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Lately, it's almost impossible not to be reminded of the rising probability
of a recession by the Wall Street cheerleading squad, which used to dispute
vehemently any notion of a recession just a couple of months ago. As it gets
closer to the FOMC meeting next week, the R word has been thrown around by
experts and Wall Street pundits more frequently than the re-run of Frasier.
They're apparently hoping the onslaught of this recession campaign would sway
the Fed to cut its overnight lending rate more drastically. The market, nonetheless,
appears to have already priced in 0.25% rate cut and moved on since the end
of August. Unless the Fed does something unexpected, the market seems no longer
driven by the highly anticipated rate cut. The revival of yen carry trade may
be the driving force behind recent rally.
I mentioned in Rally
by Carry Trade on 9/11/2007 that recent intraday charts of the SPX (S&P
500 Index) and the Dollar-Yen Exchange Rate were moving almost tick for tick.
The longer term chart also shows synchronized movement between the SPX and
the exchange rate. I use 11-day simple moving average on Chart 1 to
smooth out the curve of the daily % change of the SPX and the yen. They show
almost identical pattern since the end of August (blue dotted box), when
the intraday SPX reached above 1480 for the first time since 8/9/2007. What's
interesting is that this is all happening while the Dollar's sinking like
a stone against most other major currencies.

Chart 1
The Fed's Dollar Index against major currencies (Chart 2) plummeted
below 7/24/2007 record low (76.7802) on 9/7/2007. It then went on to set consecutive
new low records 4 days in a row from 9/7/2007 to 9/12/2007 (at the time of
this writing). After falling below 80 in April, it appears that the Dollar
Index had tried to hold its ground till mid June (yellow dot). Over the ensuing
3 months, and before the record breaking nosedive this week, other major currencies
had actually depreciated against the Dollar. But, no other major currencies
had lost more ground to the Dollar during that period than the Japanese yen.

Chart 2
This 3-month map of currency's appreciation (blue) and depreciation (red)
against the Dollar (Chart 3 below) shows that, as of 9/12/2007, the
Japanese yen (JPY) had depreciated 7.19% against the Dollar - more than the
Euro (EUR), the British pound (GBP), the Canadian dollar, the Chinese yuan
(CNY), and other major currencies.

Chart 3
While all the talk of recession and the Fed's rate cut have dropped the Dollar
to the historic low, the demise of a president or a prime minister appears
to have more devastating effect on its currency. Toward the end of August,
when Japan's prime minister, Shinzo Abe, began replacing his cabinet members
with old timers, the market obviously thought that might be his final act.
And,
only days after President Bush told him, on the sideline of the APEC summit
in Australia, that Japan's refueling of U.S. warships in the Indian Ocean has
provided a vital service to the fight against terrorism, Shinzo Abe stepped
down as Japan's prime minister on Sept. 12.
Some sources cited the primary reasons for Abe's resignation as health related
and low approval rating. Chart on the right, shows 2007 timeline of Abe administration's
approval (orange line) and disapproval (aqua line) ratings. Other sources,
mostly from Japan and the rest of Asia, seem to place more emphasis on his
relentless support for Bush. Just one day after his one-on-one meeting with
Bush at the APEC summit, Abe said he would resign if the
Parliament voted not to renew a law that allows Japanese armed forces to supply
fuel to U.S. warships.
Despite his personal health issue, scandals within his administration, low
approval rating, etc. that might've contributed to his final decision to resign,
Abe's demise is actually just a reflection of Japan's frustration over a stagnant
economy. Japan's prolonged recession is further burdened with aging population,
widening income gap, and growing national debt. Japan's national debt had grown
to be approx. 170% of its GDP, which is the highest among industrialized nations.
Each Japanese citizen is now carrying more than $5 million share of the national
debt.
Since my January 22, 2006 article, Too
Old to Rock 'n' Roll, Too Young To Die, the Tokyo Nikkei Average Index
had gone from 15,696.69 on 1/20/2006 to 15,797.60 on 9/12/2007, for a change
of 100.91 points, or 0.64%, over approx. 20 months. This measly annualized
gain of 0.39% spoke volume of the undercurrent of Japan's socioeconomic problems.
The only thing that's going for Japan is perhaps its currency devaluation
against the U.S. Dollar. The yen devaluation has kept the Japanese exporters
going, but it has done very little for domestic businesses and its people.
This inequality in wealth distribution, by all means, further exacerbates
the income gap. The yen's devaluation also translates to higher import prices.
This means, among other implications, higher energy costs for an island nation
that has little natural resources of its own.
Japan's businesses had once again started to trim back on capital investment,
which led to the GDP decline of 0.3% in the April-June quarter, or the 1st
quarter of this fiscal year.
For now, devaluing the Japanese yen becomes the lifeline that at least keeps
the Japanese exporters afloat. And, its competitive devaluation against the
US Dollar seems to form the carry-trade lifeline that keeps Wall Street speculators
going. The problem is that, in its attempt to accommodate Wall Street's greed,
the Fed may prescribe overdose of liquidity easing to a financial system that's
experiencing more of a credit and confidence crisis than a liquidity problem.
That would accelerate the Dollar's decline. And, in addition, if we should
ever see a quarter of negative GDP growth, the Dollar may go into freefall.
The absence of risk premium covering this Fed's intervention risk as well
as the US economy's recession risk makes recent carry-trade based rally extremely
speculative and dangerous. But, then again, Wall Street may finally get what
it wishes for.
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