|
Trading in foreign exchange is akin to judging a reverse beauty contest. The
trick is to buy the "least ugly" currency at the right time. Nearly every central
bank is engaging in some sort of manipulation of its currency, from outright
intervention in the marketplace, such as in Brazil and China, to pumping up
the money supply to inflate local stock markets, such as in Australia, China,
England, the Euro zone, and India. Other central banks engage in "verbal jawboning" to
keep traders in check.
Central banks are key players in the $2 trillion-a-day currency market, and
traders are always on the lookout for signals that central banks are diversifying
their FX reserves away from the US dollar. Global central bank reserves have
more than doubled to $4.9 trillion in just three years, with particular focus
on the massive US dollar stockpiles built up by Asian central banks, which
could be switched into other currencies such as the Euro, Japanese yen, British
pound, or Gold.
The US dollar accounted for 66% of foreign currency reserves held by global
central banks in 2005, with 25% stashed in the Euro, 5% in the British pound,
and 4% in the Japanese yen. In London, the world's largest FX market, the Euro
accounts for 35% of its average daily trading volume of $942 billion. Traders
often look to the Euro, yen, and pound to gauge the mood of the global currency
markets.

For the past six months, the Euro, Japanese yen, and British pound have been
remarkably stable against the US dollar, locked into a 4% to 5% trading ranges.
So the big question is: How did the big-4 central banks and their finance officials
pull off such remarkable currency stability, at a time of enormous global trade
imbalances, and 10% to 25% swings in global commodity and stock markets?
Recent history in the Euro, Yen and Sterling
The Euro's last major move in late-April thru mid-May, and extended from $1.21
to a high of $1.30, before coming to an abrupt end, when top European finance
ministers objected to further gains above $1.30. On May 16th, French Finance
Minister Thierry Breton, said the French economy could tolerate the Euro's
rally to $1.30, but, "We must be very attentive to exchange rates. We will
do everything so that this difference between the Euro and US dollar doesn't
keep growing."
Breton was backed-up by verbal jawboning from Bank of France chief Christian
Noyer on May 16th. "Big movements in the foreign exchange market could hamper
economic growth in the Euro area, and run exactly contrary to G-7 efforts to
rebalance the global economy. So certainly, this is not something that is warranted.
The clear consensus in the G-7, is that there should not be any correction
between the dollar and especially the Euro and other European currencies," Noyer
warned.
Then on May 21st, German Deputy Finance Minister Thomas Mirow added, "We don't
see problems from a rising Euro for us because of the nature of our exports," driven
by technology companies competing in high-end, high quality markets. "Still,
we do not want to see abrupt changes of exchange rates. So at the Euro level
of $1.27-$1.30 we esteem that there are no acute problems for Germany," he
added.

As if by magic, the Euro obeyed the whims of the Group of Seven, stabilizing
within a tight range between $1.25 and $1.30. The Euro did attempt a break-out
rally towards $1.30, after the Federal Reserve paused in its 2-year rate hike
campaign at 5.25% on August 8th. With the Fed on the sidelines, the European
Central Bank lifted its repo rate twice to 3.25%, and telegraphed a third hike
to 3.50% in December, which in theory, should make the Euro more attractive.
Instead, the Euro did a U-turn, tumbling from a high of $1.2939 on August
21st to as low as $1.2480 on October 13th. The reason for the Euro's slide
didn't become apparent until October 17th, when the US Treasury said foreign
demand for US bonds and stocks had soared to $116.8 billion in August from
$32.9 billion in July, far higher than the monthly US trade deficit of $69.9
billion.

Against the Japanese yen, the US dollar bottomed out at 114-yen on August
8th, within minutes of the Fed's announcement of a pause in its rate hike campaign.
The US$ climbed 5-yen in a see-saw pattern to as high as 119.88-yen on October
13th. Japanese investors were net buyers of $7.6 billion of US Treasuries in
August, their largest purchase in 14-months, anxious to lock in 5% yields on
US long bonds.
But the dollar received its biggest boost against the yen from Tokyo's sleight
of hand on August 25th, when Japanese apparatchniks re-jigged the consumer
price index, and revised the inflation rate lower by two-thirds from the previous
calculation. That handcuffed the Bank of Japan (BoJ), and ignited a rally in
Japanese yen Libor futures to 99.50 from 99.34, which effectively ruled out
a BOJ rate hike in Q'4.
The US dollar hit resistance at the psychological 120-yen level on Oct 13th,
when BoJ chief Toshiro Fukui hinted at a rate hike, despite Tokyo's re-jig
of the inflation data. "If you ask me whether there's a possibility of another
rise in interest rates within this year, I cannot deny that possibility," he
warned. Then on October 16th, Russia's central bank said it planned to convert
some of its $267 billion of foreign currency reserves into Japanese yen, triggering
dollar sales below120-yen.

Russia's finance chief Alexei Kudrin ignited a big rally for the volatile
British pound in late April, when he questioned the US$'s status as the world's
reserve currency. Speculators jolted the British pound from $1.74 to the $1.90
psychological level on May 14th, where the currency has been capped for the
past six months. The Bank of Italy announced on August 3rd, that it had boosted
sterling to 25% of its $79 billion in FX reserves, briefly lifting the pound
to $1.91, where it ran into a brick wall.
The British pound is a favorite among currency speculators, because of the
Bank of England's "hands-off" policy. Last week, the BoE received the green
light to hike its base rate by 0.25% to 5.00% on November 9th. UK Treasury
minister Edward Balls signaled on October 20th. "With the economy growing more
strongly than expected and with upward pressure on global commodity prices
we must all remain vigilant. We need continued discipline in wage-setting and
pay-bargaining across the private and public sectors," he said.
How the US$ defies the Law of Gravity
The giant US trade deficit has generated a huge outflow of dollars, and behind-the-scenes
strategies to bring the money back home. For the first eight months of 2006,
the US trade deficit rose to $522.9 billion, and is likely to exceed the 2005
shortfall of $726 billion. Such a sea of red ink suggests the US dollar is
still overvalued on a trade weighted and prone to a further devaluation.
Nearly a third of the US trade deficit in August was with China, widening
to a record $22 billion, and twice the $11-billion deficit posted with the
European Union, and three times the $7.5-billion US deficit with Japan. By
the end of September, China's global trade surplus was at $110.9-billion this
year, surpassing the annual record of $102-billion set in 2005, and on course
to reach $150 billion in 2006.
China's trade surpluses with the European Union of $127 billion and with the
US of $202 billion in 2005, enabled it to become the world's third largest
trading nation, exporting and importing about $1.4 trillion worth of goods
and services a year. Robust exports and bank loan growth of 15.2% have defied
planners' efforts to rein in economic growth, projected at 10.5% for this year.

Under the Bush administration, the US trade deficit has mushroomed from about
$26 billion per month in 2002, to as high as $70 billion in August 2006. The
US dollar's 30% devaluation against a basket of currencies since 2002, including
the Euro, British pound, Canadian dollar, and Japanese yen, did catapult US
exports to a record high of $122.4 billion in August '06, but import growth
was still stronger at $192.3 billion, and generating record US trade deficits.
The US trade deficit remains stubbornly high, partly because the undervalued
Chinese yuan pushes up imports of Chinese goods and handicaps US exporters
of durable goods and high-end services. Also, record high oil prices boosted
US oil imports to $27.2 billion in August, and the world's biggest economy
was on course for a whopping $320 billion oil bill this year, until the latest
plunge in oil prices.

Financing the US external deficit requires increasing agility. Every business
day requires $3.5 billion of net new money to enter the US markets, to prevent
the US dollar from falling under its own weight. Most of that money comes from
Asian central banks and Arab oil producers, which own large amounts of dollars.
Japan is the largest holder of $644.2 billion of US Treasuries, and China
is the second-largest holder with $339 billion. London based brokers added
$11.1 billion of US Treasuries to their clients' portfolios in August, including
members of OPEC, to a record $210.4 billion. Overall, foreigners now own $2.14
trillion, or 46% of the $4.5 trillion of marketable US Treasuries.
The US Treasury's Secret agreement with Beijing
The Bush administration's dealings with Beijing are simple, free Chinese access
to US consumer markets, and acceptance of the undervalued yuan, in return for
massive Chinese purchases of US bonds. China is loath to increase the yuan
enough to dampen growth in its coastal factories. Exports are a key source
of jobs in a country that must employ tens of millions of poor farmers and
workers laid off by bankrupt state factories, in the continued transition from
communism to capitalism
The Chinese central bank prints yuan in exchange for the foreign currency
flowing into the country, and in the process, has increased its M2 money supply
by 18% for the past few years. Beijing added $169-billion to its foreign currency
reserves in the first nine months of this year, which will soon top $1 trillion,
the world's largest. Beijing's satellite, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority
said its foreign currency reserve assets rose $1.4 billion to $130.3 billion
in September.

China purchased more than $200 billion in US and other foreign debt last year,
equal to 9% of its economic output and about 25% of its exports. China has
recycled about 70% of its $988 billion foreign currency reserves into US Treasury
and other government agency debt, helping to keep US mortgage rates artificially
low. In return, the Bush administration killed the Schumer-Graham bill that
would have slapped a 27.5% tariff on Chinese imports into the US.
Beijing has limited the yuan's gains to 2.1% since it ended the rigid dollar
peg in July 2005, and is expected to limit the dollar's decline to 3% this
year, to minimize losses to its massive US bond portfolio. Yu Yongding, an
adviser to the central bank has warned, "China's economy would take a big hit
if the US dollar weakened sharply due to such factors as a bursting of the
US property bubble. The loss for China's foreign exchange reserves would be
extremely serious."

Subsidizing its exports with an undervalued yuan has allowed China's cargo
trade to reach about 56% of the level of the United States and 82% of Germany's.
But Beijing is paying a heavy price in its trade dealings with the Bush administration.
The purchasing power of US Treasury notes in relation to gold has dropped in
half from four years ago, making it much more expensive for Beijing to switch
its reserves from US debt to gold. Beijing holds only 1.5% of its FX reserves
in gold.
And the million dollar question in the foreign exchange and gold markets is
how will Beijing manage its bloating reserves in the years ahead? China's FX
reserves are on track to hit the $1.5 trillion mark in the second quarter of
2008, and might hit $2 trillion by the end of 2010. Last month, China tapped
into its reserves, importing a record 13.2 tons of crude oil, up 24% from a
year earlier, and not including 3 million barrels of Russian crude that was
pumped into storage tanks south of Shanghai.
After the Bush economic team departs, China might find a tougher US president
or a Democratic Congress, that aims to reverse the massive transfer of wealth
from the US to China, but could steer Beijing away from the US dollar. However,
such a scenario is at least 2-years away, and no change is expected in the
gentleman's agreement between the US Treasury and the People's Bank of China
until then.
Japan Targets US dollar for Nikkei Exporters
Japanese investors have $14 trillion in savings, and earn more from interest
and dividends on investments held overseas, than from foreign trade. Japan's
current account surplus rose 22.2% in August from a year earlier to 1.48 trillion
yen ($12.3 billion) earning 1.16 trillion yen from overseas investments, dwarfing
a trade surplus 312.4 billion yen. Japanese investors were net buyers of 16
trillion yen ($140 billion) of foreign bonds in 2005, but avoided the US Treasury
market.
The Bank of Japan affixed its reputation as the world's second leading interventionist
bank, when it sold 35 trillion yen in exchange for $315 billion US dollars,
mostly between 105-yen and 112-yen, in late 2003 thru March 2004. The BoJ plowed
the US dollars into US Treasuries until August 2004, when its holdings peaked
at a record high of $699.4 billion. Thus, Tokyo is the world's biggest "yen
carry" trader.

Tokyo skillfully unwound $50 billion of its "yen carry" trade over the past
two years, without disturbing the US dollar's uptrend to 120-yen. Tokyo depends
on the US dollar's 5% interest rate advantage over Japanese Libor rates, to
enable the dollar to bounce back from periodic sales of US Treasuries. Still,
Tokyo holds onto the bulk of its US Treasuries, to maintain cordial relations
with its military protector, especially while under nuclear threat from North
Korea's Kim Jong-il.
Japan's ministry of finance and the US Treasury might have a secret target
zone for the dollar /yen, and when the US$ approached 120-yen on October 23rd,
Japan's top financial diplomat, Hiroshi Watanabe told reporters in New York, "I
see no reason for a further deterioration in the yen given the strength in
the Japanese economy."
Arab Oil producers Recycle Petro-dollars thru London
The Institute of International Finance, an umbrella group for 340 of the world's
private-sector banks, predicted in August that high oil prices would lift the
current account surpluses of six Gulf Arab states to $230 billion this year,
or 30% of their gross domestic product. The bulk of the surpluses in Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain, are re-cycled
into their already large private and official foreign assets, such as in British
gilts and US Treasuries.
The six Gulf countries, all with currencies pegged to the dollar, are working
towards monetary union by 2010, but will initially peg their future common
currency to the US dollar. "It makes sense for the Gulf States to peg its currencies
to the dollar since the oil market is priced in dollars," said Sheikh Ahmed
bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, the Bahraini Minister of Finance on October 19th.

Amid soaring oil prices, holdings of US Treasuries through London based brokers
quadrupled in just fourteen months to a record $210.4 billion in August '06,
probably on behalf of Middle Eastern investors. Only the UAE's central bank
has signaled a desire to convert 10% of its largely dollar-denominated foreign
exchange reserves into Euros and gold, but is waiting for a dip in the Euro
before making the switch.
Shifting Fortunes, Brazil is a buyer of US Bonds
The four year boom in commodities prices to 25-year highs has been a bonanza
for Brazil's economy, the largest in Latin America. Brazil's exports reached
$76.9 billion thru the first seven months of this year, an increase of 14.7%
from the same period in 2005, netting a trade surplus of US$25.82 billion.
The Bank of Brazil has been a daily buyer of US$'s from exporters, who desire
the higher yielding Brazilian real.

Brazilian central bank's FX reserves have jumped by $20 billion to $72.3 billion
this year. Brazilian-based traders added $11.5 billion of US Treasuries in
August, boosting their holdings to $43.2 billion, making the country the 11th
largest holder of US debt. Brazil's finance ministry does not want to see the
US dollar fall below the psychological 2.0 real level, which could badly hurt
its exporters, especially in light of the recent drop in commodity prices.
But the strong Brazilian real has also exerted downward pressure on the benchmark
IPCA consumer inflation index, which the central bank uses as a guide to set
interest rates. Consumer inflation rose 3.7% in the 12-months through September,
the slowest pace since a 3.32% rise in the year through June 1999. Inflation
is below the central banks target of 4.5% for 2006.

On October 19th, Brazil's bank's nine-member monetary policy committee, led
by its President Henrique Meirelles, voted unanimously to cut the so-called
Selic rate, to 13.75% from 14.25%, extending the longest period of monetary
easing in the country's history. Borrowing costs have fallen by 6% from 19.75%
in September 2005, partly in a bid to prevent the US dollar from falling under
2 Reals.
Still, currency traders are likely to favor the Brazilian currency, which
carries a positive rate of return of 10%, adjusted for inflation. That in turn,
forces the Brazilian central bank to continue its daily intervention on behalf
of the US$, and rolling-over the proceeds into US Treasury bonds. Banco de
Brazil might choose to cut its Selic rate further at its next meeting on November
29th
Russia is an Outspoken Bear on the US dollar
Record oil prices combined with record Russian oil exports, have boosted the
Kremlin's foreign exchange reserves to a record $267 billion this year, outstripped
only by those of China and Japan. In August, Russia paid back $22.5 billion
debt to the Paris Club of creditor nations, and with its foreign debt standing
at just $108 billion, S&P raised Moscow's foreign bond rating to BBB+.
It represents a spectacular transformation from the financial meltdown in
1998 when Russia defaulted on its debt and the rouble crashed. Booming crude
oil, base metal and other commodity prices lifted Russia's foreign trade surplus
to $86.2 billion in the first half of 2006 from $66.3 billion in the same period
a year ago.
With its reserves swelling from petrodollar inflows, strong current account
surplus and booming economy, Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin ordered the full
convertibility of the rouble in July, and launched trading of Russian oil,
refined products and commodities on local bourses in roubles. Russia was accumulating
$10 billion of foreign exchange a month until July, and the central bank bought
more than $100 billion from the currency markets this year to slow the appreciation
of the rouble.

But Moscow remains a vocal bear on the US dollar, bucking the strategy of
other central banks in China, Japan, or Brazil. Instead, Moscow has steadily
reduced its dollar holdings from three years ago. Sergei Ignatyev, the central
bank chief, said that about half of bank's reserves were held in US dollars,
with the bulk of the rest in Euros. He indicated the yen would be increased
as a proportion of the total reserves, and Russia would build positions in
the Australian and Canadian dollars.
Federal Reserve Underpins US$ with high fed funds rate
In order to attract $3.5 billion each working day from Asia, Europe, and the
Persian Gulf, the Federal Reserve lifted the fed funds rate to 5.25% to discourage
dumping of the dollar. The fed funds rate is pegged 5% above Japan's overnight
loan rate, 2% above the ECB's repo rate, and a half-percent above the Bank
of England's base rate, even at the risk of sinking the US housing market.
Russian finance minister Alexei Kudrin dropped a bombshell on the dollar in
April 2006, wiping out half of it's gain from the previous year. "The US dollar
is not the world's absolute reserve currency. The unsustainable US trade deficit
is causing concern, and the international community can hardly be satisfied
with this instability," he declared to members of the IMF in Washington.

Kudrin's remarks touched off a mini-free fall for the US dollar index to the
84-level, in Q'2, forcing the Fed to hike the fed funds rate by another half-percent
to 5.25% in June, to stabilize the dollar. The Russian central bank vexed the
Fed for a second time on October 18th, when it vocalized its intention to convert
US$ into yen. The Federal Reserve understands that it cannot afford to ease
its grip on interest rates in the fourth quarter, without triggering a speculative
attack against the US dollar.
On October 4th, Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn challenged expectations
that Fed rate cuts will occur anytime soon. "I am surprised at how little market
participants seem to share my sense that the uncertainties around inflation
and their implications for the stance of policy are fairly sizeable at this
point," he warned.
Philly Fed chief Charles Plosser was more hawkish, "The housing sector is
going through a painful, but necessary adjustment. But the expansion is still
on firm footing and growth is likely to accelerate in 2007. We need to remain
vigilant and maintain the current policy, or even firming further, in the best
interests of the economy's long-run performance. The predominant risks facing
the economy now are on the inflation side," he warned on October 6th, ruling
out Fed rate cuts in Q'4.
But at some point however, the Fed may have to confront the unenviable task
of defending the US dollar or US home prices. Now that the fed funds rate has
settled at 5.25%, US dollars bears such as the Russian central bank, are acting
before the earliest clue that the Fed is about to lower the fed funds rate.
"Tricky" Trichet makes US dollar look less Ugly
The European Central Bank raised interest rates for a fifth time on October
5th, to 3.25%, the highest level in almost four years, and telegraphed another
hike in December to 3.50% to combat inflationary pressures. ECB chief Jean "Tricky" Trichet
avoided any clear message on where rate moves are headed after that, but said, "Our
monetary policy remains accommodative. If our baseline scenarios are confirmed
it will remain warranted to further withdraw monetary accommodation."
The Euro M3 money supply and loan growth accelerated in August, driven by
a surge in new loans for corporate mergers and takeovers. The 12% annual increase
in business lending was the highest since September 2000. The M3 money supply
measure jumped 0.4% to an annualized growth rate of 8.2%, far above the central
bank's long discarded 4.50% target rate.

But "Tricky" Trichet's rate hikes are deceiving, because they are pegged far
below the Euro zone's producer inflation rate. Negative interest rates have
spawned European mergers and takeovers to the tune of $1.2 trillion in the
first eight months of 2006. The ECB can't control the M3 money supply, when
borrowing is expanding at such a rapid clip, and negative interest rates in
Europe, enable the ECB to covertly make the US dollar look less ugly in the
foreign exchange market.
Bank of Japan working behind the Scenes
Tokyo has a lot of experience in battling foreign currency speculators, when
the dollar sinks against the Japanese yen, and threatening the best interests
of Nikkei-225 exporters. Yet the BoJ appeared to be facing a mission impossible,
trying to dismantle its five year super easy money policy on one hand, without
crushing the US dollar against the Japanese yen with the other hand.

The Bank of Japan has withdrawn 27 trillion yen from the banking system since
March 9th, and lifted its overnight loan rate above zero percent on July 14th.
Previously, the BoJ was flooding its banking system with an excess of 26 trillion
yen above the reserve requirements of local banks, which often submerged the
six-month Yen Libor rate below zero percent from 2003 through 2005.
The US dollar did go into a mini meltdown against the yen in late April thru
early may, plunging 10-yen to as low as 109-yen, as the BoJ moved aggressively
to drain excess yen out of the banking system. But Tokyo's financial warlords
went into action when the dollar fell towards 110-yen, with a predictable barrage
of jawboning, peppered with threats of outright intervention in the currency
market.

Tokyo received valuable outside help from the Federal Reserve, which hiked
the fed funds rate on two occasions to 5.25% since March 9th. Tokyo then rigged
the components in its consumer price index on August 25th, handcuffing the
BoJ from further rate hikes in the fourth quarter. That was the icing on the
cake, which enabled Tokyo to restore the dollar to its previous position of
118 to 120-yen.
The Bank of England's Radical Monetary policy
The Bank of England has tried to cap the British pound at $1.90, by keeping
its base rate exactly where it was at the start of 2005. The BoE also tolerates
an explosion of the British money supply that is more characteristic of emerging
economies in China and India. The UK's M4 money supply surged to a 14.5% annualized
growth rate in September, its fastest rate in 16-years, setting-off alarm bells
in London.
But time seems to be running out for the BoE's ultra easy money policy. The
UK economy grew by 0.7% in the July-September period, lifting the annual rate
of expansion to 2.8%, the fastest pace since the third quarter of 2004. That
seems to cement the case for a quarter-point BOE rate hike to 5.00% on November
9th. BoE chief Mervyn King warned on October 10th, "That decision will be taken
only in November, and much can change between now and then."

From 1997 through 2003, the Bank of England closely monitored its benchmark
M4 money supply, adjusting its base rate higher to counter strong M4 growth,
and lowered rates when the money supply slowed. However, the BoE abandoned
the discipline of monetarism over the past two years, and has lost control
of the money supply, which now threatens the UK economy with an inflationary
surge.
British interest rates are far too low to curb borrowing or the velocity of
the money supply. Net mortgage lending rose by 6.2 billion pounds in August,
up from the monthly average rise of 5.4 billion over the previous six months,
and beating the last record set in April 2004, when it increased by 6 billion
pounds. Asking prices for UK homes in the four weeks through October 7th rose
to 338,000 pounds, or 11.5% higher from a year earlier, the biggest annual
gain in two years
The BoE's Andrew Sentance said inflation could slip in the short term because
of lower energy prices, but rising wages present a problem. "In terms of inflation,
there is the risk if we have continuing inflation above target that it does
begin to feed into wage increases. That's a significant worry," said Sentance.
UK wages including bonuses grew an annual 4.4% in the quarter through July.
Quizzed on the importance of M4's 14.5% expansion, "The recent growth in M4
could ultimately have an impact on the economy. I view this as an issue of
concern about the future path of inflation," said BOE member Timothy Besley.
Sentance said the 14.5% M4 growth rate, the fastest since 1990, was an "amber
light".
The New Zealand dollar offers Interesting Insights
It would be far fetched to put the New Zealand dollar, (kiwi) in the same
league as the world's top-4 reserve currencies. Still, currency traders are
often attracted to its high yield, but lose sleep over its huge external deficits.
The kiwi has been on a rollercoaster ride in 2006, amid shifting expectations
over the direction of NZ Libor rates and the ability of the NZ economy to sustain
high interest rates.
The Kiwi is buoyed by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's (RBNZ) 7.25% cash
rate, which is 2% above the US fed funds rate and 7% higher than the Bank of
Japan's overnight loan rate. But the NZ current account deficit widened to
NZ$15.2 billion ($US10 billion) in the year ended June 30th, equivalent to
9.7% of gross domestic product. The compares to South Africa's 6.4% c/a to
GDP ratio of 6.4%, which encouraged traders to hammer the South African rand
by 25% this year..

Ten months ago, the kiwi began a 20% devaluation against the Japanese yen,
on news that NZ's economy had ground to a halt in the third quarter of 2005.
On January 26th, the RBNZ halted its two year rate hike campaign at 7.25%,
and while it reiterated that it saw no scope for an easing, it added, "We do
not expect to raise the official cash rate further in this cycle. However,
this possibility cannot be ruled out until we see clear evidence of a sustained
weakening in domestic demand."
Anticipating a peak in NZ Libor rate and an RBNZ easing cycle in 2007, Japanese
traders rushed to unwind the "yen carry" trade. The Bank of Japan started to
dismantle its ultra-easy money policy, ultimately draining 27 trillion yen
out of the Tokyo money markets. Japanese investors, who had bought NZ$12 billion
of NZ bonds in 2005, started dumping the kiwi, after NZ Prime minister Helen
Clark applauded the kiwi's devaluation.
Yet the kiwi stabilized at 70-yen in the summer of 2006, when traders began
to have second thoughts about the inevitability of RBNZ rate cuts this year.
Last month, RBNZ chief Alan Bollard insisted that he wouldn't cut rates for "some
considerable time because inflation hasn't abated". Consumer prices rose 4%
in the year ended June 30th, above the central bank's 1 to 3% target. Kiwi
Libor rates climbed to 7.62% last week, discounting an RBNZ rate hike to 7.50%
on October 26th.
Japanese traders are once again, playing the "yen carry" in the both the NZ
kiwi and the US dollar. Interest rate differentials are a powerful draw in
the foreign exchange markets, even for currencies with chronically high external
trade deficits.
"The world economy is doing miraculously well," said former Fed chief Paul
Volcker on October 17th, because "there are some big imbalances underneath
all of this, especially the flow of capital into the US. If the music stopped
or slowed down a bit in terms of the foreign money coming into the US, you've
got a potential problem for the US dollar and inflation," Volcker warned.
** If you enjoyed this article, consider a subscription to the Global Money
Trends newsletter published on the 1st and 15th of each month in pdf
format, and 20-25 pages in length. GMT collects a wide array of news and
information from reputable sources, filters out the noise and distractions,
and puts all the pieces of global economic puzzle together into coherent
snapshot analyses, with lots of cool charts depicting the inter-relationships
of markets and economies around the world.
Here's what you will receive with a subscription,
Insightful analysis and predictions of, (1) top stock market indexes around
the world, and US-listed Exchange Traded Funds (ETF's) and closed-end country
funds. (2) Commodities such as crude oil, copper, gold, silver, the
CRB index, and gold mining and oil company indexes. (3) Foreign currencies such
as, the Australian dollar, British pound, Euro, Japanese yen, and Canadian
dollar. ($) Libor interest rates, global bond markets and their central
bank monetary policies.
A subscription to Global Money Trends is $120 US dollars per year
for 24 issues, including access to all back issues. Click on the following
hyperlink, to order now, http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php.
This article may be re-printed in its entirety on other internet sites for
public viewing, with links to, http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php.
|