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In a keynote speech on February 2nd, in the northern Italian city of Turin,
Bank of Italy chief Mario Draghi, warned global stock market operators not
to assume that present favorable conditions would last. "It is not realistic
to expect that the current orderly market conditions will last forever, we
do not know where the next crisis will come from, we must do everything to
be prepared," he said.
"Market pricing does not currently incorporate the full range of potential
risks. Financial market participants need to take into account in their risk
analyses, the full implications of a possible reversal of the current benign
conditions, including the possibility of less liquid markets," he warned.
But Draghi is the "Boy who Cried Wolf", and few hedge fund or stock traders
heeded his warnings. Central banks, including Draghi's ECB, are flooding the
global money markets with liquidity, encouraging rampant speculation in financial
markets. On Jan 29th, the ECB's Klaus Liebscher admitted, "Liquidity levels
continue to be enormously accommodative, driven by high borrowing due to low
interest rates," he said. The Euro M3 money supply is exploding at a 9.8% annual
clip, it's fastest in 17-years!

Two of the biggest culprits behind the rampant speculation in global markets
are the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB), whose lending
rates are so low, that an estimated $330 billion of "carry trades" in yen and
Swiss francs are swirling around the global markets. On Feb 28th, the BoJ's
Atsushi Mizuno, pointed to the side effects of keeping low interest rates near
zero percent. "It could cause distortions in global asset prices by speeding
up capital outflows from Japan."
And on January 24th, SNB Chairman Jean-Pierre Roth told the annual meeting
of the World Economic Forum. "My current thinking on the Swiss franc, which
is going against the fundamental elements in the Swiss economy, is that it's
part of the exuberance in the financial markets," before vowing to crank up
Swiss loan rates. The SNB started cranking up rates from near-zero in mid-
2004 to its current 2%.
Interestingly enough, the latest plunge in global stock markets came on the
heels of a hike in the Bank of Japan's overnight loan rate to 0.50%, its highest
in a decade, and renewed warnings by Swiss central bankers of a tighter monetary
policy in the weeks ahead, and threats of a short squeeze on speculators betting
against the Swiss franc. Earlier, on February 10th, G-7 central bankers warned
currency speculators that they could get burned betting in one direction against
the yen.
Global Jitters Linked to Downturn in US Housing market
Since former Goldman Sachs CEO Henry Paulson took the helm at the US Treasury
last July, the Dow Jones Industrials (DJI) had marched 2,100-points higher,
almost without interruption, and without more than a single 2% correction along
the way. That was a winning streak unparalleled since 1964. It seemed as if
the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve had gained complete mastery over the
markets.
"The combination of lower energy prices, job creation and a strong stock market
has limited the impact of stagnating house prices on consumer spending," said
Chicago Fed chief Michael Moskow on February 18th, hinting at the Fed's clandestine
strategy. But the higher the DJI flies, the greater the amount of liquidity
that is necessary to keep the stock market afloat, and prevent a boom from
turning into a bust.

Then on Feb 15th, with the DJI climbing to within a stone's throw of the 13,000
level, Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke identified the depressed US housing
market as the biggest risk to the Fed's goal of a soft landing of 2-½ to
3% growth this year and next. "The ultimate extent of the housing-market correction
is difficult to forecast and may prove greater than we anticipate," he said.
The "soft landing" scenario for the US economy was jolted on February 16th
with news that housing starts plunged 14.3% in January to a 1.41 million annual
rate, the lowest level since 1997. The Fed's 2-year rate hike campaign has
toppled the US home building industry into a severe recession, and now a meltdown
in the sub-prime US home loan market threatens the stock market.
In other signs of severe distress in the all important US housing sector,
sales of new US homes plunged 16.6% in January to an annualized rate of 937,000
units, the sharpest monthly decline in 13-years. The Mortgage Bankers Association
purchase index fell 4.8% to 381.4 last week, below its year-ago level of 408.7,
and is considered a timely gauge of US home sales.
Suddenly, the first major crisis facing the Bernanke Fed arrived without much
advance warning - a rash of defaults on sub-prime home loans that if unchecked,
can drive the US economy into recession in 2007. Shares of many US sub-prime
lenders, such as New Century Financial (NEW.N), and NovaStar Financial (NFI.N),
have been brutally hammered in recent weeks, as defaults mount among homeowners
with poor credit histories, and where there is smoke, there is fire.
Skyrocketing property values during the US housing boom made it easy for homeowners
to borrow heavily against their homes with second mortgages and home-equity
loans. But if home prices continue to slide amid a glut of unsold homes and
foreclosures, many over-extended homeowners will lose their ATM machines.

HSBC Holding, HBC.N Europe's largest bank and a major sub-prime lender in
the US, shocked Wall Street by announcing that home-loan delinquencies have
gotten so bad that it set aside $10.6 billion to cover potential losses. Delinquencies
in the $1.3 trillion impaired-credit mortgage market exceeded 13% among borrowers
with sub-prime adjustable-rate loans in the fourth quarter. The top catalyst
of delinquencies was second-lien "piggyback" loans taken by borrowers for a
down payment.
Defaults could spiral higher as lenders are slated to reset as much as $1.5
trillion in ARM's this year. A credit squeeze could develop with major players
such as HSBC and New Century taking big hits, the entire sub-prime industry
is likely to tighten underwriting standards and throttle back on the highest-risk
loans.
So with the Dow Jones Industrials badly shaken to as low as 12,086 on Feb
27th, the Plunge Protection Team went into action to rescue the other important
ATM machine. "There's not much indication that sub-prime mortgage issues have
spread into other mortgage markets," Bernanke said on Feb 28th, triggering
a 150-point rally in the DJI futures market, and allowing buy-side Wall Street
investment bankers to shrug off the bearish news of a 16.6% plunge in existing
home sales.
The epicenter of Asian contagion is located in China, and how Beijing
decides to deal with the Shanghai bubble, can have a great impact on the outlook
for the Chinese economy, global commodity markets, and exporters in the region
from Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Korea. Will Beijing try to prick the
bubble and set-off a steep correction, or carefully calibrate a series of tightening
measures to take some steam out of the market and simply flatten it out?
"There is a bubble growing. Investors should be concerned about the risks," said
Cheng Siwei, vice-chairman of China's National People's Congress in a January
31st interview with the Financial Times. "But in a bull market, people will
invest relatively irrationally. Every investor thinks they can win. But many
will end up losing. But that is their risk and their choice," Cheng warned.
Sometimes, markets can boomerang on central banks and torpedo the most carefully
designed strategies.

On Feb 9th, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) tried to keep the market off
balance, by warning that it would use a number of tools to keep flush liquidity
conditions in check. "The central bank would use a combination of open market
operations and higher required reserves for banks in an effort to stave off
a credit-fuelled investment boom, and will make the yuan more flexible," it
said.
The PBoC put its verbal threats into action on February 16th, when it lifted
bank reserve ratios by half-percent to 10%, coming only six weeks after the
last hike, and at faster pace of tightening than expected. The hike in bank
reserve ratios should drain about 160 billion yuan ($20.7 billion) from the
Chinese money markets. What disturbs Chinese government officials are signs
of a speculative bubble in the stock market. Investors opened 50,000 retail
brokerage accounts a day in December and mutual funds raised 389 billion yuan
last year, quadruple the 2005 amount.
China's stock markets are dominated by retail investors, who hold 60% of the
total trading shares. By comparison, in Hong Kong, which lists a number of
mainland Chinese companies, institutional investors account for 70% of daily
transactions.

The Chinese stock market has now become the most expensive in Asia, trading
at 40 times 2005 earnings, compared to 16 in Hong Kong. The high P/E ratio
is supported by expectations of 25% earnings growth for 2006 and 2007, from
the possible new tax policy and new accounting standards starting from 2007.
However, if 2006 corporate results fail to meet strong expectations, Chinese
investors could easily dump inflated stocks, and send the overall market into
a tailspin.
Swiss National Bank takes aim at Swiss franc "carry traders" in SMI
Swiss Market Index futures plunged about 175 points from their intra-day high
on Feb 21st, following hawkish comments by Swiss National Bank (SNB) chief
Jean Pierre Roth. "Inflation will accelerate in 2009. The current interest
rate level is not high enough to ensure price stability in the medium term.
If the weakness of the franc feeds inflation, an interest rate increase would
be necessary" he warned.
Roth also repeated SNB warnings against the risks attached to short-selling
the Swiss franc. "The exchange rates on the markets develop out of line with
economic fundamentals. Experience shows that such situations are fragile. If
the correction comes, it is often harsh and can overshoot," he said.
Earlier, on Feb 4th, SNB member Thomas Jordan warned investors of the high
risks in carry trades, because of a possible sudden and violent appreciation
of the Swiss franc. "The weaker the franc gets, the higher the risks investors
take when they engage in new carry trades. A sudden appreciation of the franc
would lead to heavy losses for those who are short in the franc or sold it
in futures," he said.

"I am not sure whether all the market participants in this business are always
aware of the risk. If import goods got significantly costlier due to the weaker
franc and signs of higher inflation existed, we would have to react. We would
also move to a tighter monetary policy if the weaker franc led to an overheating
in the export industry and a strong wage increase," Jordan warned.

The SNB lifted its target for the three-month Swiss franc Libor rate to 2.00%,
on Dec 15th. The next policy meeting is due on March 15th, when the SNB is
almost certain to lift its Libor target to 2.25%, to match the ECB's repo rate
hike to 3.75% a week earlier. Two more rate hikes by the SNB to 2.50% might
slow M3 to as little as 1-2% growth, which could trigger an unwinding of short
positions in the Swiss franc, but put a lid on the high-flying Swiss Market
Index.
India Signals Tighter Money Policy to control Inflation
"We will continue to take more steps to dampen inflation," said Indian Finance
Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram on Feb 27th. If true, the Reserve Bank of
India still has a long road ahead to contain the M3 money supply, which grew
at an annualized 21.3% last month, and bank loans expanded at 30% clip, much
higher than the central bank's target of 20 percent.
India's central bank has been raising official interest rates gradually for
the past 2-½ years, and lifting bank reserve ratios, to curb rapid credit
expansion and accelerating inflation, but remains far behind the inflation
curve. "It is important to lower inflation perceptions and the Indian central
bank will take all measures to rein in price pressures," said Deputy Governor
Rakesh Mohan on Feb 28th.
India's wholesale inflation rate climbed to 6.73% in January, and prices paid
by farmers are at an eight-year high of 8.94 percent. New Delhi expects unprecedented
growth of 9.2% in the year to March 31st, the fastest pace after China among
the world's major economies. The economy has averaged 8.6% growth since 2003.

The Bank of India, which owns nearly a quarter of banking sector assets in
India,, raised its benchmark prime lending rate by 75 basis points to 12.25%
last week, the second time it has raised its benchmark lending rate in two
months. It also lifted the rate a half-point to 11.50% in late December. Leading
private lender ICICI Bank's benchmark rate for corporate loans is now 14.75%,
and expects Indian loan demand to slow to a 20% annualized rate in the future,
and in turn, slowing M3 growth.
The RBI's tightening campaign, up until now, has failed to slow the M3 money
supply or bank lending. But since mid-December, India's 3-month Libor rate
has climbed 300 basis points to 10.25%, the tightest squeeze on Bombay's money
markets in many years. That could take some of the air out of the Bombay Sensex
bubble, where 75% of capital inflows are funded with hot money from abroad.
Gold is a Safe Haven from the Global Stock market Storm
So far this year, the Dow Jones Industrials have lost 6.5% to an ounce of
gold, much to the chagrin of central bankers. Gold rallied as high as $690
/oz on Feb 26th in Asia, before market contagion knocked it off its upward
course. With a background of sub-prime loan debt bombs, explosive global money
supply growth, and jitters over Iran's nuclear weapons program, gold has emerged
triumphant over the DJI.
Strategists at 12 of the biggest Wall Street firms predicted in December that
S&P 500 stocks would rally an average 7.8% this year. The unanimous bullish
outlook on Wall Street last happened for 2001, when the S&P 500 dropped
13 percent. The growing complacency about the stock market is strange with
slower earnings and economic growth on the horizon. This quarter may be the
first one since 2003 that profits at S&P 500 profits will fall short of
a 10% increase.

The amount of money borrowed from brokerage firms to buy stock reached a record
$285.6 billion last month, topping the prior high set at the peak of the so-called
Internet bubble. Changes in the level of margin debt have mirrored those of
US stock indexes. After setting an all-time high of $278.5 billion in March
2000, margin debt dropped to less than half that amount by September 2002.
For now, gold is seen as a safe haven for the global stock market storm.
The upcoming March 2nd edition of Global Money Trends for paid subscribers
will examine whether the latest shake-out in the global stock markets represents
a major top with a bear market ahead, or rather a stiff correction in a long-term
bull market, along with expanded analysis and forecast of crude oil and gold.
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