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Welcome to the Weekly Report. Due to family illness, this week's letter will
be shorter than usual but all the more powerful. This week we re-visit the
scenario used for the Occasional Letter series as another milestone is passed.
The Scenario:
bubble, easy money, inflation in fiat money supply, inflation in commodities
and hard assets, inflation, fear of inflation, rising rates, YC inverting,
flattening, rising and inverting again, tightening, withdrawal of liquidity,
corrections, crashes, talk of stagflation, FEAR, withdrawal of speculative
funds, further corrections and crashes, demand collapse.....Deflation.
I wrote the above scenario many years ago. My only regret was that I didn't
write it more clearly. It was not written as a linear listing of events, it
was meant to show an interactive series of events that run parallel to each
other. These events overlap, some are a reaction to others but they all move
in the same direction. Let me attempt to show you how I "see" this. I am going
to quantify the various factors that make the scenario and measure them on
a time line. This will give us a visual representation of the various strands.
The relationships on the chart are important, not the numerical value.

Don't worry about whether you think EZ money should be a higher value, that's
not what I want you to see. Instead think of the trends and how they relate
to each other. The diagram displays the historical as well as the future trend.
Right now I see a post bubble, low interest rate environment, where EZ money
is disappearing as credit contracts. Funds have poured into commodities as
unstable stock markets and topped out bond markets make traditional investment
havens unattractive. Meanwhile money, real paper and coinage, continues to
slow and contract as the real economy suffers.
Which brings us to the milestone. Current interest rates are not reflective
of current circumstances. Think of the attractiveness of assets and their returns.
Commodities are currently appreciating in capital, prices are rising but they
do not pay a dividend or a yield. We have been here before and not that long
ago, last time it was tenuous promises of dot.com companies, this time its
hard and soft commodities. The "attractiveness" measure of assets is about
to change.
The IMF issued a downbeat report on the UK economy earlier this week. Whilst
it is country specific, its relevance to other similar economies cannot be
ignored, especially the US. (The latest IMF report on the US - http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2007/cr07264.pdf is
incredibly inaccurate even though it is less than a year old)
Here are the paragraphs that interested me:
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7. Three elements can help respond to these broader challenges.
8. First, continued moderation in nominal earnings growth is essential.
If secured even in the face of relative price changes, monetary adjustment
and associated sterling depreciation may reduce risks to output, the external
balance, and employment without compromising the nominal anchor. But if
not, monetary flexibility to address these concerns will be diminished.
9. The risks to nominal wages appear balanced. So far, nominal remuneration
has held steady, encouraged by the flexibility of labor market institutions
and public sector pay restraint. But key wage settlements remain outstanding,
and tolerance for continued low real earnings growth is uncertain.
10. In this context, we see no scope for further near-term monetary easing
absent assurances of continued wage moderation, fiscal policy that is tighter
than planned, or signs that house price and credit developments are significantly
curbing domestic demand, relative to our central case projection for continued
growth. Indeed, given the risks to the nominal anchor, monetary policy
should stand ready to tighten at the earliest clear signs of emergent nominal
wage inflation.
11. Second, as the commodity and consequent relative price shocks have
a permanent element, the appropriate focus of the policy response is fiscal.
In this context, budget consolidation should rebalance demand-away from
domestic in favor of external-to the benefit of the current account balance,
activity, and employment.
13. Third, efforts to stabilize financial markets remain essential. This
will not only reduce lagged effects on credit flows from past strains,
but will reduce remaining tail risks and support more efficient pricing
of risk in future.
There is no respite for the UK consumer. If inflation pressures remain.....
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Mick P (Collection Agency)
About
Collection Agency
An Occasional Letter From The Collection Agency In association with Live
Charts UK.
For some years now I have written an ongoing letter, using macro-economics,
to try and peer into the economic future 6 to 18 months ahead. The letter was
posted on a financial bulletin board to allow others discuss its topic.The
letter contains no recommendations to buy or sell, indeed I leave that to all
the other letters out there and to the readers own judgement. The letter is
designed to make us all think about what may be coming, what macro trends are
occurring and how that will affect future trends and how those trends will
filter down to everyday life and help spot weak or strong areas to focus on
for trading or investing.
To contact Michael or discuss the letters topic E Mail mickp@livecharts.co.uk.
Copyright © 2006-2009 Mick P
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