How to trade the xenophobia epidemic spreading across the world

If it’s at all possible to pinpoint one thing that is of paramount importance to business, it is the freedom of movement. If people are not allowed to move around, global trade collapses and the global economy collapses with it. Following with what started as restrictions on capital flows, which are bad enough, we seem to be at the beginning of a major scourge of government crackdowns on the freedom of movement of people, and this will only exacerbate the monetary troubles currently plaguing the global economy. A clear trend is developing and investors would be well to take notice.

The assault on freedom of movement is centering, of course, on the gambling industry. The two biggest industries with the most government intrusion are arguably banking and gambling. Government control of banking leads to capital controls and restrictions. Government control of gambling is now leading to restrictions on movement emanating from that sector. Yesterday, November 28th, the government of the Philippines executed a major crackdown on online gambling, detaining over 1,200 Chinese nationals suspected of running an online gambling ring out of an old US airforce base. China is obviously upset at this, as only the Chinese government should be allowed to harass its own citizens. States tend to get territorial when other people bully the subjects that they normally bully.

This is just the latest manifestation in a wave of crackdowns sweeping the world, not necessarily because of, but definitely in the spirit of, the election of Donald Trump, himself not at all a fan of freedom of movement in any sense. If governments all over the world were not in such an insular xenophobic mood, they’d find a reason to look the other way. Artificial laws are only there to be used when whoever is in charge is in a particularly sour frame of mind.

The crackdown in the Philippines follows the recent Chinese crackdown on Crown Resorts executives, not related to the Philippines but indicative of the global trend here. Three have finally been formally arrested as of November 22. As for the rest, still in the dark. Two days later, China decided to confiscate the passports of 23 million people in its Xinjiang region for who knows what reason, showing clearly that the spirit of Mao is alive and well in the capricious authoritarian “Republic”. 11 million of these people are Muslim Uighurs, but you don’t normally hear about Uighurs bothering anyone or doing anything but quietly living their own lives. What a threat. It just shows that Beijing is getting antsy, not entirely unrelated to the collapse of the yuan, which just broke through long term support at .146 yuan to the dollar. We’re now in no man’s land with the yuan, from a technical perspective. Monetary disorder tends to breed xenophobia and hyper nationalism. A monetary catastrophe is what preceded World War II, and may I go out on a limb here and say that mankind has never fought a war without an economic catalyst to set it off.