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The Bush administration has been undermining the pillars of dollar policy under
the management of his associates - Mr. O'Neill and Mr. Greenspan - even long
before adopting the phrase 'free markets determine foreign exchange rates'
(paraphrase).
Since last March as the Treasury and Fed were engaged in a policy that was
aimed at slowing down the rise in commodity prices, and the fall in asset values,
the President had already been allowing the Unified Budget Surplus to dwindle.
Greenspan and O'Neill's strategy, we surmised, was that while the Fed pushed
down on interest rates, Mr. O'Neill would continue to talk up the dollar's
potential, thereby creating price pressures in key commodity markets, or it
could have been the other way around - by pressuring commodity prices, the
dollar could stay strong, and monetary policy could work to inflate the investment
premium on dollar denominated assets.
We argued that O'Neill was the perfect pick for the job because this way they
had the element of surprise in their favor. The entire world expected Mr. O'Neill
to pursue a weak dollar policy because he was Chairman of Alcoa you see.
But as self-correcting mechanisms go since monetary policy still failed to
reverse the shock to the economy from sliding stock prices and business capital
expenditures, for most of 2001, fiscal policy kicked in to pick up the slack.
The result was a dwindling budget surplus that even until today the Treasury
insists is a brief phenomenon.
Please note that our use of the Government's term "Surplus," unified
or otherwise, in no way infers an endorsement of the validity of their calculation.
The fact of the matter is that the total debt of the US government has grown
regardless of their revised definition of the factors contributing to it. However,
be that as it may, we have assumed that to most people today, the government's
numbers are as valid as any. So in order for our message to reach the broadest
audience possible we thought it would be appropriate at this point to illustrate
that even the government's most hedonic data series are worsening.
In reality, Bush's economic policy has been at odds with the Treasury/Fed's
strategy from day one, which means it has been at odds with dollar policy since
day one.
Thus, March resulted in the left shoulder of the 12 month topping formation
technical analysts refer to as a head and shoulders formation (see chart below).
Note in the chart also that by June last year, bond prices turned back up.
That was coincident with a downturn in equity prices, which were to begin their
next bear leg that ended 3000 points lower for the Dow and 300 points lower
for the S&P500.
What bond market wouldn't rally on that, particularly as commodity prices
slide, and as the Fed lowers short-term interest rates by 75% on a firm dollar?
Still, the budget surplus did not return, and Larry Summer's promise a year
earlier, of a buy back scheme targeting the long bond, was becoming less believable
to the bond market. Now this was the real problem revealed to the Treasury
after the bombing of the WTC towers on September 11th, 2001, because even while
the Fed slashed the Fed Funds rate another 50% after that (to 1.75%), and commodity
prices as well as government price indexes sunk to their 1998 lows, Treasury
yields continued to stay stuck (high).
This in turn is partly why credit spreads didn't really grow through 2001
even though the secondary bond markets had to contend with growing default
rates.
So concurrent with Enron's belated bankruptcy disclosure, on October 31, 2001,
the undersecretary of the Treasury Peter Fisher announced a scheme that would
involve suspending the issuance of the 30-year government long bond. This was
the advice given to the President as being the best way to keep borrowing costs
low.
The combination of that implication along with the sudden perception of scarcity
that was engendered in the 30 year drove yields down sharply. In the above
chart, this was the HEAD of the pattern we referred to earlier, and it was
the method by which the Treasury was temporarily able to unstick the sticky
bond yield.
What a coup for dollar policy! The reason Fisher claimed borrowing costs would
stay low is due to the affect this announcement would have on long-term interest
rates.
He further argued that when the surplus returns to displace the temporary
deficit he would be vindicated of any interim errors resulting from that judgment.
But he probably didn't count on how crowded the medium to short term debt markets
could become, and he probably didn't see the stimulus to commodity prices resulting
from the then current decline in yields.
After all, November was the precise bottom in the CRB and other commodity
indexes as well. Finally, he probably didn't see how much credibility the scheme
would cost.
What you're reading about is the battle by the Fed and Treasury to keep yields
low, while the economy has time to heal itself. You're reading about market
manipulation at its highest level, where the masters of the universe are above
the laws preventing the rest of us from swindling our neighbor.
The lower interest rates helped fuel consumption, but at the cost of credit
quality and further dislocations in capital structure, all of last year. Meanwhile,
none of these maneuvers helped profits come back, and the value of stock prices
surged as much as another 50% in the case of the S&P 500.
That's right, the simple PE ratio went from 27 times earnings to better than
40 times trailing earnings today. This valuation spike was the direct result
of lowering interest rates below the level at which savings and consumption
were in equilibrium, thereby superficially inflating investment expectations
while concurrently deflating inflation expectations, and thus sustaining the
low equity risk premium.
I bet you couldn't say that ten times real fast.
However, lower interest rates also brought on bond supply. Within a month,
Fisher's strategy had backfired. Greenspan's own argument for dwindling long-term
Treasury supplies became a warning to Congress and the President, commodity
prices surged, and yields continued to rise until late December when stock
prices weakened again.
The December/January capitulation in stock prices kept yields from rising
further, but now, stock bulls have been working themselves up about confidence
surveys, housing activity, and the interim manufacturing data. For the moment
their eye is off the valuation ball.
The bear market parameters are largely still in place, technically speaking,
but there is tremendous excitement that the Fed's stimulus has finally begun
to work.
However, the dollar has been troubling to us all along because it is supported
largely by an inflated set of expectations about future dollar denominated
returns. What's more is that while the dollar was still up against most currencies
last year, it was the first year in its six-year bull market where it was outperformed
by gold prices.
The most recent peak in the dollar index occurred at the end of January, roughly
as the Dow's cyclical leadership began to develop into the current mini-mania,
as if the market was privy to the Bush administration's coming steel import
tariff news.
In fact, even during early February I had a sense that the cyclicals were
discounting a weak dollar policy.
Regardless how terrific the economic data looks today (it really doesn't by
the way) stock prices themselves are considered to be a leading indicator.
And their valuation could be an obstacle to full fledged economic recovery.
Should something happen to reassert the bear market's stranglehold on stock
market confidence these very same indicators will not look as good.
Of course, nothing helps the bear come out of hibernation like the smell of
fresh fear, or concern about valuations.
And nothing focuses investors on the problem of valuation like changing relationships
between interest rates, currencies, and commodity prices.
This week, global bond markets all fell out of major topping patterns. The
long term Gilts, the Euro bunds, US Municipal bonds, as well as the thirty-year
Treasury bond (though the break is clearer in all the others besides the US
long bond) all followed the Japanese government bond in reversing their 2-year
intermediate bull markets.
The catalyst? A shift in US trade policy that threatens to ignite a global
trade war. A rising tide of protectionism is bearish for the dollar and bond
since the US leadership position on trade is one of the key pillars
of dollar policy.
The willingness of foreign investors to fund the ongoing US current account
deficit is in jeopardy as their biggest incentives (the ability to engage in
competitive currency devaluations for the benefit of trade, and accumulate
appreciating dollar reserves) have been markedly altered. It doesn't matter
whether the US has the right under a world trade agreement because of a surge
in imports. If the owners of US bonds feel as if they've been slighted, they
set the rules, not the WTO.
The world trading and banking community is in an uproar over the US steel
tariffs.
We'll just have to wait and see if those cyclicals can continue to lead equities
higher, amidst a collapsing dollar, and bond prices. I suspect that by Tuesday
of this week, when the EU and US meet, we'll have an idea of whether foreign
exchange markets are going to adjust the chronic current account deficit, and
how quickly.
But I have a feeling too that President Bush was serious when he said that
the free markets determine foreign exchange rates. I have a feeling that despite
Greenspan and O'Neill's wishes to the contrary, Bush has already abandoned
the strong dollar policy.
I believe this is what concerns Treasury markets today. But I think it will
concern equity markets tomorrow.
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