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Since the historic 1987 stock market crash, the Federal Reserve has responded
to every recession in the US economy by slashing interest rates, and funneling
massive amounts of money into the hands of Wall Street's aristocracy, - the
ruling class that dominates the two political parties in Washington. The Fed's
cash injections have usually found their way into assets, including commodities,
stocks, and mortgage-backed securities, and often fueling speculative binges
into stratospheric heights.
But on March 12th, US President Barack Obama warned a group of chief executive
officers of the Business Roundtable, that the Fed "can't continue with its
policies of endless cycles of bubble and bust, and instead, must build a new
foundation for future economic growth." Obama blamed the lingering banking
crisis on "reckless speculation and spending beyond our means, on bad credit,
inflated home prices, and over-leveraged banks. Such activity isn't the creation
of lasting wealth. It's the illusion of prosperity, and it hurts us all in
the end," Obama warned.
"We cannot settle for a return to the status quo. We must put an end to the
reckless speculation, spending beyond our means; bad credit, over-leveraged
banks, and the absence of oversight that condemns us to bubbles that inevitably
bust," Obama added. Yet only a few days earlier, Obama exerted maximum pressure
on the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to let Wall Street bankers
set their own prices for toxic assets in earnings reports, regardless of market
prices.
By suspending the so-called "mark to market"accounting rules, concerning the
value of toxic securities they hold, FASB's new guidance would allow American
banks to value assets using their own internal "mark-to-myth" models. This
is, in fact, is the creation of a loophole allowing bankers to conceal their
true losses and cook their financial books. By allowing the banks to claim
their assets as fundamentally sound, the ruling elite expect the panic selling
in the stock market will subside, banks will start lending again, and the US-economy
will gradually recover.
So far, all the measures taken by Obama's economic team in response to the
financial crisis, have pointed their aim at protecting the wealth of the Wall
Street aristocrats. Treasury Secretary Geithner announced a scheme to enable
the banks to offload their toxic assets by subsidizing hedge-funds and private-equity
firms to purchase them at inflated prices, using hundreds of billions of taxpayer
money to cover any losses, and insure double-digit profits for the speculators.

The masters of Wall Street erupted into great euphoria and jubilation over
the death of FASB #157, and Geithner's scheme to loot taxpayer funds and offload
the toxic assets of the financial oligarchs, - creating illusions of new found
wealth. Obama himself went a step further to reassure the Wall Street titans,
by quietly killing a bill passed by the House of Representatives that would
have taxed 90% of the bonuses of wealthy executives and traders at AIG and
other bailed-out firms.
By obscuring the accuracy of bank balance sheets, mixed with the Fed's zero-percent
interest rate policy, and the hallucinogenic "Quantitative Easing"drug, traders
are taking collective leave of their senses, succumbing to delusions of ever-expanding
wealth, and actively participating in the creation of new bubbles. And by definition,
market bubbles can expand much farther than most traders can imagine.
Nobody bothered to ask how Wells Fargo (WFC) could post a record $3-billion
profit in the first quarter, at a time when one in eight US-homeowners with
mortgages, are behind on their loan payments, or in the foreclosure process
as job losses intensifies, and California home prices are 40% below their peak
levels. Instead, operating under the illusions of "mark-to-myth" accounting,
and the hallucinogenic "QE-drug," administered by the Fed, hedge-fund traders
accepted the WFC earnings report at face value, bidding its share price 30%
higher.
Former Fed chief "Easy" Al Greenspan and his prototype, Ben "Bubbles" Bernanke,
hold the view that deliberate bubble-bursting is something between impossible
and dangerous, and thus, is best avoided. The Fed is inherently opposed to
hiking interest rates, to prevent bubbles from arising in the first place.
Instead, the Fed allows stock market bubbles to inflate into the stratosphere,
and patiently waits for the bubbles to burst under their own weight. Afterwards,
the Fed moves to cushion the meltdown, by slashing interest rates and flooding
the banking system with liquidity, - the infamous Bernanke / Greenspan Put.
The Fed operates under the belief that wealth in an asset-based economy is
created by massively inflating the money supply and pumping-up the value of
financial or tangible assets. Today, the Fed has joined the Bank of England
and the Bank of Japan in printing trillionsof British pounds, yen, and US-dollars
in part, under the radical "Quantitative Easing" framework, designed to monetize
their respective government's debt, which in part, is used to bail-out the
financial aristocracy.

Central bankers inflate bubbles in order to give households a fresh sense
of wealth, encouraging them to borrow and spend more, and businesses to boost
investments. The strategy is built around the massive expansion of the money
supply. There are generally two types of bubbles, firstly, speculative excesses
fueled by irresponsible bank lending. The second type of asset bubble is one
in which bank lending plays a minor or no role at all, - usually related to
the introduction of new technology or rapid industrialization that promises
untold riches.
The Nasdaq high-tech stock bubble is an example of this second type. So was
the spectacular run-up in the Shanghai red-chip index, which soared four-fold
in 2007, mirroring China's rapid accession as the world's third largest industrial
power and the biggest exporter. China's vast manufacturing sector employs tens
of millions of workers and functions as the cheap labor workshop for Asian
and Western companies, and is the biggest customer for Australian and Brazilian
miners.
But it's the first type of bubble which Beijing is busy inflating right now,
- with the ruling Politburo ordering its state-owned banks to lend yuan aggressively.
China's central bank said on April 12th, it will ensure massive liquidity to
sustain economic growth, squashing speculation that regulators might try to
restrain bank lending that could lead to bad debts and asset bubbles. Chinese
banks extended 1.9-trillion yuan in local currency loans in March, bringing
the first-quarter total to 4.6-trillion yuan, ($585-billion), larger in size
than Beijing's 4-trillion fiscal spending plans.
In turn, explosive lending in China has fueled the explosive expansion of
the Chinese M2 money supply, now standing +25.5% higher than a year ago, its
fastest growth rate in 12-years. With the blessing of Beijing, much of this
money is funneled into Shanghai equities and the property markets, thereby
inflating prices. The combined fiscal and monetary stimulus, equaling about
30% of China's GDP, is widely expected to lift the local economy out of its
deep slump, through the traditional strategy of inflating market bubbles and
indirectly boosting household wealth.

Indeed, China's industrial output rebounded to an annualized +8.3% growth
rate in March, from a record low of +3.8% in the first two months of the year,
adding to evidence that Beijing's stimulus plans, are starting to take effect.
Still, China's factory sector is structurally dependent on exports and therefore,
highly vulnerable to any downturn in foreign demand, which is beyond Beijing's
control.
In fact, the spectacular growth of China might not have been possible without
the massive expansion of household debt in the United States. But this growth
of debt, which sustained the US-economy and global demand for 15-years, is
de-leveraging, and morphing into the biggest banking crisis since the 1930's.
As a result, China's vast export machine is grinding to a halt. Without the
government's stimulus measures, the predicted growth rate for China would be
closer to 2% this year.
So far, some of the big the winners from China's massive stimulus plans are
skilled operators in copper futures and base metal miners. Copper stockpiling
by the secretive Chinese Reserves Bureau is rumored to reach 300,000-tons this
year. China's imports of the red-metal jumped 71% to 451,400-tons in the first
two months from a year ago, customs data showed. On the Shanghai Futures Exchange,
copper futures are up 85% above December's lows. Meanwhile, copper inventories
in Shanghai warehouses have dropped to dangerously low levels at 18,766 tons,
prompting a fresh wave of arbitrage buying in London.
China is also riding to the rescue of the American farmer. In Chicago, soybean
futures have jumped 15% over the past four-weeks, to $10.35 /bushel, whetted
by China's voracious appetite. Beijing confirmed that it bought 3.86-million
tons of soybeans in March, up +66% from a year earlier, and the second highest
monthly tally ever. More than half of this week's US-exports, 10.4-million
bushels, are headed to China. This comes at a time, when US soybean stockpiles
are projected to reach a five-year low of 165-million bushels this summer.

The PBoC is engineering a vast expansion of money and credit, to bolster its
economy, and taking advantage of a narrow window of opportunity, - the collapse
of factory-gate inflation, which is -10% lower than a year earlier. The stunning
collapse of a broad array of commodity prices, including crude oil, gasoline,
kerosene, diesel, base metals, food and clothing, provides the necessary cover
for the PBoC's massive money printing operations, - the traditional antidote
for warding-off deflation.
The PBoC last cut its key one-year lending rate to 5.31% on Dec 22nd, still
much higher in inflation-adjusted terms than those pegged by G-7 central banks.
The PBOC cut rates five times since September and reduced bank reserve requirements
four times. It has also abolished credit quotas, triggering a surge in bank
lending in support of the government's 4-trillion yuan fiscal stimulus package.
With its command and control over the Chinese banking network, the PBoC has
demonstrated its ability to burst bubbles in the Shanghai stock market, as
it did last year, hammering the red-chip index 75% below its October 2007 peak.
Now, the PBoC is printing money at a feverish pace, to re-inflate the stock
market, endorsed by Premier Wen Jiaboa, claiming that China's economy is on
the road to recovery. What is involved here is an attempt to equate a rising
stock market with economic recovery, even as unemployment continues to rise,
and exports fall.

So far, China's lending boom and efforts to re-inflate the Shanghai red-chip
bubble, has coincided with its stockpiling of copper and soybeans. The Shanghai
Index closed at 2,513-points, it's highest since August, with over thirty Shanghai-A
shares soaring by their 10% daily-limit, a sign that speculators, brimming
with cheap bank loans, are returning to the roulette-table. Wuhan Steel and
China Cosco both leapt 10%, as strong economic data configured by Beijing's
apparatchik's stirred optimism.
Trade data released on April 10th, was also of great interest to Nymex oil
traders, - China imported 16.3-million tons of crude oil in March, up 33% from
February's 11.7-million tons. According to a three-year plan designed by the
National Energy Administration, China's stimulus plan would include building
large oil and natural gas refineries, increasing its total oil refining capacity
to 440-million tons by 2011, which might also be a prelude to national stock
building of energy fuel.
But optimism for a Chinese-led crude oil rally, was delayed by an IEA report,
predicting that world oil demand would fall 2.4-million bpd to 83.4 million
bpd in 2009, the biggest annual contraction since the early 1980's. Chinese
demand for crude oil is expected to fall 1% this year, the first decline in
decades. By all indications however, the IEA's estimate of future oil demand
is probably off-the mark, judging by the failure of OPEC to jig the market
higher.

The OPEC oil cartel has slashed its output by 3.4-million bpd since August,
but hasn't gotten ahead of the supply curve, even with Mexican oil output slumping
by 300,000-bpd from a year ago. Supply from OPEC members with output limits,
is 880,000-bpd higher than their collective target of 24.8-million bpd.The
biggest cheater within the oil cartel is Iran, pumping 400,000-bpd above its
quota.
OPEC agreed on March 15th to keep output quotas unchanged, as part of its
effort to help mend the world economy. "We believe the global economy is still
very weak," noted Qatar's Abdullah al-Attiyah on March 30th. "The crisis has
not reached the bottom so we have to be very careful. We are saying that $40-to-$50
/barrel is more pragmatic for the economic crisis. We cannot do more than that," --
it doesn't mean we are going to cut production in May," he hinted.
US inventories of unsold crude oil are bloated at 361-million barrels, their
highest levels since July 1993, weighing down on oil prices. US-oil demand
in January was 989,000 bpd less a year earlier, tumbling to 19.1-mil bpd. In
Japan and Korea, the world's third and fifth largest energy importers, crude
inventories have also risen due to the worst recession since WWII. Explaining
oil's rebound from $35 /barrel to around $52 /barrel today, Qatar's al-Attiyah
said. "The current oil price is not related to demand and supply - it is higher
mainly because of a weak US-dollar."

And while Beijing is calling on the G-20 to replace the US-dollar as the world
reserve currency, the Chinese central bank is simultaneously printing vast
quantities of yuan. The rapid expansion of Chinese M2 is buoying gold prices
in Shanghai, since the Chinese yuan has no intrinsic value whatsoever, but
for the fact that it has been decreed as legal tender. Instead, Chinese traders
confronted with limited choices, are bidding-up Shanghai red-chips, even at
a time when industrial profits are 37% lower in Q'1, compared a year ago. Traders
are intoxicated by bubble-mania, and acting out of fear of the inflationary
impact of the PBoC's printing press.
Shanghai gold traders are waiting to find-out if Obama's economic team will
label Beijing as a currency manipulator, in the next semi-annual US-Treasury
Department report. "I recognize that China's currency manipulation and domestic
subsidies give it an unfair trade advantage and has led to US- job losses.
I am committed to tackling this problem and ensuring that all trade manipulations
are addressed by the US government," Obama said rhetorically ahead of the Nov
4th election.
But given America's desperate fiscal condition, Obama needs to convince China
to keep investing its foreign exchange reserves in US Treasuries in order to
help finance the bailout of failing US-banks and pay for the $787-billion US
stimulus package. Yet China's financial security is increasing intertwined
with US Treasury bonds, which are fast becoming a risky option, inflated within
a bubble of gigantic proportions. It will be too late to leave the game of
musical chairs, when China and Japan decide to stop buying or begin selling
the US Treasury bonds. Someday, Beijing might take pre-emptive action to buy
gold directly from the IMF, to re-balance its portfolio.
The upcoming April 17th edition of Global Money Trends presents its
updated Q'2 prediction for the global stock markets, plus an analysis and forecast
of the crude oil market, and expectations for foreign currencies versus the
US-dollar, and much more.
This article is just the Tip-of-the-Iceberg of what's available in
the Global Money Trends newsletter, published each Friday after the
NYSE close, with insightful analysis and predictions of the future direction
of (1) top stock markets around the world, (2) Commodities such as crude oil,
copper, and gold, (3) Foreign currencies (4) Libor interest rates and global
bond markets (5) Central banker "Jawboning" and Intervention techniques that
move markets.
GMT filters important news and information into (1) bullet-point, easy to
understand analysis, (2) featuring "Inter-Market Technical Analysis" that
visually displays the dynamic inter-relationships between foreign currencies,
commodities, interest rates and the stock markets from a dozen key countries
around the world. Also included are (3) charts of key economic statistics that
move markets.
Subscribers can also listen to bi-weekly Audio Broadcasts, posted Monday
and Wednesday evenings, with the latest news and analysis on global markets.
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