How does one reconcile the powerful Santa Claus rallies that are underway
on global equity markets, while the gold market is simultaneously enjoying
its greatest bull market in 25-years? Gold is not just moving swiftly higher
against the US dollar. Gold has more than doubled in Japanese yen terms from
5-years ago, to stand at 64,000 yen per ounce, its highest in 18-years. Against
the Euro, gold is trading at 460 Euros per ounce, an all time high, and 32%
higher from just four month ago.
Traditional market signals of higher inflation, emanating from soaring copper,
crude oil, gold and the CRB index have not led to higher US Treasury bond yields.
Instead, Asian central banks are recycling dollars acquired through currency
intervention, and Arab oil kingdoms are recycling Petro-dollars into the safe
haven US bond market, through their London based brokers, regardless of market
value or the inflation outlook, depressing long-term US Treasury yields by
up to 100 basis points.
So while the Federal Reserve was lifting the federal funds rate over the past
eighteen months, foreign central banks kept a lid on long term rates, locking
yields on the benchmark Treasury 10-year note into a tight sideways trading
range for the past two years. The famous bond market vigilantes of the 1980's
who punished the Fed when the US money supply was out of control with higher
bond yields, have been beaten into submission by China, Japan, and lately,
by Arab oil kingdoms of OPEC.
Among the myriad of influences that can impact the global economy, one cannot
overlook the pivotal role that persistently low bond yields had in fueling
the most rapid world expansion in three decades. The persistence of such low
bond yields in a period of rapid growth has created enormous bubbles in gold,
base metals, crude oil, US home prices, emerging market bonds and global equity
markets.
Yet at a meeting of the top-10 central bankers on January 9th>,
European Central Bank chief Jean Claude Trichet sought to link the low bond
yields and the flat US Treasury yield curve to the G-10's vigilance in combating
inflation. "We think that the credibility of the central banks is very, very
important and has proven to be effective as regards to inflation expectations.
Inflation expectations are low worldwide, another sign of central bank credibility," he
said.
But behind the scenes, Trichet has pursued a policy of "asset targeting",
pegging the ECB's repo rate below the Euro zone's inflation rate to engineer
a 23% rally in the EuroStoxx-600 index last year. Europe's negative interest
rates nurtured $1.04 trillion of Euro mergers and takeovers in 2005, which
in turn, injected more fresh cash into Euro equity markets, and fueled explosive
growth of 8.5% for the Euro M3 money supply. The ECB used to consider 4.5%
growth for M3 to be consistent with low inflation.

However, in "hard money" terms, the impressive 23% rally for the EuroStoxx-600
index in 2005 was only an optical illusion. The EuroStoxx-600 was outpaced
to the upside by a 31% surge in gold prices against the Euro. Compared to gold,
the EuroStoxx-600 actually fell 8% to 0.712 Euro /ounce from about a year ago.
Gold added an extra 8% against the Euro in the first two weeks of January,
sinking the EuroStoxx-600 further to 0.689 Euro /ounce.
Targeting the lowest credit costs in six decades during a period of strong
credit demand, meant the ECB had to pump more Euros into the $9.3 trillion
economy than needed for inflation-free growth, triggering double-digit house
price increases in countries such as France and Spain. Thus under Trichet,
the ECB's monetary policy has evolved into the Greenspan Fed's model of stimulating
consumer demand through the "wealth effect" with higher equity and home prices.
Trichet has turned 180 degrees away from a speech he gave before the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago, on April 23, 2002. Then, Trichet sounded like a fierce
opponent of "asset targeting", and said central bankers should avoid using
interest rates to prop up or reduce inflated prices for stocks, real estate,
and commodities. "We should be extremely cautious in reacting to asset price
bubbles. It would be like opening a Pandora's box, where investors take risks
because they think policy makers protect them from losses," he said.
"Central bankers can't determine the appropriate value of assets. It is generally
hard to assess whether price movements are the result of fundamental changes
in the economy or whether asset prices evolve according to some pathological
path. Central bankers watch bubbles, which may increase consumer confidence,
spending and investment when they inflate and impinge upon financial stability
when they burst. Governments should use market regulations to discourage bubbles
instead of expecting monetary policy to do so," Trichet said.
Finally, in September 2005, the European gold market joined the global bandwagon,
and broke out of a five-year sideways trading range to the upside, recognizing
that the ECB had joined the Bank of Japan and the Federal Reserve in rigging
asset markets. On January 12th, ECB chief Jean Trichet could not muster the
courage to lift the central bank's repo rate above the Euro zone inflation
rate, triggering a 2% surge in gold prices to 460 Euros /oz the next day.
Still, the ECB's easy money policy pales in comparison to that of the ultra-easy
money policy of Bank of Japan. Tokyo remains the cheapest source of capital
on the globe and is fueling asset inflation worldwide in equity and commodity
markets. Global financial markets have become so sophisticated that traders
can borrow cheap money in Europe and Japanas easily as they can in the
United States, to leverage their purchases of natural resource stocks, crude
oil, gold, or even Brazilian and Russian bonds, all benefiting from soaring
commodity prices.

Tokyo's Nikkei-225 stock index finished 40% higher in 2005, its biggest annual
gain since the 1980´s asset bubble, on expectations that Japan's once
morbid economy can post steady growth and exports. Foreign investors bought
a net 10.21 trillion yen of Japanese equities, a record for a single year.
Land prices in Tokyo, which had fallen 80% since peaking in 1990, rose last
year for the first time in 15 years. In "hard money" terms however, the Nikkei
rally was just an optical illusion, unable to outstrip gold's 44% climb to
an 18-year high of 64,000 yen per ounce.
Japan 's ruling elite tried to squash the gold rally by ordering the Tokyo
Commodity Exchange to lift margin requirements by 33% to discourage speculation.
The tactic worked for a brief time, and triggered a mini panic, knocking gold
13% lower to $495 per ounce in New York. However, news that Barrick Gold and
Placer Dome were joining forces to put more gold into fewer hands, and China's
future plans to diversify its massive US dollar reserves into other currencies,
including gold, ultimately foiled Tokyo's grand scheme.
Millions of words have been written about the Bank of Japan, known for its
heavy handed intervention tactics in the foreign exchange market, dueling speculators
to defend the US dollar and the profits of Japanese exporters. But the BOJ
doesn't limit its intervention to the forex markets. The central bank also
buys of 1.2 trillion yen of Japanese government bonds each month, and monetized
42% of the budget deficit last year. The BOJ floods the Tokyo money markets
with an excess of 30 to 35 trillion yen, ($300 billion) above and beyond the
demands of local banks.
Japan's overly generous monetary policy has pinned local interest rates at
zero for four years, and in a long delayed reaction, ignited a frenzy for real
estate and natural resource shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange similar to the
country's asset-inflated bubble of the 1980's. And if a Nikkei bubble does
develop, the Bank of Japan could wait too long to take counter measures, as
it did the last time, allowing Japanese share prices to show signs of irrational
exuberance.

Tokyo 's national debt is now approaching 774 trillion yen ($6.4 trillion),
or 151% of its economic output. The Ministry of finance is staunchly opposed
to a tighter BOJ policy, which could drive up the yen against the dollar, and
increase the cost of financing the debt. Yet if the BOJ keeps the current policy
in place when consumer prices start to rise, it will lead to negative interest
rates in real terms. That will have an easing effect. Already, Japanese producer
prices have been in positive territory for the past two years, leaving the
BOJ far behind the inflation curve.
But while the Nikkei-225 lost 4% to the gold market, and the EuroStoxx-600
lost 15% last year, the Dow Jones Industrials surrendered 23% of its value,
falling below 20 ounces of gold per one Dow share, to its lowest level in nine
years. The results might have been far worse. Not until the appointment of
Super-dove Ben Bernanke to lead the Federal Reserve and the onset of powerful
stock market rallies abroad did Santa Claus come to Wall Street.
Bernanke's reputation as an easy-money man is engraved by his most infamous
speech in November 2002. "The US government has a technology, called a printing
press that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially
no cost. By increasing the number of US dollars in circulation, or credibly
threatening to do so, the US government can also reduce the value of a dollar
in terms of goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system,
a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive
inflation."

Thus, the Santa Claus rally that has lifted Dow blue-chips 8% higher to the
11,000 area was just another optical illusion. Gold rallied 19% or $90 per
ounce since the Bush appointment of Ben Bernanke to the Fed on October 24,
2005. Both gold and stock market bulls have a lot of money riding on Bernanke.
Everybody knows the fortunes of the US economy will rise and fall with the
direction of home prices, and the appointment of Bernanke, was a clear signal
to the marketplace, the Fed would do whatever it takes to keep home prices
from falling.
How would the new Fed chief react to a spike in oil prices if Iran unleashes
the "Oil Weapon" in 2006, and cuts off oil exports of 2.4 million barrels of
day, in reaction to UN sanctions? "If inflation has recently been on the low
side of the desirable range, and inflation expectations are likewise low and
firmly anchored, then less urgency is required in responding to the inflation
threat posed by higher oil prices. In this case, monetary policy need not tighten
and could conceivably ease in the wake of an oil-price shock," Bernanke said
on October 21, 2004. Thus, Bernanke might point to the flat or inverted yield
curve as credible proof that inflation expectations are firmly anchored on
the low side, and start lowering rates in reaction to an oil spike.
Iranian hardliner Ahmandinejad has threatened to cut off 2.4 million per day
of oil exports if the UN imposes economic sanctions on OPEC's second largest
oil producer. "Those who use harsh language against Iran, need Iran 10 times
more than we need them. We suspended enrichment voluntarily, but now we don't
want to suspend any longer. Other nations do not have the right to deny our
right," he said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on January 16th, that
Iran "crossed the threshold" with its recent nuclear actions and the world
must act fast to send Tehran to the UN Security Council. On January 15th,
Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona said the US might ultimately have to
undertake a military strike to deter Iran. "I don't think it helps to speculate.
We have said all along that the president always keeps all of his options,
but we are on the diplomatic course."
McCain called the nuclear standoff, "the most grave situation that we have
faced since the end of the Cold War, absent the whole war on terror. We must
go to the UN now for sanctions". While acknowledging that President George
W. Bush has "no good option," McCain said "there is only one thing worse than
the United States exercising a military option, and that is a nuclear-armed
Iran. If the price of oil has to go up then that's a consequence we would have
to suffer," he said.
Sen. Evan Bayh of Indiana, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
said there are sensitive elements of Iran's nuclear program, which, if attacked, "would
dramatically delay its development." Republican Trent Lott of Mississippi,
said that despite a massive military commitment in Iraq the United States has
the capability to strike Iran but it would be difficult and other options must
be tried first.
US Vice President Dick Cheney arrived in Egypt on January 16th,
at the start of a brief Middle East tour that will include visits to Saudi
Arabia and Kuwait, in a flashback to a similar trip he made several months
before the US invasion of Iraq.

But while the yellow metal handily beat the big-3 equity markets last year,
it lost 12% to "black gold" last year in a continuation of a four-year bear
market. Gold fell to as low as 6.57 barrels of US light crude oil per gold
ounce in the third quarter of 2005, or 58% below its high in 2002, before it
was rescued by a second half recovery. Arab sheiks in the Persian Gulf might
have already begun stockpiling gold ahead of a possible military confrontation
between the US-Israeli alliance and the Iranian-Syrian axis, over Tehran's
secret nuclear weapons program.
Gold's recovery carried the yellow metal through horizontal resistance at
7.5 barrels per ounce, and then penetrated a downward sloping trend-line at
8.25 barrels, confirming that a major bottom has been reached. If crude oil
spikes to $70 per barrel under an Iranian self-inflicted embargo, and if gold
recovers to the mid-point of its five year trading range near 11 barrels of
crude oil per gold ounce, that would project a gold price of $770 per ounce.
However, those are two big ifs.
Global blue-chip stock funds are often purchased as a hedge against monetary
inflation, and the coincident rally in gold prices might only confirm the bullish
outlook of many investment bankers and mutual fund managers. However, lurking
below the surface, gold's rally might also be linked to geo-political tensions
in the Persian Gulf. If Tehran's Ayatollah refuses to back down, the world
could witness either a nuclear armed Iran with long range Shahab-4 missiles
or a nasty military confrontation.
Under either of those two scenarios, crude oil and gold could soar, and the
global Santa Claus stock market rallies would come into clearer focus as optical
illusions.
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