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The S&P-500 Index, a global bellwether for the world stock markets, extended
its best five-month winning streak since 1938, by advancing through the psychological
1,000-level, and is up nearly 50% from its 12-year low set on March 10th. The
S&P-500 gained 7.4% in July, its best monthly performance since 1997, even
as average earnings per-share tumbled -32% and sales slid -16% from a year
ago.
Industrial commodities, often viewed as barometers for global economic trends,
have also moved sharply higher. So far this year, copper has soared by +96%,
nickel is up 62%, and zinc is +50% higher. China, which buys two-thirds of
the world's seaborne iron ore shipments, boosted imports 30% in the first seven-months
of this year to 353-million tons, lifting its spot price to $91 /ton, up from
$60 per ton in February. Crude oil rose above $71 /barrel this week, doubling
in value since December.
In hindsight, while the "Group of Seven" (G-7) economies in North America,
Europe, and Japan, were experiencing the most severe economic contractions
since the Great Depression of the 1930's, coupled with unemployment rates ratcheting
upward to multi-decade highs, the emerging economic giant, - China, was demonstrating
its prowess, with the most ambitious stimulus plan the world has ever seen,
to rescue its juggernaut economy from the brink of social disaster and unrest.
In a little more than nine-months, the pendulum of investor sentiment in Asia
has swung from the extreme of terrifying panic and fear, to the opposite side
of the emotional spectrum, - hope and unbridled greed. The Shanghai stock market
index has surged +90% this year, owing its good fortune to 1.2-trillion of
bank loans clandestinely funneled into the stock market by brokerage firms,
leaving it awash with yuan and lifting share prices above what economic reality
can support.
China's ruling Politburo is demonstrating to the world, its command and control
over its stock market and economy. Over past few-years, Beijing has proven
its ability to either massively deflate a stock market bubble, as seen in 2008,
and the wizardry to re-inflate a stock market bubble this year. Beijing is
following the Greenspan - Bernanke blueprints, - turning to massive money printing
to re-inflate bubbles in asset markets, in order to jump start an economy from
the doldrums, or in this latest case, from the grip of the Great Recession.

A relatively healthy banking system enabled the Chinese central bank to work
its magic. China's M2 money supply is growing at a record +28.5% annualized
rate, and the money supply surge is coinciding with big rallies in stocks and
property, spilling over into neighboring Hong Kong. State-controlled Chinese
banks extended 7.4-trillion yuan ($1.2-trillion) of new loans in the first
half of this year, equal to 25% of China's entire economy - helping to fuel
a powerful Shanghai
red-chip rally.
One of the beneficiaries of the explosive growth of the Chinese money supply
is the Shanghai gold market, which is trading near 6,600-yuan /ounce, and is
also tracking powerful rallies in industrial commodities. China is poised overtake
India as the world's top gold consumer this year, and there is speculation
that Beijing will quietly buy the gold which the IMF wants to sell in the years
ahead.
China, the world's biggest gold mining nation, is seeking to boost gold output
by 3% to 290-tons this year, far less than the 400-tons it consumed last year.
Thus, China could become an even bigger importer of the yellow metal in the
months ahead, helping to cushion inevitable corrections in the gold market.
Given the trade-off between expanding growth and fighting asset-price inflation,
Shanghai traders are betting that Beijing will opt to blow even bigger bubbles
in asset markets.
Industrial Commodities Eyeing Shanghai,
China's super-easy monetary policy is designed to offset the damage to its
export-dependent regions, which are suffering from the collapse in global trade.
Beijing is also spending 4-trillion yuan on infrastructure projects, equal
to roughly 15% of its economic output per year, to create jobs and stoke economic
growth. So it was of great interest to global traders, when the Shanghai red-chips
suddenly plunged -5% on July 29th, the biggest daily loss in eight-months,
on rumors that Beijing would curb bank lending in the second half of this year.

The Shanghai index is prone to sudden shake-outs, with the index trading at
35-times earnings, and Shenzhen's small-cap shares trading at 45-times earnings.
The Shanghai red-chip index has evolved into the locomotive for key industrial
commodities, such as crude oil, base metals, and rubber. Industrial commodities
rebounded from a nasty one-day shake-out on July 29th, after the People's Bank
of China wasted little time, in denying rumors swirling in the media that is
was considering the idea of enforcing quotas on bank loans.
The prospects for Chinese corporate earnings growth are of critical importance,
with the Shanghai stock index flying higher in bubble territory. Large-scale
industrial companies in 22 Chinese provinces saw their profits decline -21.2%
in the first half to 894.14 billion yuan, but the decline rate was less from
the first quarter's 32% slide, and nowadays, "less bad," means signs of recovery.
The most optimistic scenario calls for Chinese industrial profits to rebound
to an annualized growth rate of +30% in the fourth quarter, due to the government's
massive stimulus. China's Bank of Communications predicts the economy's growth
rate will to accelerate to a pace of +9% in the third-quarter and +9.8% in
the fourth-quarter. China's crude steel output would surely top 500-million
tons this year, equaling 40% of the world's total production.
Korea Joins Alignment of B-R-I-C-K
Upbeat markets in China are helping underpin the BRIC nations, including Brazil,
India, and Russia, which have the four best performing stock markets this year.
Brazil's Bovespa Index is up 79%, India's Sensex Index is up 63%, and Russia's
RTS Index has gained 62-percent. The S&P-500 Index by comparison, is up
9.4% this year, while Japan's Nikkei-225 index is up 7.5-percent.
One could add Korea to the alignment of B-R-I-C-K stars, since the Kospi Index
has rebounded by 72% above its November low, emerging as the most favored market
among global investors. With growing appetites for risky assets, global investors
have rushed to snatch up Korean Kospi shares, particularly those in the information
technology (IT) and the auto sectors. Foreigners were net buyers of $4.7 of
Korean stocks in July, much larger than net-purchases of $2.6-billion of stocks
in Taiwan, $1.9-billion shares in India, and $1.29 billion shares in South
Africa.

"Money has no motherland, financiers are without patriotism and without decency,
- their sole object is gain," observed Napoleon Bonaparte. Highlighting the
fickle nature of speculators, - foreigners bought a record $18-billion of Korean
securities in the second-quarter of this year, or 24-times more than $750 million
the previous quarter. In the third and fourth quarters of 2008, foreigners
sold $17.9-billion and $17.4-billion, respectively, at the height of the global
financial turmoil.
Foreign buying of Korean equities knocked the US-dollar 28% lower against
the Korean-won, and the Japanese yen has tumbled 20% to 12.8-won, since March
10th, when global stock markets bottomed out. "Carry traders" are active in
Seoul, and profiting from a stronger won. In a world where G-7 central banks
are pegging rates at record low levels, it does not take much imagination to
envision the Federal Reserve, the ECB, and the Bank of Japan underwriting rallies
in the emerging currencies of Brazil, Russia, India, and Korea, just as Tokyo
pumped massive liquidity straight into New Zealand and Australian dollars during
its flirtation with the hallucinogenic drug - "Quantitative Easing" (QE) between
2001 and 2006.
Virtuous Cycle Swings in the Kremlin's favor,
The resilience of China's economy has rekindled the de-coupling debate, which
hinges on the premise that the emerging economies in Brazil, Russia, India,
China, (BRIC) can grow in spite of a declining G-7 economies. The so-called
BRIC countries accounted for half of global growth in 2008 - China alone accounted
for a quarter, and Brazil, India, and Russia combined equaled another quarter.
Furthermore, the IMF notes that BRIC "accounted for more than 90% of the rise
in consumption of energy products and metals, and 80% of grains since 2002."

The virtuous cycle of events are now swinging back in the Kremlin's favor,
as global speculators flock back into hard-hit resource shares trading in Moscow.
Russia's central bank cut its main interest rates for the fourth time in less
than three-months, after Moscow said the local economy contracted an annual
10.2% in the January-May period. Bank Rossii lowered the refinancing rate a
half-point to 11% following on initial reduction on April 24th and two further
cuts on May 13th and June 5th.
The Russian rouble has rebounded 16% against the US-dollar, since the first
quarter, as Urals blend crude oil rebounded towards $70 a barrel, and base
metals surged higher, boosting demand for Russia's currency, a world leader
in commodity exports.Russia is the world's second-largest oil exporter behind
Saudi Arabia, and supplies a quarter of Europe's natural gas needs. Russia
is also the world's largest nickel and palladium miner, the second largest
platinum miner, and the fourth-largest iron ore miner, behind Brazil, Australia,
and India.

After reaching a record high of $597-billion last August, Moscow's foreign
currency reserves were dramatically depleted in the second-half of 2008, as
the central bank spent more than $200-billion supporting the Russian rouble
and bolstering the capital position of domestic banks. This year's rebound
in Urals blend crude oil has improved the Kremlin's coffers, to the tune of
$404-billion today. China, the world's second-largest oil guzzler, imported
3.83-million barrels per day in July, or 25% more than a year earlier, the
fastest pace in nearly two-years.
The BRIC nations are rethinking how their US-dollar currency reserves are
managed, underlining a power shift from the United States, which spawned the
global financial crisis. Russian chief Dmitry Medvedev has repeatedly questioned
the US-dollar's future as a global reserve currency. China is allowing companies
in its southern provinces of Yunnan and Guangxi to use yuan to settle cross-border
trade with Hong Kong and Southeast Asia to reduce exposure to the US-dollar.
India Weathers the "Great Recession"
Reserve Bank of India chief Duvvuri Subbarao says India's modest dependence
on exports will help Asia's third largest economy, to weather the "Great Recession" and
even stage a modest recovery later this year. Even during the depths of the
October massacre in the Bombay Sensex Index, India managed to maintain a 5.3%
growth rate in the fourth quarter, and India's banking system had virtually
no exposure to any kind of toxic asset, manufactured in the United States.
India's factory output contracted by a slim 0.25% in January, the first decline
this decade, and export earnings had fallen for six straight months. In January
exports were 16% lower from a year earlier tumbling to $12.3-billion. So the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) scrambled to rescue the Bombay stock market, by
slashing its lending rates six times from September thru April, by a total
of 425-basis points.

The Indian Sensex index began to decouple from Wall Street and Tokyo in early
May, after it rallied 14% for its biggest weekly gain since 1992, when Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh won a second term. Bombay stocks soared with
enthusiasm at the prospect that Singh's new government, shorn of Communists,
would privatize up to $20-billion of state-owned assets, increase foreign investment
in highly profitable crown jewel companies, begin deregulation of banking and
financial services, and gut restrictions on the closing of factories.
India's factory sector, measured by the Purchasing Mgr's Index, held strongly
at a reading of 55.3 in July, or 2-points higher than China's, signaling a
strong industrial recovery in the second half of this year. If the decoupling
of China, India, Russia, and Brazil becomes a reality, it could be good for
the developed G-7 nations, as growing wealth in BRIC nations could, in theory,
increase demand for goods made in battered nations like Japan, Germany, and
the United States.
A decoupling between the emerging BRICK nations and the more developed G-7
economies would mean a huge shift in the global financial markets, away from
the traditional pattern of emerging markets dancing to the tune of G-7 economies,
which still account for 60% of global GDP. Instead, increasing independence
could lead to a greater sphere of influence of the emerging giants, led by
Beijing.

In the United States, Fed chief Bernanke is pumping a "bailout bubble" for
Wall Street, similar to the policies of his mentor "Easy" Al Greenspan, who
inflated the housing bubble, the sub-prime debt bubble, and the high-tech bubble.
It's a never ending cycle of boom-and-busts of bubbles, engineered by central
banks. The revival of the "Commodity Super Cycle," might already be already
in motion, and if a global economic recovery gains traction, soaring input
costs, would begin to crimp the profit margins of the giant Asian industrialists.
All the liquidity that's been unleashed into the global banking system would
play havoc with accelerating inflation. History shows that central banks won't
pre-empt inflation by withdrawing liquidity early. Instead, the money printers
tend to inflate bubbles to dangerous proportions. Add to the mix, the vast
leverage of the US-dollar and Japanese yen carry trades, it's going to be a
wild ride for the US Treasury bond market, which is increasingly dependent
upon the whims of BRICK.
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