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The inflation redux plan from the Fed and Washington is based on zero interest
rates, massive deficits and quantitative easing, which are designed to bring
down the value of the U.S. dollar and create inflation. That is the truth,
despite promises from Treasury Secretary Geithner that he really means it this
time when he says the U.S. has a strong dollar policy--the irony being, that
he says this while concurrently begging the Chinese to allow the dollar to
fall vs. the Renminbi. But their hopes placed in a lower dollar are woefully
misguided and all that is being accomplished is to put into place the same
conditions that brought the global financial system to its knees.
Messrs Geithner and Bernanke have been successful in bringing down the value
of our currency. In fact, many of the negative factors that were in place before
the global economic meltdown occurred have returned in full force.
The trade deficit for September surged 18% to $36.5 billion. That gap was
the largest since the beginning of 2009 and largely due to imports surging
5.8% to $168.4 billion, which was the biggest increase since 1993. The news
must have been greeted with cheers in D.C. After all, the deficit would mean
more dollar weakness and signaled the return of the borrowing and spending
consumer. But the news also meant that the strategy of balancing trade by destroying
the dollar was not based on sound economics. The U.S. dollar fell from 78.5
on the DXY to about 77 during the month of September. In fact, the US dollar
has lost more than 16% of its value since March of this year. If a weak dollar
discouraged imports and boosted exports, then why did imports surge by the
most in 16 years?
Sorry Ben and Tim, the so called benefits of a falling dollar didn't materialize
as planned. That's because the inflation you created to bring the dollar down
caused the price of goods made in the US to become more expensive. Therefore,
foreign exporters couldn't really afford to increase the purchase of American
made goods even though their currencies strengthened.
The Treasury and the Fed have also able to bring risk appetites back to 2007
levels. The massive increase in money printing and government guarantees has
reduced credit spreads to razor thin margins. The Libor OIS spread measures
the spread between the London Interbank Offered Rate for dollars over three
months and what traders expect the Fed's Funds target rate will be during the
term of the contract. The gap fell to .1 percentage point this quarter and
according to Bloomberg, it was below the average between December 2001 and
July 2007. The record high Libor-OIS Spread was 3.64% in September of 2008.
Likewise, the Ted Spread is back to the "good old days" as well. Last November
the gap between the 3 month Treasuries and 3 month LIBOR was 199 bps. Today
it is just 21 bps. But the mispricing of risk that helped bring the financial
sector down in 2007 and 2008 is not boosting bank lending to private industry.
Bank lending is plummeting for the creation of capital goods and new businesses.
However, Money of Zero Maturity is up 8% YOY. That's because banks are lending
to the U. S. government, which is the only insatiable entity for borrowing
that still exists.
So the benefits of a crumbling currency have yet to materialize. However,
the ravages of pursuing such a flawed policy have started to arrive. The price
of oil has soared and gold is setting new highs every day. Credit spreads are
indicating that investors are mispricing risk yet again and the ballooning
trade deficit indicates that we once again believe we can consume much more
than we produce.
The stock market is dancing on top of a $2 trillion monetary base and that
latent liquidity has sent commodities higher, while the dollar sinks. My guess
is that Wall Street and Washington believes things are getting much better.
But I've seen this movie already and I don't like how it ends. As the prints
on CPI become more and more difficult to ignore, the Fed will be forced to
remove the life support provided by their free money policy. When that occurs
we will see the return of economic calamity. And maybe then we will have the
courage to finally face and deal with the true problem. New flash to D.C. and
Wall Street, it is not the misperception of an overvalued dollar, but rather
it is our overriding debt.
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