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Nowadays, traders of all different stripes are betting on more rate cuts by
the Federal Reserve in the months ahead. Since mid-July, the odds of a US economic
recession have been mounting, led by sliding home prices and the first loss
of US jobs in four years in August. Sales of new single-family homes fell 8.3%
in August to a 795,000 annual sales pace, to stand 21.3% lower from a year
ago, and the glut of unsold existing US homes has swelled to the highest in
18-years.
Robert Shiller, a Yale university economist, told a US Congressional panel
on Sept 19th, "The collapse of US home prices might turn out to be the most
severe since the Great Depression. The decline in house prices stand to create
future dislocations, like the credit crisis we have just seen." According to
the S&P/Case Shiller national home price index, US home prices in the top-20
metropolitan areas fell 0.4% in July from June, to stand 3.9% lower from a
year earlier.
Former Fed chief "Easy" Al Greenspan said on Sept 16th, the he would not be
surprised if US home prices fell by double-digits into 2008. A fall in home
prices on that scale would be unprecedented in US history. US residential real
estate has an aggregate value of about $21 trillion, and is the single biggest
source of US household wealth. If home prices fall roughly 15%, it could wipe
out $3 trillion of household wealth, and deal a huge blow to consumer spending.

A double-digit decline in US home prices could also spark big job losses.
Construction employment fell about 15% in both the 1990's and 1980's recessions,
and it dropped 18% in the recession of the mid-1970's. In each case, the sector's
declines were far steeper than job losses in the overall economy, and the recovery
took longer. About 7.6 million Americans workers are employed by construction
companies, so a 15% decline would translate into the loss of 1 million jobs.
According to ADP Employer Services, employment in the construction sector
fell by 20,000 in September, the 12th decline in thirteen months, bringing
the total decline since August of 2006 to 157,000 workers. The US Labor department
appears to be vastly overstating the level of employment in the construction
sector, which is far out of alignment with the 44% plunge in US building permits
from two years ago.
It's not just the prospect of a sharp decline in US homes prices which has
the Bernanke Fed in a state of panic. About 5 million adjustable-rate mortgages
are slated to reset to higher rates in the next 18-months. Therefore, the housing
slump could deepen if the Fed doesn't lower short-term rates, to ease the plight
of homeowners who are unable to refinance loans under tighter underwriting
guidelines and as home values stagnate or fall.
US Treasury Traders bet on more Fed rate cuts
Historically, the US economy has gone into recession seven times since 1960,
and six of the downturns were foreshadowed by an Inverted yield curve, when
yields on three-month Treasury bills are higher than for ten-year Treasury
Notes. Usually, when lenders in the bond market are willing to accept lower
interest rates for longer term debt than for shorter term debt, it is a signal
that the US economy is about to experience a serious slowdown or even a recession
within 12-months.
So far in this decade, the Inverted yield curve has made two grand appearances.
Between March and Dec 2000, at the height of the frenzy for internet and high
tech stocks, the yield curve was inverted, but stock market bulls argued that
its shape reflected the Clinton administration's retirement of longer term
debt from huge budget surpluses. But the Nasdaq and S&P 500 did begin to
implode in 2001, and an eight month economic recession arrived in 2002.

More recently, the yield curve inverted between February 2006 and June 2007.
At its peak in February 2007, the yield on the US three-month T-bill rate was
roughly 60 basis points above the benchmark 10-year yield. At that time, many
analysts predicted the inversion would at least signal slower economic growth,
but few were convinced it would spell a contraction of gross domestic product
for two consecutive quarters, the typical definition of recession. The yield
curve's only wrong signal was in 1966, when the curve inverted but no recession
followed.
Nowadays, the US home prices are tumbling and threatening to drag the US economy
into recession in 2008. According to former Fed chief "Easy" Al Greenspan, "The
critical variable is the price of homes in the United States. I would expect
home price declines to continue until the rate of inventory liquidation reaches
its peak. And a weakened US consumer market, still has the capacity to impact
our trading partners," Greenspan told a gathering of reporters in London on
October 1st.

During the three previous Fed easing campaigns, whenever the two-year Treasury
yield fell to more than -50 basis points below the fed funds target, the Fed
lowered its target rate each period. In August 2007, the 2-year T-Note yield
fell to -110 basis points below the 3-month T-bill rate, persuading the Fed
to slash the fed funds rate by a larger-than-expected 50 bp on Sept 18th. The
longer the spread between the two-year T-Note yield and the fed funds rate
stays below -50 basis points, the greater the likelihood of more Fed rate cuts
in the months ahead.
US Economy caught in "Stagflation" Trap?
Finally forced to choose between defending US home prices or the US dollar,
the Bernanke Fed decided to sacrifice the greenback, and slashed the fed funds
rate by 50 basis points to 4.75% on Sept 18th. "We took the action to try to
get out ahead of the situation and try to forestall potential effects of tighter
credit conditions on the broader economy. The resulting global financial losses
have far exceeded even the most pessimistic estimates of the credit losses
on these loans," Fed chief Ben Bernanke explained on Sept 20th.
But unlike previous US economic slowdowns which have worked to contain inflationary
pressures in the global commodity markets, this time around, the Fed's aggressive
rate cut on Sept 18th, ignited big rallies in a broad spectrum of commodities
to all-time highs, and lifted gold to a 28-year high. Greenspan warned the
Bernanke Fed to be careful, and not cut rates too aggressively, "because the
risk of an inflationary resurgence is greater now than when I was chairman," he
told the Financial Times on Sept 16th, two days before the Fed rate cut.

But Bernanke ignored his mentor's advice, and shocked the world markets on
Sept 18th, by slashing the fed funds rate a larger-than-expected half-point
to 4.75%. That allowed the inflation genie to escape from its bottle. The Fed's
latest rate cut lifted the benchmark DJ AIG Commodity Index from a -3% year
over year loss in August to positive +11.6% gain in September.
Meanwhile, the Fed's aggressive rate cut conveyed a sense of panic, and wasn't
copied by any other central bank, thus knocking the US dollar to 15-year lows.
In turn, a weaker US dollar is engraving sharply higher food and energy prices
into "core" inflation. Corn futures gained 9.7% last month, and soybean futures
climbed 14% in September, up 79% in the past year, after US farmers cut acreage
15% to a 12-year low. Wheat futures were up 21% for September towards $10 /bushel,
the sixth straight monthly gain. Milk futures are up 70% from a year ago.
Crude oil prices rose 16% last quarter, the biggest quarterly percentage gain
since the first quarter of 2005. In US dollars, West Texas Intermediate is
up 30% in the past year. Oil is up 16% in euros, 19% in British pounds and
26% in yen.
"We're beginning to see the extraordinary period of disinflation and economic
growth coming to a halt," Mr Greenspan told a business audience in London on
October 2nd. "We now have to be very sensitive to the fact that inflationary
pressures could well get out of hand. The trade-off between inflation and growth
had become more negative," Greenspan warned. Thus, in trying to stave off a
recession with aggressive rate cuts, the Bernanke Fed might still end up with
the worst of all possibilities, a stagnant economy and rising inflation, or "Stagflation".
Fed Officials Engage in Intellectual dishonesty,
Greenspan said that Mr Bernanke would have a tougher job than he did in dealing
with the trade off between growth and inflation. But Mr Bernanke appears to
have already geared US money policy towards fighting a housing led recession
at the expense of much higher inflation. Since Bernanke became Fed chief in
March 2006, the growth rate of the US M3 money supply has exploded to a 14%
annualized clip, its fastest rate in 35-years, sending gold to $750 /oz, it's
highest in 28-years.
Bernanke was asked about the importance of the US money supply on July 10th, "The
monetary aggregates do not have a special role in the formulation of US monetary
policy. Our experience has been that financial innovation and other factors
have tended to create a relatively weak relationship in the short run between
money and inflation and money and output," he said.

Not surprisingly on Sept 11th, the Fed's newest rookie Frederic Mishkin remarked
that, "Gold is not a particularly reliable indicator of inflation," downplaying
the yellow metal's 15% jump in Q'3, its best quarterly performance since 1999.
Instead, Mishkin was declaring victory in the war against inflation on Sept
27th. "Inflation has come down in the old-fashioned way. Tighter monetary policy
and a commitment to price stability by central banks throughout the world have
led to lower inflation and an anchoring of inflation expectations," Mishkin
said.
On July 10th, Bernanke appeared to firmly endorse the Fed's long-standing
practice of focusing more heavily on core price measures in setting monetary
policy. "Inflation is less responsive than it used to be to changes in oil
prices and other supply shocks. If inflation expectations are well anchored,
changes in energy and food prices should have relatively little influence on
core inflation," he argued.

While Fed officials point to inflation statistics that are conjured up by
government apparatchniks, traders should focus their attention on the global
commodity markets for real time indications on inflation expectations. And
it's not just the prices of food, energy, and gold that are hitting historical
highs these days. The cost of shipping dry goods around the world is soaring
to stratospheric heights.
The Baltic Dry Freight Index is a barometer of the volume of global trade,
and it hit an all-time highs of 9,474, up sharply from the 4,000-level a year
ago. And unlike stock and commodity markets, the Baltic Dry Index does not
contain speculative froth. The booming Chinese and Indian economies are key
drivers for the Baltic Dry Index. Does the parabolic rise of the BDI to 9,500
represent a Nasdaq-style bubble or rather an Asian demand-led structural change?
Global Bond Vigilantes hooked on Gold
With booming commodity and stock markets detected in all corners of the earth,
and out of control money supply fueling inflation, the global bond vigilantes
should be reacting by jacking up long term interest rates. Instead, global
bond yields have tumbled by anywhere from 50 to 75 basis points since mid-July,
when revelations of the sub-prime debt crisis surfaced.
While the US economy is sliding towards "Stagflation", other economies in
Australia, Brazil, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Russia, and South Korea are de-coupling
away from the US locomotive, and have become more "China-centric," feeding
on the world's fastest growing economy, which is booming ahead at a 12% clip.
Therefore, Fed rate cuts are simply adding more firepower to the "Commodity
Super Cycle" which is increasingly fueled by a strong global economy, and not
just the US economy.
In the $11 trillion Euro zone economy, there are recent signs of a economic
slowdown, but higher raw material prices are exerting upward pressure on inflation.
On Sept 15th, Austrian central bank chief Klaus Liebscher warned that sharply
higher oil prices, were a big inflation risk which the ECB had to keep a close
eye on. "Upside risks are prevailing with respect to inflation, oil prices,
basic foodstuffs that are getting more expensive, higher wages driven by the
good economic situation" Liebscher told the Der Standard newspaper.

Euro zone inflation rebounded to +2.1% in September against +1.7% in August,
rising above the European Central Bank's target for the first time in a year.
The Euro M3 money supply is 11.6% higher from a year ago, which ignited a gold
rally from 485 euros on August 27th to as high as 528 euros /oz this week.
Gold jumped above the psychological 500 euro /oz level, after the ECB admitted
its hands were tied by the Bernanke Fed, and left its repo rate unchanged at
4.00% on Sept 6th.
Any attempt by the ECB to tame the explosive growth of the Euro M3 money supply
by lifting its repo rate to 4.25%, could catapult the Euro to $1.500, especially
if the Bernanke Fed is lowering the fed funds rate at the same time. On October
3rd, Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi spoke with German Chancellor Angela
Merkel about the strong Euro, "There is concern that the US monetary policy
is very attentive exclusively towards domestic interests," Prodi said.
"Having crossed $1.40 against the US dollar and appreciating against the Chinese
yuan and Japanese yen, the Euro exchange rate has attained a pain threshold
for European companies," said BusinessEurope President Ernest-Antoine Seilliere
on October 3rd. Yet any attempt by the ECB to lower its repo rate to curb the
strength of the Euro could stimulate faster money supply growth and inflationary
pressures.

In today's bond markets, which are plagued by heavy intervention from central
banks, it might not be possible for the bond vigilantes of yesteryear to swing
the big stick and jack-up bond yields to punitive levels. Instead, bond vigilantes
must operate via the gold market, in order to profit from excessive money supply
growth, by simultaneously shorting government bonds and buying gold. This way,
if central banks try to artificially depress bond yields with excessive money
supply, the resulting inflationary pressures would ultimately show up in a
higher gold price.
For example, since May 2004, the Euro M3 money supply has accelerated from
a 4.9% growth rate to as high as 11.6% in August 2007. During that time, German
bund prices gyrated up and down, but today, are little changed since May 2004.
But when measured against the price of gold, the German 10-year bund has lost
40% of its value to a ratio of 0.22 Euro.
Thus, gold has a very special role to play, as a hedge for fixed income investors
from abusive central bankers. It's a mystery, why most institutional traders,
seeking a "safe haven" during times of financial turmoil, such as the current
sub-prime debt debacle, prefer to buy government bonds and avoid buying the
yellow metal, especially when central banks are flooding the banking system
with cheap money.
Japanese bonds in Bear market, Tokyo Gold at all-time highs
The Bank of Japan has pegged its overnight loan rate at an abnormally low
0.50% since February, exporting inflation around the globe. "I cannot deny
that monetary conditions remain very accommodative," said BoJ chief Toshihko
Fukui on Sept 19th. "If market participants come to believe that such conditions
will last for ever, it would undoubtedly create distortions in asset allocation.
Yet there is no need to adjust interest rates if the economy moves in line
with our scenario."
Since October 2002, the Bank of Japan has bought 1.2 trillion yen of government
bonds each month, to pump more money into the economy, and keep the yen weak
in the foreign exchange market. The BoJ will monetize more than half of the
government's budget deficit this year, expected around 25 trillion yen. Such
massive money pumping has led to a doubling of Tokyo gold prices to a record
85,500 yen from four years ago, while knocking government bond prices into
a bear market.

Tokyo gold traders have not been duped by the government's brainwashing and
fuzzy math on inflation. Japan's financial warlords paint an economy that is
flirting with deflation, with core consumer prices falling -0.1% from a year
ago. Few traders believe the phony statistics on inflation anymore, but they
still serve to provide political cover for the Bank of Japan's ultra low interest
rate policy.
By flooding the Japanese bond market with enormous liquidity, and ruling out
a rate hike in August, Fukui put a floor under the 10-year JGB market in July,
and capped yields at 2.00 percent. However, artificially low interest rates
in Japan and elsewhere are providing fertile ground for speculators in global
commodity and stock markets. Thus, the BoJ is exporting inflation worldwide,
thru it ultra-easy low interest rate policy, via the mammoth $1.05 trillion "yen
carry" trade.

Fukui is a stalwart ally of the "Plunge Protection Team" headed by the dynamic
duo of US Treasury chief Henry Paulson and Fed chef Ben "B-52" Bernanke. "We
regularly keep in touch with overseas central banks on market developments
and share each other's understanding. That is something we do all the time.
But when financial markets are volatile, we are even more closely in contact
with each other so that we come up with a common understanding." Fukui said
on August 23rd.
By putting a lid on 10-year Japanese bond yields at 2.00%, Fukui also put
a ceiling on the US 10-year T-Note yield at 5.25% in July, sparing further
damage to the US housing market. With Fukui pumping 1.2 trillion yen into the
Tokyo money markets each month, Mr Bernanke can run the US money printing presses
at full speed, with little fear of a collapse of the US Treasury bond market.
US Economy headed for the "Stagflation" Trap
It would be especially difficult to forecast the direction of US Treasury
yields, if the world's largest economy gets snared in the "Stagflation" trap,
with a weakening economy accompanied by higher inflation. On the one hand,
a weaker economy could encourage the Bernanke Fed to slash the fed funds rate,
and anchor yields at lower levels. On the other hand, an easier Fed policy
can crush the US dollar and trigger higher inflation, especially in the global
commodity markets.
Since mid-July, US 10-year Treasury Notes have rallied strongly, lowering
the yield from as high as 5.25% in July to 4.50% today. Yet when measured against
the price of gold, US T-Notes actually fell from 41-cents on the dollar to
as low as 37.5-cents. Investors seeking shelter from the global sub-prime mortgage
crisis were much better off buying an ounce of gold, rather than the US Treasury's
IOU's.

US Treasury yields are no longer a reliable indicator about inflation expectations.
Instead, the Treasury bond market is simply a parking lot for foreign central
banks that peg their currencies to the greenback, and want to earn some interest
on their dollar reserves. But if the US dollar remains chronically weak, due
to Fed rate cuts, one has to wonder if dollar pegs in China and the Persian
Gulf might unhinge.
Yu Yongding an adviser to the Chinese central bank predicted as far back as
Dec 30, 2005, that the Fed might stop raising interest rates in 2006 and start
guiding the dollar downward, putting upward pressure on the yuan. "More seriously,
China's economy would take a big hit if the US dollar weakened sharply due
to such factors as a bursting of the US property bubble. The loss for China's
foreign exchange reserves would also be extremely serious," he said. China
has $1.4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, double the amount held in Q'4
2005.
On March 26th, Bernanke was asked what would happen to US interest rates,
if China began dumping some of its $408 billion position in Treasury bonds. "If
such a shift were to put undesired upward pressure on US interest rates, the
Federal Reserve has the capacity to operate in domestic money markets to maintain
interest rates at a level consistent with our economic goals," Bernanke replied.

Thus, while the Fed could buy large sums of bonds from China and set a floor
under the market, it would have to turn up the printing presses to accomplish
that feat. That could send the price of gold soaring, once Beijing finally
relents to a significant dollar devaluation against the Chinese yuan. Such
as scenario is unlikely any time soon under Paulson's watch, but could happen
if the protectionist bent Democrats capture the White House and Capitol Hill
in 2008.
The latest downturn in US Treasury Notes, when measured in "hard money" terms,
extends an unrelenting bear market that has prevailed since 2003, when the
T-Note to Gold ratio peaked at 87-cents. Nevertheless, on Sept 20th, Bernanke
said the Fed would remain vigilant on inflation. "We will continue to pay very
close attention to the inflation rate. It is an important part of our mandate
and I agree that an economy cannot grow in a healthy, stable way when inflation
is out of control, and we will certainly make sure that doesn't happen," he
told lawmakers on Capital Hill.
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