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Perhaps the most important market in the world today is the vast network of
foreign currencies, where total trading volume, including derivatives and futures,
average around $2.9 trillion a day. This is ten times the size of the combined
daily turnover on all the world's equity markets. And as world's economies
have become increasingly integrated, so have the foreign exchange and global
capital markets.
And the size of the foreign exchange market is mushrooming each year. FX trading
increased by 38% between April 2005 and April 2006 and has more than doubled
since 2001. That's not surprising, since 18 of the top-20 central banks around
the world are tolerating double-digit growth of their money supply. Therefore,
fluctuations in the foreign exchange market are bound to become more violent.
But the foreign exchange market is only one piece, albeit a very important
one, of a bigger puzzle. Turnover of interest rate, currency and stock index
derivative contracts rose 24% to a mind boggling $533 trillion in the first
quarter versus the previous quarter, underscoring the enormous leverage in
the global markets. Thus, any major unexpected event can touch off a panicky
and violent market reaction.

But it all starts with the foreign exchange market, the first port of call,
for global investing. Central bankers have several tools at their disposal
to influence foreign exchange rates, including verbal "Jawboning" to the media,
outright intervention in the spot or futures market, or adjustments to short-term
interest rates. But managing the direction of foreign currencies becomes more
daunting, as the global money supply mushrooms each year, attracting more speculators
to the markets.
Among the Group of Seven central banks, which oversee two-thirds of the world
economy, the Bank of Japan is the most interventionist, working hard each day
to guide the value of the Japanese yen to target ranges. But over the past
two weeks, the Bank of Japan lost its influence over the dollar/yen exchange
rate, after trying to keep the greenback in a range of 120 to 124-yen. Earlier
today, the dollar tumbled below the psychological 120-yen level, and quickly
slid to as low as 118.50-yen, outside the realm of market expectations, and
shaking global stock markets, much like an earlier episode in late February
and early March, which saw the dollar plunge to as low as 115-yen.

That was a big surprise, because the BoJ is so adept at managing its currency
to its desired target ranges. In the past, as recently as Feb 9th, US House
Democrats complained to the US Treasury chief about the clandestine operations
of Tokyo's financial warlords. "We believe that a weak yen is a reflection
of Japanese government policy," wrote Reps. Charles Rangel, Barney Franks,
John Dingell and Sander Levin. "The Japanese government should be selling the
massive reserves it has accumulated thereby changing the imbalances with the
dollar and the Euro."
"The huge misalignment of the Japanese yen is giving Japanese auto manufacturers
an unfair and undeserved trade advantage over US companies," said Stephen Collins,
President of the Automotive Trade Policy Council on July 24th. "It's clear
that the primary beneficiary of Japan's 25% to 30% undervalued yen is the Japanese
auto industry, which is reaping a $4,000 to $10,000 yen subsidy for every vehicle
it ships to the US," Collins said.
But Treasury chief Paulson has always defended Tokyo's cheap yen policy. "I
think the big point is the Japanese have a currency that is traded in an open
and competitive marketplace based upon economic fundamentals," he argued on
Capitol Hill, on February 1st. (Global Money Trends' special report for July
27th, reveals an important clue on how to detect when Paulson's Plunge Protection
Team, is operating in stock index futures. http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php
The extent of Tokyo's intervention operations can be gauged by the size of
its foreign exchange reserves. Tokyo controls a record $913 billion of foreign
currency reserves, second only to China's $1.33 trillion, and mostly held in
US Treasury securities. Japan's reserves ballooned after selling 35-trillion
yen in 2003 and the first quarter of 2004, in exchange for 330 billion US dollars.
Tokyo controls a record $913 billion of foreign currency reserves, mostly
held in US Treasury securities. Japan's reserves ballooned after selling 35-trillion
yen in 2003 and the first quarter of 2004, in exchange for 330 billion US dollars.
Japan's FX reserves have continued to climb with a higher Euro, and a build-up
of interest income from US bonds. The BoJ earned 3-trillion yen ($25 billion)
of interest income last year, while paying 7.5 billion yen in interest on short-term
T-bills, issued to finance past intervention, and is therefore, the world's
largest "yen carry" trader.

Since its historic intervention effort in 2003-04, Tokyo has engineered a "cheap
yen" policy, designed to boost Japanese exports, a key driver of the world's
second largest economy. Japanese shipments to China and Hong Kong account for
32% of its exports today, with 18% sold to the US, 16% to Korea, and 5% to
Europe. The "cheap yen" policy is showing tangible results, with overall Japanese
exports climbing to 7.28 trillion yen ($60.5 billion) in June, up 16.2% from
a year ago.
Not surprisingly, exports to China are growing the fastest, with the Chinese
economy booming at an 11.9% annualized clip in the second quarter. Exports
to Asia grew 15.8% from a year earlier to 3.54 trillion yen, rising for more
than 5-years in a row, led by sales to China up 22.6% to 1.13 trillion yen.
Europe bound exports rose 16.3% to 1.08 trillion yen, helped by the yen's weakness
against the Euro.
Therefore, the Japanese yen is probably undervalued by 20% on a trade weighted
basis. But the BoJ keeps the yen artificially low, by holding yen Libor interest
rates at less than 1%, and by pumping 1.2 trillion yen into the banking system
each month, thru the outright purchases of government bonds (JGB's). The BoJ
justifies its ultra-low interest rate and "cheap yen" policy, by pointing to
fraudulent statistics on inflation, conjured up by Japanese government apparatchniks.

Tokyo argues that Japan is the only country in the world that is not experiencing
any inflation at all, even at a time of sharply higher crude oil and food prices.
Japan is the largest importer of food in the world, and the IMF states that
food prices are 23% higher today than 18-months ago. Japanese oil importers
are paying a record 9,250-yen per barrel for crude oil, double the price of
two years ago.
Tokyo gold traders don't believe in the government's phony inflation numbers,
and are bidding a record high of 82,500-yen per ounce for the yellow metal,
up from 45,000-yen /oz in early 2005. If Tokyo told the truth about its inflation
rate, global bond yields might be 100 basis points higher, and global stock
markets might be 20% lower than today. The US Treasury surely understands this.
Tokyo's financial warlords weaken the yen in order to pump-up the export earnings
of Japanese multinationals that dominate the Nikkei-225 index. Net exports,
the difference between exports and imports, were the biggest contributor to
growth in the first quarter, helping Japan's economy to expand at an annual
3.3% rate. Half of Japan's exports were traded in US dollars in the first half
of 2007 compared with 38% in yen and 8.7% in euros. So a rising Euro and US
dollar against the Japanese yen, inflates the earnings of Japanese multinationals
that earn their income abroad.

Of course, the process works in reverse, when the dollar and Euro tumble against
the yen, lowering Japanese exporter revenue. Indeed, the Nikkei-225 Index topped
out at 18,200, a six-year high, soon after June 24th, when the Bank of Int'l
Settlements warned that the yen could strengthen rapidly at a moment's notice. "There
is clearly something anomalous in the ongoing decline in the external value
of the yen. There 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.
"Investors might be better encouraged to consider the autumn of 1998, when
the yen rose by more than 10% against the US dollar in the space of two days,
inflicting sizeable losses on those involved in the carry trade business." The
size of "yen carry" trades is a hotly debated topic as no concrete official
data is available, but estimates range from $150 billion to as high as $1 trillion.
(To read more about the "yen carry" trade and its far ranging impact in global
bond and stock markets, read the Global Money Trends newsletter), http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php
The BIS added, "In particular, the Bank of Japan should continue raising rates
now that the potential for a dangerous deflationary spiral has been much reduced.
The fact that the economy seems to be growing robustly, and that capital outflows
from Japan might be having unwelcome effects elsewhere in the world, provides
further arguments for supporting the suggestion that the Bank of Japan should
continue to normalize interest rates gradually," it said.
But
as a political gift for Japanese prime-minister Shinzo Abe, the BoJ has delayed
a long awaited quarter-point rate hike to 0.75%, until after the upcoming July
29th ballot for the legislature's upper house. Abe is plummeting in the polls
after losing three Cabinet ministers, and his inept handling of a pension scandal
and allegations of political corruption.
Electoral defeat would not immediately threaten the ruling LDP coalition's
hold on power because it has a commanding majority in the lower house, but
an embarrassing loss could prompt party leaders to boot Abe from office.
However, once the election is out of the way, the decks would be cleared for
a baby-step BoJ rate hike to 0.75%, in August as widely predicted by futures
traders in Tokyo and Singapore.
"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. However, at a subsequent meeting on July 12, only BoJ member Atsushi Mizuno
voted for a rate increase.
"It is desirable for policy rates to naturally converge to levels that would
help minimize destabilizing risks to the economy. Side effects of keeping low
interest rates regardless of economic conditions could weaken the yen and may
increase protectionism among Japan's trading partners. It could also cause
distortions in global asset prices by speeding up capital outflows from Japan," Mizuno
warned.
Tokyo's
financial warlords, working in a close coordination with the US Treasury's
Plunge Protection Team (PPT), have been skillful in guiding the dollar higher
for most of this year.
But Tokyo and the PPT were caught off guard by Iran's Ayatollah, when he demanded
on July 14th, that Japanese oil refiners pay for Iranian crude in yen, instead
of US dollars, starting in September.
The Ayatollah wants to be paid in Euros and yen for Iran's $54 billion of
annual oil exports. That's just a drop in the bucket in the $2.9 trillion per
day foreign exchange market. But since Nippon Oil agreed to pay for Iranian
oil imports in yen, the US dollar has tumbled by 3.5-yen to as low as 119.10-yen.
Japan imported about 323,000 barrels per day of crude oil from Iran last year,
or about 11% of Japan's total oil imports, in 2006. The National Iranian Oil
Company is also trying to avoid a possible seizure of its assets by the US
government amid tensions over its nuclear weapons program. China buys 15% of
Iran's oil exports and has been paying in Euros since December. The Ayatollah's
advisers might be skilful foreign currency traders, turning bearish on the
dollar at 122.50-yen.

At the June 15th BoJ meeting, some members noted a recent 0.25% rise in 10-year
JGB yields to 2%, saying it was important to find out whether it was due to
a favorable view on the economy or higher inflation expectations. Bank of Japan
chief Toshihiko Fukui said the central bank needs to keep a close eye on recent
rises in long-term rates and how they could affect Japan's economic outlook.
"The recent movements in long-term rates are a relatively new phenomenon so
we need to watch them closely. It would be very problematic if the rise in
bond yields signaled that market players are cautious about rising inflationary
expectations," he said. Yet that's exactly what's happening, with crude oil
hitting a record 9,400-yen per barrel in Tokyo. Would Japan's financial warlords
permit a stronger yen to keep oil and raw material import costs from exploding
higher?

Perhaps the dollar /yen exchange rate is simply catching up with the greenback's
big losses against every other currency around the globe. The US$ has been
tracking the slide in the riskiest segment of the US sub-prime mortgage market,
the ABX, BBB-, fell to just 39 cents on the dollar, and could lead to big losses
for US banks and brokerage firms, and tighten lending standards in the housing
market. With a glut unsold US homes at 8.8 months, and homebuilder sentiment
at its lowest since January 1991, the US dollar has been on the skids all year.
With the Dollar Index teetering on the key psychological 80-level, the US
Treasury's Plunge Protection Team sprung into action on July 23, with "Jawboning" exercises. "There
has been a very significant housing correction. I think we're at or near a
bottom there," US Treasury chief Henry Paulson said on CNBC. "I don't deny
there's a problem with sub-prime mortgages but it's quite containable. The
economy is very, very healthy, despite the problems in the sub-prime mortgage
lending sector."
On July 20th St Louis Fed chief William Poole, tried to brainwash his audience,
with a "Don't worry, be Happy" speech. "The US sub-prime mortgage problems
probably have a ways to go, but unless the pressure becomes much more severe,
the problems would not impact consumer spending or credit quality more generally."

But three days later, on July 23rd, the Dow Jones Industrials lost 236-points,
partly due to the unwinding of "yen carry" trades and a slew of disappointing
earnings from Caterpillar, American Express, Home Depot, Countrywide Financial,
USG, US Steel, among others, in a market priced for perfection. On July 25th,
US PPT chief Paulson was hosting a conference on US corporate taxation, while
the dollar was skidding towards 119-yen, and the Dow Jones Industrials were
plunging 320-points lower in a panic towards the 13,460 area.
Harvard University Professor Martin Feldstein told the audience that "as long
as the American dollar is greatly overvalued relative to other currencies,
it's going to be hard for American products to get their share in other markets," perhaps
referring to the manipulated Chinese yuan and Japanese yen. "Marty, I'm a strong
dollar man," Paulson replied, fearing the possibility of a brutal unwinding
of "yen carry" trades, and the blow-up of the PPT's Ponzi schemes arranged
with Beijing and Tokyo.
But what about the surge in crude oil prices to $77 per barrel, up 20% from
just two months ago? Should the markets be worried about the spiraling cost
of energy that could sap household disposable income and crimp business profits?
In his speech on July 24th St Louis Fed chief William Poole tried to brainwash
the public with a sense of complacency. "There are certainly strains from the
high price of energy, however, there is no energy crisis and households and
firms are adjusting in a sensible way to price increases. Oil price increases
over the past several years are, in percentage terms, roughly comparable to
the 1970's episodes, but overall inflation has remained relatively contained."
"The impact has been real, but the magnitude is small enough that prices increases
have not disrupted the normal processes of economic growth. In my judgment,
markets will continue to handle energy problems well and the future for the
US economy is bright. Recent attention paid to the negative impact of higher
gasoline prices on the consumer energy prices has been overstated," Poole argued.

Is gold a safe haven from the brutal stock market shakeout? The US M3 money
supply is expanding at a 13% annualized rate, its fastest in 30-years, the
US dollar is plunging to its lowest levels in decades, and crude oil prices
are soaring to record highs. Most logical folks would probably agree these
signals are forecasting higher inflation, and bullish for gold, irrespective
of the Fed's contortionism.
But we have seen this movie before, and during previous periods of panic stricken
sell-offs in stock markets, gold has been swept lower by the contagion. If
the Dow Jones Industrials are starting to price in a US economic recession
however, then gold should outperform the DJI-30 index, no matter which way
the markets move.
Under Paulson's tenure at the US Treasury, stock market bulls have always
been able to rely on their "Plunge Protection Insurance" policies, to rescue
their portfolios from nasty corrections. But as the stock markets climb to
higher and higher levels, the cost of the Plunge Protection Insurance premiums
is also going higher, as mushrooming money supply growth guarantees greater
volatility in the markets.
But the story gets more interesting by the day. The Global Money Trends newsletter
is your best investment, to track global commodity, currency, and bond and
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