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The Swiss franc is counted among the top-5 reserve currencies in the world,
alongside the US-dollar, the Euro, the British pound, and the Japanese yen.
The Swiss franc holds this top distinction, even though the Swiss economy does
not find its place among the top five economies of the world. Instead, its
annual output of $488-billion of goods and services ranks as the world's 22nd
largest.
When the Swiss franc nearly reached parity with the US-dollar this week, it
raised many eyebrows, since it's a remarkable achievement, considering the
fact that Switzerland's economy is only 1/25th the size of the US-economy.
However, rather than speaking volumes about the intrinsic worth of the Swiss
franc, its climb towards $1.00 is signaling that the world can no longer rely,
as it has done since the end of the gold standard, on a currency issued by
a single country.
At present, roughly 62% of the $7.3-trillion of currency reserves held by
central banks and sovereign wealth funds are held in US-dollars and 25% in
Euros. But World Bank chief Robert Zoellick warned in late September, "The
United States would be mistaken to take for granted the dollar's place as the
world's predominant reserve currency. Looking forward there will be increasingly
other options to the dollar." To that end, the SDR basket of currencies might
be modified to include the Chinese yuan, the Indian rupee, and Brazilian real
as well.
The Swissie's surge from around 94-US-cents in late August, towards parity
with the US-dollar in October, began shortly after US President Barack Obama
nominated Ben "Bubbles" Bernanke to a second term as head of the Federal Reserve.
Soon after, a British newspaper revealed that finance ministers and central
bankers from the Arab oil kingdoms, China, Russia, Japan, and France had held
a series of secret meetings to plan an end to the use of the US-dollar for
oil trading by 2018.
Under the scheme, the US-dollar would be replaced with a basket of currencies,
including the Euro, the Japanese yen, the Chinese yuan, and Gold. If correct,
such a move would be an economic bombshell. An end to the US-dollar as a medium
of exchange for trading in a vital commodity such as crude oil would deal a
powerful blow to the greenback's pivotal role as the world's reserve currency.

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) usually keeps a tight rein on the Swiss M3 money
supply, limiting its growth rate to a 3% annual clip, thus bolstering the franc's
appeal to offshore investors. Because of Switzerland's lack of natural resources,
it's created an economy that is heavily dependent on a steady tide of foreign
capital inflows, for its banking services, wealth management, and global trade.
But the SNB was suddenly forced to loosen its tight-rein on M3, when the Fed
began slashing the fed funds rate towards zero-percent and shifted to nuclear "Quantitative
Easing" (QE. The SNB responded by slashing the 3-month Libor target rate by
250-basis points to 0.25%, and said it would engage in its own variant offshoot
of QE - printing unlimited amounts of Swiss francs, if necessary, to weaken
its currency against the Euro, and to widen the profit margins of its exporters.
This year, the SNB has ratcheted-up the growth rate of the M3 money supply
to an 8% annualized clip, weakening the franc against the Euro, and slowing
the franc's ascent against the US-dollar. However, these radical moves by the
SNB, pale in comparison to the Fed's onslaught, which is flooding the world
with trillions of cheap dollars, and pegging the fed funds rate below the SNB's
0.25% Libor target.
Whereas interest rate differentials often influence foreign exchange rates,
in today's hallucinogenic world of zero-percent interest rates and nuclear
QE, - it's the degree of risk appetite in global stock markets, that's become
the key factor moving the Aussie, Loonie, the Euro, and the Swiss franc. And
every piece of paper that can be electronically printed by central bankers
is losing ground to the king of currencies - Gold, now hovering above $1,100
/oz.

In earlier decades, the Swiss franc displayed an 80% correlation with gold,
because the Swiss constitution called for the franc to be backed by 40% with
gold reserves. This link was broken however, when a panel of government experts
delivered a report in October 1997 finding that 1,300-tons of gold "were no
longer necessary for monetary purposes and could therefore be withdrawn from
the Swiss National Bank's (SNB) balance sheet and used for other purposes."
Over a five-year period ending in March 2005, the SNB sold nearly 1,300-tons
of its gold at an average selling price of $351.40 /oz, and raked in Sfr
21.1-billion. Thus, these controversial sales turned the Swiss franc into
a "relic of the gold standard." In June 2007, the SNB shocked the markets again,
by saying it would sell another tranche of 250-tons of gold thru September
2009, and use the proceeds to increase its foreign exchange reserves.
The SNB's decision to dump more than half of its gold holdings was in retrospect,
one of the greatest blunders in financial market history. It probably ranks
alongside the British Treasury's determination to sell 400-tons of England's
gold in a series of 17-auctions between 1999 and 2002, when the price was at
a 20-year low. More than half of England's gold reserves were sold at an average
price of $275 /ounce, - a blunder costing the BoE about 7-billion pounds at
today's prices.
Despite the SNB's massive sales of gold, the yellow metal continued to climb
on an upward trajectory, hitting 1,150-francs /oz, an all-time high. Gold's
value in relation to the Swiss franc has more than doubled since March 2005,
when the SNB completed its first round of gold sales. The SNB's vow to print
unlimited amounts of francs in January, and threats to buy other currencies
at a fixed rate, helped fuel gold's rally from 800-francs /oz to as high as
1,150-francs today.

SNB chief Jean Pierre Roth, a 30-year veteran of the bank, announced his intention
to retire in December. Sometimes, central bankers will issue a mea-culpa, or
a confession about their inner thoughts, before leaving the world stage. It's
a break from tradition for central bankers to speak candidly about key issues,
after they've operated behind a veil of "smoke and mirrors," throughout their
careers.
When asked on Nov 12th, if he believed the G-20 central banks would be inclined
to lift their interest rates to calm stock market exuberance, and pre-empt
the emergence of dangerous bubbles, Roth told the Swiss newspaper Le Temps, "If
the bourse is euphoric, do we have to raise interest rates? I do not believe
that, right now there is, within the G-20 central banking circles, the belief
that interest rates should be an instrument to use to limit euphoria," he said.
With Swiss consumer prices falling at the fastest rate in 50-years in July,
the SNB issued a stark reminder that it's determined to fight deflation risks
by printing Swiss francs. In the process, it pumped-up the Swiss Market Index
(SMI) to the 6,400-level, - creating the illusion of an economic recovery.
However, when measured versus gold, the SMI has actually tumbled by 11% since
its peak on August 20th. In hard money terms, the SMI is trading at 5.5 oz's
of gold, the level which prevailed in mid-July, when the SMI was last seen
in the vicinity of the 5,600-area.
"Plunge Protection Team" Engineers Global Recovery
In the United States, the infamous "Plunge Protection Team" (PPT), has been
busy at work, engineering the most remarkable recovery in the Dow Jones Industrials,
since the 1930's. The Dow Industrials is up 60% from its 12-year low of 6,500,
and is perched near the 10,400-level. The euphoria and greed that dominates
stock market psychology today, is completely reversed from the fear and panic
meltdowns that prevailed in the aftermath of the default of Lehman Brothers,
a year ago.
The central mechanism behind the PPT's clandestine scheme is a gradual devaluation
of the US-dollar through the Fed, which has carried out the electronic equivalent
of printing $1.75-trillion through the purchases of Treasury notes and mortgage
backed bonds, and flooding the global money markets with ultra-cheap credit.
The tidal wave of liquidity has enabled Wall Street's Oligarchic banks to reap
bumper profits in stocks and bonds, and awarding their traders with record
bonuses, while making US exports cheaper and foreign imports more expensive.

The historic rally in global markets is part of a trend that has emerged since
hitting bottom in late March - global stock markets generally move in the opposite
direction of the US-dollar. Also in keeping with the dollar's 16% slide since
late March, crude oil, base metals, gold, and grains have also surged sharply
higher. The connection between soaring commodity and stock markets and a falling
dollar points to the speculative nature of the carry trade. Yet carry traders
should be careful about what they wish for, - if the US-dollar's gradual slide
suddenly lurches into a free-fall.
The US dollar has supplanted the Japanese yen as the top funding currency
in highly leveraged carry trades. Speculators are borrowing US-dollars at near
zero-percent, betting that the greenback will decline further, and investing
the funds in volatile stocks and commodities around the world. Over the past
six-months, the US-dollar is off 20% against the Canadian dollar, down 16%
against the Euro, down 11.4% against the Japanese yen, and is 36% lower against
the Brazilian real.
Nuclear QE and the US-dollar's devaluation have already led to the rapid unwinding
of the deflationary forces in the global economy that threatened a second Great
Depression. The Dow Jones Commodity Index is now 10% higher than a year ago,
portending an outbreak of inflation in 2010. Like its Swiss counterpart, the
rally in the Dow Jones Industrials is also a monetary illusion. When measured
in gold terms, the Dow is 11% lower below its peak level on August 24th, trading
at 9.15 ounces of gold, - reflecting the PPT's monetization of the stock market.

With the gold market surging above $1,100 /oz, its comforting for gold bugs
to know, that Fed chief Ben "Bubbles" Bernanke views the surge in commodity
markets as a signal of a revival in global economic activity, "especially in
resource-intensive emerging market economies," rather than the early warning
signs of accelerating inflation next year. Instead, the Fed chief argues that
inflation will remain "subdued for some time and that gives the Fed leeway
to hold rates at record-low levels for an extended period," he said on Nov
16th.
"Jawboning" is only weapon in the Fed's arsenal right now that can be used
to defend the despised US-dollar, without actually lifting interest rates.
It's a delicate balancing act that's likely to go down in flames before a sophisticated
audience. "We are attentive to the implications of changes in the value of
the dollar, and the Fed will help ensure that the dollar is strong and a source
of global financial stability," Bernanke declared. Yet traders are skeptical,
given "Helicopter" Ben's reputation.
By pegging interest rates at zero-percent, the Fed is inflating speculative
bubbles worldwide. Right now, Gold has become the most coveted sanctuary from
the G-20's money printing orgy. Even with gold zooming above $1,100 /oz, Bernanke
said on Nov 16th, "It's extraordinarily difficult to tell if a bubble is forming.
It's not obvious to me in any case." His right-hand man, Fed governor Donald
Kohn, went one step further, revealing for the first time, that the Fed's ultra-easy
money policy is in fact, meant to encourage traders to shift money into risky
assets, and argued that hiking interest rates isn't the appropriate tool for
deflating asset bubbles.
Beijing fuels Gold, Commodity Rally,
In unusually blunt criticism of the Fed's "bubble blowing" policy, on Nov
15th, Chinese banking regulator Liu Mingkang said the Fed's pledge to hold
down borrowing costs for an "extended period of time" is creating a new systemic
risk for the world economy. "This situation has already encouraged a huge dollar
carry trade and has a massive impact on global asset prices. It is boosting
speculative investment in stock and property markets and will pose new, insurmountable
risks to the global recovery and, particularly, to the recovery in emerging
markets," he warned.
Fan Gang, a top member of the People's Bank of China's (PBoC) monetary policy
committee, said on Nov 18th, "The US needs to address how to raise interest
rates to curb excess global liquidity and rein in volatility in the dollar.
Speculative capital inflows or "hot money" into China has become a problem," he
said. In order to maintain the US-dollar's exchange rate at 6.84-yuan, the
PBoC has cranked up its money printing operations, and ordered its state owned
banks to extend a record amount of new loans, 20% of which filtered into the
Shanghai stock market.

China's M2 money supply is expanding at a +29.4% annualized clip, and sowing
the seeds of faster inflation in China and around the world. The late Milton
Friedman, the godfather of monetarism, once remarked that, "Significant changes
in the growth rate of money supply impact the financial markets first. Then,
they impact changes in the real economy, usually in six-to-nine months," he
observed. Indeed, in China, the rapid expansion of the M2 money supply began
in Nov 2008, and the subsequent upturn in the commodity based inflation began
to jettison higher in July 2009.
Beijing is wary of printing money at such a fast pace, since an outburst of
hyper-inflation would be just as debilitating as a slump in exports. Thus,
former Chinese central bank adviser Yu Yongding warned US Treasury chief Timothy
Geithner in June, "I wish to tell the US government, - Don't be complacent
and think there isn't any alternative for China to buy your bills and bonds.
The Euro is an alternative. And there are lots of raw materials we can still
buy," he said.
China has already begun to experiment with alternatives. Beijing has signed
currency swap agreements with Russia, and Asian and Latin American countries,
in order to settle bi-lateral trade in their own currencies, rather than the
US-dollar. Moreover, Beijing is increasingly using its $300-billion sovereign
wealth fund (SWF) to buy minerals, and stakes in base metal miners, oil companies,
and commodity trading firms, rather than to purchase US Treasury bills at near
zero-percent.
Hong Kong's Central Bank Inflates Stock market Bubble
Beijing has kept the yuan's value frozen against the US-dollar over the past
year, and it leading to cries of foul from US-companies, Asian exporting nations,
Brazil, and Euro-zone officials, complaining that their currency appreciation
against the yuan is giving Chinese exporters an unfair advantage. "Either all
countries should have a fixed exchange rate, or all should have a floating
exchange rate," said Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega on Nov 9th.
Asian central banks are printing vast quantities of money, and pegging interest
rates at ultra-low levels, in order to prevent their currencies from rising
further against the dollar, and by default, against the Chinese yuan. The most
glaring example of currency manipulation is the actions of Hong Kong's Monetary
Authority, which has injected about HK$546-billion into the foreign exchange
market over the past 12-months, in order to offset huge demand for Hong Kong
dollars, and to keep the US-dollar fixed at an artificial rate of 7.80 HK-dollars.

The parabolic surge in Hong Kong's FX reserves, to $220-billion last month,
reflects the amount of HK$'s pumped into the local currency market in exchange
for US-dollars, which in turn, ends-up inflating the local stock and property
markets. The HKMA has slashed its overnight repo rate to a record low of 0.50%
from 6.75% two-years ago, encouraging speculation in risky assets. Thus, the
HKMA is also pursuing QE, thru its currency intervention tactics.
Hong Kong's chief central banker remarked last week, "a US-dollar carry trade
spawned by ultra-low interest rates threatens to inflate dangerous asset bubbles
in emerging markets, the same way low Japanese rates did in the 1990's." But
St Louis Fed chief, James Bullard said US monetary policy won't be formulated
with regard to prices outside its borders. "It's very hard to identify bubbles,
and I think if there's problems in real estate markets in Asia, it's not very
practical to say that you should raise interest rates in the US," he declared.
President Obama bows to Japanese Creditors,
In Tokyo, the six-month US-dollar Libor lending rate fell below the Japanese
yen rate for the first time in 16-years, as the Fed signaled it would keep
the fed funds rate pegged near zero-percent or an extended period of time.
As the US-dollar has lost its interest rate advantage against the Japanese
yen, it's tumbled from around 122-yen in June of 2007, to around 89.25-yen
today. The "Yen carry trade," which dominated the scene from the beginning
of 2005 thru the first quarter of 2009, has been virtually unwound, and is
no longer causing markets to tremble.

Successive Japanese finance chiefs, have always come to the rescue of the
US-dollar after sharp declines, since the yen's appreciation threatens to undermine
Japan's export-driven recovery and prolong its pain with deflation. The "current
level around 90-yen is a bit painful," said Yukitoshi
Funo, vice president of Toyota on Sept 25th. Sure enough, Japan's new finance
chief Hirohisa
Fujii heeded the call for help, and issued his clearest warning yet that
Tokyo would intervene to prop-up the tumbling dollar. "If currencies show some
excessive moves in a biased direction, we will take action," Fujii warned on
October 3rd, stabilizing the dollar at 88-yen.

Japan's economy has contracted by -7.2% from a year ago, and its annual output
of $4.9-billion is roughly eight-percent of the world economy. Japan's industrialized
economy has few natural resources, and foreign trade enables it to earn the
currency to purchase raw materials, energy, and food supplies. It's also the
second largest creditor to Washington, holding $751-billion of US Treasury
notes, up sharply from $617-billion in September 2008. Thus, it wasn't surprising
to see President Obama bowing last week before Japanese Emperor Akihito at
the Imperial Palace.
Increasingly, the US-dollar's privileged role as the world's top reserve and
trading currency is being called into question. This was highlighted when India's
central bank purchased 200-tons of gold at an average price of $1,045 /oz in
the second half of October, in exchange for $7-billion held in its FX stash.
The dollar's demise highlights the transformation of America from the world's
industrial powerhouse, and into the center of global financial speculation
and highly leveraged carry trades.
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