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"...In a credit crunch, it's often said, cash is king. In which case, gold's
just been crowned emperor..."
AT LEAST THE weather here in London suits the markets. More like October
than August, the constant drizzle is broken only by chill gusts of wind, rattling
the windows like a late autumn gale.
Unseasonable? Yes - even for a British summer! But it's perfect weather for
losing your shirt as yet another bubble turns to bust.
Just like the Bankers Panic of 1907, the Great Crash of 1929...Black Monday
in 1987...and the "mini-crash" triggered ten years later by the Asian Crisis...any
trader bored of tanning his hide on the Cote d'Azur can now come home to find
October in full swing. And if he's seeking a snow-white pallor for autumn,
he can turn white as a sheet within minutes in Mayfair, watching his funds
under management shrink with each breath.
Wednesday 15th August marked the deadline for hedge-fund investors to withdraw
what's left of their money before the third quarter ends 45 days from now.
Tuesday saw one fund, Sentinel Management Group, ask the US authorities if
it could "allow it to halt client redemptions until it can conduct them in
an orderly fashion." No dice, said the CFTC to the puny $1.6 billion fund.
A disorderly fire-sale might now be expected.
Further north, in Canada, two trusts said that they'd failed to sell new securities
needed to refinance loans that are due for repayment. A bank had also refused
to provide liquidity, according to news reports, making August '07 a real crunch
for those trusts, if not yet for all of their peers.
"Everyone always waits until the last second to get out, and [Wednesday] is
the last second," said Mike Hennessy of Morgan Creek Capital to Reuters today.
But in fact, redemption notices began "piling up weeks ago" says the newswire.
The proximate cause remains the collapse of Bear Stearns' two highly-geared
mortgage bond hedge funds in June. Those wipe-outs sparked the current turmoil
in world financial markets.
"The longer this credit crunch goes on, the more likely that gold will attract
safe haven buying," reckons John Reade, head of metals trading at UBS in London.
In the short-term, "we do not expect institutional buying of gold to trigger
any sharp move higher; we suspect that position closing and de-leveraging will
be the focus of these investors' attention.
"[But] any move to gold will probably come from private investors. As such,
the listed exchange-traded funds in gold will signal this interest."
Confirming the move into gold by a growing number of anxious private investors,
the StreetTracks gold ETF reported a record holding of more than 510 tonnes
on Tuesday. In London, the gold fund run by ETF Securities saw a trebling of
holdings last week alone. According to AFX News, some 200,000 ounces of gold
was bought in one day!
(Here at BullionVault - the world's
fastest-growing route to outright gold ownership between April and June - gold
sales are also markedly higher. As ever, secure
gold storage in Zurich is proving the most popular choice with new gold
owners.)
But it's not only private investors who are choosing solid gold bullion over
paper promises right now. The last two weeks have seen a huge surge in gold
leasing rates - the price charged by the major members of the London Bullion
Market Association to lend out their gold. Put in plain English, the banks
of ScotiaMocatta, Barclays, Deutsche, HSBC, J.Aron & Co, J.P.Morgan Chase,
the Royal Bank of Canada, Société Générale and
UBS have become less likely to put their gold at risk by lending it
out.
After all, in a credit crunch, cash is deemed to be king. In which case, gold
owned outright has just been crowned emperor.
The move in gold lease rates, spiking inside a fortnight from 0.15% to a 33-month
high of 0.32% above Dollar lending fees, would also contradict claims that
the US Fed and its fellow central bankers are dumping fresh gold loans onto
the market. Such a forced increase in gold-for-hire would have pushed gold
leasing rates down, not up. But whether or not you hold with the theory that
central banks are wantonly quashing the gold price - despite it doubling since
2002 - it's clear that the Fed and its friends have got plenty to fret about
besides bullion right now. The US Dollar, after all, is up versus the Euro.
It's everything else which is down, besides gold, Treasury bonds, and the Japanese
Yen.
Last Friday's open-market operations by the Federal Reserve saw it accept
mostly mortgage-backed bonds - precisely those unsellable "assets" undermining
faith in the financial system today. That left the big houses free to trade
their outstanding positions in both Treasury bonds and the more secure agency-backed
notes, a gift from the Fed that points to how serious this credit crunch is
beginning to prove.
To date, the quarter-trillion in central-bank cash lent to the world's biggest
investment houses has failed to prevent the asset-price bubble - way up there
in the stratosphere of new or near all-time highs - from hitting a series of
air pockets, bid-free. The ECB’s money on Tuesday failed to save Europe's
300 largest stocks from losing an average of 1.2% of their value. The S&P
closed the day 1.8% lower, while the Nikkei dropped 2.2% by the close in Tokyo
on Wednesday. Here in London, the FTSE100 has now dropped nearly 650 points
- bang on that 10% slump deemed to mark a "correction" - inside one month.
No wonder then that lower interest rates are now priced into bonds. Traders
foresee an 88% chance the Fed will cut rates to 5.0% at its Sept. meeting,
says Bloomberg, followed by odds of 47% for a further cut by December.
There's no risk of monetary policy allowing the bubble to burst, in short.
Or at least, that's what everyone thinks...even as the bubble bursts despite
super-fast action in central-bank policy. "My worry is the Fed will cut too
little, too late," said Nouriel Roubini, NYU professor and a former advisor
to Bill Clinton, in an interview this week. And besides, if the money markets
are freezing up with Dollar rates at 5.25%, will anyone become more likely to
lend money at just 5.0% or 4.75% this Christmas...?
Now that cash is once again king - and the Dollar has seized the throne with
its twisted sidekick the Yen playing court jester - we think you might do well
to keep an eye on the gold price. Even with spot prices ticking sideways amid
the sell-off in paper, the smart money looks keen to keep hold of its bullion.
Versus the resurgent Dollar, the price of gold remains little changed right
now from a week or even a month ago. Indeed, it's risen against Sterling and
Euros - a little-reported fact that US investors wanting to take advantage
of this spike in the Greenback may like to note.
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