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Merk Insights provide the Merk Perspective on
currencies, global imbalances, the trade deficit, the socio-economic impact
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We have been warning for some time that "there is no such thing as a safe
asset anymore, you have to take a diversified approach to something as mundane
as cash." Unfortunately, the current crisis shows that we may be right.
Physical gold is attractive to many investors because of its lack of counter
party risk. The only counter party risk with gold held in your personal vault
is that someone may break in and steal it. However, even staunch gold bugs
rarely hold all their net worth in gold, but diversify if for no other reason
that it is impractical to have essentially all your net worth in gold. And
while gold is currently fulfilling its role as sound money, it often trades
in tandem with other commodities; this can result in stomach-twisting volatility.
As a result, many hold gold as insurance, but few truly live on their personal
gold standard.
In late 2006, we forecast the ensuing surge in volatility to unwind the unprecedented
credit expansion that had taken place in the previous years (please
click here for past Merk Insights). When the crisis first started, we argued
that the markets dealt with a valuation, not a liquidity crisis: financial
institutions were unwilling to sell off assets on their books out of fear of
jeopardizing their capital ratios. By now, the valuation crisis has morphed
into a liquidity crisis where financial institutions don't trust one another;
inter-bank lending is grinding to a halt. The business model of most commercial
banks consists of borrowing short-term funds to provide long-term loans; if
short term funding is not available, central banks step in as the lender of
last resort. Consumers, investment banks, large corporations, municipalities
and states alike have realized that they do not have a central bank as a lender
of last resort; when short-term funding dries up, they may have to file for
bankruptcy protection even if they are otherwise financially sound. Quite simply,
unless one can afford the risk of not obtaining refinancing, we believe long-term
projects ought to be financed with long-term loans.
Accessing the lender of last resort for overnight funding requirements is
generally frowned upon. Banks that may need to access the Federal Reserve (Fed) "discount
window" or one of its new short-term facilities tend to reign in their lending
activities to hoard cash; this is motivated by a desire to rebuild the balance
sheet so that at some point reliance on the Fed may no longer be necessary.
Similarly, if they were to access the interbank lending market at what is currently
a very high rate, they would eventually have to pass on the elevated cost of
borrowing to their customers. This makes credit availability "tight"; in a
credit driven society, this is bad for economic growth. Hoarding cash to rebuild
your balance sheet quickly becomes a habit - just as the Japanese or those
who are still around to have experienced the Great Depression. A depression
is not merely a severe recession; it is a state of mind.
Because of these concerns, policy makers want to jump start credit markets,
especially short-term money markets, at just about any cost. The Fed just announced
an increase of its Term Auction Facility (TAF) to over $900 billion; the TAF
effectively allows financial institutions to park a broad range of collateral
in return for cash with the Fed. The bailout plan approved in Congress tries
to be a tool in Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's "toolbox"; a coordinated
interest rate cut throughout the world may be applied with the same objective.
One should not underestimate the will of the Fed to throw money at the problem;
at the same time, the Fed has underestimated the markets' resilience to make
that money stick.
So far, efforts by policy makers have been ineffective. It appears that, at
least for now, central banks may be losing control of the situation as massive
liquidity injections are simply not enough to stabilize the credit markets.
Much of it is because, in our assessment, the Federal Reserve has been losing
valuable time by employing inefficient policy tools. Amongst them is that the
cutting of interest rate had been mostly ineffective while we had a valuation,
not a liquidity problem; now as we have a liquidity problem, the Fed has less
ammunition. Similarly, the $700 billion bailout approved in Congress may be
ineffective if it is not used to improve the capitalization of financial institutions,
but merely replaces bad assets with good assets; this move may be helpful,
but is not enough. Again, valuable ammunition is wasted should, to name potential
challenges ahead, the credit continue to be seized up; should the automotive
and airline sectors deteriorate further; should the anger in public increase
and the mood in Congress to reach constructive solutions worsen; or should
the consumer slide further into recession.
The implications of all of this heavily depend on how governments interfere
in the markets. Without interference, only the strongest institutions may survive.
That's why the large U.S. financial institutions, in particular JP Morgan,
Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo have experienced substantial inflows
in recent weeks, at the cost of small banks. To stem the flow out of small
institutions, Congress has increased FDIC insurance. In Europe the same trend
can be observed with HSBC, Europe's largest bank, experiencing large inflows
- despite HSBC's exposure to the U.S. subprime market through its 2003 acquisition
of U.S. based Household International -, but many smaller or weaker institutions
experiencing outflows. European governments are scrambling to issue guarantees
for depositors to stem the tide; one may take note that many of these guarantees
only affect personal, not business accounts. There is the danger that governments
may not be strong enough to bail out their financial institutions. Iceland,
in particular, has seen not only a flight on its institutions, but also on
the currency; as the crisis deepens, there is the real fear that Iceland may
become insolvent. For the time being, Iceland is negotiating a loan from Russia
and is attempting to peg its currency; as of this writing, it is not sure whether
this will work as trading liquidity dried up as a result as the unofficial
exchange rate is about half of what the peg would suggest.
As most know by now, not all cash is the same. The U.S. government has taken
steps to shore up confidence by, for example, temporarily increasing the insurance
on FDIC insured deposits; or providing assurances on money market funds. Still,
we have seen brokers transfer units of money market funds rather than cash
for intra-broker transfers; this is a legitimate practice, but shows the strains
in the money markets. One safe alternative is the purchase of U.S. Treasury
Bills; the challenge is that the yield on a 4-week T-Bills is just above zero,
possibly negative after commissions. Given the volatility in the current markets,
it is possible to lose money if one needs to sell the T-Bills before they mature
should they drop in value. Recently, we were unable to buy a 3-month T-Bill
because the yield would have been negative. Imagine the strain on money market
funds that don't want to touch any commercial paper, but have to keep a stable
net asset value, after expenses. Many Treasury-only money market funds may
engage in overnight repurchase agreements; this may allow such money market
funds to get sufficient return to keep a stable net asset value after expenses,
but it is not what investors in these funds necessarily expect. To some, but
certainly not all, it may be reassuring to some that the government provides
a backstop to money market funds. Some opt to take the cash and put it under
their mattress, literally. In California, everyone is encouraged to keep an
emergency pack in case of an earthquake; why not also hold some cash and gold
coins just in case the financial system seizes up? Financial institutions are
hoarding cash, why shouldn't you? Please note that this is not investment advice,
but food for thought.
How will this play out? In recent days, there has been a flight to cash, U.S.
dollar cash. The violent deleveraging has accelerated and the only currencies
that have benefited from this are the Japanese yen and the U.S. dollar. The
U.S. dollar has returned, at least for the moment, to its safe haven status.
This has become a fairly common phenomenon in recent crisis, but did not necessarily
last; U.S. investors repatriate foreign investors in times of crisis; as a
second wave, they then decide how to deploy them. The challenge with holding
U.S. dollar cash is that it is also not without risk because one can never
underestimate just how determined the Federal Reserve is to get the credit
markets going. Fed Chairman Bernanke has been critical of how the Japanese
handled their banking crisis in the 1990s because they Bank of Japan was not
forceful enough in pre-empting the crisis. This is part of the reason the Fed
and the Treasury were pushing for the $700 billion bailout before the crisis
was felt on Main Street. Japan, unlike the U.S., however, does not have significant
foreign creditors; the U.S. is crucially dependent on foreigners to support
the currency. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were quasi-nationalized after foreigners
no longer bought these agency papers, causing a 94.5% drop in foreign investments
in the U.S. in the 2nd quarter. Foreign investments have since returned, but
foreigners have every right to be nervous on how the Treasury and the Fed steer
through the waters. In the latest developments, the Fed has indicated that
it will buy commercial paper directly; the initial positive reaction is that
this very targeted action does indeed help the commercial paper market; the
negative reaction is to the dollar that is reacting negatively.
In the meantime, fears about the European financial sector have increased.
Hypo Real Estate, a large German real estate company and DAX listed company,
would have collapsed had it not been for a government-orchestrated bailout.
A €30 billion rescue package hastily put together collapsed over the weekend
when an audit revealed that the short term funding requirements were substantially
higher. By Sunday night, a new rescue package was put together. In Europe,
not all cash is the same, either. The short-term money markets are seized up,
only government securities issued by select Northern European governments are
in demand; in Switzerland, for the second week in a row, T-Bills (other countries
also issue T-Bills in their domestic currencies) were issued with 0 yield,
resulting in a negative yield for any participant that had to pay commissions.
In our view, though, the European Central Bank (ECB) has been prudent in not
lowering interest rate to date; as of October 6, 2008, short-term rates have
remained at 4.25%. This gives the ECB far more ammunition than the Fed to help
the crisis. ECB President Trichet has re-iterated many times that they are
exclusively focused on price stability and will not lower rates merely because
of an economic slowdown. However, because interbank lending rates have soared,
the ECB now has substantial leeway. Just as Trichet said in 2004 that monetary
policy was not tight because credit was easily available, he can now lower
rates without causing inflation because - even with lower rates - access to
money is likely to remain relatively tight.
A major driver in all markets, including the currency markets, has been the
at times violent unwinding of leveraged positions held by hedge funds. Multi-billion
dollar hedge funds need to liquidate positions, partially to meet redemption
requests (according to media reports, some of the largest funds had negative
returns in excess of 50% in the first three quarters of 2008), partially to
reduce counter-party risks. AIG, the bailed out U.S. insurance giant, for example,
was the guarantor to many financial instruments, including some London based
commodity exchange traded funds (ETFs); in the weeks before AIG's collapse,
in our analysis, hedge funds unwound 'long inflation'/'short financial' trades,
causing seemingly erratic actions in the market. On Monday, October 6, 2008,
the yen surged 4% versus the U.S. dollar while the Australian dollar fell by
over 6.5%; such extreme action is a clear indication of an unwinding of the
popular 'carry trade' where hedge funds had borrowed money cheaply in yen to
buy higher yielding currencies, such as the Australian dollar. Volatility is
the enemy of the carry trade as leverage of 30:1 or even 100:1 is the norm
rather the exception for such trades. A day later, Australia's central bank
has lowered interest rates from 7% to 6%, which further reduces the attractiveness
of the carry trade. Another suggestion that hedge fund liquidation is contributing
to the volatility is the intra-day rise of the shares of Volkswagen, the German
carmaker, of 55% on October 7, 2008; the carmaker did not reinvent the wheel,
but a short-squeeze must have caused the massive rally. For the global deleveraging
to succeed, we must see this type of action because hedge funds are one type
of leveraged player that must be brought to its knees.
In our analysis, we have not seen the end of the crisis; we expect continued
volatility in the days, weeks and months to come. While we have been critical
of U.S. institutions for not acting fast enough, there is progress. The remaining
large financial institutions may be too large to fail; institutions from Bank
of America to Citigroup; from Goldman Sachs to General Electric have been swallowing
tough medicine to strengthen their respective balance sheets in a market when
capital is expensive. In Europe, financial institutions still have a lot of
work ahead of them; however, it does look like European governments are waking
up to the seriousness of the situation. Without passing judgment whether bailouts
should have taken place, European governments have shown both will and ability
to act. What makes us more positive about Europe than many is that, ultimately,
European economies are less fragile because of - with some regional exceptions
- much healthier consumers and less elevated home prices. European governments
may also be more willing to nationalize banks or force capital injections to
protect the system than U.S. regulators are. Ultimately, it is capital that
is missing more than anything; and then there's the value of homes that triggered
all of these - in the U.S., home prices continue to be too expensive, posing
further risks to the U.S. economy and the dollar. Finally in Asia, while Japan
is ironically shining, the region has yet to see the full impact of weaker
sales to the U.S. and potential shocks to their real estate markets.
We don't have a crystal ball either. But being active in parts of the money
markets both domestically and abroad, we are concerned at what we see. There
is a significant risk that the U.S. dollar resumes its downward trend. As a
result, investors may want to consider diversifying to take this risk into
account.
We manage the Merk Hard and Asian Currency Funds, no-load mutual funds seeking
to protect against a decline in the dollar by investing in baskets of hard
and Asian currencies, respectively. To learn more about the Funds, or to subscribe
to our free newsletter, please visit www.merkfund.com.
Please also register
for our free webinar on October 15, 2008, to get an update on our views
on the economy and the markets.
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