerland with about 70% of GDP (about $450 billion) in currency reserves. This trade will look brilliant if the eurozone lives, and it won't look nearly so good if the eurozone breaks up.

If Nicole's predictions come true and things really come unglued, it will be difficult for places like Scandinavia and Switzerland to keep a lid on currency appreciation. There is a LOT of money out there and these currencies are small. Without controls, this will seriously distort their markets. Even now with all the money printing and the eurozone rescues the Swiss 2 year is yielding -.23% per year.

The choices for the safe haven countries whose economies are small (Scandinavia, Switzerland) and who live outside the eurozone is either money printing or capital controls. Or perhaps both. I don't imagine they'll just sit by and let their currencies get wanged around by safe haven flights without trying to do something.
Posted: 6 months ago by Nassim #6315
For people outside the UK, you can now watch this video at:

!

Thanks gurusid. I haven't watched it yet, but is seems stoneleighstic.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6314
kcl6750,

I wouldn't write off the US dollar any time soon. I think it has a long way to go to the upside. The Swedish krona could do relatively well too, as a safe haven for capital flight from the eurozone. My worry for Sweden is that a sharply rising currency, combined with weakening demand, will kill their manufacturing sector. All exporters face this scenario. Trade dependency is dangerous at this point.

As for the Swedish banking crisis, that occurred in isolation. Resolving it cost Sweden about 4% of GDP and they moved on. Today, however, they have a huge housing bubble, debt to GDP of some 350% and a major export dependency. Sweden is in trouble going forward.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6313
davefairtex,

I think the spreads are going to blow out over the next few months. Spreads wax and wane, reflecting the tug-of-war of greed and fear, as if collective psychology were inhaling and exhaling over time. The apparent taking off of pressure is a temporary suspension of disbelief in the powers of the ECB, while hedging bets in the form of continued capital flight to the core. When that suspension of disbelief ends, the spreads will widen again. This time I am expecting record spreads to develop since the ECB already used the 'unlimited' word and has no back up plan for when the market calls its bluff this time.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6312
Viscount St Albans,

Prepping is big in the UK. See www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2240239/Armageddon-houses-Brit-preppers-stockpiling-food-weapons-preparation-end-world.html

I agree with your comment. I worry that warning people will become seen as dangerous and that those who wither warn or prepare will be demonized. This is one good reason to prepare as a community rather than alone. Solo preppers are far more likely to be targeted by the neighbours they left behind.

Psychology will be a crucial factor in what's coming. Things will be twisted in the blame game in order to target specific groups of people. Magical thinking will become more and more common, so that spurious connections will seem more plausible and baseless slurs will be more likely to stick. This will be a time of psyops. We will be dealing with the dark side of human nature. All the more reason to do everything we can to deprive movements of anger and fear of support and keep our focus on the constructive. The alternative is probably a period of brutal totalitarianism. Think 1984.
Posted: 6 months ago by davefairtex #6311
@nicole

The bond rate graph did show an astonishingly small interest rate differential between Greece and Germany during the salad days of the euro, that's for certain. And it did a great job showing "before", "during", and "after". The objection I had was only on the issue of trend analysis.

Which brings me to that question: where are things going next? Will spreads ultimately narrow, or will they widen further? The most current data shows that the pressure has come off substantially. Will that pressure relief continue, or not, that's the primary question.

Ok, I ran off and did some analysis.

Here's the thing. The ECB knows that this 10 year bond chart is what traders are watching like the entrail-reading Romans of old trying to divine the future of the zone. Looking at my new data for the entire zone, I see is that pressure has indeed come off the PIGS, quite dramatically, but money has not left the safe haven countries at all. In fact, all bonds everywhere have had their yields go down since mid-2012.

This is a curious pattern. One would expect if there was genuine relaxation and return to risk-taking in the peripheral nations, money would have moved OUT of the safe havens. But that's not what went on. Money has continued to pour into french and german long term bonds. That's the curious thing.

I'm tempted to put the blame on central bank buying. But I have no actual evidence, so I'll continue to poke around and see what comes up.
Posted: 6 months ago by gurusid #6310
Hi folks,

If you can get it this piece by the BBC on the "The Great Spanish Crash" ("This World" BBC2, 16th Dec 2012) its really interesting as it nails on the head all the points that TAE have raised over the last few years. It shows how Spain went from being a poor rural based economy under a dictatorship to what was at one stage the fastest growing economy on the planet (China beware). The regional banks lent vast sums to the local governments and to the local building industry to build a whole new country, including ghost towns and large white elephants like sports stadia and 'arts centres' - all little used. Now after the boom, the populace suffers 25% unemployment, (50% for under 25s), and is all but starving and ironically 'homeless'. Many survive on their grandparents pensions, currently being cut by austerity measures, and what vegetables they can grow on their allotments. One hilarious moment was when they described how the government tried a stimulus package by building more 'infrastructure' projects - talk about a one trick pony.

While it shows how the everyday people are trying to cope in the crisis by tragically trying to continue BAU (i.e. get non-existent jobs etc) and the government implements the most 'austere' austerity measures seen anywhere on the planet (as dictated by IMF etc) it shows the lack of any real initiative in facing the new paradigm: the end of growth and the reality of contraction. It also shows the reality of so called 'community' - it often leads to 'groupthink' on all sides of the crisis. One of the most poignant pieces was a pharmacist who had no medicines for her 'customers' as the government hadn’t paid her, showing the stark reality and depth of the crisis for many who rely on such medications.

Instead of trying to build a new way of life that is more resilient and reducing both ones expectations and needs (and especially wants), all everyone wants is a return to the boom years.

Also its worth noting that the debt curve in the debt/credit 2008 graph above starts its real upward sweep in the 70's just as the US domestic oil peaks. (Its also typical of an exponential function - see Albert Bartlett)

L,
Sid.
Posted: 6 months ago by Viscount St. Albans #6308
The Telegraph reports: Connecticut Shooter's Mother was a Survivalist Preparing for Economic Collapse.

[obvious editorial subtext]
Now we see where all this incessant doomsday thinking leads. It's time for the government to examine dark unfounded rumors of economic collapse propagating on the internet. Regulation is necessary. These dark visions are twisting the minds of citizens and their children.

www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/9749217/Connecticut-school-shooting-Adam-Lanzas-mother-was-preparing-for-disaster.html

Question: Why are they reporting this in Britain? Economic Doomerism = Extremism = Violence. A useful message for control.
Posted: 6 months ago by kcl6750 #6307
Sweden went through a "reform" process in the early 90's . They CUT spending AND taxes and guess what ? They do not have a debt crisis, serious inflation, or high unemployment ! As an investor I am thinking its time to get out of $ and into Swedish Kroeners. Even the Costa Rican colone is holding steady against the $ and, in fact , has strengthened recently. 6 month CDs in colones pay close to 10% vs 0 in US $ with little or no FX risk and are backed by the full faith and credit of the Costa Rican government. I am thinking of starting a new MMkt fund here and calling it the Banana Republic MMkt Fund. This would be funny if it were not true, but sadly it is true ! The US $ is fast becoming a joke ! Even drug dealers in Colombia are reluctant to take payment in $ ! What does that tell you?
Posted: 6 months ago by jal #6306
We had 30 years of demand stimulus, and we can expect (IMO) at least 10 years of demand contraction, and quite possibly longer (although I would expect fluctuation and cycles with that overall contraction). A demand undershoot is on the cards - ie demand decreases at least to below what it was when our expansion began in the early 1980s.


Darn!!!
That 10 year will probably coincide with the end of my life cycle.

Then, there will be a new and different social/economic environment.

Hopefully, my gran-son will have been prepared.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6305
Chrissie,

The expansion phase of a bubble artificially stimulates demand. People have more purchasing power (credit), so they demand additional goods and services. Other people set up businesses to supply those goods and services. When the expansion ends, credit is no longer available, so the stimulus disappears. Not only do we see no new business creation or growth, but as credit contracts, the existing businesses have to compete for sharply reduced demand (on the withdrawl of credit). A wave of consolidation ensues as there is too little demand to go around.

This is only the beginning for larger scale contractions though (as opposed to mere business cycle recessions). In larger contractions, credit can almost disappear, and asset price collapse. The leveraged bets placed on asset price appreciation go bad and go into default. The money supply (money plus disappearing credit) contracts sharply. Demand for everything falls very sharply.

For a period, there is almost no demand at all, so many suppliers go out of business. We see negative growth, falling asset values and falling demand for many years. Even the price of essentials is likely to fall initially, as people lack the money to purchase them and demand for them falls (temporarily).

We had 30 years of demand stimulus, and we can expect (IMO) at least 10 years of demand contraction, and quite possibly longer (although I would expect fluctuation and cycles with that overall contraction). A demand undershoot is on the cards - ie demand decreases at least to below what it was when our expansion began in the early 1980s.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6304
William,

I don't see it that way at all. Bankers are not far-sighted perceivers of oil fundamentals. Most haven't got a clue about energy issues. They are trying to make money today. They follow trends, not lead them.

Oil is not the primary driver to the downside - finance is, because finance is the operating system, and because changes in finance unfold so much more quickly than changes in the real economy.

In the 1930s we experienced a credit crunch even though oil (and everything else) was abundant at the time. This time the larger credit crunch will be exacerbated by resource shortages, but not immediately. For a while money will be in shorter supply than oil.
Posted: 6 months ago by stoneleigh #6303
davefairtex,

The point of the interest rates graph was really to look at trends - supposed risk equivalence that subsequently broke down. Spreads will expand and contract over time, depending on whether people are optimistic or pessimistic. At times of relative optimism, spreads narrow, and at times of heightened fear they blow out. I am expecting them to blow out again in the not too distant future.

There are different risk distinctions at play - core vs periphery of the eurozone, inside vs outside the eurozone, long term vs short term etc. I am expecting all these spreads to increase as the crisis deepens. Places perceived to be relative safe havens (like the US) end up being bought some time under this dynamic, while places perceived to be at most risk will be eaten alive by it.
Posted: 6 months ago by Glennda #6302
Here is an interesting bit on the home front in the US. Good charts even if I don't know how to give you real links.

He is giving a guess that things will tank in early to mid 2013.

www.oftwominds.com/blogdec12/2-charts12-12.html

Charles Hugh Smith
The Two Charts You Should See Before Risking a Dime in the Market in 2013 (December 17, 2012)


'As a lagniappe, there is a third pattern suggesting a major decline just ahead: Three Peaks and A Domed House Pattern Signals An End To The Bull Market.'

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