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In an age when ruling parties of every political stripe manipulate data to
promote their own self interests, there is also strong universal cynicism towards
government statistics on inflation. It is natural for official inflation data
to be wildly at odds with the realities of the marketplace, and regarded with
utter disbelief. Nowhere on Earth is there more skepticism about inflation
data than in Japan, especially after Tokyo's financial warlords rigged the
core CPI last August, and shaved 0.4% off the official inflation stats with
the stroke of a pen.
That slick maneuver handcuffed the Bank of Japan from raising its overnight
loan rate to 0.50% for the past four months. Tokyo was able to buy more time
to keep the Nikkei-225 index afloat with a cheap yen policy, but Tokyo gold
prices are now bumping against 78,000-yen /oz, just 4% shy of their 18-year
highs set in May 2006, reflecting the massive amounts of monetary steroids
injected by the BoJ into the Tokyo and global money markets for the past five
years.
Now, there is heightened speculation that the regime of PM Shinzo Abe has
gone a step further and hijacked the Bank of Japan, robbing the central bank
of its independence. "The government and the BOJ should share major policy
objectives through mutual understanding, but not numerical targets," said Japan's
top government spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki on January
23rd.

The Bank of Japan was forced to kept its powder dry on January 18th, leaving
its overnight loan rate pinned a just 0.25%, and sending the yen to a four-year
low against the US dollar, a 9-year low against the Korean won, and a 14-year
low against the British pound. Speculation is rife, that the BOJ buckled under
heavy pressure from Tokyo's financial warlords, and a global flight from the
Japanese yen could be in the cards in the first quarter of 2007.
Bank of Japan Handcuffed by Ruling Politicians
At a time when Iceland's central bank is pegging its overnight loan rate at
14.25% to defend its currency from speculative attack, it's ironic that the
world's second largest economy cannot withstand a baby-step rate hike to 0.50
percent. "Speculation is speculation. As always, our decision is based on our
careful assessment of the economy and prices. There is no room for factors
other than economic and price conditions to wield clout over monetary policy," BoJ
chief Toshiro Fukui explained.
The Bank of Japan faces tough political opposition to a rate hike before an
election for parliament's upper house in July. "With the US economy slowing
and domestic price growth showing no sign of accelerating, the BoJ's next move
should be to lower, not raise, its policy target rate," said Kozo Yamamoto,
a senior vice minister of economy, trade and industry. "Nowhere can we see
signs of inflation, and consumer prices could turn negative any time," he warned.
"There is no reason for there to be talk of a BOJ rate hike unless the core
CPI grows consistently above 0.5%," Yamamoto added. Japan's core CPI was 0.2%
higher last month, adjusted for the re-jig of the CPI components last August,
which shaved 0.4% off the inflation data. "I believe Japan has yet to come
out of deflation," said Shoichi Nakagawa, the ruling LDP 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.
"It's up to the BOJ to decide whether to raise rates," said Japanese Economics
Minister Hiroko Ota on Jan 14th. "We are truly at the crucial moment of finding
out whether the Japanese economy could get out of deflation. And consumption
has recently been somewhat weak. It is a critical period and the path toward
escaping from deflation may reverse. I hope the BOJ will make a decision while
taking responsibility for its action," Ota said.

Setting the manipulated CPI data aside, Tokyo said Japanese wholesale prices
were 2.5% higher in December from a year earlier. The Japanese corporate goods
price index (CGPI), which tracks trends in global commodity markets, slowed
for the third straight month after hitting a 25-year high of 3.6% in September,
with crude oil and other raw material prices falling sharply, and lowering
the costs of key imports.
However, in light of the Japanese yen's devaluation against the US dollar,
in which most international commodities are traded, the Dow Jones Commodity
Index in yen terms, has stayed elevated in a range within easy striking distance
of its 25-year high. A further sharp devaluation of the yen could lift commodities
higher in Japan, and lead to higher factory inflation.
The DJ Commodity index is 63% higher in yen terms from five-years ago, or
an annualized inflation rate of 12.6%, far above the Tokyo's wholesale price
statistics. Where is the deflation that Tokyo's financial warlords fret about?
Instead, it's entirely possible, that the BoJ's failure to tighten in monetary
policy in a timely manner can revive the "Commodity Super Cycle" and a new
wave of global inflation.

With crude oil falling 10% towards 6,400-yen per barrel in early January,
one can might see a down-tick in Japan's official wholesale price stats towards
2.2%, buying more time for the BoJ to keep rates unchanged. Yet the Nikkei-225
has climbed to the 17,500 level, telegraphing a rebound in the Japanese economy
from a slack 0.8% growth rate reported in Q'3, with sharply lower oil prices
putting more yen in consumer's pockets and boosting company profits.
The US Dollar breaks thru the 120-yen barrier
"I have asked the Bank of Japan that their monetary policy should support
economic growth," said Japanese Finance Minister Koji Omi on January 8th, after
meeting US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in Washington DC. Omi's comments
triggered a US dollar rally above the psychological 120-yen level, to its highest
level in four years, perhaps with the consent of the US Treasury.
If the Bush administration has signed on to the yen's devaluation, then it's
turning a deaf ear to Detroit's Big Three automakers. The chief executive of
hard-pressed automaker General Motors charged on Nov 14th that "the Japanese
yen is systematically undervalued, which helps Tokyo to maintain significant
trade balance surpluses in our industry. Japan's yen is kept artificially low
so that the effect is to provide a subsidy between $3,000 and $9,000 per vehicle
for Japanese cars."

Why would the Bush administration agree to a stronger dollar and a weaker
yen, after General Motors slashed 30,000 jobs and closed 12 facilities in North
America over the past 12-months? America's dependency on foreign capital to
finance its budget and trade deficit puts foreign creditor nations in the driver's
seat. The dollar's rally above 120-yen, provides currency profits for Japanese
investors in US bonds, and also discourages them from dumping US Treasury debt.
Japan is the largest holder of $637.4 billion of US Treasury securities, but
was a seller of $2.2 billion of US bonds in November. Japan has been a gradual
seller of US Treasury bonds since August 2004, when its holdings peaked at
a record $699.4 billion. Japanese sales of US bonds would probably have accelerated
at a much faster clip, if the US dollar was trending lower against the yen.
Since August 2004, China has picked up the slack from Japanese investors,
boosting its holdings of US Treasuries from $201.6 billion to a record high
of $346.5 billion in November. Beijing was a buyer of US debt, even as it allowed
the yuan to appreciate 6.3% against the US dollar since July 2005, sustaining
a foreign currency loss in its massive US bond portfolio. Beijing continues
to buy US debt to avoid hostile protectionist legislation from the White House.

But the BoJ's super easy money policy is only half of the story behind the
US dollar's strength against the yen. The dollar enjoys a 5% interest rate
advantage over the yen, and "yen carry" traders can borrow in yen and re-lend
the funds in higher yielding currencies around the globe, including the Australian
dollar, British pound, Korean won, the US dollar, or buy gold and silver. JP
Morgan estimates the size of "yen carry" trades world-wide to be about 40 trillion
yen, or $331 billion.
The "yen carry" trade has muted concerns about trade imbalances between Japan
and the US. Over the past 12-months, Japan racked up a 200 trillion yen ($171
billion) current account surplus, or roughly +3.8% of its GDP, compared to
US external deficits of $860 billion, or -6.8% of GDP. Yet the currency with
massive external deficits is climbing against the currency with huge surpluses.
Obviously, Tokyo's interest rate policy is far out of alignment with the rest
of the world, and is expanding big bubbles in local and foreign markets. But
Japan had 765 trillion yen in sovereign marketable securities, or $6.5 trillion,
outstanding at the end of June, and its finance ministry will pay 21 trillion
yen ($177 billion) in interest expense this year, the equivalent of Hong Kong's
gross domestic product. So naturally, the Shinzo Abe regime is opposed to any
increase in interest rates.
Europe Expresses Frustration with Tokyo Warlords
Euro zone officials are frustrated by the yen's weakness against the Euro,
especially after the BoJ refrained from an expected rate rise, with accusation
of dirty politics at play. Jean-Claude Juncker, representing finance ministers
from 13 Euro zone countries remarked, "I get the impression that there was
something akin to political influence on the Japanese central bank's decision," he
said.
Juncker said the BOJ had been prepared to raise rates. "The Japanese central
bank has now voted 6-3 to hold rates steady, so that what was bound to happen
has happened, namely the Euro-yen exchange rate has swung so far to our disadvantage
that the yen is now enjoying a particular low," he said. Juncker's comments
and French calls for a weaker Euro against both the US dollar and the yen are
likely to put exchange rates on the agenda at the next Group of Seven meeting
in February.

Since the start of the current ECB rate hike campaign, Euro Libor rates have
outpaced yen Libor rates by roughly 85 basis points, encouraging carry traders
to bid the Euro 14% higher to a record 157.5-yen this week. Until Juncker's
outburst, Euro zone officials were silent about the cheap yen policy, allowing
currency traders to earn an extra 3.25% interest on the Euro /yen cross rate
and a nice profit to boot.
Looking forward, ECB officials are dragging their heels on future rate increases,
but are still expected to lift the repo rate to 3.75% in March. Italian central
banker Lorenzo Bini Smaghi said on Jan 23rd, "The ECB's repo rate is still
accommodating. Growth will remain robust in 2007. If the growth scenario is
confirmed, not to adjust interest rates accordingly would mean feeding excessive
liquidity growth," he said.
"I am still of the opinion that there are upward risks to price stability
in the Euro zone," said Bundesbank chief Axel Weber on Jan 22nd, adding that
higher-than-expected wage deals were the biggest risk to inflation. "Monetary
policy cannot wait until second-round effects materialize. We have to run a
forward-looking monetary policy and orient ourselves based on what our expectations
are," he said.
With the ECB's repo rate heading higher and the BoJ handcuffed by Tokyo warlords,
there is no end in sight for the Euro's advance against the yen, and the widening
of Japan's trade surplus with the European Union, which jumped 51% in November
from a year earlier. When asked his views on the Euro /yen and Japan's surging
trade surplus with the EU, Japanese Vice finance minister Hideto Fujii sounded
annoyed, "As I have said repeatedly, excessive fluctuations and disorderly
moves in the currency market are undesirable."
Who will step up to the plate to buy the low yielding Japanese yen? United
Arab Emirates central bank chief Sultan Nasser al-Suweidi dismissed the yen
as a possibility for reserve diversification on Nov 19th, "The yen is not a
currency. It's very much controlled by the central bank of Japan and I would
say it's lost confidence," he said. Arab Monetary Fund director Mannai said
the yen lacked appeal for the Arab Gulf states. "I think yen is losing ground
in favor of sterling."
Yen Carry Trade Upsetting Korean Stock Market
Complaints about Tokyo's cheap yen policy may start to grow louder in the
months ahead, and leading the pack could be South Korea's finance ministry.
The South Korean won rose to 7.75-yen, it's highest in over 9-years, after
the Bank of Japan left rates on hold, hobbling the already low-yielding currency.
Seoul is coming up with new ways besides market intervention to cap the Korean
won's strength.
Seoul plans to exempt Korean investment firms and securities companies from
taxes on profits generated from overseas investments, starting from the first
quarter of this year for the next three years. Until recently, the government
had deducted tax from income at source at the rate of 14 percent. "The following
measures are expected to see results of an outflow of around $10 billion-$15
billion, which is an outstanding effect to the market," said Finance Minister
Kwon O-kyu.

Still, the flow of money from Tokyo into the higher yielding Korean won might
mitigate much of the finance ministry's efforts, with Korean won deposits offered
450 basis points above comparable yen Libor rates. Sharply higher yields in
Korea have led to a 22% devaluation of the Japanese yen against the Korean
won from two-years ago, despite central bank intervention to stem the won's
strength. South Korean foreign reserves rose by $27 billion in 2006, mostly
due to intervention.
"If the government judges we need to stabilize the won, we can consult with
the central bank and we have unlimited resources," said Deputy Finance Minister
Kim Sung Jin on Dec 22nd. "Market participants should clearly recognize that.
Basically, the market decides supply and demand, but if the won moves excessively
in a short period of time, it can give shocks to the economy. We need a stable
currency for the sake of a stable economy and the government will try to maintain
that," he said.

Seoul is worried that a stronger won will make South Korean exporters uncompetitive
versus Japanese exporters, especially when a slowdown in the United States
is threatening to reduce demand from the world's biggest economy. To maintain
competitiveness, Korean exporters must lower their sales prices, thereby squeezing
profit margins. Every 1% gain in the won cuts earnings-per-share of Kospi blue-chips
Samsung Electronics by 0.8% and Hyundai Motor by 2 percent.
Yet Korean exports jumped by 20% from a year earlier in November to a record
$31 billion, even as the won climbed to nine-year highs against the dollar
and the yen. China and Japan together account for about 30% of Korean exports.
Still, growth in exports, which make up 40% of Korea's $788 billion economy,
will slow to 10.4% this year compared with 14.6% in 2006, the Commerce Ministry
said on Jan 3rd.
Korean manufacturers are the most pessimistic as the won's surge to the highest
since 1997 poses a direct threat to sales and earnings. Shares in Hyundai Motor,
which sells three out of four cars it makes overseas, dropped 14% in the second
half of last year. The won-yen rate has a significant impact on South Korea's
export volume, while the won-dollar rate is related to corporate profitability.

South Korea's benchmark Kospi was Asia's second-worst performing stock index
last year. On the flip side to the Kospi's malaise, Japan's Nikkei-225 index
sprang to life with a late year-end rally, climbing to 17,500, by tracking
the Korean's won's rally against the yen. The Nikkei share average ended with
a 6.9% gain last year, marking its fourth straight year of advances and its
longest bull run in nearly two decades. The weak yen boosted exporters such
as steel and auto makers.
Bank of Japan to fuel Global Inflation
With his popularity sinking, Abe might be more determined than ever to tightly
control the Bank of Japan and its interest rate policy. However, a chorus of
foul-play towards the cheap yen from Japan's major trading partners in Australia,
China, the Euro zone, Korea, and elsewhere, might force Abe to relent to a
baby step rate hike in the months ahead.
Public support for Japanese PM Shinzo Abe has been gradually declining since
he replaced the widely popular Junichiro Koizumi in September, in part due
to a perception that he is closely tied to vested interests. The Abe cabinet
enjoyed a public support rating as high as 71% when it took office, but a poll
for the Sankei Shimbun newspaper found it had fallen to 47.7%, a new low.

But a baby step rate hike to 0.50% would still leave Japan's borrowing rates
the lowest in the universe, and won't scare off "yen carry" traders. Global
imbalances in terms of trade, and bubbles in asset markets could become more
pronounced in 2007, due to Abe's reckless policies. Japan's central bankers
understand the risks.
In a speech given in March 2006, the BoJ's leading hawk, Atsushi Mizuno said, "The
biggest lesson to be learned from the bursting of the bubble in the early 1990's
was the importance of forward-looking monetary policy and of monitoring various
signals from asset prices. If there are excessive expectations for zero interest
rates to continue long-term, then the stimulus on demand will be too strong,
and fluctuations in the economy and asset markets could become very big, and
that in turn, could make official rate movements that much bigger."
"Raising rates just to prevent overheating in the economy or excessive gains
in asset prices will likely be difficult for the government or market participants
to accept, if core consumer prices are rising only moderately year-on-year," he
said. Mizuno's prognostications seem to becoming true, but what he didn't envisioned
was a loss of independence for the BoJ to rein in global bubbles before they
grow bigger.
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