|
Weekly Markets
Precious Metals - Oil
Other Commodities - Currencies
Bonds - Stocks
Weekly Commentary
The Elephant in the Living Room
Opinions
- Sir Anthony O' Reilly warns that we are in a "Second World War" which is
a "a major battle for economic prosperity and survival."
- Greenspan discusses 'Housing Bubbles.'
- Bank of England cautions on Financial Derivatives.
- McWilliams warns of possibility of US Economy Imploding Argentina Style
Performance ( % Change)
| |
Current Level |
5 Days |
1 Year |
5 Year |
| Gold |
417.30 |
-0.6% |
+10.4% |
+51.5% |
| Silver |
6.94 |
+0.4% |
+20.7% |
+36.6% |
| S&P |
1,189.28 |
+3.1% |
+9.0% |
-18.9% |
| Nasdaq |
2,046.42 |
+3.5% |
+7.9% |
-45.0% |
| ISEQ |
6,157.62 |
+2.1% |
+18.9% |
+13.4% |
| FTSE |
4,971.80 |
+1.7% |
+12.6% |
-21.3% |
| USD/EUR |
0.79 |
+0.6% |
-5.5% |
-28.6% |
| OIL (Nymex) |
46.80 |
-3.8% |
+14.4% |
+57.4% |

Gold Investments are Approved Dealers for the Perth Mint Certificate Programme.
The PMCP is the world's only government-guaranteed precious metal certificate
programme. The Perth Mint is wholly owned by the government of Western Australia
which is rated AAA by the US International Credit Rating Agency, Standard
and Poor's.
Weekly Markets
The stock bulls had a good week this week.
The Dow and the S&P were up four days in a row and some 3% for the week.
However, the bond markets failure to sell off with a corresponding rise in
yields suggests many investors are not convinced of the sustainability of the
US economic recovery.
Commodities and precious metals were largely unchanged for the week but oil
was down a significant 3.84% for the week.
Precious Metals
Gold was down by $2.40 or 0.57% for the week. From $419.70 to $417.30 per
ounce.
Silver was very volatile and rallied sharply before settling up for the week,
from $6.91 to $6.94 per ounce. It was up 0.4%.
Platinum (July) was down marginally, finishing at $862.50 from $865 per ounce
Palladium (June) was down also down marginally from $188.50 to $187.75 per
ounce.
'A close below $418 will not look good on the charts,' said James Moore of
TheBullionDesk.com. He targeted short-term weakness in the precious metal down
to the 410-to-415 USD range.
Gold in dollar terms took out its massive wedge formation to the downside,
but only marginally. This could mean that gold may retreat to $410 or possibly
even $400 in the short term. However, gold in Euro terms has remained strong
at EUR332.82 and this continuing strength of gold in EUR terms may mean that
the recent slight sell off in gold may be due to the USD's recent strength
rather than weakness in gold per se.
Short term indicators look good for gold as sentiment is overwhelmingly bearish
which means most of the short term buyers have thrown in the towel and thus
there is a lot of room for the longs to re enter their long positions.
Thus if gold reverses back up, which I believe it will, this be reviewed as
a false breakdown.
Reuters reported how "gold demand in India, the world's largest consumer,
has surged this week because of lower prices and strong wedding season demand,
traders said on Tuesday. Jewellers were placing large orders and banks were
running out of ready stocks, they said... Gold buying has jumped to 1,000 to
1,500 kg a day in Ahmedabad from 500 kg during the off season. In Jaipur, the
capital of Rajasthan state, gold imports have doubled to 1,000 kg... 300 kg
of gold was being sold everyday in Madras compared with 175 kg in April."
A glance at the rupee/gold chart shows why. Gold has recently only been lower
in the first few days of February this year - when demand was stupendous -
and prior to that early last year. These sorts of stories are rare and are
invariably associated with lows.
There are similar if vaguer references in various commentaries speaking of
the Middle East and South East Asia.
Even Japan's futures traders became active on finding the active contract
back below Y1500/g. On volume equal to 14,826 Comex lots (132% above Monday)
open interest rose 465 Comex lots, but according to the Mitsubishi data, the
public added 6.2 tonnes (1,993 Comex) to their long. The active contract closed
down 2 yen, but world gold went out $1.20 above the NY close.
Shorting into the type of physical market that has developed is very unhealthy.
Oil
Oil was again massively volatile and ended down 3.84%. The price for a barrel
of oil fell from $48.67 to $46.80. For the week, oil is down by $1.87.

Chinese, Indian and Asian demand for energy is continuing unabated and is
forecast to continue to grow exponentially. The urbanisation of China and India
is creating massive demand for motorcycles and cars by the burgeoning middle
class commuters which means it is unlikely we will ever experience the record
low prices of the late 1990's.
Exxon Mobil has released projections predicting global energy demand will
increase by 50 per cent by 2030. This coincides with a growing realisation
that the peak oil supply has been reached or will be reached very soon which
may result in what oil analysts have called a permanent high plateau.
Geopolitical issues in Venezuela, Russia and the Middle East may also affect
the supply side of the equation.
Other Commodities
Reuters Commodities Research Bureau's Index was largely unchanged from 293.85
last Friday to 293.28.
The CRB's year to date gains are at 3.3%.
Since hitting a low of 182.83 in October 2001 it is up some 65%.
The Reuters CRB Index ( the 17 basic components include hard tangible assets
such as Metals, Textiles and Fibers, Livestock and Products, Fats and Oils,
Raw Industrials, Foodstuffs). One of the CRB index's greatest strengths is
the fact that there is an equal weighting of all of its 17 components. This
weighting assures that no price increase in any single commodity, like oil,
can significantly skew the entire index. Significant moves in the CRB are only
possible when the majority of its component commodities are moving in unison
with a particular primary trend. Oil, silver and gold only account for 3/17th
of the entire index.
The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index was down 2.2%. The GSCI is a world production-weighted
commodity index which next year will be composed of 24 liquid exchange traded
futures contracts. The GSCI includes energy, industrial metals, precious metals,
agricultural and livestock products. It is up 9.9% year to date.
One of the most important indicators for commodity prices is copper. Copper
rallied 1.7 pct.
Should copper prices and the wider commodity indexes resume their downtrend
it may indicate that deflationary forces are overcoming inflationary forces
in the wider global economy. Precious metals are the only commodities, and
one of the few asset classes, which perform well in both inflationary and deflationary
economic conditions.
Helen Yuan and Xiao Yu of Bloomberg reported how "China's imports of steel
products rose to a one-year high in April, indicating efforts by the government
to cool economic expansion isn't dampening demand from makers of home appliances
and cargo containers. China imported 2.56 million tons of steel products last
month."
July copper futures settled 1.20 cents higher at 137.50 cents per pound.
Arabica coffee futures for July settled up 0.20 cent at $1.17 a pound on the
New York Board of Trade and September closed up 0.30 cent at $1.20 a pound.
Cocoa futures for July settled $6 lower at $1,440 a metric ton.
World raw sugar futures for July settled 0.06 cent higher at 8.59 cents a
pound.
Chicago Board of Trade July corn settled 3.75 cents higher at $2.13.25 a bushel.
July soybean futures settled 2.75 cents higher at $6.32 a bushel.
The CBOT's new South America soybean futures contract, or SAB, traded more
than 200 lots on Friday's launch day, brokers said.
July SAB closed at $6.41 per bushel, August ended at $6.44, and September
closed at $6.53.
CBOT July wheat settled up 3.50 cents at $3.13 per bushel.
Currencies
The U.S. dollar index gained 0.44 points to 86.61 Friday, a new 7 month high.
The dollar index gained0.58%, as the dollar rally continued.
The euro index lost 0.9 points to 125.45 Friday, a new 7 month low. The euro
is lower by 0.65% for the week.
The British pound was down 1.3% due to disappointing economic figures in the
UK.
The Japanese yen lost 0.58 points to 92.37 Friday, a new 5 week low. For the
week the yen is lower by 0.87%.
The Brazilian real rose 1% to a 3-year high. The Iceland krona rose 2.3%,
recovering some of its recent steep decline. On the downside, the South African
rand declined 3%, the Hungarian forint 1.6%.
China further denied imminent plans for a Yuan revaluation as pressure by
the US continues, though eventual revaluation is likely to happen sooner rather
than later. The market will likely view this as dollar negative. Add to this
recent comments from other major trading partners like Russia, South Korea,
India, and Japan who all have expressed a desire to diversify their foreign
reserves, which means they plan to hold or buy fewer U.S. dollars in the future.
Bonds
The treasury and bond markets were largely unchanged and did not sell off,
with a consequent rise in yields, as is the norm when the stock market rallies
strongly.
The 10-Year Treasury note yield was largely unchanged for the week at 4.125%.
Five-year Treasury yields were rose 5 basis points, ending the week at 3.87%.
Two-year Treasury yields ended the week up 7 basis points to 3.66%.
Long-bond (30 year) yields dropped 4 basis points to 4.44%.
The spread between 2 and 30-year government yields declined from 89 to 78.
The US Current Account and Trade Deficits
Bill Gross who is the manager of PIMCO, the largest bond fund in the world,
recently told the Financial Times, "But when over 50% of outstanding US Federal
debt is held by foreign creditors, then the rules of the game can change."
The US Treasury report showed that foreign central banks became net sellers
of U.S. assets for the first time in 19 months in March, helping to slow foreign
capital inflows into the United States by a large 46%. Net capital inflows
fell to $45.7 billion in March from $84.1 billion in February. Read
the full report.
It was the lowest level of capital inflows since October 2003 and was the
first time since October 2004 that foreign inflows have fallen short of the
U.S. trade deficit for the month. The trade gap was $55 billion in March.
The United States demands nearly $2 billion a day in foreign capital to finance
its current account deficit. So far, the requirements have generally been met
and thus U.S. interest rates remain very low.
"The report strikes at the heart of the worries of the swelling trade deficit
and the long term prospects for its financibility," said Ashraf Laidi, chief
currency analyst for MG Financial Group.
Asian banks have stopped buying the humongous levels of US debt of recent
times which have allowed the 'drunken sailor spending' of this fiscally irresponsible
US government.
What has been happening is that China, Japan and Asia's middle classes work
and save and their governments have bought trillions of dollars of U.S. Treasury
bonds. This low-interest debt has helped keep interest rates low in the US
and help support the spending habits of both the U.S. government and American
consumers. They in turn buy Asian and Chinese-manufactured goods at Wal-Mart,
which has kept the whole cycle going.
But the data released last week showed that this process is beginning to end
with Asian savers starting to curtail their purchases of US Treasury debt.
There has been a significant increase in purchases of US Treasury debt from
the Caribbean. It is suggested that these are purchases by large hedge funds
and that they are short term purchases and due to the herd like trend following
behaviour of hedge funds these trades may be unwound as quickly as they have
been put in place.
The US is now the largest debtor the world has ever seen and it's economic
destiny is in the hands of it's creditors. These creditors are becoming increasingly
nervous about their savings and the health of the US dollar and the US economy.
Dollar
ignores inconclusive data - Financial Times
Investor
gloom gathers over world economy-Merrill - Reuters, 17-05-05
Fears
for dollar as central banks sell US assets - Financial Times, 17-05-05
U.S.
capital inflows slow in March - CBS Market Watch, 17-05-05
International
Investors Add U.S. Assets at Slowest Pace Since October 2003 - Bloomberg
Pirates of the Caribbean -
Kirby, Safe Haven
Pirates Reprise -
Kirby, Safe Haven
How Japan
financed global reflation - Duncan, Gold Eagle
Foreign
investment slowest since '03 - Chicago Tribune
Bizarrely, the figures released by the US Treasury last Monday for March 2005
contradict and are different to previous figures released. They seem to have
been altered after the fact and as of yet there has been no official or non
official explanation for the massive discrepancy in the figures.
These major alterations are particularly glaring with regard to the major
buyers of US Treasury debt. The tables of MAJOR FOREIGN HOLDERS OF TREASURY
SECURITIES can found here and here.
The figures for smaller countries have also changed. Ireland is one of the
largest buyers of US Treasuries on a per capita basis. The first report showed
that Ireland's holding of US Treasury debt as of January '05 was at $21 billion.
The second report showed that their holdings for the same period, January '05,
had dropped to $15.6 billion. This restatement has not been explained by the
US Treasury Department. Either this is a major statistical error or the US
has some very forgiving creditors.
The chart below shows the continuing deterioration in the US Current Account
balance and of US manufacturing. The US current account is now at record levels
at some 6% of GDP. It has been pointed out that when the US current account
deficit hit it's record levels, near 3.4% of GDP in 1987, there followed Black
Monday and the October Stock Market Crash. Many analysts believe that the record
current account deficits were a contributory factor in the stock market declines.
Stocks
The stock markets were largely up. The Dow and S&P were up 4 days in a
row (before their streak ended with slight losses on Friday) and the Nasdaq
6 days in a row.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up from 10,140 to 10,472; up 3.27% for
the week.
The S&P 500 Index, of more significance than the DOW, was up 3.05%; from
1154 to 1189.28.
The Nasdaq Composite was up 3.52% for the week to 1976.8 after a late day rally
on Friday.
The FTSE was up 1.7% and the ISEQ was up 2.1%.
The broader US stock market experienced strength also.
The Transports were up strongly by 6.5%.
Utilities were up 2%.
The Morgan Stanley Consumer index was up by 3%.
The Morgan Stanley Cyclical index was down by 4%.
The small cap Russell 2000 and S&P400 Mid-cap indices were up 5% and 4%
respectively.
The NASDAQ100 and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index were up some 4%.
The Semiconductors were also up 4%.
The Street.com Internet Index and NASDAQ Telecommunications indices were up
5% and 4% respectively.
Biotechs were up 3%.
The Broker/Dealers were up 5% and the Banks were up 3%.
The XAU Index of large precious metal mining stocks was up 2.2%.
The HUI (AMEX's Gold BUGS index) a basket of unhedged gold and silver stocks
was up 2.2%.
The strength in the precious metal stocks despite gold's small sell off may
mean gold may be ready to make a move up as oftentimes precious metal stocks
signal ahead of time a move in the metals themselves.
The one sector that experienced weakness was the retail sector due to concerns
regarding the health of the US consumer.
It is broadly accepted that due to record debt levels and record low savings
levels US consumer spending will slow.
Just 10 years ago the savings level in the US was 6% whereas today it is 0%.
In 2001, the U.S. savings rate ranked 22nd out of 25 OECD countries. Today
it is believed to be lower. Conversely, the Chinese save some 40% of their
income. The hope is that US business spending will increase to supplant US
consumer spending.
Walmart (WMT) is the largest retailer in the world and it's shares were down
marginally for the week despite the strength in the rest of the stock market.
In the last 5 months it is down some 20% to $47.18. Increasing protectionist
sentiment in the US congress and in the Bush administration does not bode well
for the retailing sector.
Also if and when China revalues the yuan it will make Walmart and other retailers
goods more expensive and thus create even more inflation which the US consumer
may be ill equipped to cope with.
Other Credit and Money Supply Indicators
Broad money supply (M3) declined $5.7 billion to $9.584Trillion (week of
May 9). Year-to-date, M3 has expanded at a 3.3% rate, with M3-less Money Funds
growing at 5.5% pace. For the week, Currency dipped $0.9 billion. Demand & Checkable
Deposits added $2.6 billion. Savings Deposits fell $15.9 billion. Small Denominated
Deposits gained $4.2 billion. Retail Money Fund deposits dipped $1.9 billion,
and Institutional Money Fund deposits declined $8.0 billion. Large Denominated
Deposits dropped $8.8 billion. For the week, Repurchase Agreements rose $13.8
billion, and Eurodollar deposits gained $9.3 billion.
Bank Credit rose $10.9 billion last week, increasing the year-to-date expansion
to $305.8 billion, or 12.4% annualized. Securities Credit is up $123 billion,
or 17.5% annualized, year-to-date. Loans & Leases have expanded at a 10.2%
pace so far during 2005. For the week, Securities surged $15.2 billion.
Commercial & Industrial (C&I) loans added $3.2 billion. Real Estate
loans gained $2.6 billion. Real Estate loans have expanded at a 12.6% rate
during the first 19 weeks of 2005 to $2.67 Trillion. Real Estate loans
are up $290 billion, or 12.2%, over the past 52 weeks. For the week, consumer
loans declined $3.5 billion, and Securities loans fell $5.2 billion. Other
loans dipped $1.4 billion.
Total Commercial Paper surged $16.6 billion last week (up $29.7bn in 2
wks) to $1.51 Trillion. Total CP has expanded at an 18.5% rate y-t-d (up
12.5% over the past 52 weeks). Financial CP jumped $14.1 billion last week
to $1.363 Trillion, with a y-t-d gain of $78.9 billion (16% ann.). Non-financial
CP gained $2.5 billion to $151.2 billion (up 28% in 52 wks). The expansion
of CP, especially financial sector borrowings, is one factor explaining the
lagging monetary aggregates.
Fed Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt rose $4.7 billion to $1.404
Trillion for the week ended May 18. "Custody" holdings are up $68.3 billion,
or 13.3% annualized, year-to-date (up $204.3bn, or 17.0%, over 52 weeks). Federal
Reserve Credit expanded $4.3 billion to $787.6 billion. Fed Credit has declined
1.0% annualized y-t-d (up $47.1bn, or 6.4%, over 52 weeks).
ABS issuance was a solid $13.4 billion (from JPMorgan). Year-to-date issuance
of $246 billion is 13% ahead of comparable 2004. At $155 billion, y-t-d home
equity ABS issuance is 24% above the year ago level. (Noland, Prudent Bear)
Commentary
The Elephant in the Living Room
It is becoming increasingly obvious that there are fundamental economic challenges
facing the global economy and especially the economies of the western world.
These include unprecedented US trade and current account deficits, record debt
levels, rising oil prices, the prospect of rising interest interest rates and
an increasingly vulnerable global reserve currency.
The possibility of a burgeoning financial crisis has been spoken and written
about by a litany of the most respected economic figures and institutions in
the world today.
Alan Greenspan, his predecessor Paul Volker, Robert Rubin, Sir Tony O'Reilly,
George Soros, Stephen Roach (chief economist of Morgan Stanley), Bill Gross
(manager of the largest bond fund in the world), US Comptroller General David
Walker, Warren Buffet, Martin Wolf (Associate Editor and Chief Economics Commentator,
Financial Times) the editors of the Washington Post and New York Times and
institutions such as the Bank of England, IMF, World Bank and OECD have all
warned of the serious macroeconomic challenges we all face. The reaction of
many economic commentators has been to ignore the warnings and the substantive
points being made about the risk posed by the significant macroeconomic risks.
Economic wishful thinking is fine and of course we all hope there is a gradual
readjustment in the large financial imbalances in the global economic system
and the recent economic paradigm of low inflation and high growth continues.
However, it is highly irresponsible not to acknowledge these fundamental economic
realities. Ignoring the 800 pound gorilla or the elephant in the living room
and putting a false benign spin on economic reality helps to lull people into
a false sense of economic security. These people become non rational economic
agents resulting in a non rational market place. This distorted marketplace
results in misallocations of capital and increasing bubbles in various asset
classes.
Occasionally lesser mortals than the illustrious men listed above who have
voiced similar economic warnings advising financial caution and prudence have
been dismissed as 'Cassandras or being 'gloomy'. This is a way of 'attacking
the man and not the ball' in order to detract from and avoid the substantive
economic issues at stake and shows a level of irresponsiblity.
It is worth noting that Cassandra herself did have the gift of prophecy and
was right in her predictions and her terrible affliction was that despite knowing
what would befall her countrymen no one would listen to her. Cassandra correctly
warned not to allow the 'Trojan Horse' into the city and prophesised the fall
of her native Troy and no one listened to her. The irony is that had her prophecies
and explicit warnings been listened to and cautious and prudent measures taken
in advance her warnings and prophecies might not have come true.
It is also worth noting that the first sellers of comprehensive health insurance
in the US - Massachusetts Health Insurance of Boston in 1847, were also called
'cassandras' who focussed on the 'negative' possibility that one could get
seriously ill in order to garner profit. Modern sellers of car, health and
other forms of insurance no longer have to spell out the blindingly obvious
reality that there are unforeseen, non linear events that occasionally happen
such as September 11th, the Boxing Day Tsunami and the Stock Market Crash of
1987. And that one should take precautions against such possible eventualities.
It is now taken for granted that one should be cautious and prudent and always
have insurance 'just in case'.
Many economic commentators are reluctant to discuss these challenges. Some
are naive and ill informed while with the majority there is a forlorn hope
that these economic realities will gradually correct themselves and we can
all return to the massive levels of economic growth and prosperity experienced
by the First World in the 1990's.
Hoping for a continuance of this economic status quo is understandable. Ignoring
economic realities is not.
Whether those dismissed as modern day economic pessimists are proved right
or wrong is irrelevant. What is relevant is how we react to these economic
realities in order to protect ourselves materially 'just in case' those issuing
warnings are proved correct.
Opinions of the Week
"Asian economies are growing while Europe and the US are in decline . The
solution is for the major economies to adjust their currencies to levels which
reflect today's economic reality. There is a general feeling that Europe, particularly "old
Europe" as a manufacturing and potentially services area, is, or will become,
increasingly uncompetitive...
Essentially this means that manufacturing and services in Europe will be a
shadow of their former selves...
In the medium and long term - not to speak in certain cases of the short term
- this bodes ill for Ireland, and for Europe. The question is what can be done
about it?...
There are a number of answers, not least being a growing sense of awareness
both in Europe and the US, that they are engaged, as assuredly as they were
in the Second World War, in a major battle for economic prosperity and survival.
Simply stated, as we contemplate this growing struggle... it becomes clear
that companies act in this way [relocate] because European and US currencies
are overvalued in relation to Asian currencies, particularly the Chinese yuan.
The solution to this is a major and organised adjustment of currency parities.
Otherwise, there is a risk of a drift to protectionism, as is actively being
pursued in the US Senate today (and as happened, to drastic effect, in the
1930's with the Smoot-Hawley Act in the USA...
I believe therefore that all the major parties, the EU, Britain, USA, China
and Japan should urgently organise a major conference along the lines of the
Plaza/Louvre Accords of 1985 and 1987 which would indicate that the parties
believe is fair value for a basket of currencies for a period of say, 5 years,
and a concurrent declaration that they will act in concert against any speculation
or gross overvaluation of a particular currency against it's neighbours.
Such a declaration will bring economic stability and growth to the world on
a steady and measured basis.
Nothing else will."
Asian economies are growing while Europe and the US are in decline - Sir
Anthony O'Reilly, The Sunday Independent
"In some ways, the 19th-century version of the global capitalist system was
more stable than the current one.
It had a single currency, gold; today there are three major currencies crashing
against each other like continental plates."
Ominous:
The US Deficit V's the US Dollar - Jack Crooks quoting George Soros,
The Crisis of Global Capitalism
"Some regions of the U.S. housing market are showing signs of unsustainable
speculation and froth based on fast turnover of existing homes.... The price
surge may simmer down as housing becomes less affordable.... It's pretty clear
that it's an unsustainable underlying pattern...
People are reaching to be able to pay the prices to be able to move into a
home...
There are a few things that suggest, at a minimum, there's a little froth
in this market. While we don't perceive that there is a national bubble, it's
hard not to see that there are a lot of local bubbles.''
Alan Greenspan on the US Property Markets
"In the end, we cannot eliminate the risk inherent in mortgages with refinancing
options. But we can markedly contain the accompanying risks to systemic stability
by diversifying the concentration of risk away from large, highly leveraged
portfolios for which misjudgments can have quick and devastating consequences.
A system of diversified and less-leveraged interest-rate-risk management would
be far more resilient to the inevitable mistakes and shocks of individual risk-mitigating
strategies. Such diversification would thus pose much less systemic risk, largely
because of lowered leverage, which in turn is the consequence of the private-market
discipline imposed on commercial and investment banks, mutual funds, insurance
companies, and other current or potential holders of mortgage-backed securities...
Without the needed restrictions on the size of the GSE (Government Sponsored
Enterprises - Mortgage Providers) balance sheets, we put at risk our ability
to preserve safe and sound financial markets in the United States, a key ingredient
of support for housing.
Financial instability coupled with the higher interest rates it creates is
the most formidable barrier to the growth, if not the level, of homeownership.
Huge, highly leveraged GSEs subject to significant interest rate risk are not
conducive to the long-term financial stability that a nation of homeowners
requires."
Alan Greenspan on the risks posed by the huge government sponsored mortgage
companies
"Since the end of 2003, the rise in the value of imported oil--essentially
a tax on U.S. residents--has amounted to about 3/4 percent of GDP. The effects
were far larger in the crises of the 1970s. But, obviously, the risk of more-serious
negative consequences would intensify if oil prices were to move materially
higher."
Alan Greenspan on rising oil prices affects on the US Economy
"Over the last few years China, for its own reasons, has acted as an enabler
both of U.S. fiscal irresponsibility and of a return to Nasdaq-style speculative
mania, this time in the housing market. Now the U.S. government is finally
admitting that there's a problem - but it's asserting that the problem is China's,
not ours.
And there's no sign that anyone in the administration has faced up to an unpleasant
reality: the U.S. economy has become dependent on low-interest loans from China
and other foreign governments, and it's likely to have major problems when
those loans are no longer forthcoming...
Here's what I think will happen if and when China changes its currency policy,
and those cheap loans are no longer available. U.S. interest rates will rise;
the housing bubble will probably burst; construction employment and consumer
spending will both fall; falling home prices may lead to a wave of bankruptcies.
And we'll suddenly wonder why anyone thought financing the budget deficit was
easy.
In other words, we've developed an addiction to Chinese dollar purchases,
and will suffer painful withdrawal symptoms when they come to an end.
I'm not saying we should try to maintain the status quo. Addictions must be
broken, and the sooner the better. After all, one of these days China will
stop buying dollars of its own accord. And the housing bubble will eventually
burst whatever we do. Besides, in the long run, ending our dependence on foreign
dollar purchases will give us a healthier economy. In particular, a rise in
the yuan and other Asian currencies will eventually make U.S. manufacturing,
which has lost three million jobs since 2000, more competitive.
But the negative effects of a change in Chinese currency policy will probably
be immediate, while the positive effects may take years to materialize. And
as far as I can tell, nobody in a position of power is thinking about how we'll
deal with the consequences if China actually gives in to U.S. demands, and
lets the yuan rise."
The Chinese Connection - Krugman, New York Times
"A PERFECT STORM. That's what one of Washington's top lobbyists tells me is
brewing. It might blow away the decades-long consensus in favour of free trade.
It is not only that the Treasury used its latest report to Congress on exchange-rate
policies to warn China to unpeg its currency from the dollar, or else. The
Treasury was unusually blunt: "Current Chinese policies are highly distortionary
... The peg blocks the transmission of critical price signals (and) impedes
needed adjustment of international balances.... What converts this from your
garden variety trade dispute into a more significant threat to America's relations
with China, and to the Doha round of trade-opening talks, is the powerful protectionist
coalition that is forming.... Trade watchers should focus on three dates: the
July vote on the Schumer proposal; the September meeting in Washington of the
American and Chinese presidents; and the October Treasury report on currency
manipulation that could set the stage for retaliation. If the Chinese cannot
find a way to make concessions without losing face, and Bush cannot find a
way to hold off the protectionists, the free-trade system as we know it just
might not survive."
Perfect
Storm: America heads for showdown on China Trade - Stelzer, The
Sunday Times
"Real wages in the US are falling at their fastest rate in 14 years, according
to data surveyed by the Financial Times by the Economic Policy Institute. Inflation
rose 3.1 per cent in the year to March but salaries climbed just 2.4 per cent,
according to the Employment Cost Index. In the final three months of 2004,
real wages fell by 0.9 per cent."
US
real wages fall at fastest rate in 14 years -Financial Times
"We looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further. A further rise would
have taken down one or several trading houses, which might have taken down
all the rest in their wake. Therefore at any price, at any cost, the central
banks had to quell the gold price, manage it. It was very difficult to get
the gold price under control but we have now succeeded. The U.S. Fed was very
active in getting the gold price down. So was the U.K."
Edward A. J. George, Ex Governor of the Bank of England, Director of the
BIS
"The money supply (which is hardly ever mentioned in polite company anymore)
has hit the wall, And while we're not high-church monetarists, a collapse in
money growth always has presaged an economic slowdown and a punk market."
Randall W. Forsyth, "Up and Down Wall Street", Barron's
"Three
long-term trends are threatening to bankrupt America: the burgeoning costs
of waging the war on terrorism, the U.S. economy's increasing reliance on foreign
capital, and rapid aging throughout the developed world. Washington must understand
that committing the United States to a broader global role while ignoring the
financial costs of doing so is deeply irresponsible.... The United States is
now borrowing about $540 billion per year from the rest of the world to pay
for the overall deficit funding Americans' consumption of goods and services
and US foreign transfers. This unprecedented current-account deficit is paid
through direct lending and the net sales of US assets to foreign business or
persons: everything from stocks and bonds to corporations and real estate.
The United States imports roughly $4 billion of foreign capital each day, half
of that to cover the current-account deficit and the other half to finance
investments abroad. At 5.4% of GDP [gross domestic product] in the first quarter
of 2004, the deficit is substantially higher than its previous record (3.5%
of GDP) in 1987, when the dollar fell by a third and the stock market took
its "Black Monday" plunge."
Riding
for a Fall - Peter G Peterson, Chairman of the Council on Foreign
Relations, the Institute of International Economics, Foreign Affairs Magazine
"Well our reality-based fairytale must now come to a close. The one reality
we are sure of is that we at PIMCO are most fortunate to be entrusted with
the management of your assets. The responsibility, while heavy, is the reason
we are in business. Thank you. As to happy endings in the global economy and
financial markets? Well some assets - high quality bonds, and certain commodities
in limited supply among them - may continue to do well; other risk-oriented
holdings can be pumped only a little bit further. And then? Well, given appropriate
steps from government policymakers that attempt to rebalance our decidedly
imbalanced global economy, we can still continue to prosper, but as with most
fairytales, the wicked witch lurks. For now we at PIMCO will be content to
acknowledge our reigning King's clothes, the poor quality of the stitchery,
and the partial exposure of his bare-bottom displayed on our front cover. Stay
tuned in future years. This may yet turn into a reality show that resembles
not the Coppertone Girl but Uncle Sam with a crown on his head and not much
else to show for his/our years of profligate consumption based upon Bretton
Woods II and the leveraging of near costless finance."
Investment
Outlook: The Strange Tale of the Bare-Bottomed King - Bill Gross, Managing
Director, PIMCO
"The upsurge in new financial instruments may be changing the relationship
between debt and equity markets in ways that are still hard to fathom. . .
. This is not yet a crisis. But these are early days, and it seems that relatively
few positions have been successfully unwound yet. It is possible that some
time next autumn a couple of big banks will announce big losses in their prime-brokerage
and proprietary-trading businesses - and if this were to raise their cost of
funding substantially, it could begin to be a crisis.
On a less cataclysmic note, however, all markets overshoot, and new instruments
and risk-control techniques, plus new participants, make it more likely. So
another possibility, suggests Mark Kiesel of PIMCO, an American bond-investment
firm, is that hedge funds and dealers will have their wrists badly smacked,
learn a lesson and dedicate themselves henceforth to fundamental credit analysis
and due diligence. PIMCO is looking to make profits by picking up and holding
debt whose spread has widened further than it should have in the general conflagration.
Others will follow suit. As you see, Buttonwood strives always for cheer."
A New Conundrum - Buttonwood, The Economist, 18-05-05
"Disaster can strike from what appears to be "clear blue sky", as in the stock
market crash of October 1987, as well as more literally on September 11, 2001.
On closer examination, at the time and since, the 1987 episode stemmed from
imbalances in the world economy that led to a sharp fall in the dollar, which
in turn triggered the crash.
Comparable international imbalances exist today. America's unusually large
budget and trade deficits need a flow of funds from Japan and China that can
be turned off rapidly. But the expectations reflected in share ratings worldwide
are much lower than in 1987.
Derivatives and hedge funds are more credible agents of a self-feeding crash.
In a speech on financial-disaster planning this week, Sir Andrew Large, Deputy
Governor of the Bank of England, noted that credit derivatives have spread
so fast that no one is quite sure where concentrations of risk now lie. Financial
assets based on derivatives also make credit markets more vulnerable.
As Sir Andrew admitted, no disaster planner was likely to have foreseen that
Russia's loan default of 1998 would quickly lead to the system-threatening
failure of the huge LTCM hedge fund in New York. LTCM was not heavily into
Russian debt, but it had laid bets elsewhere on interest rates converging.
Not many could have foreseen that General Motors shares would enjoy their
biggest one-day rise in 40 years, thanks to the intervention of Kirk Kerkorian,
the renowned speculator, just 24 hours before GM bonds were relegated to junk
status. A trading strategy of being long on the bonds and short on the shares
would not have been clever.
Last weekend, rumours circulated of several highly leveraged funds in trouble
or suffering embarrassing withdrawals by worried investors. Few yet suggest
that hedge funds will suffer damage on the scale of LTCM. It could happen,
but it is worth remembering the wider consequences in 1998."
Don't
Panic, It may never happen - Graham Searjeant, Personal Investor,
The Sunday Times
"We are heading into a slowdown and slowdowns inevitably put pressure on the
world's financial system. So where will this hit?... If you ask in the City
of London where any financial crash will come from, the answer top of the list
will be hedge funds."
Horses
a better bet than hedge funds? Too early to tell - McRae, The Independent
"Credit risk transfer has introduced new holders of credit risk, such as hedge
funds and insurance companies, at a time when market depth is untested. ...
The growth of derivative instruments and advent of a range of new asset classes,
despite added dispersion and better risk management, have added to the risk
of instability arising through leverage, volatility and opacity."
Sir Andrew Large, Deputy Governor of the Bank of England
Bank
of England warns of 'threat to markets' - The Times
"Is the global outlook improving or not? Is everything hunky dory or about
to implode?...
the Pope of Mammon is the man responsible for the expansionary monetary policy
of the US - and, by extension, the western world - over the last decade. Greenspan
has overseen the creation of more money than anyone else, ever. The result
has been a prolonged period of economic expansion and, very significantly,
the avoidance of several potential catastrophes...
History suggests that this cannot last.
The longer it carries on, the worse the ultimate come-uppance will be. Yes,
it is still very unlikely that the US economy will implode Argentina-style.
But the mere fact that one can suggest a parallel of any sort between US 2005
and Argentina 2001 is instructive.
I'm not surprised the markets are confused.
The reason equities are rising is the same reason property is rising - because
there is abundant credit out there driving prices. Can bonds and equities go
up at the same time indefinitely?
Well, in the short term, two apparently contradictory things can be true,
but longer term, I'm not so sure."
Don't
cry for me, Mr Greenspan - Argentine Style US Collapse? - McWilliams,
Sunday Business Post
Opinions and Quotes can be found in articles in the Daily News and Commentary
sections of www.gold.ie.
Key economic reports in the week ahead
On Tuesday, the April existing home sales report is expected to have shown
a rise to a 6.90 million unit annual rate from a 6.89 million unit annual rate
in March, according to a consensus of economists surveyed by Briefing.com.
New home sales, due Wednesday, are expected to have fallen to a 1.345 million
unit annual rate, down from a 1.431 million unit rate in March.
April durable goods orders, due Wednesday, likely rose 1.1 percent, according
to forecasts, after falling 2.3 percent in March.
The revised read on first-quarter gross domestic product growth is expected
to show an upward revision to a 3.7 percent annual rate, when it's reported
Thursday, up from the early read of 3.1 percent.
April personal income and spending figures are due Friday. Income likely rose
0.6 percent in the month, after rising 0.5 percent in March. Spending likely
rose 0.8 percent after rising 0.6 percent in March. The core PCE index, the
spending report's main inflation gauge, is expected to hold steady after rising
0.3 percent in March.
Also due Friday: the revised may read on consumer sentiment from the University
of Michigan. The index is expected to be revised up to 86.0 from 85.3 in April.
(CNN Money)
|