"Central Bankers of the World, Unite!" That at least seems to be the theme
from the central banker's playbook. The US Federal Reserve, The European Central
Bank and now even the Bank of Japan all seem to be in a mood to tighten the
global money supply. What does this mean? We explore that thought and look
at the US saving rate (or lack thereof), foreclosure rates and more.
But first, I want to once again mention that I along with my partners Altegris
Investments will be hosting our third annual Strategic Investment Conference
in La Jolla, California next May 18-20. As usual, we have a powerhouse lineup
of speakers. Martin Barnes of Bank Credit Analyst, Dennis Gartman, Richard
Russell, Louis-Vincent Gave, Mark Finn and my personal (as well as someone
called Oprah's) doctor Dr. Michael Roizen (who wrote the RealAge series of
books and the recent blockbuster bestseller You - The Owner's Manual). With
this lineup you can expect not only solid information and some fun, but some
very serious debates. One of my rules in designing a conference is to get speakers
who are going to help make me a better investor and analyst. I think we have
done that and more this year.
Due to regulations, we must limit attendance to "qualified" individuals and
all attendees must be approved in advance. "Qualified" in this sense is a legal
term which designates certain levels of net worth and not meant to say that
all of my readers are not excellently qualified and astute analysts of investments
and the markets. In general this means to attend you must have $2 million or
more in investments, or be institutional investors. While I wish I could open
up the conference to all of you, I do not make the rules. I just follow them
religiously. If you are interested, click this link below to access our "Save
the Date" form to allow us to contact you to help us determine if you are eligible
for an invitation as soon as they are ready. If you have any questions as to
whether you qualify for the event, please send me an email. Attendance is limited.
The initial response has been quite strong. I think it is likely this conference
will sell out, so I suggest you act now and click on the link and give us your
email address to notify you when the conference information is ready in a few
weeks. https://hedge-fund-conference.com/SAVETHEDATE06.ASPX?M=1
The End of Japan's Quantitative Easing
One of the more important aspects to global growth has been the "quantitative
easing" policy of the Bank of Japan. Basically, they have put about Y30 trillion
into the world since 1999, with Y20 trillion of that coming since 2003. They
have flooded the world with liquidity, at almost exactly the same time as the
US Fed was aggressively lowering rates. Japan has been a main source of capital
and savings for the world. Now that looks like it is going to change. My friends
at GaveKal give us a succinct picture of what is happening. After that we will
look at why you should care about Japanese bank policy.
"As long-time believers in the huge importance of Japan's zero interest rates
for every financial market in every corner of the world, we have to sit up
and take notice of the imminent tightening of monetary policy in Tokyo. First
hints and, more recently, explicit statements suggest that the Bank of Japan
is about to abandon its policy of flooding the Japanese banking system with
money so as to create excess balances of Y30 trillion. Whether the BoJ announces
this change at its next monthly meeting on Wednesday, or waits until the April
meeting, is of little importance. What matters is that the policy of quantitative
easing is clearly at an end.
"But the imminent end of QE begs a crucial question, which seems to be confusing
many investors and market analysts. Will the end of QE be followed quickly
by the ending of the zero interest rate policy (ZIRP)? Remember that the QE
policy did not begin in earnest until 2003, four years after interest rates
were reduced to below 10bp in 1999 and two years after they fell to absolute
zero in mid-2001. Thus a gradual reduction in bank reserves from the present
Y35 trillion to Y15 trillion (where they were in 2001) or even Y5 trillion
where they were in 1999 would be perfectly compatible with zero or near-zero
interest rates.
"Our view is that this combination of declining reserves and zero rates is
exactly what the BoJ will try to achieve. We have long believed that the ZIRP
would continue for at least another year or so and that Japanese interest rates
would remain near zero (i.e.: below 50 basis points) for the rest of this decade.
We believed this because the Japanese had a very plausible reason for sticking
to ultra-low interest rates for the foreseeable future: Japan has the biggest
government deficit and the highest level of public debt relative to GDP in
the OECD. Thus when the economy gets strong enough to withstand a deflationary
impact, the Japanese will want to hit it with fiscal rather than monetary tightening.
Tax increases are already in preparation for 2007 or 2008 and to make sure
that they can be implemented without causing a 1997-style economic disaster,
Bank of Japan and Ministry of Finance officials have agreed that monetary policy
should remain ultra-loose for the foreseeable future.
"This very plausible story has been supported by news reports which predict
that the BoJ will accompany its statement about the end of quantitative easing
with a public assurance that the ZIRP will be maintained. But strangely, the
market seems to be taking the opposite view. All the discussion about ending
QE seems to have persuaded many investors that the ZIRP is also about to be
abandoned. The Japanese yield curve is now discounting a very aggressive increase
in interest rates, with short rates expected to rise by 75 bps this year and
150 bps by the end of 2007. This seems to us very implausible."
This week the European Central Bank raised interest rates and optimistically
projected European growth to be higher. European Central Bank President Jean-
Claude Trichet said, "...projections for the annual average rate of growth
are in a range between 1.7 and 2.5% in 2006 and between 1.5 and 2.5% in 2007." While
we should note that if the Bush administration made such a proclamation, it
would be considered a disaster, this is actually an increase in the estimates
for Europe. When combined with his recent and frequent use of the word "vigilant" every
time he talks about inflation, it seems to indicate that the ECB is not through
with its rate increases. Cheap European money and credit is on its way out
the door.
And with the recent strength in the US of the ISM numbers, it appears the
US economy is going to turn in a very respectable GDP number this quarter.
It makes a rate hike this month a lock, increases the probability of a hike
in May and maybe one more in June. I am not alone in that thought. Market expectations
(using CBOT futures prices) suggest that there is a 100% chance of a rate hike
in March, a 78% chance in May, and a 67% in June. Futures pricing even suggest
a better than even chance for a fourth rate hike in August!
Let me repeat what I said when the Federal Reserve began to increase rates
in 2004. "History says the Federal Reserve will increase rates more and for
a longer period than anyone now suspects." I also said I hoped I would be wrong,
as the Fed usually stops when they have already inflicted enough damage to
materially slow the economy. It looks like they are going to go too far this
time as well, at least from my vantage point.
In short, all three major central banks, and a lot of smaller central banks,
are going to either tighten their money supply or continue to raise rates or
both. Yet, investors and banks continue to lend money and demand less risk
premium. Such a combination does not usually end in happiness. It reminds me
of Mad Magazine's Alfred E. Neuman. "What? Me Worry?" When central banks tighten
simultaneously, bad things can happen. Think of the tightening in 1997 and
then the Asian and Russian problems in 1998, or the serious tightening in 1999
and 2000 and the stock market corrections in 2001-2003.
Troubles in the Housing Markets
Reduced liquidity and rising interest rates are slowly being translated into
higher mortgage rates, slowing the rise in home prices and cash out refinancing.
As I wrote last summer, the Fed is clearly bent on stopping a housing bubble
in its tracks. They hope to be able to engineer something similar to what has
happened in both the United Kingdom and Australia, where both countries experienced
an even greater housing price increase than in the US, their central banks
raised rates and yet did not see a falling of home prices or a bursting of
a bubble. Home prices in those countries simply went flat.
Are higher interest rates having an effect on the housing market? The clear
answer is yes. RealtyTrac (www.realtytrac.com),
the leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties, today released its
January 2006 Monthly U.S. Foreclosure Market Report, which shows 103,540 properties
nationwide entered some stage of foreclosure in January, a 27% increase from
the previous month and a 45% increase from January 2005. The report shows a
January national foreclosure rate of one new foreclosure for every 1,117 U.S.
households, continuing an upward trend in which the national foreclosure rate
rose in every quarter of 2005.
An interesting series of stories on foreclosures in the Charlotte Observer
in North Carolina illustrates the problem. As they report, FHA loans are failing
in Charlotte at nearly twice the national level. But the reasons for failure
are interesting. Many of the failures are on the lower end of the economic
scale.
A new mortgage industry grew in the mid-1990s, offering loans at higher interest
rates to people who don't qualify for traditional loans. Such loans account
for about 10% of all home purchase loans but result in at least 24% of local
foreclosures, the Observer found. More than 40% of failed loans in Charlotte
involved an arranged gift from a charity to cover the borrower's down payment.
It's a practice the FHA is reviewing because such loans fail 76 percent more
often. Further, more than 20% of foreclosures resulted from defaults on loans
taken after the home purchase. The cash out financing was at such high interest
rates that it pushed the families into economic problems.
Let me state that I am all for lenders willing to make home loans to riskier
type accounts. The stability of an area is improved when you have more home
owners, and I am all for people having a chance to own their own homes. But
it will involve more defaults. In certain streets in Charlotte, up to 20% of
the homes are in foreclosure. That does not help property values for the remaining
home owners. http://www.charlotte.com/mld/charlotte/news/special_packages/foreclosure/
The Fed is going to get what it wants: home price increases are going to come
down and then go flat. Let us hope they do not start to go down.
This week we learned that both new and existing home sales slowed last month.
The inventories of both types of homes are rising to recent highs. Another
50 basis points in rate increases is only going to increase those trends. A
large number of homes in hot markets have been bought by "investors," using
adjustable rate mortgages with little or no equity. They intend to either flip
the house or rent them. The increased cost of holding those homes is going
to make it difficult for those investors who do not have some deep pockets.
Right now, in many of the hot markets like San Francisco, LA, New York, Miami,
DC and Las Vegas, it is much cheaper to rent than to buy. According to an article
in today's Financial Times, the extra cost of ownership to renting in those
markets is anywhere from 50% to almost 100% more!
Let's recapitulate. Cash out refinancing is dramatically slowing down, and
as interest rates rise, will slow down even more. Home price increases are
also going to slow down and stop. The Fed is going to continue to increase
rates until that trend is well and truly broken. Rising rates make homes less
affordable so fewer homes will be sold. Since much of the recent growth in
the US economy relates directly to housing, that growth is going to slow down.
Consumer spending is also slowing as a result (see recent e-letters).
And then along comes Japan and suggests they are going to start to take away
the world's liquidity punch bowl. They will not do so rapidly, but do it they
will. This will eventually have an effect on financing costs world wide. It
helped while they were easing and it will have the opposite effect as they
take that easing policy away. I wonder what the Japanese words for "measured
pace" are?
This is just one more reason why I think we are going to see a slowdown in
the economy that latter part of the year. And it is one more reason why I think
the broad equity markets are going to have a very difficult period.
The Retirement Savings Picture
I want to close with this rather troubling survey released this week by the
Financial Services Forum. The headline for the press release was "Survey finds
that half of all Americans worried about retirement security." There is a good
reason for them to be worried. Look at the table below. This gives us the amount
different age groups saved last year for retirement. This is in response to
the question "How much did you save last year for retirement, including such
savings plans as IRAs and 401ks?" Read it and weep.

Assuming the 33% that did not respond breaks out more or less in the same
percentages as those who did respond, we find that 67% of the people aged 50-64
saved less than $10,000 last year. Over 40% saved less than $1,000!!!
By the time you are 50, you should be thinking about retirement and putting
away some savings. Your peak earning years are the next 15 years, and hopefully
your kids are out the door (unless you are like me, 56 with 4.5 kids in college
at the same time!).
Interestingly, only 51% of those age 50-64 are worried about retirement. This
tells me that a lot of people are not really focused on their retirement, or
have some very unrealistic expectations about how well they will live on Social
Security.
This squares with other surveys I have written about. A majority of Americans
expect to work either full-time or part-time after retirement. The above data
suggest they will have not choice, as their savings will not be there.
Living on Tulsa Time
Tomorrow I take a road trip with some of my kids to Tulsa. I have twins attending
Oral Roberts University (juniors). One of my daughters is captain of the cheerleaders
for ORU, and they start their conference basketball tournament this weekend.
We are going to go up and watch her cheer. If ORU wins the tournament (they
are the #1 seed), I may be making an unplanned trip the following week to some
locale to watch her cheer at the NCAA tournament.
It's been a while since a bunch of us piled into a car to drive for more than
a few hours, so this should be fun, or at least I hope it is.
On a totally different note, I have been really working on losing weight and
getting in shape the last few years with some modest success. I have found
a protein powder that has really helped me. Dave Draper, the Blond Bomber of
my youth (Mr. Universe, taught Arnold everything he knew, etc.) has formulated
a powerful protein powder called Bomber Blend. It is the best powder I have
ever seen as far as its contents. It also has the advantage of REALLY tasting
good and being relatively inexpensive compared to all the stuff in the stores.
I mix the chocolate powder with water, ice and a banana or the vanilla with
peaches or strawberries. It is my regular breakfast. You can order some at www.davedraper.com.
Give him your email to get his weekly letter. It helps inspire me to get into
the gym and pump some iron. You will be glad you did. He is a really fun writer.
And now, that I have talked about health and stuff, I think I will hit the
send button and go eat some Mexican food. In moderation, of course! Yeah, right.
But life is good.
Your having more fun than is probably legal analyst,