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The $2 trillion per day foreign exchange market never sleeps. Yet for the
past six months, the big-3 central banks, the Federal Reserve, the European
Central Bank, and the Bank of Japan managed to lull the currency markets into
a deep trance. Since last May, the big-3 central banks corralled the US dollar
to within a 3% to 5% trading range against the British pound, the Euro and
Japanese yen.
The big-3 central banks utilized their three major weapons, (1) relentless
jawboning, (2) Japanese threats of intervention, and (3) coordinated rate hikes,
telegraphed far in advance to avoid any nasty surprises in the markets. But
the big-3's spell-binding magic act began to wind down on November 25th, when
Chinese deputy central banker Wu Xialong jolted the foreign currency markets,
warning other Asian central bankers of the future risk of a US dollar devaluation.
Beijing is having second thoughts about the composition of its $1 trillion
portfolio of FX reserves, with 70% held in low yielding US fixed income securities. "Firstly,
long-term US interest rates are falling. Secondly, the exchange rate of the
US dollar, which is the major reserve currency, is going lower, increasing
the depreciation risk for east Asian reserve assets," Wu said.
On October 10th, Fan Gang, another member of People's Bank of China's policy
committee, made similar comments, "China risks an erosion of its holdings because
the US dollar will probably decline." On August 29th, Gang wrote, "The US dollar
is no longer a stable anchor in the global financial system, nor is it likely
to become one, therefore it is time to look for alternatives."

Central banks are key players in the currency markets, and traders are always
on the lookout for signals that the heavy hitters are diversifying their FX
reserves away from the world's reserve currency, 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.
China's FX reserves are on track to hit $1.5 trillion in the second quarter
of 2008, and might hit $2 trillion by the end of 2010. China's holdings of
US Treasuries have skyrocketed from $59.5 billion to $342 billion since January
2001, and have kept interest rates artificially low in the face of large federal
budget deficits. So the slightest hint of a bearish Chinese disposition towards
the US dollar instantly sent the Euro spiraling above the psychological $1.30
level last week.

US Democrats on the Joint Economic Committee argued on Nov 4th, that "the
United States must reduce its heavy dependence on foreign borrowing in order
to avoid a run on the dollar and a steep rise in interest rates. Even without
a run on the dollar, the need to pay interest of $100 billion or more per year
on foreign holdings of Treasury securities will reduce US national income."
"Our reliance on China and other nations to finance our debt is the result
of a deliberate policy by the Bush administration, one that reversed course
from the Clinton administration, and has favored deficit financing of tax cuts
and federal spending over a prudent fiscal policy. It will take years of sound
fiscal policy to reduce our reliance on foreign lenders and return the federal
debt to a prudent level," the Congressional Democrats concluded.

The Bush administration grants Beijing free and unfettered access to US consumer
markets, in return for massive Chinese purchases of US bonds. But since Beijing
decoupled the yuan from the rigid peg of 8.27 /US$, the yuan has appreciated
by 5.6% to 7.835 per US dollar. That's translated into a 10% loss for Beijing's
holdings of 10-year US Treasury notes when converted back into Chinese yuan.
During the same time, the price of Gold gained 40% against the Chinese yuan. "We
have had a very clear diversification plan," said Chinese central bank chief
Zhou Xiaochuan on Nov 9th. "We are considering lots of instruments for diversification,
including currencies, investment instruments, and emerging markets." Asked
if diversification included gold, Zhou coyly replied, "That's a separate thing."
Forward traders in Hong Kong predict the dollar will fall another 4% to 7.53
yuan within the next 12-months. US Treasury chief Henry Paulson and Federal
Reserve chief Ben Bernanke will meet with Chinese officials on Dec 14-15th
in Beijing. The yuan had its largest monthly gain in September, when Paulson
held talks in Beijing with President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.
"There has been a fair amount of tension in the economic relationship,'" said
Paulson at a business conference in London on Nov 27th. "For this to be successful,
issues such as greater currency flexibility must be addressed," he said. Ahead
of the December meeting, traders think Beijing might allow the dollar to fall
0.5% to 7.80 yuan, to equal the Hong Kong dollar's peg against the US dollar.
Korean Experience with US T-Notes
Interestingly enough, the December 14th meeting in Beijing would be exactly
one year since PBoC chief economist Yu Yongding called for East Asian central
banks to come up with a plan to slow the rate of accumulation of US dollars
and eventually cut their holdings. "Asian countries don't need more than $2
trillion of foreign exchange reserves, and dangerously exposed to a decline
in the dollar."
Yu said China faced big losses on its reserves if the US dollar does decline
by as much as 30 percent. "That is a very big problem and I think the Chinese
government should take some action to reduce the growth rate of the accumulation
of foreign exchange reserves as we're still facing the possibility of a big
devaluation of the US dollar, so capital loss will be huge," Yu 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. If that happens, it will
be a tremendous hit to the Chinese economy," he said. Yet Chinese leaders were
slow to accept Yu's advice and didn't see the light until a few weeks ago.

China faces a much graver situation than the Bank of Korea, which abandoned
its defense of the US dollar at 1140-won two years ago. In Korean won terms,
US Treasury 10-year notes have since plunged 22% lower, with the dollar falling
to 930-won. Soon after the dollar collapsed from 1140-won towards the psychological
1000-won level in February 2005, the BoK said it would not sell US bonds outright,
but instead, would diversify future reserve accumulation into high yielding
currencies such as Australian and Canadian dollars, and the British pound.
Yet despite the Korean won's 20% appreciation against the US$ from two years
ago, Korean exports hit a record $30 billion in September '06, or 22% higher
than a year earlier. In the first nine months of 2006, Korean exports gained
14.9% year-on-year to US$238.62 billion. Bilateral trade between China and
Korea was $61.9 billion last year, up 24% from the previous year, as Seoul
started to wean itself off the US market.
Needless to say, traders will closely scrutinize the monthly reports on foreign
purchases of US Treasury securities, to see if China is shying away from the
depreciating US dollar, and instead, following the example of the Bank of Korea.
That might account for the urgency of next month's meeting in Beijing, especially
with Democrats preparing a protectionist plan in Congress.
Underpinnings of US dollar remain weak
After the 3-year bear market for the US Dollar Index, which shaved a third
of its value by December 2004, there was cautious optimism among FX traders
that the greenback had finally bottomed out. In 2005, the US dollar began a
counter-trend rally, recovering a third of its 2002-04 losses, under a wave
of slow but steady rate hikes by the Federal Reserve to as high as 5.25 percent.
Yet despite the Fed's best efforts to rescue the dollar, the underpinnings
of the US currency stayed weak.
Since December 2001, the monthly US trade deficit has increased $37.7 billion,
saddling its economy with huge foreign debts and taxing domestic growth. In
the third quarter, the trade deficit subtracted 0.6% from GDP growth. American
economic output would be 20% greater today, were it not for the trade deficits
accumulated over the past twenty years.
Despite the sharp devaluation of the US$ Index, the US trade deficit hit a
record high of $69 billion in August. Three major segments account for the
90% of the US trade deficit Energy, automobiles, and Chinese and Japanese imports.
On Nov 14th, General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner said Detroit automakers share
a "strong conviction that the Japanese yen is systematically undervalued, which
helps them to maintain significant trade balance surpluses in our industry." Diplomatic
efforts to persuade China to stop manipulating the yuan for the past 5-years
were a sham.

Energy imports have increased $17.1 billion per month since 2001, with the
average price of imported oil soaring from $15.46 to $62.52 per barrel, and
monthly imports increased 352 to 414 million barrels. Automobiles and parts
account for $10.7 billion of the monthly trade deficit. Japanese and Korean
manufacturers have snatched market share from GM and Ford by offering more
attractive and reliable vehicles.
The US trade deficit with China was $23.0 billion in October, and has increased
$17.5 billion per month since December 2001. Imports from China increased to
a record $27.6 billion in September, but US exports to the Asian nation fell
to $4.6 billion. China will soon replace Mexico as America's second-largest
trading partner behind Canada. So far this year, the value of trade between
China and the US is $246.7 billion. That compares with $248.3 billion in trade
with Mexico.
Fed Rates hikes trumped by Foreign Central Bank sales of US$
Fed rate hikes began to lose their potency to support a US dollar rally after
Fed chief Ben Bernanke indicated on March 21st, that he wouldn't lose any sleep
over a weaker dollar. "Although US trade deficits cannot continue to widen
forever, these deficits need not engender a precipitous decline in the dollar,
nor should such a decline, were it to occur, necessarily disrupt financial
markets, production or employment."
While Bernanke's comments were greasing the skids under the US dollar, it
was Russian finance minister Alexel Kudrin, speaking to the annual IMF meeting
in Washington on April 20th, dealt the hammer blow to the US$. "Russia cannot
consider the US dollar as a reliable reserve currency because of its instability.
This currency has devalued by 40% against the Euro in recent years. The international
community can hardly be satisfied with this instability," Kudrin said.

Kudrin touched a raw nerve among FX traders, and knocked the US$ Index about
6.6% lower over the next four weeks, until European finance ministers began
to voice their displeasure with a Euro above $1.30. Two months later, Russia
revealed that it had reduced its US$ exposure by 20% to 50% of its foreign
exchange reserve, while boosting the Euro to 40% from 25% earlier.
Then on June 8th, the Russian Trading System launched futures contracts in
gold and Urals crude oil denominated in Russian rubles instead of US dollars.
Record oil prices have boosted Russia's foreign exchange holdings by 54% to
$279.8 billion, so that the Kremlin's reserves are outstripped only by those
of China and Japan.

On October 16th, Alexei Ulyukayev, the Russian central bank's first deputy
chairman, said the Japanese yen would be increased as a proportion of the total
reserves in 2007, and Russia would build stocks of other currencies, including
the Australian and Canadian dollars. Izvestia newspaper reported on Nov 6th
that Russia's central bank bought six tons of gold in October to boost its
reserves to 400 tons.
Italy's central bank slashed its US dollar reserves to 63% from 84% in the
first half of 2006, while holdings of sterling rose to 25% from zero in 2004.
Italy's official reserves equal 61.2 billion euros ($79 billion). Britain's
Daily Telegraph newspaper said the Bank of Italy was acting in advance of an
expected slide in the dollar, once the Federal Reserve ended its two-year credit
tightening campaign, leading traders to focus again on the gaping US current
account and trade deficit.
As recently as November 7th, San Francisco Fed chief Janet Yellen warned, "many
Asian and OPEC countries have a global savings glut and are holding US dollars
to protect their economy from volatile capital flows such as the Asian currency
crisis. There is a mutuality of interest. That doesn't mean that it won't change.
It could be that countries will decide to channel less of it into dollar assets
and that could have some impact at some stage," she said.
Is the Federal Reserve out of Rate Hike Ammunition?
So far this year, the US dollar has shed over 10% of its value against the
Euro, 12% against the British pound and 6% versus the Australian dollar. The
Euro's surge above $1.30 on November 24th unfolded 3-½ months after
the Federal Reserve signaled a pause in its 2-year rate hike campaign at 5.25%.
If the ECB decides to extend its tightening campaign beyond the widely telegraphed
rate hike to 3.50% on December 7th, does the Federal Reserve have enough elbow
room to match the ECB with a surprise quarter-point hike in the fed funds rate
to 5.50% next year?
"Taking all of the factors on growth and inflation into account, my current
assessment is that the risk of inflation remaining too high is greater than
the risk of growth being too low," said Chicago Fed chief Michael Moskow on
Nov 7th. "Thus, some additional firming of policy may yet be necessary to bring
inflation back to a range consistent with price stability in a reasonable period
of time," Moskow warned. The Chicago Fed chief added that "although crude oil
prices have fallen, the potential for another price shock remains a risk to
the US economy," he said.

Moskow will join the Fed's other leading hawk, Jeffrey Lacker, on the Fed's
voting committee in January, in supporting a tougher Fed policy. Also, recognizing
the risk of higher inflation from a weaker US dollar, Philly Fed chief Charles
Plosser called for higher rates on Nov 27th. "There remains some risk that
policy is not yet firm enough to ensure a return to price stability over a
reasonable time horizon."
"We need to remain vigilant and recognize that maintaining the current stance
of policy, or even firming further, may be in the best interests of the economy's
long-run performance," Plosser argued. Still, the consensus of opinion in the
US Treasury bond markets and among foreign currency traders is that the Fed's
next move on interest rates is towards an easing of policy in 2007.
Since the Fed's last rate hike to 5.25% on June 29th, the yield on the 10-year
T-note has declined by nearly 70 basis points, producing a deeply inverted
yield curve. At last reading, the yield on the 10-year note is roughly 78 basis
points below the US$ six-month Libor rate, it's deepest inversion since 2000,
when bond traders correctly forecasted a US economic recession that materialized
in 2002.

US home prices were 3.5% weaker in November than a year earlier, which is
expected to persuade the majority of the Fed's interest rate setting committee
to hold rates steady at 5.25% thru January. The Mortgage Bankers Association's
Index for US home purchases, a real time indicator for the state of the US
housing sector, fell to 401.4 last week, roughly 24% below its all-time high
in Q'2 of 2005.
The pace of US home construction sank 14.6% in October, as a glut of unsold
homes kept builders at bay, hinting economic growth will remain tepid and keeping
hopes alive for interest-rate cuts. The annual pace of US housing starts was
1.486 million, the lowest level in more than 6-years, and 27.4% lower from
October of last year. The Fed is counting on a limited economic slowdown to
help keep inflation in check, but is keeping a careful eye on home prices.
Interest rate differentials undermining US dollar
Making matters worse for the US dollar is a sharp drop in interest rate differentials
with Euro yields, one of the key factors propping up the dollar for the past
two years. The gap between US Treasury's 2-year Note and the German 2-year
note is near an 18 month low, hovering at 108 basis points this week, and down
from 180 basis points in mid June, just before the Fed's last rate hike to
5.25%.

While the US Treasury bond market is pricing in a Fed rate cut, the benchmark
German bund market is pricing in future ECB rate hikes. Yet it is interesting
to note, the US dollar's interest rare advantage was shrinking from a high
of 180 bp in mid-June to as low as 102 bp on October 4th, but the Euro was
pinned near $1.25 in mid-October, acting oblivious to the big shift in interest
rate differentials.
Ironically, the Euro bottomed at $1.25 on October 17th, when the US Treasury
reported that the foreign demand for US bonds and stocks soared to a record
$116 billion in August, compared to only $32.9 billion in July. Thus, the US
dollar topped out a very bullish news, then headed south over the next five
weeks, as the arcane foreign exchange market decided to look at shrinking interest
rate differentials.
Arab Oil kingdoms suffer FX losses on US$ Bonds
The foreign exchange market was also guided by statements from former Fed
chief "Easy" Al Greenspan, who indicated on October 26th, "We're beginning
to see some move from the dollar to the Euro, both from the private sector
and from monetary authorities and central banks. We'll get to the point at
some point that willingness to finance the current account deficit will slow," Greenspan
warned.
Greenspan was proven correct on Nov 16th, when the US Treasury said foreigners
had scaled down their purchases of US bonds and stocks by 45% in September
to $53.7 billion, falling short of the $64.4 billion US trade deficit for that
month. Japanese bond traders were net sellers of $5.1 billion of US Treasuries,
but Beijing was a net buyer of $3 billion and allowed the dollar to fall 1.5%
to 7.84 yuan.

Arab oil kingdoms were net buyers of as much as $6.9 billion thru their brokers
in London in September, after adding $11.1 billion to their portfolios in August.
Arab oil kingdoms are recycling part of their petrodollar surplus into US Treasury
bonds, to help finance the American war effort in Iraq, which costs about $2
billion per week. But the British pound has been a stronger currency than the
Euro against the US dollar recently, dealing a bigger blow to Arab holdings
of US bonds.
But United Arab Emirates central bank chief Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi is avoiding
the US Treasury market, "I expect the Euro to become the currency of international
trade and investment in 10 years. If we add tourism, the Euro will surpass
the dollar as the first currency in the world by 2015." The UAE central bank
is shifting 10% of its $25 billion reserves out of the dollar and largely into
British pounds and Euros.
European Central Bank Signals higher rates ahead
The ECB had already raised its key repo lending rate by 125 basis points since
last December and has telegraphed a further 25 bps increase to 3.5% for December
7th. When asked asked about the rate outlook beyond that, Greek central banker
Nicholas Garganas said on Nov 7th, "No matter what criteria one uses to characterize
monetary conditions, the conclusion is inescapable that there is more than
ample liquidity. Despite the interest rate increases to date, real rates remain
through the whole maturity spectrum near historically low levels," he said.

"There is little doubt to have further withdrawal of monetary accommodation.
Moreover inflationary risks remain on the upside. If one looks at what is happening
to producer prices, and non-energy related prices, the picture is one of elevated
prices for goods. I think this is a clear indication of significant inflationary
pressures remaining in the system," Garangas said.
The Euro zone's M3 money supply expanded at an annualized rate of 8.5% in
October for the second month in a row, far above the ECB's original 4.5% target.
While total Euro zone bank lending growth eased 0.2% to 11.2% in October, loans
to the corporate sector hit 12.9% annual growth rate in October, the highest
since records began in 1998. Loans have increased in size, largely due to massive
borrowing to finance $1.3 trillion of European mergers and acquisitions this
year.

Futures traders in Frankfurt predict the ECB is on course to raise its repo
rate by a quarter-point in the first quarter of 2007 to 3.75%. Meanwhile, traders
in Chicago are betting on a 50% chance of a quarter-point Federal Reserve rate
cut to 5.00 percent. That would narrow the US$'s rate advantage by 50 basis
points and buoy the Euro above $1.300. However, due to the dollar's structural
weakness, any round of Fed rate cuts would be limited, so as to avoid a dollar
free-fall into the abyss.
Bank of Japan battles Tokyo warlords over Interest rates
G-10 central bankers are calling on the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to tighten its
monetary policy further, to discourage carry traders from borrowing yen, and
reinvesting the funds in inflation assets around the world. European bankers
object to unilateral ECB rate hikes without similar moves by the BoJ, which
could exert further upward pressure on the Euro beyond 150-yen, already at
8-year highs.
The BOJ has left monetary policy unchanged after hiking its key overnight
call rate target to 0.25% in July, the first rate hike in six years. Japan's
economy grew an annualized 2.0% in the July-September quarter, double the pace
the market was expecting and higher than the 1.6% growth in the United States
in the same quarter. "I told the G-20 that the Japanese economy continues to
expand steadily, amid stable prices. If this trend continues, we will adjust
monetary policy gradually, looking at various risk factors ahead," said BoJ
chief Fukui.

Japan's monetary base in October was down 21.3% from a year earlier, marking
the eighth consecutive month of decline. The monetary base has been falling
on a year-on-year basis since March after the BOJ announced the end of its
policy of flooding the banking system an excess of 26-trillion yen on March
9th. But despite the BoJ's historic draining operation, the Japanese overnight
loan rate remains at a paltry 0.25%, hardly reflective of the size of the world's
second largest economy.
Still, a top Japanese ruling party politician on Nov 7th, opposed a credit
tightening by the BoJ, saying the economy had not yet emerged from deflation. "I
believe Japan has yet to come out of deflation," said Shoichi Nakagawa, the
ruling Liberal Democratic Party policy chief. "I'm against the BOJ raising
rates. Given the state of the Japanese economy, talking of a rate hike is absurd," he
said.

Tokyo financial warlords are closely watching the Bank of Japan, because a
tighter monetary policy might cause, "Increases in long-term rates, which would
have a big effect on the country's fiscal situation through the government's
debt interest payments," said Japanese PM Shinzo Abe on October 4th. "We have
to keep a close watch on their moves." A 1% increase in 10-year bond yields
would push up the debt-servicing costs by 1.6 trillion yen ($13.6 billion).
Debt-servicing costs already account for a quarter of spending in the annual
budget.
Japan had 765 trillion yen in sovereign marketable securities, or $6.5 trillion,
outstanding at the end of June 2006, compared with $4.3 trillion in the US
Treasury market. Since then, the spread between the US 10-year yield and the
Japanese 10-year yield has narrowed 54 basis points to 2.82%, making US bonds
less attractive to Japanese investors, and weighing on the dollar /yen.
Is "Stagflation" on the horizon for US Economy?
In the months ahead, the Federal Reserve could face the dreaded nightmare
of "Stagflation." Weaker home prices and a sinking US dollar on one hand, and
rising gold prices on the other hand. Fed chief Bernanke observed on Nov 27th, "In
the case of inflation, the risks to the forecast seem primarily to the upside.
A failure of inflation to moderate as expected would be especially troublesome."
The December 1st edition of Global Money Trends will present
forecasts for the US dollar against an array of different currencies, and the
impact of a weaker dollar for global stock markets, interest rates, gold, silver,
base metals, key commodities such as crude oil and grains, and commodity indexes.
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