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"Imagination is more important than knowledge", the brilliant Albert Einstein
used to say. Imagine for just a moment, that the Dow Jones Industrials has
become a key instrument of national economic policy, and that by "actively
managing" its direction, the government could impact the wealth of tens of
millions of US households, and by extension, influence consumer confidence
and spending.
Since the appointment of Henry Paulson to the helm at the US Treasury, the
US stock market has always found a way to defy the law of gravity. During Paulson's
short reign, the Dow Jones Industrials (DJI-30) broke an 80-year old record
for the longest streak of gains with only three declining days in between.
During the first seven months of his tenure, the S&P 500 did not decline
by 2%, the second longest-period without a 2% correction since 1964.
The market savvy Treasury chief, who built a $730 million fortune at Goldman
Sachs, is also the chairman of the Working Group on Financial Markets, commonly
known as the Plunge Protection Team (PPT), created by Ronald Reagan to prevent
a repeat of the Wall Street meltdown in October 1987. The PPT is empowered
to intervene in stock index futures and the foreign currency markets in the
event of a crash.
Paulson and his Plunge Protection Team are dealing with another tough challenge,
trying to extend the S&P 500's all-time record for avoiding a 10% correction.
It's been 52-months since the S&P 500's last slide of 10% or more, which
took place from January 14 to March 11, 2003, when it lost 14 percent. Since
then, the benchmark index has more than doubled without a similar drop.
"It's my job to be vigilant," Paulson said on July 26th. "I've made this statement
when the markets looked very good, and I've made it during times of volatility,
but I will say that on global financial shocks, it's very hard to predict them.
I am comforted by the fact that we have a strong global economy and very healthy
economy in the US, but it's my job to be vigilant," Paulson said.
Federal Reserve chief Ben "helicopter" Bernanke is the US Treasury chief's
right hand man, a key player controlling the US money supply. Since Paulsen's
confirmation in July 2006, the broad M3 money supply has expanded at a 13%
annualized clip, its fastest in 30-years, in a brazen effort to inflate the
US stock markets, and keep the cost of borrowing low for corporate takeover
artists.

The PPT's strategy is to offset weakness in the US housing market, with increased
household wealth in the stock market, in order to avoid a recession. However,
the weakness in housing has gone on longer and deeper than the PPT would like.
Existing US single-family homes marked their eighteenth consecutive monthly
price decline in May, bringing the annual loss to 3.4 percent.
US homebuilder sentiment slid in July to its lowest since January 1991, the
National Association of Home Builders said on July 17th, as fallout from the
housing slump and sub-prime mortgage crisis caused a glut of new homes. US
home foreclosure filings rose 58% in the first six months of the year and could
surpass 2 million this year as the housing market continues to deteriorate,
RealtyTrac, said on July 30th.
The escalating foreclosure rate on US homes has badly shaken the $2 trillion
sub-prime mortgage market, and the riskiest BBB- segment, has lost 65% of its
market value to 35-cents on the dollar. The sudden aversion for risk spilled
over into the high-yield junk bond market, where yields jumped 120 basis points,
putting speculators on edge about the outlook for corporate takeovers and share
buybacks, the two key catalysts of the market's rally to record highs.

The US junk bond market lost another source of liquidity, via the "yen carry" trade,
after the dollar tumbled from 124-yen in June to as low as 118-yen. It was
against this backdrop, that the skittish S&P 500 retreated 1.8% to close
at 1433 on August 3rd, bringing its string of losses since July 13th to 7.7%,
it's third largest since May-June 2006, when it fell 8%, and from March 2004
to August 2004, when it fell by 8.7%. The fickle stock market switched its
focus away from second-quarter profit growth of 11% for the S&P 500, or
2.5 times more than estimated in June.
But the PPT cannot afford to sit back and watch both the US housing market
and the stock market sinking at the same time. That might spell the dreaded "R" word,
- Recession. Recognizing the huge risks to the US economy, President Bush called
for a special meeting of his economic advisors on July 27th, to discuss the
stock market, which had plunged as much as 456-points the previous day.
Speaking from the Roosevelt Room, just 20-minutes after the opening bell of
the NYSE on July 27th, President Bush said the US and world economy were strong
after American gross domestic product jumped 3.4% in the second quarter. "The
world economy is strong and I happen to believe one of the main reasons why
is because we remain strong. The US economy is large, flexible and resilient."
Before
his meeting with Bush, PPT chief Paulson spoke about the 381-point plunge of
the Dow Jones Industrials on July 26th. "We're always going to have volatility.
What we see going on right now is risk being re-priced and as we get a broad
reassessment of risk we're getting volatility. We've had volatility as long
as I've watched the markets," he added.
Did President Bush give the "Plunge Protection Team" the green light to intervene
in the marketplace to prevent a stock market crash on July 27th?
After another volatile trading session on July 31st, when the Dow Jones Industrials
gyrated within a 300-point range, from its early morning high of 13,500 to
close sharply lower at its worst level at 13,185, PPT skeptics were asking, "Where
is the mythical PPT now, with the stock market is teetering on the verge of
collapse?
Just 24-hours earlier, shares of American Home Mortgage AHM.N, had plunged
87% to $1 per share, after the mortgage lender said it was unable to fund home
loans and would have to liquidate its assets. The company commanded a 2.5%
share of the US mortgage market, and specialized in prime and near-prime loans,
otherwise known as Alt-A loans, which are now trading close to 63 cents on
the dollar. The meltdown in AHM.N shares was largely blamed for the DJI's 240-point
plunge on July 31st.
Later that evening, Dow Jones Industrial futures were unusually volatile during
Asian trading hours, extending their losses by 110-points, and the US dollar
slumped to as low as 117.60-yen. The next morning, the US government reported
that crude oil stocks had declined by 6.5 million barrels to 344.5 million,
and Venezuela's mercurial kingpin Hugo Chavez was loudly telling his audience
in Caracas, that "crude oil prices were headed straight to $100 per barrel."

US light crude oil briefly shot-up to a new record high of $78.77 per barrel,
and the DJI-30 sank further to 13,150. It was looking pretty grim for Wall
Street bulls, with PPT chief Paulson, situated far away in Beijing, trying
to head-off a trade war between the US Congress and China next year. And when
the cat's away, the mice will play. Was the mythical PPT was asleep at the
switch while Wall Street burned?
But then it happened! At around 3:20 pm EST on August 1st, the DJI-30 began
to move up strongly and without hesitation. By the closing bell at 4:00 pm,
the DJI-30 had skyrocketed by 230-points above its lows, to close 150-points
higher on the day. The mainstream media pointed to the possibility of computer
buy programs, which kicked into high gear, after the S&P 500 held above
its 200-day moving average.
Did the Plunge Protection Team enter the marketplace in the final half-hour
of August 1st to prevent the DJI-30 and S&P 500 from closing below key
technical support levels? A former Federal Reserve member once suggested that "instead
of flooding the entire economy with liquidity, and thereby increasing the risk
of inflation, the Fed could support the stock market directly by buying market
averages in the futures market, thus stabilizing the market as a whole."
However, PPT skeptics could argue that the 230-point surge for the DJI-30
in the last half hour of trading on August 1st was a delayed reaction to an
earlier $2.50 per barrel plunge in crude oil to $76.20 /barrel. US Energy czar
Samuel Bodman was "jawboning" OPEC, and publicly called on the oil cartel to
open its spigots wider, to cap the price of oil, and move the US economy away
from the danger zone.

Also in the background, the US dollar was building a "triple bottom" on the
hourly charts at 118.40-yen, which meant the "yen carry" trade was down but
not out. The late surge in the DJI-30 was enough to persuade currency traders
to bid the dollar to 119-yen, which in turn, was enough to scare over zealous
DJI-30 bears out of short futures positions, and pushed the stock market higher.

The following day, the DJI-30 held onto its late 230-point advance, see-sawing
in a tight sideways range, and keeping short sellers in a hammer lock. Not
knowing who delivered the late knock-out punch on August 1st, several short
sellers folded their cards in the final half-hour, lifting the DJI-30 by 100-points
to the 13,500 area. Yet during the trading session, the strength of the DJI-30
couldn't mask the underlying erosion in Wall Street power brokers, such as
kingpin Goldman Sachs.
Goldman Sachs was swept lower by Bear Stearns, whose shares melted down by
25% since July 18th, after two of its hedge funds that bet heavily on risky
sub-prime loans had dropped to 9-cents on the dollar. Traders are also nervous
about investment banks that have underwritten $300 billion of high yield junk
bonds that are unlikely to clear the market at a price they were bought at.
However, the PPT wouldn't stand idle and allow the panic swirling around the
Wall Street power brokers to turn into a crisis. "The market understands, that
the Fed will act in due time, if and when evidence accumulates that action
would be appropriate," said St Louis Fed chief William Poole on July 31st.

On the morning of August 3rd, the PPT was faced with a renewed assault on
the stock market, when the US dollar plunged 1-yen to as low as 118.20-yen
in the first hour of New York trading, following a weak US jobs report in July.
Traders reacted more severely to the private ISM Service sector index, which
fell 8% in July, and tracks 85% of the US economy. ISM's service sector employment
index fell 6% to the 51.7 level, dangerously close to stagnant job growth.
PPT spin-meisters began twirling the data. On August 3rd, the White House's
top economic adviser Edward Lazear said, "Job growth continues, even in a period
when we are seeing changes in the US economy, most of which were positive," after
data showed 92,000 new US jobs were created in July, the slowest in two years.
But there is still much skepticism over the reliability of the employment figures.

Traders are puzzled over why the US Bureau of Labor Statistics has shown no
change in the number of construction jobs from eighteen months ago, even though
homebuilding activity has dropped dramatically. Sales of new homes in the US
have tumbled 40% to annual rate of 834,000 from their peak, and are down 22.3%
compared with June 2006. The sales pace in June and March was the lowest since
1999. Are homebuilders employing idle workers, to help the broad economy?
An alternative estimate, based on data used to develop the ADP National Employment
Report, suggests that employment in the construction industry has already declined
156,000 from a recent peak, and is now 139,000 below the government's official
estimates. ADP suggests that the construction sector will shed as many as 247,000
jobs thru the end of 2008, or about 14,000 per month.
But dire comments by Bear Stearns Chief Financial Officer Sam Molinaro at
2:30 pm EST on August 3rd, unraveled the PPT's hard work. "The fixed income
market environment we've seen in the last eight weeks has been pretty extreme,
and is comparable to market events that include the debt crisis of the late
1990's," he said.

Molinaro's confession left the Dow Jones Industrials in a shambles with a
281-point loss on August 3rd, closing below horizontal support at the 13,250
level, and knocked the S&P 500 below its 200-day moving average. DJI-30
futures extended their losses by 50-points on Sunday night, during Asian trading
hours, when the dollar fell to 117.10-yen. But Nikkei-225 futures and DJI-30
futures recovered their losses when the dollar bounced back above 118.00-yen
in London.
The PPT got a timely gift, when Barclays Bank formally launched its 65 billion
euro ($89 billion) bid for ABN AMRO, on August 6th, in an attempt to beat a
Royal Bank of Scotland-led consortium, in the biggest ever bank takeover. Pulling
another rabbit out of the hat, US light crude oil opened $2 per barrel lower
on the NYMEX, and extended its daily loss to 5%, and igniting a 286-point DJI-30
rally, it best daily performance in five years..
On August 3rd, US Energy czar Sam Bodman had loudly voiced concern the US
economy was "in the danger zone" and would suffer if oil prices did not fall
soon. "We are going to need more oil and I'm hopeful that the OPEC ministers
at their Sept 11th meeting will agree to that. I am concerned that we are operating
in the ranges approaching $80 per barrel," Bodman said.
An
hour later, the UAE's oil chief Mohammed al-Hamli, signaled a possible increase
in OPEC oil production next month. "We are concerned about the higher price,
because we don't want to go through a recession," he said, quickly knocking
$2 a barrel off crude prices. Expectations of an OPEC decision in September
to pump more oil has already flushed out bullish speculators, and shaved about
8% off the peak oil price set on July 31st.
There's a good chance Riyadh might heed the call for more oil, after the Bush
administration said it will ask the US Congress to approve an arms-sale package
to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman,
that may total more than $20 billion. The package includes advanced satellite-guided
bombs, fighter-aircraft upgrades and new naval vessels. Bush wants to lock
in the 10-year deal for the US military-industrial complex, before he leaves
office.
OPEC
has already boosted its oil output by 250,000 bpd since April to 26.75 mil
bpd today. In a surprising move on August 6th, Saudi Arabia lowered the price
for its best blend, Extra Light crude by $4 per barrel to US customers. Still,
Riyadh may wait for confirmation that the president's "Arms for Oil" deal can
pass through the Democratic led US Congress, before committing to a formal
increase in oil output in September. So far OPEC "jawboning" has done the trick
of knocking crude oil off its all-time highs.
The DJI-30's powerful rallies on August 1st and August 6th might have been
linked to expectations of sharply lower oil prices. That would be a replay
of July 2006, the last time crude oil topped out at $78 per barrel, before
an extended slide of $28 per barrel to $50 /barrel, and helped jettison the
Dow Industrials 10% higher, while keeping Treasury bond yields low.

If one suspects the DJI-30's powerful 550-point rally from the August 6th
low to the August 8th high was fueled in part by the 8% slide in crude oil
prices, how does one explain how Exxon Mobil, led the DJI-30 rally, climbing
10% to as high as $87.90 /share. Similarly, the S&P Energy Spider-XLE,
rebounded by 7% above its early August 6th low, tracking the DJI-30 higher.
Apparently, energy traders don't believe the latest shakeout in crude oil is
the beginning of a major slide.

On August 7th, the Federal Reserve held the fed funds rate steady at 5.25%,
despite downside risks to the US economy from the sub-prime mortgage meltdown
and frozen junk bond market. The Fed's hands are tied right now, because rate
cuts could hammer the US dollar. "The Committee's predominant policy concern
remains the risk that inflation will fail to moderate as expected. High levels
of resource utilization can sustain inflationary pressures," the Fed said.

The knee-jerk reaction to the Fed's statement was bearish. The DJI-30 quickly
lost 150-points in 20-minutes to as low as 13,350. The initial interpretation
of the Fed's statement meant the central bank could not ease the plight of
Wall Street power brokers by pumping dollars into the money markets. Yen carry
traders panicked, when the Fed said "downside risks to economic growth have
increased", and quickly dumped the dollar to as low as 118-yen.
But the carnage came to an abrupt halt, when PPT chief Paulson said "a strong
dollar is in the nation's best interest. We welcome foreign investment." Within
a half-hour of Paulson's comments, the US dollar jumped 0.90-yen to 118.90-yen,
and the Dow Jones Industrials skyrocketed 250-points in a flash. With the Fed
ruling out rate cuts in August and September, "yen carry" traders figured it
was safe to dive back into the DJI-30, especially after Paulson's wink and
nod.

The US stock market got a big shot of adrenalin, when Bear Stearns (BSC.N)
rose 24% above its August 8th low, within the span of 48-hours. On August 3rd,
Standard and Poor's had lowered its outlook on Bear to negative, which prompted
BSC's stock price to plunge by 14% to as low as $99.75 /share. Then on August
6th, S&P said market's bearish response was a "vast overreaction. We still
expect the company to be profitable in the current quarter and thereafter.
Its liquidity is strong," S&P said.
Later on, the media began to sprinkle rumors that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
were seeking authority to bid for badly battered sub-prime mortgage debt, a
quasi government bail out of Wall Street power brokers. Jigging the market
higher, Wells Fargo announced the buyback of another 50 million shares, while
Merrill Lynch's stock was upgraded by fellow banker UBS, which said the stock's
beaten down price already reflects risks the company faces in the sub-prime
mortgage market.

On August 8th, the DJI-30 was humming on all cylinders, up 550-points above
its August 6th low, reaching 13,700, before word spread that Bush was holding
a important meeting with PPT chief Paulson at the Treasury department, amid
talk that China was dumping US bonds, in retaliation to US sanctions aimed
at the yuan. The DJI-30 plunged 200-points over the next hour.
PPT chief Paulson spoke to reporters to extinguish the rumors. "I think it's
absurd, frankly. What the Chinese hold in Treasuries is less than one day's
trading volume in Treasuries. We have a broad, liquid market. If you've got
a hundred things to worry about, I'd worry about that last," he said. Bush
told Fox News Channel's Neil Cavuto, "It would be foolhardy for China to sell
US dollar assets"
Soon after remarks by Bush and Paulson, the DJI-30 soared 150-points, "micromanaging" the
market on every significant pullback or downturn. Nowadays, "Investing" in
the stock market seems like a crap shoot, rolling the dice on the next piece
of "hot news" to roll across the computer screen.
Is the "Plunge Protection Team," Myth or Reality?
Is the legendary PPT just a myth, conjured up by a bunch of conspiratorial
nuts? Former president Clinton advisor, George Stephanopoulos told "Good Morning
America" on Sept 17, 2001, "There are various efforts going on in public and
behind the scenes by the Fed and other government officials to guard against
a free-fall in the market, what is called the "Plunge Protection Team."
"The Federal Reserve, big major banks, representatives of the New York Stock
Exchange and the other exchanges have an informal agreement to come in and
start to buy stock if there appears to be a problem. They acted more formally
in 1998, during the Long term Capital Crisis, and propped up the currency markets.
And, they have plans in place if the markets start to fall."
On August 8th, 2007, President Bush hinted at government intervention in the
US stock market. "Treasury secretary Paulson and his advisors are paying close
attention, as the market begins to readjust its assessment of risks and are
watchful for any downturn," he said. "There is a lot of liquidity in our system
and liquidity will provide the capacity for our system to adjust," Bush added,
alluding to the Fed's tolerance of double digit M3 money supply growth.
The big question is whether US Treasury chief Henry Paulson and Fed chief
Bernanke are pursuing a more active interventionist policy than what was originally
mandated for the PPT? The turnover of interest rate, currency and stock index
derivatives rose 24% to $533 trillion in the first quarter, and that's a big
time bomb that can blow-up at anytime. It requires constant surveillance and "vigilance" over
the world's greatest casinos. Warren Buffett calls derivatives "weapons of
mass destruction."
If correct, then the PPT is "watching the markets closely", (Japanese code
words for intervention) and Paulson and Bernanke aim to prevent a 10% correction
at all costs. There are glaring signals in the marketplace that indicate when
the PPT appears to be intervening in stock index futures, and these signals
were revealed in the August 3rd edition of Global Money Trends, with plenty
of cool charts. If you expand your imagination, as Einstein suggests, and accept
the notion that the PPT is "managing the markets," you might become more successful
in trading.
The Global Money Trends newsletter provides insights and analysis on
the global commodity, currency, and bond and stock markets that are not found
in the mainstream media, to help readers make better investment decisions.
Each edition contains lots of cool charts, and is published 44 times per year
on Friday's, with special alerts when unexpected events unfold.
This article is just the Tip of the Iceberg, of what's available in
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currencies such as, the Australian dollar, British pound, Euro, Japanese
yen, and Canadian dollar (4) Libor interest rates, global bond markets and
central bank monetary policies, (5) Central banker "Jawboning" and Intervention
techniques that move markets.
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