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Trading in the arcane world of foreign exchange is often akin to judging a
reverse beauty contest. The trick to profitable trading is to pick the least
ugly currency. Nearly all fiat or paper currencies are ugly, because the 18
of the world's top-20 central banks are inflating the money supply at double
digit rates. At the moment, the world's two ugliest currencies are the Japanese
yen and the US dollar.
The Bank of Japan pegs its overnight loan rate at just 0.50%, in a brazen
effort to devalue the yen, to boost exports abroad, and prevent an abrupt unwinding
of the mushrooming "yen carry" trade. Meanwhile the Federal Reserve is inflating
its M3 money supply at a 13.7% annualized clip, according to private economists,
which if correct, would be the fastest rate of expansion in more than 30-years.
US Treasury chief Henry Paulson, and former chairman of Goldman Sachs, GS.N, "monitors
the financial markets closely," and has reinvigorated the infamous "Plunge
Protection Team," which comes to the rescue of the US stock market whenever
nasty revelations come to the surface. At the moment, Paulson's grand strategy
is to offset losses in the US housing sector with big gains in the stock market,
to prevent the US economy from sliding into recession.

A key player in the "Plunge Protection Team" (PPT) is none other than Federal
Reserve chief Ben "helicopter" Bernanke. Since the Bernanke Fed discontinued
the decades-old reporting of the broad M3 money supply in March of 2006, the
growth rate of M3 has accelerated from an 8% rate to a sizzling 13.7% clip,
its fastest in more than three decades. The Bernanke Fed is preventing borrowing
rates from rising at a time of explosive loan demand for US corporate mergers
and takeovers, by rapidly increasing the US money supply.
The Bank of America, Citigroup, and JP Morgan led US loan underwriting in
the first half of 2007, which totaled $943 billion, up 5.4% from a year earlier.
Global mergers and takeovers soared to an astronomical $2.78 trillion during
the first six months of the year, up 51% from a year ago, led by $1.05 trillion
in the US alone. Buy-outs by private takeover artists soared 23% to a record
high of $568 billion in H'1 2007, with 35% of US takeovers, and 13% of European
takeovers financed with debt.
But one sector of the US stock market which has not responded positively to
the Fed's heavy injections of monetary steroids has been the home builders,
once regarded as a top bull-market leader from 2003 thru August 2005. The Dow
Jones Home Construction Index, a yardstick that measures home builder performance,
is off 25% this year, and is flirting with key support at the 525 level, which
if penetrated, would be especially bearish.
On July 2nd, Paulson sent a discreet signal to Wall Street power-brokers to
avoid dumping the home builders. "In terms of housing, it's had a significant
impact on the economy. No one is forecasting when, with any degree of clarity,
that the upturn in housing is going to come, other than it's at or near the
bottom."

The Fed has obscured its money printing operations by discontinuing the reporting
of M3, in order to limit the damage to the fixed income markets. But word of
the explosive growth of the M3 money supply is slowly leaking out, and taking
its toll on the US Treasury Note market, which briefly tumbled to its lowest
level in five years in June, lifting 10-year yields as high as 5.30%, before
receding back to 5.00%, on a "flight to safety" from the riskiest of the sub-prime
home loan market.
Because the US credit markets are swimming in a tidal wave of rising liquidity,
there will always be bargain hunters who are happy to park excess cash into
the bond market whenever yields surge higher. Asian central banks and Arab
Oil kingdoms in particular, have been big buyers of US T-bonds over the past
four years, and hold roughly $1.3 trillion of the IOU's, but even this massive
intervention couldn't turn the tide of the four-year bear market.

But now there are indications that China's insatiable appetite for US T-bonds
is waning. Beijing was a net seller of $5.8 billion of US T-bonds in April,
the first drop in Chinese holdings since October 2005, and sparking the recent
slide that lifted 10-year yields by 70 basis points, at its high mark. Since
Beijing unhinged the dollar from a fixed peg of 8.27 yuan in July 2005, the
value of the US 10-year T-note, when converted into yuan, has declined by 15
percent. Earlier today, the dollar slipped to 7.59 yuan, or 8.9% lower since
the yuan was freed from the dollar peg.
If Beijing understood the full extent of the Fed's money printing operations,
it might think twice about putting its hard earned dollars into Treasury IOU's.
Beijing is almost guaranteed to take further losses on its massive $900 billion
US bond portfolio, with its secret agreement with Paulson, limiting the dollar's
annual devaluation against the Chinese yuan to 5%, to avoid the US Treasury's
label of a currency manipulator.
China to diversify future FX Reserves away from US dollar
But China's old guard is finally waking up to reality, and looking for new
ways to invest its bulging foreign currency reserves. China's FX reserves have
more than tripled in three years after rising $209 billion in 2005, $207 billion
in 2004 and $117 billion in 2003, and in the first quarter of 2007 alone, its
treasure chest was bloated by a whopping $136 billion to a record $1.2 trillion.
Last Friday, the National People's Congress authorized the Ministry of Finance
to set-up the State Investment Company, (SIC), which will invest $200 billion
of the country's FX stash, into publicly listed companies, real estate, or
private deals around the globe. Mostly likely, at the bottom of the list of
possible Chinese investments are US Treasury bonds, which are a losing proposition
due to heavy pressure for a further slide of the US dollar against the yuan.
The Ministry of Finance plans to issue 1.55 trillion yuan ($203.49 billion)
of bonds to the People's Bank of China (PBoC), in a swap for the FX reserves
that will be managed by a new investment fund. But the PBoC is also authorized
to re-sell the giant bond offering, which would mop-up liquidity in the Shanghai
money markets. If the PBoC parcels out the entire block of bonds, it would
have the same effect as lifting the bank reserve requirements by 10 times with
a magnitude of 0.5% each.

The sale of 1.55 trillion yuan of these special bonds would be equivalent
to more than 50% of the government's 2.9 trillion yuan outstanding debt. China's
parliament also authorized the State Council to abolish or reduce the 20% withholding
tax levied on interest income. The measure is aimed at staunching the flow
of cash into the surging stock market by making bank deposits more attractive.
Cancelling the tax entirely would be the equivalent to an increase in the
after-tax one-year deposit rate of about 60 basis points, while a 50% reduction
would boost after-tax interest by about 30 basis points. It would also increase
the after-tax interest rate on China's 7-year bond by as much as 80 basis points.
Already, China's 7-year bond yield has climbed 120 basis points to 4.22% since
April 2nd, and now the central bank has new tools to drain liquidity from the
money markets.
Higher Chinese interest rates have put a roadblock before the powerful Shanghai
red-chip index, which has found stiff resistance at the 4,300 level, but finding
support at 3,700. "China should appropriately tighten monetary policy to prevent
relatively fast economic growth from overheating, and maintain stability," the
People's Bank of China said on July 3rd. The PBoC said it "would resort to
a range of monetary policy tools to achieve reasonable growth in money and
credit."
With higher after-tax interest rates on Chinese bonds, and pressure on the
Fed to lower the fed funds rate due to the sub-prime home loan meltdown, hot
money from abroad should continue to flow into the Chinese yuan, greasing the
skids for the US dollar's slide against other Asian currencies, such as the
Korean won.
Bank of England - Pioneer of "Asset Targeting"
Just about every major central bank has a big credibility problem, when it
comes to maintaining the purchasing power of its currency. The Bank of England,
for instance, has tolerated double-digit growth of its M4 money supply for
the past two years. The BoE is the "Group of Seven's" original pioneer in "asset
targeting," or guiding the stock and real estate markets to higher levels,
by injecting excess liquidity into the markets, until asset prices reach the
bank's targeted levels.
The BoE has guided the Footsie-100 from a low of 3,500 in Q'1 of 2003, to
a 7-year high above 6,600 this month. But the BoE's monetary abuse that has
taken place over the past few years, is taking its toll on the British debt
markets, where the benchmark 10-year gilt fell to a 7-year low in June, lifting
its yield to as high as 5.55%, before bargain hunters came out of the woodwork..

"Investors are likely to take advantage of this ample liquidity and the associated
easy credit to purchase other assets, driving risk premia down and asset prices
up," the BoE said in a February 20th, report for parliament's Treasury Committee. "In
due course, those higher asset prices may be expected to feed through into
higher demand for goods and prices, putting upward pressure on the general
price level."
In a speech to mark the tenth anniversary of the central bank's independence,
BoE chief Mervyn King said on May 2nd, "It is unfortunate, if monetary developments
are given insufficient attention in the analysis of the inflation outlook.
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."

The BoE is well aware of the inflationary consequences of double-digit money
supply growth, and London futures markets are pricing in two BoE rate hikes
to 6% in the days and months ahead. But the BoE must still overcome stiff political
opposition to higher borrowing costs, namely from newly installed prime-minister
Gordon Brown. "Rigid monetary rules that assume a fixed relationship between
money and inflation do not produce reliable targets or policy," Brown argued
on June 14th.
Such reckless comments by Mr Brown, are reminiscent of his decision to sell
off more than half of the UK's centuries-old gold reserves in May 1999. The
decision to sell 400 tons of gold is seen in City circles as a financial bungle
on the scale of the Tories' "Black Wednesday" that cost the taxpayer 3.3 billion
pounds. Brown offloaded the gold at a 20-year low in 17-auctions between $256
and $296 /oz, with an average of $275 /oz. Since then gold has risen sharply
and stands around $650 /oz.
Judging from the chart above, the BoE is still far behind the monetary inflation
curve, and would have to hike its base rate by 100 basis points to 6.50% or
higher, to rein-in M4 growth into single digits. Ultimately though, the pressure
on the BoE to hike interest rates further will come from the gilt market, which
is in danger of a nasty meltdown, unless the central bank lives up to expectations
of future rate hikes.

Mitigating some of the pressure for sharply higher BoE rates however, is the
strength of the British pound, which climbed above the psychological $2 mark
last week, for only the second time since 1980. The British pound is being
driven higher by widening interest rate differentials moving in its favor,
with the Federal Reserve handcuffed by a weakening housing market and a sub-prime
loan debacle.
Both the British pound and US dollar are heavily inflated currencies. Both
offer large external trade deficits and big budget deficits. While the Fed
is inflating its M3 money supply at a 13.7% clip, the Bank of England is inflating
its M4 at a 13.9% annualized clip. But the US economy is roughly six times
the size of England's, so in absolute terms, the increase in supply of US dollars
is much larger. And with the BoE expected to lift its lending rates to 75 basis
points above the US$ rate, the pound is winning this "reverse beauty" contest.
Aussie Dollar Shines with Yield hungry Investors
After breaking thru the long held psychological barrier of 80 US-cents in
March, one has to go back 18-years to find the last time the Aussie dollar
traded as high as 86 US-cents. There are several reasons why the Aussie dollar
is climbing sharply higher against the greenback, but the most commonly cited
is higher yields. Yesterday, the yield on Australia's 10-year Treasury bond
was +122 basis points (bp) higher than comparable yields on the US T-Note,
up from +56 bp in April 2006.

Interest rate differentials play a big role in the FX "reverse beauty" contest,
and the Aussie has been underpinned by its relatively attractive yield. Yet
why are Aussie bond yields rising relative to US yields? Flush with cash after
a string of budget surpluses, the Australian government issues barely enough
new paper to cover rolling maturities, keeping bonds outstanding at just A$60
billion, and 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. Issuance
of marketable Treasury paper has likewise surged to $5 trillion, with $1.2
trillion of that held by offshore central banks.Aussie T-bonds offer the same
triple-A rating, and with an appreciating currency, one might have expected
Aussie yields to shrink relative to US T-Note yields. This Aussie yield spread
is one of the market's great mysteries.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) isn't thrilled about the sharply higher
Aussie dollar, which is bound to hurt exporters and widen the current account
deficit, which jumped 20% to A$15.1 billion in Q'4, the largest quarterly shortfall
on record, with the 12-month rolling total equal to 5.9% of the country's GDP.
The RBA intervenes every month to sell Aussie dollars and slow its upside gains.
In the game of competitive currency devaluation with other central banks,
the RBA has allowed its M3 money supply to expand at a 14.1% annualized rate,
pumping up the local stock market but undermining confidence in the Treasury
bond market. Aussie 10-year bond yields rose above the psychological 6% level
in June, for the first time in five years.
In order to rein in the explosive growth of Aussie M3, the RBA would probably
be required to hike its cash rate by 100 basis points to 7.25%, but that could
send the Aussie dollar soaring into orbit against the Japanese yen, its top
trading partner. Thus, the RBA's anti-inflation fighting capability is held
hostage by the Bank of Japan, which won't lift its interest rates into alignment
with the rest of the world.
Indirectly, the BoJ is exporting inflationary pressures into the Australian
economy, with its super-low interest rate, and cheap yen policy. In turn, Aussie
10-year bond yields are rising faster than Japanese bond (JGB) yields, lifting
the spread to +430 bp over JGB's, and catapulting the Aussie dollar to a 16-year
high of 105-yen.

Japanese fixed income investors have become an integral part of the infamous "yen
carry" trade, purchasing a large block of Australia's outstanding A$521 billion
of foreign debt, seeking to profit from the yen's devaluation. But should the
BoJ start to lift its interest rates to narrow the gap with the rest of the
world, the carry trade could unwind, perhaps in a violent fashion.
The Bank for International Settlements pointed out on June 24th, that "there
is clearly something anomalous in the ongoing decline in the external value
of the yen. Tighter monetary policies would help to redress this situation,
but the underlying problem seems to be a too firm conviction on the part of
investors that the yen will not be allowed to strengthen in any significant
way," the BIS said.
"If global trade imbalances need to be resolved, a further and perhaps substantial
decline in the dollar might be part of the adjustment process," it warned,
adding the yen could rise sharply once market sentiment shifts. But traders
have heard these empty warnings for years, and the yen has stayed weak, in
large part due to a gentleman's agreement between the US Treasury and Japan's
ministry of finance.
BIS chief calls for Responsible Monetary Policies
Central bankers are playing a game of "Smoke and Mirrors" inching up interest
rates at a snail's pace, but not high enough to curb explosive loan demand
nor the growth of the money supply. But BIS General Manager Malcolm Knight
is now calling on the world's top central bankers to slow down the printing
presses, and allow borrowing rates to rise, to start draining the "Global Liquidity
Glut," in earnest.
"Financial conditions are still accommodative, access to credit remains easy
and credit spreads are at record lows. Containing inflationary pressures seems
to require further tightening in most jurisdictions, as is expected by financial
markets," he said.
"The credibility of central banks around the world may hinge on their response
to surging money and credit growth, which is helping fuel asset bubbles. Some
central banks need to ask soul-searching questions about the appropriate policy
response. Ultimately, the credibility of central banks lies in the balance," Knight
added.
Central banks in Australia, Canada, China, England, the Euro zone, Korea,
South Africa, and Switzerland are expected to heed the call of the BIS chief,
by lifting short-term rates a half-percent higher, albeit at a baby-step pace
in the second half of 2007. Even the radical inflationist Bank of Japan is
laying the groundwork for a long overdue quarter-point rate hike to 0.75% this
summer.
"To stand pat on monetary policy for a long period of time is not a prudent
strategy, since the acceleration of economic activity may in the future come
to require a large adjustment in the policy rate, causing unnecessary swings
in economic activity and prices," said BoJ member Kiyohiko Nishimura on July
3rd. But he added the BOJ must adjust rates slowly, "in line with economic
and price developments."
The growing presence of Japanese retail investors in foreign bond markets
has led to increased volatility in the foreign exchange market. "A sudden change
in their behavior is likely to shift the direction and the magnitude of trading
in foreign exchange markets, and heightens the risk of a sharp pull-back of "yen
carry" trades that could destabilize financial markets," Nishimura warned.
FX market Expects an Easier Fed Policy in H'2 2007
One central bank that cannot contemplate higher interest rates however, is
the Bernanke Fed, which is hamstrung by a sliding market for the weakest sector
of the sub-prime mortgage loan market. The benchmark ABX 07-1 BBB index, which
is tied to sub-prime mortgage loans, fell to 53.16 cents on the dollar, and
has tumbled 43% since January. ABX's are sub-prime loan mortgages which are
bundled in securities.

The fallout from the slide in sub-prime ABX's is uncertain, but if left unchecked,
tighter lending standards could sink the US home building sector and housing
prices, which were 2.7% lower, in May from a year earlier. Foreign currency
traders are already upping their bets that the Bernanke Fed will continue its
clandestine policy of injecting more US dollars into the banking system, and
eventually lower the fed funds rate in a crisis situation. Coupled with the
likelihood higher rates overseas, yet another global exodus from the US dollar
has been set in motion.
In retrospect, it was Bernanke's infamous comments in a letter to California
Rep Brad Sherman, dated Feb 15th, 2006 which began the dollar's latest 18-month
descent. "A precipitous decline in the dollar, should not necessarily disrupt
financial markets, production or employment," Bernanke wrote, portending the
central bank's rapid increase in the growth rate of the US money supply.

Two months later, Russian finance chief Alexei Kudrin put the knife into the
US dollar, by telling the IMF that Moscow could not consider the dollar as
a reliable reserve currency because of its instability. "This currency has
devalued by 40% against the Euro in recent years. The US dollar is not the
world's absolute reserve currency. The unsustainable US trade deficit is causing
concern and that the international community can hardly be satisfied with this
instability," Kudrin told a stunned audience of the world's top central bankers
in April 2006.
On November 24th, 2006, Chinese deputy central bank governor Wu Xiaoling warned "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."
Russian Bear aligned with "Axis of Oil" meets President Bush
Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin has been a notorious bear on the US dollar
for the past few years, and is a key member of the "Axis of Oil" including
American foes Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez. All three
members of the "Axis of Oil" have been switching their FX reserves away from
the US dollar and switching into Euros.
At
a two-day meeting in Kennebunkport, Maine, Bush called Putin, "solid partner," and
added that "Russia has made amazing progress in such a short period of time," since
Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. "Russia is a country with no debt, and it's
a significant international player. Is it perfect in the eyes of America? Not
necessarily. Is the change real? Absolutely," Bush said. Putin responded by
saying, "The deck's been dealt and we are here to play. I would very much hope
that we are playing one and the same game."
At the core of their disputes however, is Putin's alignment with Iran's Ayatollah
Khamenei, his support for Iran's nuclear program, and Moscow's opposition to
further UN sanctions on Tehran, which could wreak havoc on Iran's economy.
Putin also opposes Bush's plan to create a European-based missile-defense system
with radar based in the Czech Republic and interceptors based in Poland.

Russia is the world's largest natural gas producer, and is second to Saudi
Arabia as the world's top crude oil exporter. Rising oil prices have helped
Russia amass foreign currency reserves of $405 billion, the third largest after
China and Japan. Russia's economy expanded at a 7.7% annualized rate in the
first five months of this year, while the US economy grew at only 0.7% in Q'1,
or a tenth of Russia's performance.
On April 6th, 2007, Russian central bank chief Sergei Ignatyev said the approximate
structure of Russia's foreign exchange reserves was 50% in US dollars, 40%
Euros, and 10% in British pounds. Last year, Putin ordered payments for Russia's
Ural oil exports in rubles, abandoning the US dollar as a medium of payment.
Iran's Ahmadinejad has ordered payment for Iranian oil exports in Euros.
Higher oil prices would increase the wealth the "Axis of Oil" and the clout
of the Arab Oil kingdoms in the Persian Gulf, which control an estimated $1.6
trillion of FX reserves, outstripping the Chinese dragon. One has to wonder
what impact a possible military confrontation over Iran's nuclear weapons program
would have on the foreign exchange market.
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