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The story of Halloween goes back over
2000 years to the ancient Celts. Druidic priests regarded October 31st as the
end of the year. Not only was it their day for celebrating the year's
harvest, but also a festival for honoring the dead.
In order to appease the wandering spirits that they believed roamed at night,
the Celtic priests made fires in which they burned sacrifices, made charms,
and cast spells.
As they danced
around the fires, the season of the sun passed and the season of darkness
would begin. As Halloween 2007 approaches, traders in the global money
markets are betting that Federal Reserve chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke will sacrifice the US dollar with another rate
cut, in order to cast a magic spell over Wall Street.
But if "B-52" Ben delivers
another big-bang, a half-point rate cut to 4.25%, it might unleash a cadre of
evil spirits, ghosts, and demons that would haunt the US dollar to its
graveyard.
The US housing slump, already the most
severe in more than a decade, has taken another turn for the worse, and has
convinced the vast majority of global currency, commodity, and stock market
operators that the Fed will opt for a small 0.25% rate cut on Halloween eve. The
Bernanke Fed shocked the global markets on Sept
18th, with a half-point rate cut to 4.75%, justifying the aggressive cut as a
pre-emptive strike, to keep the credit
crunch from toppling a faltering US economy.
US sales of previously owned homes and
condos fell 8% in September to a record low of 5.04 million annual units,
amid tighter lending standards, and a meltdown in BBB sub-prime mortgage debt to
25 cents on the dollar. The slower pace of sales drove the inventory of
unsold homes to 4.40 million, representing a 10.5-month supply, the highest
since 1999. The national median existing home price for both single-family
and condos dropped 4.2% from a year ago to $211,700.
Guru "Easy" Al Greenspan, the
"godfather" of the sub-prime mortgage
crisis, said on Sept 16th, he would not be surprised if US home
prices fell by double-digits into 2008. A fall in home prices on that scale
would be unprecedented in US
history. US residential
real estate has an aggregate value of about $21 trillion, and is the single
biggest source of US
household wealth. If home prices fall 15%, it could wipe out $3 trillion of
household wealth, and deal a huge blow to consumer spending.
A double-digit decline in US home
prices could also spark big job losses. Construction employment fell about
15% in both the 1990's and 1980's recessions, and it dropped 18% in the
recession of the mid-1970's. In each case, the
sector's declines were far steeper than job losses in the overall economy,
and the recovery took longer. About 7.6 million Americans workers are
employed by construction companies, so a 15% decline would translate into the
loss of 1 million jobs. Building permits fell 7.3% to an annual rate of 1.23
million in Sept, the slowest pace since the March 1995.
Last Friday, the yield on the US
Treasury's 2-year note plunged to 3.78%, the lowest in two years, discounting
Fed rate cuts of 50 basis points to 4.25% by year's end. The Bernanke Fed is slashing the fed funds rate at a time of
extreme hyper-inflation in the global commodities markets, with crude oil
hovering near $92 /barrel, gold eyeing $800 /oz, and soybeans above $10
/bushel. The US dollar is skidding to record lows, making a sham of the US
Treasury's "strong dollar" mantra.
Old timers can remember the days when
central bankers would respond to higher commodity and oil prices by lifting
interest rates, to keep inflation in check. But in today's world, global
central bankers are addicted to double-digit money supply growth, in order to
inflate their economies to prosperity. The net result is the onset of
"Hyper-Inflation"
that is fueling near parabolic rallies in many
commodity and stock markets, and sea-borne shipping rates are up 150% this
year.
In his first year as Fed chief, Mr Bernanke tried to shed his dovish feathers by hiking the
fed funds rate 75 basis point to 5.25% by June 2006. "The Fed will be
vigilant to insure that the recent pattern of elevated monthly core inflation
readings is not sustained. The Fed must continue to resist any tendency for
increases in energy and commodity prices to become permanently embedded in
core inflation," Bernanke said on June 5,
2006, trying to reincarnate himself as a wise old owl.
But a year later, on July 10th, 2007, Bernanke was reverting back to his natural self, arguing
that the historic rise in crude oil and agricultural commodities were just
speculative bubbles, and not worthy of consideration, when calculating
inflation pressures within the economy. "If inflation expectations are
well anchored, swings in volatile energy and food
prices should have relatively little influence on core inflation," Bernanke told the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Bernanke
also told the NBER that the "monetary aggregates do not have a special
role in the formulation of US
monetary policy because "our experience has shown a relatively weak
relationship between money and inflation and money and output." He also
said "monetary policy was not a good tool to pop inflated asset
prices," yet Bernanke has no problem with
propping up the stock market with rate cuts.
The MZM money supply is a preferred
measure of the US
money supply by economists, because it represents money readily available
within the economy for spending and consumption. It's a mixture of all the
liquid and zero maturity money, included in M1 plus institutional and retail
money market funds, less small time deposits. Since the Fed halted its rate
hike campaign in August 2006, the annual growth rate of MZ has tripled from
4% to 11.8% last week.
Yet on Sept 27th, Fed governor Frederic Mishkin was boasting that, "Inflation has come down
in the old-fashioned way. Tighter monetary policy and a commitment to price
stability by central banks throughout the world have led to lower inflation
and an anchoring of inflation expectations," he declared. On Sept 11th, Mishkin said the "Gold was not a particularly useful
indicator of inflation expectations," while yellow metal was breaking
thru the psychological $700 /oz barrier.
One reason behind the US Treasury's
devaluation of the dollar is to boost US exports overseas, and offset the
drag on the economy from weaker home prices. US
exports hit a record high of $138 billion in August, and helped to reduce the
US
trade deficit to $57.5 billion in August, from a record shortfall of $67
billion in July 2006. Still, crude oil has spiked $20 per barrel higher since
August, which will widen the deficit again. To finance its
external deficits, the US
must attract $2.1 billion per day, or watch the dollar fall under its own
weight.
The Bernanke
Fed's addiction to monetizing the stock market and cheapening the US dollar
has some interesting side effects. Each Fed rate cut has translated into
higher gold and oil prices, which fuels inflationary psychology worldwide. Yet
the Bernanke Fed escapes criticism from the
mainstream media for destroying the purchasing power of the greenback. Instead,
the mainstream media accepts doctored-up inflation statistics, fashioned by
government apparatchniks as gospel.
It enables the Bernanke
Fed to argue that inflation is under control, while it turns up the money
printing presses at full speed. However, Gold bugs and crude oil traders are
not easily duped by the government's propaganda, making life difficult for
the Fed. Now, the Wall Street Journal is running a last minute article,
casting doubt about the inevitability of a Fed rate cut on Oct 31st, citing
"anonymous" sources, to spark a shakeout of overextended and
overzealous commodity bulls.
Tokyo
Warlords Repeat the "Big Lie"
"If you tell a lie big enough and
keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be
maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the
political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes
vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent,
for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the
truth is the greatest enemy of the State," remarked Nazi propaganda
chief Joseph Goebbels,
the master of the "big lie" tactic.
For the past eight months, Tokyo apparatchniks have repeatedly told the big lie. Japan is the
world's largest food importer and fourth largest oil importer, yet the
Japanese government says consumer prices are 0.1% lower today, than a year
ago. Tokyo's fuzzy math indicates that Japan is the
only place on earth that is not feeling the pinch of soaring commodity and
sea borne shipping rates.
Contrary to the government's "big
lie" however, the price of crude oil in yen terms is up 44% from a year
ago, soybeans are up 42%, and the Baltic Dry Index, which measures the cost
of shipping dry goods by sea, is up 250% from a year ago, for local
importers. Yet on Sept 7th, Bank of Japan deputy Toshiro Muto said,
"There is not yet any evidence of inflationary pressure in the
economy."
Propaganda artist Goebbells
used to say, "Think of the media as a great keyboard on which the
government can play," and no one does it better than Tokyo's warlords,
who provide the central bank with the necessary political cover to keep its
interest rates pegged at an abnormally low 0.50%, spawning the $1.05 trillion
"yen carry" trade, which inflates global commodity and stock markets
worldwide.
But Tokyo gold traders have seen thru the
government's "big lie", lifting gold prices to 90,000-yen per ounce
last night, up 100% from two years ago. On August 23rd, Mr Fukui acknowledged
that the BoJ's ultra-low interest rates are fueling global inflation, "If market players come to
think the BOJ will keep rates at a low level that deviates from economic
conditions that would prompt them to tilt risks excessively and create
distortions in asset markets," he said.
On Oct 11th, with Tokyo
gold hovering around 85,000-yen /oz, Fukui
acknowledged, "While the official consumer price index is barely moving,
there is a chance the public's perception on prices is changing
significantly," he said. Yet Fukui has
ruled out a rate hike for the rest of this year, with Japan's
economy flirting with recession.
Japanese gold traders see a world beset
by hyper-inflation, but Japanese bond traders have adopted the government's
"big lie," about deflation, and are locking up yields at 1.60% for
the next ten years. When the 10-year JGB yields tried to climb above key
resistance at 2% last summer, BoJ chief Fukui
jawboned them lower, "The recent movements in long-term rates are very
problematic, so we need to watch them closely," (the code words for
market intervention), Fukui warned.
Group of Seven calls for Stronger
Chinese Yuan
With the US dollar tumbling to historic
lows across the globe, and a Global "Oil Shock", unfolding in the
background, currency traders were interested to find out if the "Group
of Seven" finance ministers and central bankers could set aside their
differences and agree to a rescue package for the greenback. Instead, the G-7
and kept its standard line, "excess volatility in currencies is
undesirable and they should trade in line with fundamentals," a tactic
acceptance of a weaker dollar.
Traders understand this riddle to mean
that the G-7 accepts an orderly devaluation of the US dollar, while the Bank
of Japan is still allowed to manipulate the yen. The G-7 accounts for
two-thirds of the $53 trillion world economy and includes the US, UK,
Japan, Germany, Italy,
France and Canada. But
the G-7 called for an "accelerated appreciation of the Chinese yuan" as Europe and Canada
joined the US,
calling it grossly undervalued and threatening their trade balances.
China's
trade surplus is expected to reach $250 billion this year, as exports surge
to $1.2 trillion and imports grow to $950 billion, the Xinhua
news agency reported on October 28th. Total volume of foreign trade could
exceed $2.1 trillion, up 20% over last year, and could rise another 15% to
$2.4 trillion in 2008, Xinhua said. China's trade
surplus of $185.6 billion in the first nine months of 2007,
exceeded the record surplus of $177.5 billion for all of 2006.
Su Ning, vice
governor of the People's Bank of China (PBoC), signaled a further tightening of monetary policy in the
weeks ahead. "We will continue leaning toward moderate tightening. We
will enhance economic control efforts at appropriate times to ensure money
supply and credit growth remains stable," Su said. China's economy
expanded at a 11.5% annual rate in the third quarter and consumer price
inflation in September slowed to 6.2%, not far from a 10-year of 6.5% in
August.
China's
one-year deposit rate is 3.87% is slightly below the US$ Libor
rate of 4.64%. But another PBoC rate hike, coupled
with Fed rate cuts, could narrow the gap towards zero percent, and attract
more hot money to the Chinese yuan. Last night, the
yuan jumped 0.3% to 7.475 against the dollar, its
biggest daily gain since its July 2005 revaluation, which might indicate the PBoC is responding to G-7 pressure for faster
appreciation to help curb its money supply growth.
In Hong Kong, forward traders are
betting the US$ will fall below the psychological 7.0-yuan level within
12-months, or 6.5% below the dollar's current level in the spot market, to
address the yawning trade imbalance between Europe and the US. China's
foreign currency reserves rose by $367.3 billion in the first nine months of
this year, to a record $1.434 trillion in the third quarter, already
exceeding last year's increase of $247.3 billion. The PBoC
inflates its M2 money supply at a 18.5% annualized
rate to sop up the tidal wave of money flowing into the country.
US$ Tumbles to 10-year Low against
Korean won
The US dollar also fell to 907.10 Korean
on Monday, it's lowest since Sept 1997, on
expectations for Fed rate cuts in the months ahead. In a surprise move, the
Bank of Korea (BoK) hiked its overnight loan
rate 0.25% to 5.00% on August 9th, a week before the Bernanke
Fed shocked the global markets, by slashing its discount rate by a half-point
to 5.75%. Traders expect Seoul
to intervene to slow the dollar's descent.
Early this month, the Korean Ministry of
Finance and Economy said it lost 26 trillion won in 2006, by trying to slow
the dollar's decline through intervention, up from a loss of 17.8 trillion
won a year earlier. The government has sustained the loss through its
operation of a foreign exchange
stabilization fund, a kind of money pool raised by issuing currency stabilization
bonds at yields of 5.10% today.
Korean banks are raising interest rates
on savings deposits to attract more funds as a growing number of depositors
are taking money out of banks and into brokerage accounts for speculation in
gold and Kospi blue chips. The average one-year
bank deposit rate reached 5.28% last month, up from 5.11% a month earlier, to
its highest level since July 2001. Kookmin Bank
said it will offer a deposit product next month, which provides over 6%
interest income per year.
That would put the US$ at a huge
interest rate disadvantage against the Korean won, and traders could soon
test the resolve of the Ministry of finance to defend the dollar at the
psychological 900-won rate. Still, Seoul
may acquiesce to a stronger won to help deflect the spiraling
cost of crude oil. South
Korea imports 900 million barrels of crude
oil a year, which means a rise of $10 /barrel would increase the cost of oil
imports by additional $9 billion, inflicting a huge burden on manufacturers.
Bernanke Fed
Transmits Inflation to Persian Gulf
The Bernanke
Fed is expanding the growth rate of the US M3 money at a 15% annualized clip,
its fastest in history, and creating headaches for Persian Gulf central
bankers, who are pegging their currencies to the US dollar. In order to
maintain a stable dollar peg with the Kuwaiti dinar
and the Saudi riyal, Gulf central bankers have been forced to accelerate the
growth rate of their money supply to prevent the dollar from collapsing under
its own weight.
Last year, as a result of sharply higher
oil prices, Saudi Arabia's
income soared to $194 billion, and the kingdom posted a $95 billion surplus
in its balance of payments account, while Kuwait had a $50 billion surplus.
That's in sharp contrast to the US, which ran an $840 billion
external deficit. With the Bernanke Fed slashing
the fed funds rate below Persian Gulf rates,
traders are wondering if the dollar pegs might become unglued against the dinar and riyal, to stave off inflation at home.
Kuwait's
central bank allowed the US dollar to slip to a new 19-year low point of
0.27720 dinar this week, a devaluation of 0.14
percent. The currency of the Middle East's
fourth-largest oil exporter has risen 4.3% since May 19th, when the Kuwaiti
central bank dropped its crawling peg to the US dollar and adopted a basket
of currencies. Kuwait
buys more than a third of its imports in euros, which are becoming
increasingly expensive, and pushing inflation to 4.5%, a 12-year high.
In reaction to the Bernanke
Fed's decision to lower the fed funds rate 0.50% to 4.75%, Kuwait's
central bank cut its repo by 50 basis points to
4.75% on Sept 19, after lowering the repo rate by
25 basis points to 5.25% on Sept. 12. But lower Kuwaiti interest rates can
lead to an acceleration of its M3 money supply, which is 19% higher from a
year, and threatening higher inflation.
Saudi Arabia's
central bank has usually tracked interest-rate moves by the Fed to maintain
the riyal's peg to the US$.
Saudi Arabia's
repo rate is targeted at 5.50%, but the central
bank did not match the Fed rate cut to 4.75% last month. That left Saudi Arabia's
repo rate 75 basis points higher than the fed funds
rate, compared to an average spread of 36 basis points between the two rates
over the last 15 years.
"The Saudi riyal's peg to the US
dollar will remain unchanged," declared Hamad
Al-Sayari, governor of the Saudi Arabian Monetary
Agency (SAMA) on October 28th, after a meeting with GGC central bankers. Riyadh is inflating its
M3 money supply at an 18.8% annualized clip, to keep the dollar from tumbling
against the riyal. But explosive Saudi money supply growth could ignite
faster inflation towards a 6% rate in a matter of months, according to local
economists.
Explosive money supply growth did revive
Saudi demand for gold, which rose to 42.5 tons in Q'2 of 2007, up 30% from
32.6 tons a year earlier. Global traders are always interested to know how Kuwait, the United
Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia are investing their
"oil windfall." The three oil-rich kingdoms held an estimated $1.55
trillion in foreign assets as of May 31st, exceeding China's $1.43
trillion FX stash.
OPEC is likely to discuss creating a
basket of currencies for pricing its oil basket at its Nov 11th summit, said Venezuela's
Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez on Oct 26th. "The need to establish a
basket of currencies will probably be a point of discussion in the next OPEC
summit. The dollar as a benchmark currency has been weakening quite a lot and
it creates distortions in oil markets," Ramirez said.
Central Bankers dumbfounded by Global
Oil shock
OPEC's oil income is mushrooming to new
heights this year, after US
crude oil prices surged a record high of $93.68 /barrel on Oct 29th, up 30%
since the Bernanke Fed put the US dollar's
devaluation in motion. "Speculation and geopolitics are still ruling the
market," said Libya's
hawkish oil chief Shokri Ghanem
on Oct 29th. "OPEC's role is very limited now. We already agreed to
increase the production 500,000 bpd from November 1st. I don't know what else
OPEC can do at this time," he said.
Central bankers have poured massive
doses of cash into financial markets to ease a liquidity crisis, sparked by
the sub-prime debt debacle. The Bank of Japan offers near zero percent yen
loans for global speculators. Much of the money has found its way into crude
oil futures, commodities, and emerging markets, while the US Treasury and
Federal Reserve have engineered a US dollar
devaluation.
"We're beginning to see this
extraordinary period of disinflation and economic growth is coming to a
halt," said former Fed chief Greenspan on October 2nd. "We now have
to be very sensitive to the fact that inflationary pressures could well get
out of hand. The trade-off between inflation and growth has become more
negative," and he added that Mr Bernanke was
likely to have a tougher job than he did.
And just as the US dollar fell to new
lows against the Euro, Mexico's
state-owned oil company Pemex said it was shutting
about 600,000 bpd of oil output due to bad weather in the Gulf
of Mexico. The shutdown comes at a bad time, with US oil
inventories tumbling to 317 million barrels, or 6% lower than a year ago,
leaving little margin of error for unexpected supply disruptions from Iraq or
Nigeria.
ECB Signals baby-step Rate hike to
counter Inflation
While the Bernanke
Fed is lowering interest rates and pouring more gasoline on the flames of
global inflation, the European Central Bank is gathering up a tiny bit of
courage, and telegraphing a quarter-point rate hike to 4.25% in the weeks
ahead. "In Europe, there are upside
risks to price stability related to the evolution of food prices and crude
oil, along with the possibility that salaries and corporate profits are
growing with more dynamism than we expected, in a context of high-capacity
utilization," said ECB member Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo
on Oct 29th.
"In the current environment,
monetary policy must not allow inflation developments to influence long-term
expectations. To achieve this, we will do what is necessary and required to
ensure price stability for the medium term," warned Bundesbank
chief Axel Weber on Oct 30th. "We will do what is necessary to counter
inflation risks. It is too early to dismiss the need for a future monetary
policy response," he said.
The ECB has stood motionless for the
past several months however, watching in a state of utter disbelief, as the
price of North Sea Brent climbed 20% in euro terms, while soybeans moved 16%
higher. On Oct 19th, Bundesbank chief Axel Axel Weber was still in a state of denial about the
historic rise in crude oil prices. "I assume that a part of the oil
price development will normalize. You shouldn't see the current movement of
oil prices as being permanent," he suggested.
Weber noted that high oil prices contain
"a double risk, both increasing inflation and slowing growth. If the oil
price continues to be high that would dampen growth very much. We should
watch the development with great vigilance, but there is no reason for
exaggeration," he said. ECB central bankers are typically too slow to
react to market signals, and don't engage in pre-emptive strikes against
inflation.
The ECB has decided to live with a
stronger Euro to help dampen the cost of imported energy and raw materials. Still,
the surge in global commodities has been so powerful, that food and energy
prices are moving swiftly higher in euro terms. Yet even if the ECB carries
out its token threat of a miniscule quarter-point rate hike to 4.25%, it's
unlikely to offset the stimulus of Fed rate cuts.
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Mr Dorsch worked on the trading floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for nine
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the LNS Financial Group.
As a
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He wrote a weekly
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