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Amid the worst financial crisis and market meltdowns since the 1930's, the
world's top-20 central bankers and finance ministers are busy at work, inflating
the world's money supply, slashing lending rates, and crafting stimulus packages,
in order to prevent a normal recession from morphing into a Great Depression.
The ECB has cut interest rates by 100-basis points to 3.25% since early October,
and is telegraphing another 50 basis point cut at the next policy meeting in
December.
Last week, the Bank of England slashed its base rate a whopping 150-basis
points to 3%, its lowest in 53-years, and signaling more easing ahead. With
new construction in China collapsing to its worst level in a decade, Beijing
pledged to spend $600-billion over the next two-years, for new housing, road
and rail infrastructure, agricultural subsidies, health care and social welfare.
The stimulus package equals 16% of China's total economic output.
But the dreaded "D" words - "Deflation and Depression," are whispered quietly
by the "Group of 20" central bankers, behind closed doors. Traditional monetary
tools such as lowering interest rates are not working, because banks are hoarding
cash and not passing along the lower costs. There is no light at the end of
the tunnel until home prices finally stop falling, and banks can stop writing-off
big losses.
"What this crisis reveals is a broken financial system like no other in my
lifetime," said former Fed chief Paul Volcker on Nov 17th. "Normal monetary
policy is not able to get money flowing. The trouble is that, even with all
this government protection, the market is not moving again. I don't think anybody
thinks we're going to get through this recession in a hurry," he warned.
The sub-prime crisis has morphed into a diabolical monster, spreading its
tentacles across the globe. Bank credit remains tight in the United States
and Europe, even for top-notch investment-grade companies, who are confronted
with borrowing costs that are indicative of junk bonds. And the unregulated
$55 trillion credit default swap market is a nuclear time-bomb, which can explode
at a moment's notice.

In the lead-up to the G-20 central banker summit, the World Bank warned the
global economy had suddenly stopped growing,and now predicts a meager growth
rate of +1% for 2009, after expanding +5% or more from 2003-07. Global exports
are seen tumbling -2.5% in the year ahead, a precipitous fall from growth rates
of +5.8% in 2008, and +10% just two-years ago. In today's highly synchronized
global economy, no nation has been left unscathed, not even Iceland.
The Baltic Dry Index (BDI), a composite of shipping prices for various dry
bulk products such as iron ore, grain, coal, bauxite, and alumina, has plunged
11-fold from a record high of 11,800-points in May, to 840-points in mid-November,
signaling a global depression. The largest cargo ships are unable to charge
more than their daily operating costs, and must cut ship speeds in order to
economize on fuel costs. China accounts for 40% of the movement in commoditiesbeing
shipped around the world, on the 22,000 ships that sail the world's shipping
routes.
China's steel makers have cut production due to lower profit margins, and
weaker demand at home and abroad. China produced 35.9-million tons of crude
steel in October, down -23% from a record high of 47.1-tons in June. Some 90-million
tons of iron ore are now stockpiled in Chinese ports, two months worth of imports,
due to a sudden collapse in demand by steel mills. Chinese orders for copper,
nickel and a range of other base metals have also plummeted.
India's industrial production was only +1.3% higher in August, than a year
earlier, a 10-year low. Indian exports fell -15% in October compared to a year
earlier, the first such fall in five-years.Japan entered its first recession
since 2001 and Germany contracted for the first time in five-years, after its
industrial output plunged -3.6% in September, the largest monthly loss in 14-years.
The jobless rate in the UK, has reached its highest since 1997 and its economy
is expected to shrink -1.7% next year, its worst performance since the 1991
recession.

South Korea is a key bellwether of the global economy, with 52% of its GDP
derived from exports. Korea's shipments to China, its biggest customer, have
plunged over the past six-months, and were -3% lower in October than a year
earlier.Korean factory output fell for a third straight month, the longest
run of declines in eight-years, adding to fear the Asian tiger is headed for
its first recession in a decade.
Emerging Asian economies account for one-fifth of world growth, but are being
dragged down as their biggest customers in the US, Japan and Europe are sliding
into recession. Posco, PKX.n, Asia's biggest maker of stainless steel, said
it will slash output by about a third this quarter to cope with a slowdown
in demand. The Bank of Korea slashed its overnight loan rate a record 100-basis
points in October, after the Kospi stock index suffered its worst loss in two-decades.
Federal Reserve Shifts towards "Quantitative Easing"
The United States is the world's largest economy, and buys roughly 20% of
the world's exports. But after a decade of living on easy credit, US consumers
are now saturated with debt, (300% of GDP), and forced to de-leverage, leaving
Asian exporter nations in a terrible bind. US retail sales plunged -2.8% in
October, the fourth straight monthly decline, impacting across virtually all
sectors of the retail economy. According to official figures, 10-million American
workers are out of work and cannot find jobs, and over 85,000 US-homes were
foreclosed in October.
US consumer spending can collapse if the job-cutting continues and US households
are deprived of credit, as home values fall and banks tighten access to mortgages,
auto loans, and credit cards. Amid fears the US-economy is sliding towards
a Great Depression, the 1-month US T-bill rate fell to 4-basis points, and
the 3-month T-bill rate ended at 12-basis points. That leaves T-bill rates
far-below their lowest levels in 2003-04, the last time the Fed pegged the
fed funds rate at 1-percent.

With T-bill rates approaching zero-percent, the Fed has clandestinely adopted
a radical monetary policy known as "Quantitative Easing," (QE) pioneered by
the Bank of Japan (BoJ) earlier this decade, in a desperate gambit to prevent
a Great Depression. With falling retail sales, rising unemployment, collapsing
commodity prices, and an international credit crunch in motion, the Fed is
printing vast quantities of US-dollars, in order to buy government agency debt,
commercial paper, and toxic mortgages, and other paper, from the financial
industry.
"At the beginning of this year, the assets on the books of the Fed totaled
$960 billion," said Dallas Fed chief Richard Fischer on Nov 4th. "Today, our
assets exceed $1.9 trillion. I would not be surprised to see them reach $3-trillion,
roughly 20% of GDP, by the time we ring in the New Year. The composition of
our holdings has shifted considerably. Previously, almost 100% of our holdings
were in the form of US Treasuries, today, it's less than a third. The remainder
consists of claims deriving from our new facilities," Fischer revealed.
During Japan's quantitative easing campaign, the BoJ's balance sheet swelled
to the equivalent of 30% of GDP. Today, the Fed has doubled its balance sheet
in just five-weeks to 15% of US-GDP, by printing money and swapping for assets
of the banking sector, some unmarketable. The Fed has also arranged $800-billion
of foreign currency swaps with a dozen central banks, increasing dollar liquidity
worldwide, and refuses to reveal the exact composition of its balance sheet.
With so much excess cash floating around, Treasury bill rates have gravitated
towards zero-percent. But at the same time, the Fed is preventing the fed funds
rate from tumbling towards zero-percent, by offering to pay 1.15% on overnight
deposits, under new powers it was granted in the financial stabilization bill.
For the week ending Nov 5th, US-banks deposited $592-billion at the Fed, up
from $11-billion at the beginning of October, instead of dumping the excess
cash in the fed funds market. Meanwhile, the Fed continues to print money and
build its balance sheet.
Inflationary Boom to Depression Bust
It was only five-months ago, when the "Commodity Super Cycle" was flexing
its muscles, and lifting inflation rates to multi-decade highs around the world,
fueled by an unrelenting global flight from the US-dollar.Mr. Bernanke, Vice
chief Donald Kohn and governor Frederic Mishkin - the Fed's three intellectual
amigos, were pursuing a reckless policy of pegging "negative" real interest
rates, even with inflation raging at a 17-year high in the United States, to
support the financial sector.
For months, the Fed appeared to be overestimating the risks of recession while
underestimating the dangers of inflation. The Fed was too attentive to rigging
the stock market, and not the inflationary squeeze on American's paychecks.
Yet today, at remarkable speed, the inflationary boom has morphed into a deflationary
bust, led by a stunning $90 per barrel plunge in the price of crude oil, with
copper, corn, and soybean prices tumbling 50% or more.

In his infamous "helicopter" speech delivered in November 2002, Mr Bernanke
raised the question, "Suppose that, despite all precautions, deflation were
to take hold in the US-economy and moreover, that the Fed's policy instrument,
the federal funds rate, were to fall to zero. What then? Well, the US government
has a technology, called a printing press, or today, its electronic equivalent,
that allows it to produce as many US-dollars as it wishes at essentially no
cost," Bernanke said.
"Under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher
spending and hence positive inflation. Normally, money is injected into the
economy through asset purchases by the Fed. To stimulate aggregate spending
when short-term interest rates have reached zero, the Fed must expand the scale
of its asset purchases or, possibly, expand the menu of assets that it buys."
"One approach, similar to an action taken by the Bank of Japan, would be for
the Fed to commit to holding the overnight rate at zero-percent for some specified
period, which would induce a decline in longer-term rates. A more direct method,
which I prefer, would be for the Fed to enforce interest-rate ceilings by committing
to make unlimited purchases of securities up to two years from maturity at
prices consistent with targeted yields. If this program were successful, not
only would yields on medium-term Treasury securities fall, yields on longer-term
public and private debt, such as mortgages, would likely fall as well," Bernanke
said.
Japan's Experience with "Quantitative Easing"
In March 2001, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) began a radical monetary policy known
as "Quantitative Easing," pegging its overnight loan rate at zero-percent,
and purchasing 1.2-trillion yen of Japanese government bonds (JGB's) each month,
in an operation known as "Rinban." At the time, Japanese banks were hobbled
by 44.5-trillion yen of bad loans, and bank lending was -4.4% lower than a
year earlier. The aim of the BoJ's operations was to flood the Japanese financial
system with 35-trillion yen of excess liquidity, and inflate asset values.
The BoJ's long-term commitment to quantitative easing was an important element
of the policy's success. The market was able to expect that the BoJ's zero
interest rate policy would continue for years, and that Yen Libor rates and
2-year government yields would stay close to zero-percent. Throughout this
decade, the BoJ has targeted the benchmark 10-year JGB yield in a narrow range
between 1.20% and 2%, a remarkable feat of controlling the world's second largest
debt market.

On the few occasions, when JGB 10-year yields threatened to move above the
psychological 2% level, the Japanese MoF was quick to jawbone them lower. On
June 12, 2003, when JGB yields hit a record low of 0.43%, former BoJ chief
Toshihiko Fukui warned traders that yields had fallen too-low. "Now, we are
implementing measures to boost the economy, aimed at creating situations which
would drive up long term interest rates," he warned. Three months later, JGB
yields had quadrupled to 1.65% and have stayed above the BoJ's lower target
of 1.20% ever since.
JGB yields hit historic lows in 2003, even though Japan had the largest government
bond market in the world, with 562-trillion yen in marketable securities, ($4.7-trillion
outstanding), compared with the US Treasury's $3.3 trillion. Tokyo floated
36.5-trillion yen of new bonds in 2003, and the Bank of Japan monetized roughly
40% of the debt, with its monthly purchases. Even today, with the JGB market
equaling 180% of GDP, the BoJ continues its mastery over the market.
The Bernanke Fed might be inclined to follow the BoJ's blueprints, by monetizing
most of the US Treasury's upcoming auctions that according to varied estimates,
could mushroom to $1.8 trillion in fiscal 2009. The US Treasury is borrowing
$550 billion in the fourth quarter, and $368 billion in Q'1/ 2009. That figure
could climb higher, if Social Democrats vote to widen the scope of bailouts
for state governments and city municipalities, and key industrial companies.

Financing the US Treasury's debt in the next 11-months could become more difficult,
after China announced its huge $586-billion economic stimulus plan last week.
Beijing is expected to steer most of its massive trade surplus ($250-billion
in 2007) towards its own domestic economy, instead of recycling the surplus
into US-bonds. Beijing already holds between $1-trillion and $1.5-trillion
of US Treasury and agency bonds within its foreign currency stash of $1.8 trillion.
In the event of a sharp downturn in the global economy, China's exports would
be hard hit, but its imports would also fall sharply, perhaps narrowing its
trade surplus to $175-billion next year. To finance its stimulus package internally,
Beijing can also float government bonds in Shanghai, and instruct the central
bank to monetize the debt, by printing yuan, following the same game plan as
the BoJ and the Fed.
Can Beijing Prevent a "Hard Landing" of its Economy?
China's consumer inflation has fallen steadily from a 12-year peak of +8.7%
in February, to +4% in October, and the annualized rate could turn negative
in early 2009, reflecting the recent collapse in commodity prices for food
and energy. On Nov 9th, China's central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan said, "Inflation
has been easing remarkably, and the pace of easing is fairly fast. Chinese
markets can expect more money supply and looser market liquidity," he said.
After the bursting of the Shanghai equity bubble, and now the collapse in
commodity markets, the PBoC could move quickly to avoid a "hard landing" for
its economy. If inflation rates fall faster than Chinese interest rates, then
real interest rates will rise and monetary policy will actually be tightening,
even if market interest rates fall. Should this happen, the PBoC could inflate
it money supply to achieve stable prices, while monetizing the national debt.
One important lesson for the PBoC to learn from Japan's experience in 1990's,
is that falling prices, if left unchecked for prolonged periods of time, can
be very dangerous.

In orchestrated moves with other major central banks, the People's Bank of
China (PBoC) lowered its key one-year loan rate 81-basis points over the past
seven-weeks to 6.66%, following the stunning collapse of the Dow Jones Commodity
Index, (measured in yuan), to a six-year low. China's economy is also growing
at single-digit rate of expansion this year for the first time since 2003,
as its annual economic growth slowed to +9% in the third quarter from a record
+11.9% in 2007.
Zhou indicated that Beijing launched its massive stimulus package in order
to stabilize the Chinese economy at a +8% growth rate in 2009. However, output
by China's vast manufacturing sector, which employs tens of millions of workers
and has functioned as the world's cheap labor workshop, is slowing dramatically,
as demand collapses in its major North American and European markets.About
one-third of the 45,000 factories in the major export cities of Dongguan, Shenzhen,
and Guangzhou are expected to close by the Chinese New Year in January.

There is plenty of room for the PBoC to slash interest rates and bank reserve
requirements, in order to cope with the most severe recession in the United
States since World War II, and deflation looming on the horizon. Some of the
major mistakes of the Bank of Japan after the bursting of the Nikkei-225 bubble
in the early 1990's, was its failure to inflate its money supply faster, maintaining
high real rates of interest, and allowing deflationary psychology to develop.
After 1993, Tokyo also initiated a series of fiscal stimulus packages that
by 1999, reached over $1 trillion. Yet Japan waffled between economic stagnation
and deflation from 1991 thru 2001 after bubbles in its stock market and land
market collapsed. Similarly,home sales in Beijing have plunged by -55% from
a year ago, and are -38% lower in Shanghai and -15% nationally, driving down
asset values.
China's leaders must navigate carefully to prevent a hard landing, defined
as a +6% growth rate. If China's stimulus package is poorly directed towards
unproductive public works projects or businesses that are no longer economically
viable, it could greatly lose its effectiveness. It might be better to reduce
tax rates and allowed households to deploy the increase in disposable incomes
as they see fit.
Greenspan's Nightmare
The wild speculation fueling the Nasdaq high-tech bubble in the late 1990's,
followed in the footsteps of earlier infrastructure-related booms and busts.
Many new high-tech companies had no earnings, and were worth no more than a
dream. For them to be sold, Wall Street bankers developed new valuation methods,
at multiples of far-distant revenues. Eventually, the façade collapsed,
and losses from the stock market meltdown reached the equivalent of US gross
domestic product.
The Fed knew a Nasdaq bubble was brewing in 1996, when Fed chief Greenspan
spoke of "irrational exuberance." Further, the Fed knew that raising share
margin rates could have stopped the bubble before it became too frothy. But
a combination of factors, including the fear of not getting re-nominated as
Fed chief for reining in a bull-market, and a succession of international crises,
- the Asian, Russian, LTCM, and Y2K, were all rationalizations for Greenspan's
inaction. Furthermore, the Fed chief became a covert of the "productivity miracle" in
the New Economy.
However, mindful of Japan's serious policy errors of the 1990's, and America's
in the 1930's, in the aftermath of historic stock market meltdowns, the Greenspan
Fed moved forcefully to contain the damage from the bursting of the Nasdaq
bubble in 2000-01. The Fed slashed its overnight loan rate 550-basis points
to a 45-year low of 1%, and pegged it there for an entire year, until it was
confident that deflation wasn't going to take hold in the broader economy.
The US economy has not seen sustained deflation since the Great Depression
of the 1930's.

On December 20, 2002, St. Louis Fed chief William Poole said the central bank
would not make the same mistakes as the BoJ in its failed bid to ward off falling
prices in the 1990's. "Japanese authorities failed to lower interest rates
quickly enough to ensure the money supply kept growing after bubbles in its
real estate and stock markets burst. We're not going to make that mistake in
the United States. The Fed is well aware that we must maintain money growth," he
said.
Greenspan's original sin was fueling the Nasdaq bubble with excess liquidity,
when legions of speculators were taking collective leave of their senses and
succumbing to delusions of ever-expanding wealth. If left unchecked, "Bubble-mania" engenders
a massive, largely uncorrected rise in valuations that discounts not just the
present and the near future, but a distance far over the horizon as well. Greenspan
says bubbles can't be accurately detected by central bankers nor popped without
severe collateral damage to the economy. Instead, he suggests that central
banks should only attempt to mitigate the fallout by slashing interest rates.
Greenspan's second error was pegging interest rates too-low and too-long at
1%, and moving too slowly to lift the fed funds rate to a more neutral level,
that could have taken the wind out of the housing bubble. Instead, Greenspan
was a "serial bubble blower," inflating commodity and housing prices at the
same time, while casting a blind-eye to reckless sub-prime lending in the mortgage
market.
After stock market "bubbles" collapse, coinciding with economic recessions,
it can take several years until the forces of inflation gain the upper-hand
over deflation. The textbook way to combat deflation is for central banks to
rapidly expand the money supply or bank credit, and slash interest rates. That's
what the BoJ and Fed did in 2001, in a double barreled assault against deflation.

While the BoJ adopted QE to ward off deflation, the Greenspan Fed dropped
the fed funds rate to a 45-year low, and warned Treasury bond traders, that
it could follow the BoJ's blueprints. "Even though short-term rates are something
slightly over 1%, longer-term rates are significantly above that. We do have
the capability should that be necessary, of moving out on the yield curve,
essentially moving long-term rates down. The Fed would do that by buying Treasury
securities with longer maturities and setting a cap on their yields," Greenspan
said on May 21, 2003.
The Fed hasn't relied on long-term Treasury securities as a tool of monetary
policy since the 1940's. However, the threat of the Fed resorting to QE gave
a big psychological boost to the gold market. The Fed laid the groundwork for
a sustained rally in precious metals, which carried gold above $400 /oz in
New York, and 42,000-yen /oz in Tokyo, six-months later. "Should it turn out
that pressures drive the federal-funds rate down close to zero, that does not
mean that the Federal Reserve is out of business on the issue of further easing," Greenspan
added.
On May 18, 2004, President Bush nominated "Easy" Al Greenspan to a fifth-term
as Fed chief, "Sound fiscal and monetary policies have helped unleash the potential
of American workers and entrepreneurs. Alan Greenspan has done a superb job," Bush
said. Greenspan was set free to begin a "baby-step" rate hiking campaign, "the
current highly accommodative stance of monetary policy must be returned to
a more neutral setting at some point in order to foster price stability and
maximum sustainable growth," Greenspan said on June 2, 2004.

Utilizing gold as an indicator of inflation expectations, the Greenspan Fed
waited until gold prices climbed above $400 /oz, before lifting the fed funds
rate a quarter-point to 1.25% on June 30, 2004. The Bank of Japan waited until
March 2006, to begin dismantling its QE framework. By then, Tokyo gold was
trading near 75,000-yen /oz, up 150% in value from five-years earlier, or an
annualized gain of 30-percent. Tokyo gold prices vaulted sharply in late-2005,
even though Japan's government reported no inflationary pressures at all in
the local economy.
Tokyo gold traders understand the government is fudging the numbers, and understating
the true rate of inflation. The manipulation of inflation statistics helps
the Bank of Japan to manhandle the giant JGB market within a narrow range,
and at artificially low yields. Instead, Tokyo gold traders watch for other
visible signals in the marketplace, to gauge the real direction of inflation.

The Bank of Japan's ultra-low interest rate policy helped to triple the price
of Tokyo gold to a record high of 100,000-yen /oz, while also inflating bubbles
in numerous other markets around the world. Tokyo gold peaked in July, when
government reports showed consumer prices galloping ahead at a +2.3% clip,
the fastest in 10-years. In recent months however, there has been a sharp -30%
setback in Tokyo gold towards 70,000-yen /oz, alongside tumbling commodity
markets.
For the first time in seven years, the BoJ lowered its overnight loan rate,
by 20-basis points to 0.3%, as part of a coordinated effort with other G-20
central bankers. The Bernanke Fed has shifted towards "Quantitative Easing" with
a slightly different twist than the BoJ's experiment. How will gold perform
when central banks are inflating their money supplies, to prevent a Great Depression?
The upcoming Nov 21st edition of the Global Money Trends newsletter takes a
special look at gold's future, and whether the global economy is about to experience
a "decade of lost growth."
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