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by Doug Wakefield with Ben Hill
Over the last few years, in my search to understand how we arrived at this
historic juncture, I have been confronted with how ignorant the general public
is regarding the history of money. But, after five years of researching and
writing about this period, I still find it difficult to understand the day-to-day
machinations of things like Collateral Debt Obligations, Credit Default Swaps,
and Currency Swaps. So, the public's confusion is understandable. Bundling
hundreds of debt products and layering them one on top of other, as collateral,
is just too complex. But, I am not alone in this. Apparently, the largest pools
of institutional money in the world are just as clueless about these highly
complex, multi-billion dollar debt products, which they purchased for company
pensions, insurance concerns or global foundations, as retail investors are
about the inner workings of their mutual funds. It's as if, as long as someone
has told them it will work, it has to work.
In looking at several charts over the last few days, we look to be nearing
the point where adding one more grain to the sandpile could easily start an
avalanche. And, since neither I nor anyone wants to see an avalanche, we must
deal with our emotions and look at science and history.
First, let's address our fears: we are all watching something that we are
told cannot take place. But the situation has continued to escalate, since
the summer of 2007, such that it likely will take place. Yet, whether we are
retail investors or US Senator, our denial of the probable persists. Why? Plainly,
the alternative is just too painful to consider. In his book, The Wave Principle
of Human Social Behavior and the New Science of Socionomics, Robert Prechter
explains:
"The limbic system has the capacity to generate out of context, affective
feelings of conviction that we attach to our beliefs regardless of whether
they are true or false. In normal people, too, feelings of certainty can
be so overwhelming that they stand fast in the face of logic and contradiction."
If we can move past cognitive dissonance and explore that which causes us
fear, we can begin to understand the series of events that continues to unfold,
and as the parts begin to form the whole, our understanding grows. But, while
the inter-related pattern unfolds around us, many traders and experts interpret
each days moves within the confines of the daily set of events. Needless to
say, this type of analysis causes its hearers to lose sight of the bigger picture.
And though it is true that we have never lived through a set of circumstances
like today, history rhymes, science draws the parameters, and mankind - regardless
of race, age, religious beliefs, or nationality - has not changed. We display
the same fear, greed, love and hate, as we have throughout history. While we
have made many technological advancements, we display the same emotions as
those living 1000, 2000, of even 4000 years ago.
The Big
Now, if you agree with my premise to this point, consider the following charts,
and see if you see what I see from the trading activity in the top currencies
of the world.

The wide volatility in these major currencies must be wreaking havoc on the
real world operations of global corporations and banks, and governments around
the world.


To further drive home the ramifications of these violent currency moves, consider
the following, taken from the Foreign
Exchange Market educational page of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York:
"To buy foreign goods or services, or to invest in other countries, companies
and individuals may need to first buy the currency of the country with which
they are doing business. Generally, exporters prefer to be paid in their
country's currency or in U.S. dollars, which are accepted all over the world.
When Canadians buy oil from Saudi Arabia they may pay in U.S. dollars and
not in Canadian dollars or Saudi riyals, even though the United States is not
involved in the transaction.
The foreign exchange market, or the "FX" market, is where
the buying and selling of different currencies takes place. The price of
one currency in terms of another is called an exchange rate.
The market itself is actually a worldwide network of traders, connected by
telephone lines and computer screens -- there is no central headquarters. There
are three main centers of trading, which handle the majority of all FX transactions
-- United Kingdom, United States, and Japan.
Transactions in Singapore, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Germany, France and Australia
account for most of the remaining transactions in the market. Trading goes
on 24 hours a day: at 8 a.m. the exchange market is first opening in London,
while the trading day is ending in Singapore and Hong Kong. At 1 p.m. in London,
the New York market opens for business and later in the afternoon the traders
in San Francisco can also conduct business. As the market closes in San Francisco,
the Singapore and Hong Kong markets are starting their day.
The FX market is fast paced, volatile and enormous -- it is the largest
market in the world. In 2001 on average, an estimated $1,210 billion was
traded each day -- roughly equivalent to every person in the world trading
$195 each day."
When the Dollar is down 15% against the Yen, 16% against the Pound, and 20%
against the Euro, in nine trading days, we must consider the fact that these
result in operational changes, tied to profits and losses, worldwide. While
the dollar rebounded today, global businesses and world leaders have a much
more difficult task in making long-term projections in the midst of such volatile
currencies. How will this impact their next quarter's earnings or their cash
flows? At this level of instability, the last few weeks must have had enormous
operational impacts.
The Bull
In reading Steve Hochberg's (of Elliottwave International) Daily Update, his
comments on the historic nature of these moves stuck out:
"The [March U.S. 30-year Treasury Bond] never tripped our cited "trigger" level
for a bearish stance (a break of 132-09), which kept us out of this market.
Yesterday's price surge was historic in that it is the first time ever that
the Daily Sentiment Index of bond traders pushed to 99% bond bulls (see chart).
Only 1% of bond traders think prices will come down, which is simply extraordinary.
When everyone is bullish, and in this particular case everyone really IS
bullish, there is theoretically no one left to buy in order to keep the trend
intact, which leads to a reversal."


Did the Fed's latest decision to cut rates on December 16th cause bond investors
to react any differently than they have since August 2007?

Did the wording found in the Fed's announcement tell bond investors they should
change their belief that the Fed can play this game indefinitely?
"As previously announced, over the next few quarters the Federal Reserve will
purchase large quantities of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities to
provide support to the mortgage and housing markets, and it stands ready to
expand its purchases of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities as conditions
warrant. The Committee is also evaluating the potential benefits of purchasing
longer-term Treasury securities" [Federal
Reserve Governor's Press Release, December 16, 2008]
What will happen to credit markets when the spike in price comes to an end,
yields start to rise, rather than fall, thus impacting borrowing costs around
the globe?
What also hit me about Hochberg's comment on the historic number of bulls
in the long end of the Treasury markets, were the similarities that this group
of individuals had with wheat farmers in the 1920s. Farmers in the 1920s had
seen the government intervene for years trying to prop up the price of wheat.
In their belief in the omnipotent Fed, they continued to borrow money from
one government agency and sell to another. The more the role of government
expanded, the stronger the belief that it could always expand.
Our March 28 '08 Short Report to our subscribers addressed the similarities
between the events in the 1920s, to those unfolding currently. We relied heavily
on Dr. Murray Rothbard's work, "The History of Money and Banking in the United
States". Fortunately for us today, their have been those in the 20th century,
who felt it their moral duty to leave the next generation as accurate an historical
record as possible.
"Since we are all familiar with what happened in the stock market crash of
1929, and the ensuing collapse of equity prices in the next 3 years, let us
return to our discussion on commodity prices, which directly led to the picture
and comments from FDR, found in our July 2007 issue. In the weeks leading up
to the market Crash of 1929, the newly found government-lending machine, the
Federal Farm Board (FFB), was moving to "stabilize" wheat prices.
To try and hold up wheat prices by keeping some of the supply of wheat off
the market, on October 26th of 1929, the FFB announced it would lend $150 million
for wheat crops at up to 100 percent of the market price. As prices continued
to fall in 1929, the FFB created another government agency - the Farmer's National
Grain Committee (FNGC), which aimed to centralize all farmers' grain cooperatives
and eliminate competition among them. While this was supposed to stabilize
wheat prices, it only made matters worse.
By
the middle of 1931, the Grain Stabilization Corporation, which replaced the
1929-formed FNGC, was authorized to purchase as much wheat as possible. Even
after increasing their purchases by an additional 200 million bushels, prices
continued to collapse. The larger FFB eventually threw in the towel, and dumped
their wheat stocks, resulting in a final collapse.
Though the American farmer had never seen anything like this, our national
government sought every means to intervene to save our markets. Congress passed
act upon act, extending money through the alphabet soup of agency acronyms. And
just like today, though it could not stem the flow of crashing prices, it did
affect the lives of all who depended upon the commodities that farmers bring
to market for our basic food supply.
But surely, the bust that occurred in commodity prices in the early 1920s
had nothing to do with a fallacious banking system. Surely, if we join hands
with the government, we will find a "better" solution. Just like with cotton,
these brilliant central planners told farmers not to send their wheat to market
too rapidly, but to hold the wheat and wait for higher prices. Like so many
funds that have suspended redemptions, regarding their $465 million in CDOs
and CLOs, two weeks ago ING's
stated: "To continue to allow withdrawals to satisfy a minority of investors
could significantly reduce the quality of the portfolio."
The Bankers
The game of flooding paper money to key players while telling other they are
not worthy of a bailout, has undoubtedly made us all leery of hearing statements
like that concerning Goldman
Sachs, "first quarterly loss in nine years since going public," or Morgan
Stanley, "revenues in every corner of the bank fell, even when compared
with last quarter, showing a deteriorating environment that cut across business," and
then watching their prices climb.


Since common sense does not appear to work in looking at the day-to-day movement
of our leading financial firms, I have found that watching the science that
comes from our markets even more reliable. The following is a chart I presented
to our subscribers on Tuesday, after the Federal Reserve's announcement and
the subsequent explosive rally.

The one below, is as of the close of the markets just two days later.

So, what could science tell us about the extreme swings in the dollar in under
two weeks, the most daily bullish sentiment reading on record in the 30 year
bond, and the increasing frequency of the banking sector's attempts to rise
above its longer-term resistance level over the last month? Physicist Mark
Buchanan gives us a glimpse in his book, Ubiquity:
"Earthquakes in the real world tend to be accompanied by foreshocks and aftershocks,
which is another way of saying that large earthquakes tend to cluster together
in time, and that the longer you wait without seeing one, the longer you will
probably have to wait."
And the reverse is also true; the faster events cluster together and the more
violent the swings in both directions, the stronger the likelihood of an earthquake.
Conclusion
Next week is Christmas and the one following New Years, so I really don't
even want to consider the ramifications of this report. But, I continue to
believe that it is better for me to test my theories against the backdrop of
history, science, and human nature, than to trust in "experts," myself included,
bold political agendas, or solely in the past track record of successful money
managers. We have been in a credit contraction since the summer of 2007, so
we must consider all our decisions in light of this new world environment.
In my opinion, something of historical significant is once again knocking at
our door.
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