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Once upon a time, many years ago, the US stock market lived in fear
of a violent band of traders known as the "bond market vigilantes". Whenever
the Federal Reserve's money supply measures grew too rapidly, or the US economy
grew too strongly threatening to stoke higher inflation, the "bond vigilantes" would
take matters into their own hands, by jacking-up 30-year Treasury bond yields
as much as 25 basis points or short-term T-bill rates by 50 basis points in
a single day.
Former US Treasury secretary Robert Rubin convinced his boss, President Bill
Clinton that taming the "bond vigilantes" by reducing the budget deficit was
the surest way to reach long-term economic prosperity. As Clinton's political
guru James Carville famously put it, "I used to think if there was reincarnation,
I wanted to come back as the president or the Pope or a .400 baseball hitter,
but now I want to come back as the bond market. You can intimidate everybody," he
once quipped.
But during the first Bush administration, when the Treasury's budget was spinning
out of control with a $445 billion deficit in fiscal 2004, the infamous "bond
vigilantes" slipped into hibernation. Instead, a new band of traders with much
deeper pockets, the Bank of Japan, the People's Bank of China, and the Arab
Oil kingdoms were cornering the US Treasury market, and keeping yields pinned
near historic lows.
Tokyo and Beijing acquired a combined $2.1 trillion of foreign exchange reserves,
mostly held in US dollar bonds, thru massive intervention to keep the yen and
yuan weak, and plowed their newly acquired dollars into US bonds. Today, Japan
owns $612 billion of US Treasuries, after purchasing $334 billion US dollars
in 2003-04. Beijing owns $420 billion of US Treasuries, and more than $500
billion of US agency and corporate bonds, with little regard for the outlook
for inflation.
As crude oil prices more than doubled to over $65 per barrel, OPEC's oil revenue
reached $968 billion in 2006 from around $300 billion in 2002, Arab Oil kingdoms
invested about $314 billion into the US Treasury market thru their London brokers,
representing one-fourth of the $1.3 trillion of petrodollars invested globally
over the 3-years. Last week, the US Treasury said holdings of US securities
by foreign central banks and governments rose to $2.3 trillion by the end of
June 2006.

Perhaps, the most important single factor allowing the global economy to grow
at 5% or more for each of the past four years has been historically low bond
yields, courtesy of Asian central banks and Arabian petrodollars. Indirectly,
abnormally low bond yields spawned $1.5 trillion of US mergers and takeovers
in 2006, and $1 trillion so far this year, up 70% from the same period a year
earlier. Globally, M&A mushroomed to $3.6 trillion in 2006 and $1.9 trillion
so far this year.
Also behind the boom in global stock markets, hedge-fund assets tripled in
the past decade to $1.57 trillion, and private- equity companies are bidding
$447 billion for companies so far this year, versus $228 billion in the year-ago
period. Corporate treasurers are exploiting the gap between the low yield on
bonds and the earnings yield on stocks through record share buybacks, driving
equity prices sharply higher.
The Bernanke Fed is also operating behind the curtain, inflating the broad
M3 money supply at an annualized 12.2% rate, its fastest clip in 5-years. Each
morning, before the opening of the NYSE, the Bernanke Fed buys Treasuries to
accommodate strong loan demand from private equity groups and leveraged takeover
artists, and prevent short-term borrowing rates from rising.
The global stock buying frenzy might not have been possible, if the "bond
vigilantes" weren't sedated by Arab Oil kingdoms, China, Japan, and other central
bankers.

But interestingly enough, when the Dow Jones Industrials climbed above the
psychological 13,000 barrier for the first time, the "bond vigilantes" began
to crawl out of their cave. On June 1st, the Treasury's 10-year yield rose
to 4.98%, its highest level in nine-months. Treasury yields were rising despite
news that the US economy slowed to a scant 0.6% growth rate in Q'1, its weakest
in 4-½ years, largely due to a sharp downturn in the housing sector.
Fed officials believe the correction in the housing market is likely to "weigh
heavily" on economic growth for the remainder of the year, but "the risk that
inflation would fail to moderate as desired remained the committee's predominant
concern," the Fed said on May 30th. So as hopes fade for Fed rate cuts this
year, traders are dumping long-term T-Notes in favor of high flying US and
foreign stocks.

The "bond vigilantes" might have greater room to maneuver in the months ahead,
as Beijing observes its massive US bond portfolio, estimated at over $900 billion,
slide into a free-fall, when depreciating US dollars are converted back into
Chinese yuan. China's massive $233 billion trade surplus with the US last year
is going up in smoke, even before the "bond vigilantes" have a good crack at
the bat.
China controls $1.2 trillion in foreign exchange reserves and steady purchases
of longer-dated Treasuries could evaporate, after the PBoC widened the trading
band for the yuan on May 18th, allowing for a swifter devaluation of the US
dollar. Beijing could decide to recycle its massive trade surplus into riskier
assets.
But Fed chief Ben Bernanke is not worried about Beijing dumping US bonds in
the future. "I think the cost to them of doing this would be greater than the
cost to us. A substantial move on their part would be disruptive in the market
in the short term, but in the longer term, the dollar and Treasury yields would
largely recover," he told the Senate Banking Committee on Feb 14th.
"I do not believe China's substantial accumulation of reserves (recycled into
US bonds) in itself represents a problem for the United States or for US monetary
policy," Bernanke wrote on March 26th. "Because foreign holdings of US Treasury
securities represent only a small part of total US credit market debt outstanding,
US credit markets should be able to absorb without great difficulty any shift
of foreign allocations," he said in a letter to Sen. Richard Shelby, an Alabama
Republican.
"And even if such a shift were to put undesired upward pressure on US interest
rates, the Federal Reserve has the capacity to operate in domestic money markets
to maintain interest rates at a level consistent with our economic goals," Bernanke
added. Would Bernanke speed up the printing presses to buy bonds from Beijing?
Bond Vigilantes Unleashed in Europe
While American bond vigilantes are just stepping into the batter's box, the
German bund vigilantes are already on first base, jacking up European benchmark
yields to multi-year highs. Germany's 10-year bund yield rose to 4.50% this
week, its highest since Dec' 2003, while the 2-year yield climbed to 4.42%,
a five-year high.
"Euro zone inflation risks are rising and the European Central Bank is keeping
its options open on how much further to raise interest rates," said Greek central
banker Nicholas Garganas on May 30th. "All the options for a further increase
in interest rates and the pace and size of further adjustment are open. Inflation
risks are on the upside and increasing," he warned.
"A number of factors are pointing to an inflation rate which is higher than
expected so far this year," Garangas said, pointing to strong money and credit
growth, higher oil prices, and lower unemployment. "The ECB needs to exercise
strong vigilance to keep price pressures in check," warned Bundesbank chief
Axel Weber on May 16th.

Since March 13th, Euro zone traders have been dumping German bunds and switching
into high-flying European blue chips stocks. The ECB has spoken a million words
about the risks of higher inflation, but has only lifted its repo rate a quarter-point
this year. The ECB has tolerated explosive growth of the Euro M3 money supply,
which hit a 24-year high of 10.9% in March, far above the central bank's target
of 4.5%, which it believes is consistent with low inflation.
"It would be unwise to discard monetary analysis, especially now that asset
prices are at a high and liquidity at an unprecedented scale worldwide," warned
the BBK's Weber on June 3rd. "Interest rates are low in the Euro area," said
Dutch central bank chief Nout Wellink on June 4th. "These low interest rates
show up in asset prices, not only in the stock market, but also the housing
market and other financial markets."

The ECB's slow-motion tightening strategy hasn't restrained the growth of
the European money supply. In fact, Euro M3 money supply is growing at a much
faster rate today, than when the ECB began raising its repo rate in December
2005. While the mainstream media points to ECB rate hikes as proof of a tighter
monetary policy, double-digit Euro M3 growth points to a super-easy ECB money
policy.
The ECB pursues a clandestine policy of pumping up European real estate and
stock markets, to boost consumer confidence and spending at home by inflating
M3. The ECB's sleight of hand is part of its game of "Smoke and Mirrors" designed
to lull German "bund vigilantes" to sleep, while it quietly pumps up asset
markets.
But the Norwegian government recognized the shell game on April 13th, and
said it planned to raise the equity component of its $314 billion oil fund
to as much as 60% of total assets from 40%, while reducing the portion held
in bonds. According to the Norwegian Pension Fund's 2006 report, it owned 154
billion crowns ($25.7 billion) of German Bunds, and 44 billion crowns in European
Investment Bank bonds.

To restore its badly tarnished image of an inflation fighter, the ECB has
telegraphed a quarter-point rate hike to 4.00% in June, and to 4.25% by September.
The ECB was forced into the tightening mode, since gold is flirting with the
psychological 500 euros /ounce. In Frankfurt, Euro Libor traders are pricing
in the possibility of a third ECB rate hike to 4.50% by year's end.
So it was surprising that on June 1st, the ECB decided to suspend its remaining
share of gold sales thru Sept 26th. That gave a small shot of adrenalin to
the gold market, jumping back to 500 euros per ounce, and lifted the yield
on the Euro Libor rate for December by 7 basis points to 4.57 percent. Stubbornly
high gold prices in Europe provide more fodder for the German "bund vigilantes" in
Frankfurt, whose set the benchmark yields for the rest of the Euro zone.
The Bank of England faces a Backlash
For the past three years, the ECB has operated under the same modus operandi
as the Bank of England, inflating the money supply to buoy home and equity
markets. But last week, the British gilt vigilantes, who have been locked in
a tight box for the past eight years, came very close to breaking out. Two-year
British gilt yields climbed to 5.78% on June 1st, a level not seen since in
seven years. Ten-year gilt yields climbed to 5.32%, the highest since mid-2002.

For the past eight years, the UK's 10-year Gilt yield has been locked in a
tight range between 4.00% and 5.35%, benefiting from foreign capital inflows
seeking to profit from an appreciating British pound. But how much longer can
the long-term Gilt market ignore the monetary abuse of the BoE? On April 24th,
a group of leading UK economists including former BoE member Charles Goodhart
criticized the BoE for ignoring double-digit growth of the money supply since
2005.
A week later, BoE chief King admitted that, "the growth of money and credit
may signal in advance of other indicators that the Bank rate is set at a level
inconsistent with bringing inflation back to the target in the medium term," he
said. On May 10th, the BoE lifted its base lending rate by a quarter-point
to a 6-year high of 5.50%, with consumer inflation raging at 3.1% it's highest
in more than a decade.
But UK house prices jumped 0.9% in April and 0.5% in May, even after three
BoE rate hikes, and stand 10.3% higher from a year ago. The price of a typical
UK house is 181,584 pounds, or about 17,000 pounds higher than at the same
time last year. Not surprising, with the UK's M4 money supply 13.3% higher
from a year ago.
Asian Bond Vigilantes Ring the Alarm Bells
The Korean Kospi Index has been on a record-breaking rally over the past two
months, and is up 20.6% so far this year, surpassing the 1,700-point mark for
the first time, after extending gains for a 13th straight week. A quarter of
listed Kospi stocks rose 50% or more this year, and 8% of Kospi stocks are
up more than 100%.
South Korea's economy, Asia's third-largest after Japan and China, has expanded
for 16-quarters in a row, marking the longest winning streak since the 1990's.
Behind the scenes, the Bank of Korea (BoK) is inflating its M3 money supply,
buoying stock prices but rattling the bond market. (A 5-year graph of the
Korean M3 money supply and Koribor rates is presented in the June 8th edition
of Global Money Trends).
The Korean central bank lifted its overnight loan rate by 125 basis points
to 4.50% last year, and raised bank reserve ratios by 2% to 7%, but in defiance
of its baby-step tightening maneuvers, Korea's M3 money supply exploded from
a 7% growth rate to an annualized 12.3% in April 2007, its fastest rate in
4 ½-years.
Korean housing prices are growing four times as fast as consumer prices. Housing
prices across South Korea were 9.7% higher in May than a year before, compared
with a 2.3% annual rise in consumer prices. Despite the explosive growth of
the money supply, coupled with a strong economy, the BoK is holding its overnight
loan rate steady at 4.50% for a tenth consecutive month.

Korean "bond vigilantes" are alarmed by the BoK's super-easy money policy,
and have jacked up the government's borrowing costs by 50 basis points over
the past three months. Seoul plans to sell 3.74 trillion won ($4 billion) of
Treasury bonds in June, compared with 4.45 trillion won worth offered in May,
adding to bearish sentiment. But the half-percent increase in 5-year yields
hasn't been sufficient to knock the Kospi Index off its upward trajectory.
"Abundant global liquidity is one of the risky factors that all countries
need to monitor," South Korea's finance minister Kwon O-kyu told reporters
on May 17th. "We have to monitor how much the US economy slows down and how
much growth in China and India can compensate. Global liquidity may be maintained
for some period but the China effect cannot continue for ever," he warned.
The Bank of Korea is disturbed by the double-digit growth of the M3 money
supply. So what's preventing the BoK from raising its interest rates, and what
other powerful force in the global marketplace helps the Korean Kospi Index
defy the law of gravity? The answers are inter-related and were provided
in the June 1st edition of Global Money Trends).
Aussie Bond Vigilantes dig deeper "Down Under"
Australian bonds have lost considerable ground in recent weeks as Aussie traders
dumped safe-haven government debt, in favor of riskier stocks. Australian bond
futures fell to their lowest in three years on June 5th, with Aussie "bond
vigilantes" taking their cue from bears in Asia, Europe, and North America.
The Aussie 10-year bond yield broke thru the psychological 6% barrier last
week, and a break-out above 6.20% would send yields to their highest since
2002.
The latest slide in Aussie bonds has caught many traders off guard, since
the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is expected to leave its cash lending rate
unchanged at 6.25% for the remainder of the year. On April 23rd, the Australian
statistics bureau said the local consumer price index climbed 0.1% in the first
quarter, lowering the annual rate of inflation to 2.4% from 3.3% in the previous
quarter.
That left the CPI in the middle of the RBA's 2% to 3% inflation target. But
not all Aussie bond traders are duped by inflation statistics conjured up by
government apparatchniks. Instead, Australia's jobless rate fell to 4.4% in
April, to a 32-year trough and stoking concerns that a super-tight labor market
would eventually threaten higher inflation and interest rates.

While the mainstream media points to doctored-up government statistics on
inflation as gospel, Aussie "bond vigilantes" are following the money. The
Australian bank's cash rate of 6.25% might sound high compared to other countries,
but in reality, the RBA is pursuing a super-easy money policy, allowing its
M3 money supply to expand at an explosive 13.7% annualized rate. (A fascinating
graph of the Aussie M3 money supply and Libor rates is included in the June
8th edition of Global Money Trends).
What's most interesting about the Australian bond market is that the government
barely issues enough new paper to cover maturities. Flush with cash after a
string of budget surpluses, Aussie bonds outstanding are around A$60 billion,
down from around A$94 billion when Prime Minister John Howard came to power
in 1996. That is in sharp contrast to the United States where total public
debt has ballooned by 50% since the turn of the century to reach $8.8 trillion.
Foreigners have become big buyers of Australian government bonds and hold
around 75% of all marketable debt, up from just 30% in the early 1990's. So
the task of the Aussie "bond vigilantes" in jacking-up Treasury bond yields
is daunting, given the small supply of T-bonds outstanding, and the insatiable
appetite of Asian central bankers. But a super tight jobs market, a booming
economy, explosive growth of the M3 money supply, and a new round of $A67 billion
in income tax cuts, gives the Aussie "bond vigilantes, plenty of ammunition
to work with.
Canadian Bond Vigilantes Flex some Muscle
Canadian "bond vigilantes" have chipped away at government bond prices for
the past three months, following a slew of economic data that paints a picture
of a red-hot economy and higher inflation. The Canadian economy grew 3.7% in
the first quarter of 2007, compared with 1.5% in the previous quarter, setting
the stage for a new round of Bank of Canada rate hikes.
Canada's commodity exports are booming and the core rate of inflation is above
target at 2.5% in April. "On balance, the bank judges that there is an increased
risk that future inflation will persist above the 2% inflation target. And
some increase in the target for the overnight rate may be required in the near
term to bring inflation back to target," the Bank of Canada warned on May 29th.

Canadian bond vigilantes are grinding government paper lower, even as Ottawa
pays off some of its national debt. After paying down C$13.2 billion on Canada's
national debt in September 2006, the budget for 2007 further reduces the debt
by C$9.2 billion, which would bring the balance down to C$472.3 billion, or
35% of GDP, a 25-year low. Canada's federal debt has fallen by C$81.4bn over
the past decade.
The inflation alarm bells went off in the Canadian bond market, because the
central bank miscalculated the underlying strength of the economy and permitted
its M3 money supply to expand at double-digit rates in April. Canada's M3 money
supply surged from 6.3% in June 2006 to a 10% growth rate in April, after the
central bank made a pre-mature decision to pause its rate hike campaign at
4.25%.
(A cool graph of the Canadian M3 money supply and the Bank of Canada's
overnight loan rate is presented in the June 8th edition of Global Money
Trends). In order to rein-in the M3 growth rate, the BoC must narrow
the interest rate gap with the US fed funds rate of 5.25%. That's lifted
the Canadian dollar to 30-year highs against the US dollar, which can help
shield Canada from higher import prices.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper gave a thumbs-up to a stronger Canuck buck on
May 31st. "The rising Canadian dollar is a reflection of the underlying strength
of the Canadian economy. Interfering with the currency's appreciation to save
manufacturing jobs would be a huge mistake," Harper said. The energy and mineral
based economy in western Canada, has been the driver of economic growth.
Natural resources have outperformed the weakening manufacturing sector in
Ontario and Quebec, which has been hard hit by a high Canadian dollar and troubles
in the lumber and paper industry. Overall, Canada's unemployment rate has not
budged from 6.1%, a 33-year low, for three straight months, so with the BoC
set to rekindle its tightening campaign in the weeks ahead, the Canadian "bond
vigilantes" have plenty of ammunition to work with in the months ahead.
Dangerous Divergences and the Chinese "Bond Vigilantes"
It's easy to say that what goes up, must come down. But stock markets don't
necessarily follow the laws of Newtonian Physics. The Russian Trading System
Index stays perched in the stratosphere, with the Russian central bank inflating
its money supply at a 57% annualized rate.Central banks have to make a determined
effort to deflate stock market bubbles, even at the cost of a slower economy.
Explosive money supply growth, stock buybacks, and mergers and takeovers,
are all linked to the super easy money policies, within the context of a larger
game of competitive currency devaluations. However, the most powerful force
moving global stock markets today, wasn't even mentioned in this article,
but is highlighted in each weekly edition of the Global Money Trends newsletter.
So far, this powerful force moving stock markets shows no signs of abating,
but what are the early warning signals of a possible reversal of the market's
good fortune?

In Shanghai, the Chinese "bond vigilantes" have jacked-up yields on the benchmark
5-year Treasury bond by 105 basis points over the past two months, to 3.82%
today, the highest in 3-years, and including a 50 basis point surge over the
past 2-days. While the mainstream media points to Beijing's tiny 0.2% tax increase
on stock transactions to explain the wicked 21% correction in Shanghai red-chips,
quietly, little is spoken of the Chinese "bond vigilantes," emerging from hibernation.
On May 23rd, Guru Al Greenspan said the recent boom in Chinese stocks could
not last. "It is clearly unsustainable. There's going to be a dramatic contraction
at some point," he correctly predicted, but did not say why. On May 31st, PBoC
deputy Wu Xiaoling told a seminar on global imbalances, "In my view, every
market develops in twists and turns. The Chinese stock market is growing too
rapidly. We hope it can grow in a steady manner," Wu said.
At its peak, the combined market value of the two bourses in Shanghai and
Shenzhen hit a record $2.5 trillion, exceeding the country's savings deposits
for the first time in history. The value of shares in China surged more than
six-fold in the past two years, to become the world's fifth-biggest equity
market.

Policy makers were not sympathetic to the plight of over zealous red-chip
bulls on June 4th. "The speed that stock prices have soared by is extremely
unusual, which underscores the structural bubbles in the stock market. China's
increase in stamp duty is a proper forward-looking adjustment to avoid greater
systemic risks in the market and to ensure its healthy development," the state-owned
China Securities Journal wrote. "The huge price fluctuations within each trading
day reflect the fact that this trading is unsustainable," the Xinhua News Agency-
said.
The Shanghai Stock Index tumbled 7.25% in the morning of June 5th, to as low
as 3,402, after PBoC chief Zhou Xiaochuan left open the possibility of further
monetary tightening. "There are many reasons for price changes, including money
supply, international market movements, domestic supply and demand and so forth.
The central bank will use monetary policy to cope with it," he warned.
Yet Shanghai red-chips finished the day with a furious 10% rally off the intra-day
low to close 2.6% higher at 3,767-points. Bargain hunters swooped into the
marketplace, after Shanghai red-chips had tumbled as much as 21% in four trading
days, wiping out $450 billion of market value. Buyers spread rumors that Beijing
would not introduce a capital gains tax for 3-years to stabilize the market.
There is an unshakeable belief that Beijing can move the red-chip market to
its desires by remote control, thru jawboning and adjustments in the money
supply. The rise in China's 5-year bond yield to 3.82% is not as threatening
as it appears, when one considers that China's official inflation rate is expected
to accelerate to 3.5% to 4% in the months ahead, reflecting sharply higher
food prices.
However, there is a much bigger storm looming on the horizon that could
overwhelm Beijing, and wreak further havoc on Chinese red-chips, its economy,
and the Asian region. This gathering storm was under the spotlight in
the May 25th and June 1st editions of Global Money Trends, with further
updates for the June 8th edition.
This article is just the tip of the Iceberg, of what's available in the Global
Money Trends newsletter, published on Friday mornings, for 44 issues
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