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"The opera ain't over 'til the fat lady sings." And speech after speech by
members of the Federal Reserve over the past few weeks suggest that the fat
lady is still waiting offstage, not sure of her cue. Today we look at a thoughtful
speech given last night to a private gathering by Richard Fisher, President
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. We then look at a few worrisome charts
on global liquidity and inflation and some more data on housing.
But first, I want to welcome all the new readers. There has been a noticeable
upsurge in new subscribers to the letter lately, possibly caused by the fact
that more people are forwarding the letter to friends. If you do get this letter
as a forward and you would like to join my 1,000,000 closest friends and get
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subscribe by simply entering your email address at the website. We don't ask
for any other information or need a secret handshake. I like to keep it simple.
Daughter and business partner Tiffani spent a few days this week reviewing
readers' comments from the past few months. She wrote them saying she loves
that I enjoy researching and writing; and if they did, too, she asked them
to refer the letter to their friends and colleagues.
I have copied a reply back to her from David R., a long-time reader, at the
end of this week's letter. If you want to know why I work so hard and send
out this letter for free each week, this letter is one of the reasons. Feedback
(both positive and negative) like this keeps me going.
Tiffani asked me to ask you to take a few moments and use the link below:
It will take you to a page to send this week's letter to another friend or
colleague.
http://www.2000wave.com/sendfriend.asp?id=mwo090806&ref=FT090806
And speaking of Outside the Box, I sent a special one out yesterday, by good
friend George Friedman of Stratfor.com on the Iraq situation. If you have not
read it, I suggest you do so. You can click on this link to get the letter: http://www.investorsinsight.com/otb_va_print.aspx?EditionID=383
And now, back to our regularly scheduled letter.
The Fat Lady Hasn't Sung
This Rice University graduate was invited to attend the Dallas Harvard Club
last night, to hear a speech by Richard Fisher, President of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas. I went mainly for the company but was more than pleasantly
surprised by Fisher's very thoughtful and interesting presentation. I have
heard a few speeches from Fed officials, and sometimes they can only charitably
be described as merely boring. Fisher is not. If you ever get a chance to hear
him, you should.
For the next few pages, I am going to paraphrase some of his thoughts and
material. I will do my best to get the spirit, if not the exact wording, of
his presentation.
First, he made it very clear that he is concerned about inflation. His comments
were very similar to two other Fed speeches this week, one in particular by
Dr. Janet Yellen, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. "Speaking
in Boise, Idaho, Dr. Yellen said that she was concerned about recent inflationary
pressures extant in the US economy, and that as a voting member who voted to
hold rates steady at the last FOMC meeting, was prepared to move for further
tightening if these inflationary pressures became of an even greater concern.
"Worse, she said that to bring inflationary concerns under control 'could
take several years.' She said that she and others on the FOMC preferred seeing
the personal consumption expenditures index between 1-2%, and that presently
it was rising at an annualized pace of 2.4%. Clearly this is too high, then,
and her propensity shall be to err upon the side of tighter rather than easier
monetary policies going forward." (Courtesy The Gartman Letter)
A New Measure of Inflation
Interestingly, Fisher noted that the Dallas Fed has its own new calculation
of inflation, called the "Trimmed Mean PCE Inflation Rate." Not having heard
of it, I went online to check it out today. Turns out it was developed by a
researcher at the Dallas Fed named Jim Dolmas. Essentially, he takes issue
with the way the Fed calculates inflation. The favorite measure of inflation
for the Fed is the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE). The Fed then
strips out food and energy, giving us a "core" rate of inflation, or core PCE.
Why? Because the monthly food and energy numbers are so volatile that it can
make the full PCE number quite volatile. Except that we all know we use food
and energy, and inflation in those areas is quite real.
Dolmas notes as much in the introduction to the paper where he presents his
work:
"Speaking of the challenge in interpreting monthly inflation numbers during
his tenure on the Federal Reserve Board, former Vice Chairman Alan Blinder
has said 'The name of the game then was distinguishing the signal from the
noise, which was often difficult. The key question on my mind was typically:
What part of each monthly observation on inflation is durable and what part
is fleeting?
"Blinder's conception of a component of monthly inflation that is 'durable'
as opposed to 'fleeting,' that represents 'signal' rather than 'noise,' corresponds
to what most economists call core inflation. Core inflation, understood
in this way, represents the underlying trend in inflation, once transitory
swings have been smoothed out. Because what is transitory and what is lasting
can only be known with the benefit of hindsight, the true core inflation rate
for any given month cannot be known with certainty until well after the fact.
In real time--as the data arrive and policy decisions need to be made--the
best that economists can do is to estimate the core rate of inflation." You
can read the paper at http://www.dallasfed.org/research/papers/2005/wp0506.pdf.
Dolmas notes (quite correctly, I think) that to exclude food and energy, just
because they are volatile, ignores the other quite volatile measures of inflation
that are still left in. Further, energy and food inflation do have meaning
in the real world.
What Dolmas does is use a statistical device called "trimming." From the field
of statistics, trim analysis borrows the idea of ignoring a few "outliers." A trimmed
mean, for example, is calculated by discarding a certain number of lowest
and highest values and then computing the mean of those that remain.
How accurate is his new measure? Dolmas suggests it is a lot more accurate: "That
is to say, compared to the usual ... measure, on average the monthly trimmed
mean measure would be expected to come closer to true monthly core inflation
by roughly .75 of a percentage point, when the inflation rates are expressed
in annual terms." That is huge, at least in my book, especially when we look
at how much the difference is with the Fed's favorite methodology.
So what does this new measure show us? Fisher says that by their measure of
trimmed core PCE, inflation was 3.1% in July (last month for which data was
available) and not the 1.7% the Fed uses as core PCE. That is a big difference.
Let's look at the tables from the Dallas Fed web site for the last 6 months.
His research, by the way, shows that the 6-month inflation-trimmed core PCE
numbers have the highest accuracy in gauging core inflation, and thus the tables
below are for 6 months. (http://www.dallasfed.org/data/pce/index.html)

I really like what Dolmas has done. I think it makes sense. I doubt that it
will become mainstream this cycle, because Bernanke and company will not want
to use something showing higher inflation right now. By the way, this measure
shows inflation did not get as low as everyone thought in 2003, dropping only
to about 1.5% instead of below 1%.
What this data shows is that inflation has been slowly and steadily rising
over the last six months, as opposed to falling, as the Fed's favorite measure
has been. And Fisher made it clear that he is not comfortable with this trend.
No central banker, he told us, ever again wants to find himself in the position
of Paul Volker, where he was forced to bring about serious and deep recession.
"Why then," I asked in the Q & A at the end of the speech, "was there
only one dissenting vote at the last Fed meeting?"
He pointed that he was not a voting member at this meeting (the 12 Fed regional
presidents rotate that responsibility). But he hastened to add that he agreed
with the move to pause. Why? Because there is considerable lag between the
time the Fed raises rates and the effect upon the economy. There had been 17
straight rate hikes, and it was time to see if those were going to have an
effect.
But he made it clear that if inflation does not subside, the Fed would (not
could!) take action in the future. There was no soft pedaling here. Clearly
he understood the effects that such a move would have on the markets and the
economy, but he was prepared to do so to keep inflation in check. And he clearly
implied the rest of his colleagues agreed with him.
So, what does that mean? "We are data dependent," Fisher tells us. I think
it is clear that they do not know what they are going to do. If inflation falls,
they have finished raising rates for this cycle. If it does not, they are prepared
to raise rates some more. They are gambling that a slowing economy will lower
help lower inflation and remove the need for any further rate hikes. We will
have to see what the data in the next few months shows us as to whether this
approach is working.
Now, let me speculate. My sense is that they will look at the data in September,
October, and November, before they decide whether to call in the fat lady for
her finale. If inflation is still rising in November, they will likely raise
rates at the December 12 meeting. The inflation numbers would have to be pretty
bad to raise rates at the October 24-25 meeting in front of an election. The
Fed does not have a political tin ear. Remember, this is my speculation and
has nothing to do with Fisher's presentation.
This presages some market volatility, as the inflation numbers come out in
the middle of every month for the preceding month. As an aside, just a few
years ago, the CPI numbers came out before the PPI (Producer Price Index) numbers.
Then a few years ago that order was reversed. Bill King tells me that this
month they are planning to revert back to bringing out the CPI first. He does
not know why. If anyone does know, I am curious as to the rationale.
The Money Supply is Contracting
Fisher noted that about two-thirds of US cash currency is overseas, with two-thirds
of the hundred dollar bills in Russia. And that brings to mind the US money
supply. The one measure of money supply that the Fed actually has control of
is M-1. M-1 is just one measure of the money supply, and includes all coins,
currency held by the public, traveler's checks, checking account balances,
NOW accounts, automatic transfer service accounts, and balances in credit unions.
M-1 is not growing. In fact, it is actually contracting, as the charts below
show. Further, the large majority of the additions to the money supply are
physical cash; and cash is deflationary, and much of it ends offshore, effectively
reducing our homegrown money supply.
As you can see from the chart below, the money supply has not grown since
the middle of 2005. Further, the second chart shows that the money supply has
actually fallen over the last year. This, sports fans, is another example of
the Fed hitting the brakes. You don't contract money supply unless you are
worried about inflation. In tandem with the rate hikes, it is another reason
why the Fed is taking a pause to see if their efforts will slow inflation.
Notice that in 2003, when everyone was worrying about deflation, the Fed was
clearly and significantly growing M-1. Then when inflation started to rise,
they started to back off, and then in 2005 they started to hit the brakes.
(For the record, M-2, which includes money markets and other time deposits,
is only growing around 5%, but the Fed does not have direct control of M-2,
although they can influence it.)


A Warning for Politicians
Finally, Fisher referred to the national debt and growing social security
and Medicare obligations. It is not the Fed's problem, and he flatly asserted
they will not monetize the debt in the future. This is a political problem.
Congress is going to have to get its own house in order. The Fed will not bring
back inflation to accommodate a profligate Congress. He did not have kind words
for the lack of spending control in Washington.
There is a probable push of debt coming to a shove of Fed willingness to force
Congressional action in our future. Interestingly, the same events are effectively
going to be happening in Europe a few years before our problems really kick
in. We will get to see what works, or more likely, what doesn't.
The Japanese Current Account Balance Is Again Shrinking
The next chart comes courtesy of Bill King. Readers will remember when I directly
connected the contraction of the Japanese Current Account Balance last spring
and the resulting fall in stock markets all over the world, as global liquidity
dried up. In fact, the Japanese central bank has inflated their current account
and then rapidly dropped it three times in the last 20 years, with each inflation
giving us a bubble and each drop a crisis. You can see from the chart that
the Japanese stopped the slide in June, and the stock markets of the world
began to recover.
Since that time they have slowly reversed that increase, and over the last
two weeks we have seen another drop. This is worrisome. The Japanese are a
big part of the global money supply, and they are drying up liquidity at the
same time that the Fed is slowing the rise in our money supply.

Consumer Spending Likely to Slow
I have documented over the years the very strong correlation between the housing
market and consumer spending. Housing is a lot more important than stocks or
bonds as a driver of consumer spending. The following commentary and chart
from my friends at www.contraryinvestor.com show
that correlation does not bode well for consumer spending.
"Quite importantly, at least to us, the next little view of life is the NAHB
[National Association of Homebuilders] data overlaid on top of the year over
year change in real personal consumption expenditures. In other words, we're
linking housing to consumer spending. As you can see, at least in the past,
there has been a very high degree of correlation between the homebuilders survey
and the direction of consumer spending trends. If indeed this continues to
be true ahead, it sure as heck appears that a rate of change downtrend in consumer
spending has just begun and may become a whole lot deeper before hitting some
type of bottom. From current levels near 3%, we think it's fair to say that
the forward year over year rate of change in real consumer spending could indeed
drop to 1% or lower as we move forward."

If the US economy slows and consumers start to pull back, that means the trade
deficit should improve. But be careful for what you wish. In the words of Charles
Gave, "Because the US$ is still the reserve currency of the world, and because
most trade exchanges are still priced in US$, a reduction in the US current
account deficit is equivalent to a liquidity squeeze... Money becomes scarcer.
Which is why, with each improvement in the US current account deficit, someone
who is in debt and/or in negative cash, goes bust."
That means more tightening of global liquidity. Which is not good for equity
markets. I repeat my mantra of the past few months. If the economy is slowing
down, it is not good for the stock markets. If the economy is not slowing down,
that means inflation is not slowing down either. The clear implication from
every Fed speech we hear is that they will raise rates in the face of rising
or problematic inflation. That will not be good for the stock market. I think
we are going to get a chance to buy the market at a (probably much) lower price
than it is at today. Be careful out there.
New York and a Letter from a Reader
I will be in New York week after next for a few days, but then back to continue
working on my book plus the usual day-to-day business. It is probably not a
surprise I am behind, but I really do want to finish this book project. I am
having a lot of fun with it, but have a lot of new projects I want to start
and can't until the book gets finished.
I got this kind note from reader David Romero, forwarded to me by my daughter.
If you wonder why this letter is free and why I devote so much time to it,
letters like this are a partial answer.
"I can't remember the exact date that I first heard of Mr. John Mauldin. It
was back in 1998 or maybe 1999. I received an email from a government agency
concerned about small investors. It's weird that I can't even remember which
one. But the email had Mr. Mauldin's website address and I pulled it up. That
was the beginning of a long one-sided relationship between me and Mr. Mauldin.
He does all the work and I'm free to sit back and analyze what he says. I was
so impressed by his work that I began sending his website address to my family
and friends. Today his daughter has asked me to send a link to more of them.
I'm stumped because I've already sent so many emails to friends and family
I can't remember them all. I know that my cousin in Cheyenne, Wyoming receives
John's work. So does my friend in Denver, Colorado. I have another friend in
Southern California who reads him too.
"What makes John Mauldin so special is that he doesn't charge anyone for his
work. When I first encountered him, I was receiving advertisements from other
market observers asking me to subscribe to their work. Believe me they weren't
cheap. I would not send somebody a check for $3000 to give me ideas or elucidate
areas of the market that I may have overlooked. I was supposed to learn on
my own. Do the work myself. Nobody takes you by the hand and guides you through
the most competitive arena of all ... the trading pits of futures markets or
of stock markets.
"Except for Mr. John Mauldin. Without asking me for a dime he has patiently
worked very hard, week after week, writing his weekly commentary. I have even
had the audacity to actually criticize him at times. I have written him saying
what about this or you didn't mention that. But humility returned in time and
I also wrote to him to thank him for what he does.
"Mr. Mauldin has gotten even better than when he first started. Thanks to
him we readers of his weekly commentary have been exposed to many other brilliant
minds. John cares about us. That makes him very special.
"Mr. Mauldin, it's been a while since I've expressed my appreciation for what
you do. I want you to know that it pains me to have to delete your commentaries.
Usually I take copious notes. I transfer the information from my computer screen
to my ever growing notebook. I know that you are now read by millions of people.
"I certainly hope that each and every one of us is grateful. I am. Thank you
for caring enough about the small investor or trader to include all of us in
your thoughts. May the good Lord's face ... keep shining upon you ... and your
family."
Thanks, David, for the very kind words and to all of you who write me. I think
I can go home with a smile on my face with that encouragement. As an aside,
I make a special point to read those letters which are critical of my views.
And one of my best sources of material is readers who forward me articles they
find of interest. Thank you all.
It is late on a Friday, and I am keeping Doug Harrison up (the gentleman who
stays up until I finish so he can send this letter out and put it on the web
site). So I will hit the send button and let him get to bed. Have a great week!
Your having more fun than I ever have analyst,
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