Shocks,
Webs, Liquidity & USDollar
Jim Willie
CB
Jim Willie CB is the editor of the "Hat Trick
Letter"
Mar 2, 2007
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Events in the last week have
certainly caused a stir. Just what precipitated the broad global
selloff. Was it the unwind of the Yen Carry Trade, a week delayed?
Was it only attributable to the Chinese and their more stern
stance against adolescent credit abuses in the Middle Kingdom?
Was it Al Greenspan's comments on an economic recession looming
near on the horizon? Was it caution on risk pricing in view of
the insane Iran vs USA posturing in the Persian Gulf? Was it
Goldman Sachs orchestration with collusion from Beijing, after
massive short positions were put in place? Were the GSax powers
motivated by the alarms going off in the gold and silver markets,
as gold neared $700 and silver passed $14? Methinks all the above,
never just one factor in an increasingly complex financial world.
The global markets have become a tangled web.
BANK OF JAPAN
Something smelled funny when
the Bank of Japan raised interest rates a week ago, yet the USDollar
rose, US rates remained quiescent, and the Japanese yen remained
moribund. Spin was critically woven by the financial media, that
the BOJ offered no forward indication on additional rate hikes.
These guys read from the same playbook apparently. Last year,
moronic spin was woven by the Euro Central Bank governors that
their first rate hike was not necessarily the beginning of a
fresh new rate tightening cycle. It was, of course.While the
financial system depends upon the cheap yen and the infinitesimal
cost of borrowing yen for a powerful speculative engine to operate
and provided the idle aristocratic wealthy their easy income
source, the Japanese economy must heed the inherent risk extended
from cheap money in torrents over years on end. My contention
(my gut) remains that the BOJ might hike again, but it will do
so very very gradually, in order to preserve the Yen Carry Trade.
The YCT stands as the primary perverse pillar to the global financial
system.
Harken back to June 2006. The
BOJ drained a mammoth 13.2% of yen money supply from the system
in preparation for their first rate hike in years, to a paltry
0.25% at that. The shock waves were real and palpable, as every
major stock market and especially the emerging stock markets
shuddered. Afterwards, the BOJ received a scolding, the US assisted
in a CPI doctoring episode (a specialty), and almost another
full year passed before the second BOJ rate hike came to pass.
More warning was given before this rate hike. For a time it looked
as though politicians in Tokyo would keep the BOJ on a short
leash. They might still keep BOJ governors on such a shortened
leash. The time until the next BOJ rate hike might not be closer
to a full year. Rising crude oil prices wield damage to their
economy more forcefully than most others, slowing it down naturally,
since they import 99% of their oil. One should note that the
Japanese economy is twice as energy efficient as the bloated
wasteful bulbous US Economy. My gut says the Japanese keep the
monetary spigot open wide, even with the current slightly higher
official 0.50% rate.
CHINESE CREDIT
When stocks go down hard, bonds
rally, the USDollar drops hard, but gold & silver are also
hit, the cause is usually not hard to discern. Massive liquidity
drains hit suddenly, taking money out of all long positions except
bonds. Safe haven is sought in bonds. Rarely is the initial cause
what is reported. This time it was the hard 9% hit endured in
Chinese stocks after pressures mounted to curb certain credit
abuse among investors. Even condo dwellers in China were borrowing
against their equity in order to invest in stocks! One would
think such stupidity is the sole province of witless steroid
driven Americans. Not so. The most obvious and immediate story
to point to as the cause was China. Therefore dismiss it as the
actual principal cause. We are approaching the June 2008 Summer
Olympic games though, but that date is still far off. Their expansion
continues. The showcase is not yet ready for prime time. One
must wonder if Goldman Sachs and the US Dept of Treasury won
some compromise from Beijing leaders in the vacuous empty Strategic
Dialog last late November. Perhaps GSax convinced the Chinese
leaders to be more careful with credit abuse in financial markets.
Perhaps GSax won a favor from the ICBC stock launch, and they
called in a favor in the form of scaring the bejesus out of financial
markets, just to keep them in check. It is difficult to properly
gauge the sequence of guided events, what with trade protection
ratcheting forward, big bank IPO launches occurring, banking
reform urged, currency controls pressed to be released slowly,
and a brand spanking new $200 billion official "kitty"
for investing the gigantic mammoth gargantuan $1 trillion Chinese
FOREX reserve account. Perhaps Chinese leaders want to go
on a buying spree with that $200 billion only after prices come
down on speculative investments. China is a maelstrom of
events. My gut says the Chinese keep the game going, since the
only constant, it seems, is an uneasy labor force eager to exit
rurals and enter urbans in order to improve their lifestyles.
Few Americans fully appreciate this powerful political factor.
THE GOLDMAN FACTOR
One can find a safe bet, that
whenever gold flirts with the $700 mark, expect the unexpected.
Silver was leading the way, moving into the mid-$14 level. Gold
investors seem to require assurance to reinforce bravery. The
events this week undercut that built bravery. As a result, gold
and silver must climb a tougher wall of worry. My view regarding
gold and monetary policy (central bank rate decisions) and stock/bond
markets, against the backdrop of economic recession threats can
be stated here simply. If over the next several months, gold
fails to surpass $700, if silver fails to surpass $15, then we
will be treated to a whopper recession. Why? Because the USEconomy
has become driven by the financial sector in a truly bizarre
display of a sick perversion. This is more than a tail wagging
the dog. This is a goldman tail wagging a dog sled team. In order
to "control" gold, the powers must do irreparable harm
to the entire economic system. They will therefore only permit
little shocks. This accomplishes a concomitant fear factor to
assist in the control of the gold price. My sure bet is that
Goldman Sachs is behind the scenes working on the events this
week. With Alan Greenspan gone from behind the curtain, Gentle
Ben is not up to the task of pulling hidden levers. That job
goes to the Team Goldman. The gold price was issuing loud shrill
alarms. It will again, but fear must be quieted among the gold
players. They must conclude once again, and they will, that gold
will rise unless a painful recession is permitted from restricting
the monetary spigot. The US cannot restrict that spigot, since
its life blood is credit and not legitimate income from the manufacturing
or other tangible sector. My gut tells me that the phrase
"inflate or die" applies very aptly right now. The
powers know it, so they shocked the system. Rates must rise
in some global corners. Shocks might occur in other corners.
But the flow of money which is constantly reflected in the gold
price will remain brisk enough to lift that gold price. Is Goldman
playing games, exploiting the cheaper gold price for large new
long positions? Methinks probably yes.
MORTGAGE CANCER
An interesting new twist comes
to the interpretation of the single mortgage factor. Its acidic
effect on the bank balance sheets has begun to do harm, just
as my forecast has explained for a year. On the one hand, lower
mortgage rates are needed in pressing fashion. The housing market
needs lower rates, but that will not save it since the 2004 and
2005 years witnessed lending abuse never seen before in modern
history. On the other hand, the bank distress highlights the
pressing need for continued liquidity accommodation so as to
compensate for the mortgage distress. THEY CANNOT LET THE BANK
DISTRESS SPREAD. So easy money will continue. The US money supply
is on track to rise 10% this year, a shocking number reminiscent
of a Weimar stench. My gut tells me that banks will demand rampant
accommodation critically needed to stave off a crisis. That crisis
is hidden from view, visible only to the laundry expert technicians
converting mortgage backed securities (MBS), whose bonds have
contracted serious cancer. The metastasis process took a couple
years, once the system took root of the subprime adjustables
and negative amortization ARMs and no-doc loans and liar's loans
and other goony baroony contracts offered by bank officers in
their last gasp to generate fees. Now those practices have generated
pink slips and massive bank losses. However, banks still hold
about 40% of the portfolios horribly damaged by past abuses.
The contagion fully denied will nonetheless continue to spread
like a putrid infection. Banks cannot survive with any actual
ongoing tightness over time. Delinquencies are high and growing
worse. Foreclosures are high and growing worse. Builder option
losses are high and growing worse. Job layoffs in the construction
sector are contained on the official government tallies, since
many workers are paid in cash, off the system, with a scad of
immigrants acting as laborers. Why? To do so is cheaper for contractors.
Dah!
A note on the mortgage banking
mess is overdue. THIS IS GREENSPAN'S BANK CRISIS, ONE HE BUILT,
URGED ALONG, EXTENDED FROM HIS DESPERATE DESIRE. Without the
housing bubble and linked mortgage finance colossus cancer, the
system would have broken down under his watch. He created a housing
bubble and bank metastasis in order to buy time and to exit town,
leaving Bernanke holding the bag. In time, this bank crisis will
bear the Greenspan label. Recall how he urged homeowners to refinance
to adjustable mortgages in order to reduce monthly costs.
HAMSTRUNG USFED
One good morsel from the recent
tumult has been the lower long-term interest rates. Systemic
distress, bank problems, housing debacle, destroyed stock perceived
wealth, these all conspire to make difficult any decision for
the US Federal Reserve to raise rates. In fact, they might lower
rates more easily, since the combined effect from things going
wrong runs interference for a rate cut. Gold would love such
a cut.
One development is hard to
digest. The Yen Carry Trade clearly is under a brief assault
here. But evidence of its unwind is a rising yen, a falling USDollar,
and rising long-term US bond yields. After all, it forces a sale
of the USTreasurys in US$ terms and a buyback of borrowed yen
loans. That has not happened. A queer curve ball has been delivered.
Some wonder if the repayment of other widespread US$-based loans
will actually lift the USDollar exchange rate. Don't count on
it. Usually US$-based loans are never repaid, but rather extended
further. Besides, the USDollar Bear Trade is not one single trade,
but rather a mixture of long gold or long crude oil or long euro
trades. As long as the US long-term bond yields grossly exceed
the Japanese, and as long as they are substantially higher than
Euro Bond yields, a carry trade will continue to exist and breathe.
The positive bond yield differential keeps the USDollar alive
with a bond speculator bid. THAT CANNOT BE TAKE AWAY, SINCE THE
BUCK DEMANDS IT. An occasional Bank of Japan rate hike must be
endured, for the integrity of Japan, no other reason. When the
Euro Central Bank hikes by another 25 basis points later in March,
the USDollar will be hit again, and gold will lift again. Maybe
the ECB will spin that rate hike as being the last. Don't count
on it. The recent shock wave has been convenient. It enables
gobs of money to seek safe haven in the USTBond complex, at a
time when the USDollar was droopy versus the important euro currency.
GOLD FRONT & CENTER
This here analyst expects gold
to rise admidst a number of cross currents. Gold will rise regardless
of negatives and with the support of positives. The money supply
growth will be relentless, especially given the credit problems
and bank debacle underway in its mortgage chambers. The systemic
price inflation will return to full gait upward, as energy prices
have revived, wage demands will persist (outside Detroit), and
an avalanche of liquidity inexorably works its way into the price
structures. The advent of Chinese trade protection seems on our
doorstep. With less importation will come higher permitted prices,
maybe even broad worker pay demands, perhaps even shortages which
always are accompanied by higher prices. My gut tells me that
gold rose in the past few months quietly and without attributable
reason, but in the next few months the list of reasons why will
grow to be well understood.
IRAN WILD CARD
Lastly, the Iran wild card
cannot be dismissed. A casual observer might believe the United
States Military eagerly desires an incident, even with loss of
US soldier lives, provided a cause for war is achieved with Iran,
for some greater good not easily understood. So far Tehran has
not bitten the bait. In the wings is Russia, quietly in control
of European energy supply and eyeing its odd bedfellows among
the ruling mullahs. Hidden in the hills and along the shore of
the Persian Gulf are oodles of Sunburn missiles, supplied by
Russia, installed by Iran, aimed at US warships. The Sunburn
is one generation ahead of the Tomahawk Cruise missile in the
US arsenal, capable of evasive maneuvers. This qualifies as a
tinderbox. The fuse is uncertain. The gold price could only love
the shrill of geopolitical tensions. We are witnessing reckless
boys playing near the gasoline station without adult supervision.
These are boys with a long record of lying, who like to blow
things up and prefer to pilfer under the cloud of confusion.
Too bad the United Nations is such a pathetically weak parental
figure!
THE HEADACHE
If all this gives you a headache,
you are not alone. Rest assured that unless a global recession
led by the crippled USEconomy is desired, gold will thrive in
the months ahead. The gold price reflects the abuse of money,
and in order to prevent a meltdown on the financial side and
on the economic side and within the banking arena, money must
flow briskly so as to conceal the damage and to fill the gaps,
not to mention restore the losses by insiders on Wall Street.
Gold will only falter persistently if the entire system crashes
after permitting it to crash. As long as clownish desperate central
banks are on the job, at the controls, you can count on monetary
inflation. Printing money and perverting the statistics is
what they do best. They live to inflate tomorrow's bubble in
order to become heros once again. They act as accident event
underwriters of last resort in today's accident ridden world.
Their jobs will not go away. Gold took a hit as it danced
next to the $690 line, but it is stabilizing above the $660 line.
That is not a bad place to rest and recover and regroup for the
next skirmishes. Fires rage everywhere one turns. Gold rises
from the heat.
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Mar 1, 2007
Jim Willie CB
Jim Willie CB is the editor of the "HAT
TRICK LETTER"
email: jimwilliecb@aol.com
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Jim Willie CB
is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail forecasting.
He holds a PhD in Statistics. His career has stretched over 26
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