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"Here are two brother countries, united like a single fist," declared Venezuelan
kingpin Hugo Chavez after meeting Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran on Nov
19th. "We have common viewpoints and we will stand by each other until we capture
the high peaks. God is with us and victory is awaiting us," added Iran's Ahmadinejad,
vowing to defeat US imperialism together, and pointing to the fall of the US
dollar as the prelude to the end of America's global dominance.
"Don't you see how the dollar has been in free-fall without a parachute? The
US prints dollar bills with no real economic foundation. Soon we will not talk
about dollars, because the empire of the dollar is crashing. The day will arrive
not only in OPEC, but also in Latin America, when we will be liberated from
the dollar. With the fall of the US dollar, US imperialism will fall as soon
as possible," Chavez declared.
Why
are Ahmadinejad and Chavez laughing? Oil prices are up 56% this year, after
nearly reaching $100 per barrel. At the same time, the US Dollar is mired at
a 20-year low, with the US economy teetering on the verge of a recession. The
US dollar has fallen over 50% versus the Euro since 2002, and oil prices are
nearly five times higher over the same time period. Increasingly, the US dollar's
reserve currency status is looking very fragile. Perhaps, all that's left supporting
the greenback is America's military might. "They get our oil and give us a
worthless piece of paper," Ahmadinejad told OPEC ministers in the Saudi capital
of Riyadh, insulting the US dollar.
The more the US dollar slides, the less foreign investments in the US capital
markets are worth, and the more likely that foreigners could withdraw en masse.
If that were to happen, the greenback would collapse. "The dollar is losing
its status as the world currency," warned Chinese central bank director Xu
Jian on Nov 7th. "We will favor stronger currencies over weaker ones, and will
readjust accordingly," added Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of China's National
People's Congress, signaling plans to diversify Beijing's $1.43 trillion of
foreign exchange reserves.

Over the past six months, China, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan have been
net sellers of $65 billion of US Treasuries. However, the Arab Oil kingdoms
have picked up the slack, boosting their holdings of US Treasuries, thru their
agents in London, and providing the dollar with vital life support. Holdings
of US Treasuries from the United Kingdom have soared by $205 billion from a
year ago, allowing Asian central banks to scale down their exposure to US bonds
in an orderly fashion.
The Arab Oil kingdoms are plowing petro-dollars into US Treasuries, but are
also facing the same quagmire that's entrapping China, - an inevitable devaluation
of their pegged currencies versus the US dollar. Earlier today, the Dubai-based
Arabian Business magazine fed speculation of a UAE dirham revaluation of 3-5%
as early as this weekend, pushing the Saudi riyal to a 21-year high and the
Qatar riyal to a five-year high against the dollar, on ideas of a coordinated
currency shift.
Now,
Washington is asking the Saudi king for more big favors, - maintain the Saudi
riyal peg to the dollar at all costs, and start pumping more oil this winter,
to keep prices from climbing above $100 /barrel. But keeping the dollar peg
intact threatens the Saudi kingdom will hyper inflation and social unrest.
Pumping more oil endangers budding relations with Iran, and could trigger a
sharp downturn in the Saudi stock market, which is just starting to recover
from a brutal 60% correction.
Iranian president Ahmadinejad would love to see Saudi king Saudi King Abdullah
bin Abdulaziz Al Saud pull the plug on the 21-year old, US-dollar peg to the
Saudi riyal. Tehran has cut all ties with the dollar when it comes to oil transactions. "This
is an economic decision and we've been proven right. Over time the dollar has
got weaker and weaker," explained Hojjatollah Ghanimifard, director of the
National Iranian Oil Company. "Less than 20% of Iran's oil export earnings
are in yen and the rest in euros," he said. Tehran is fetching $90 a barrel
on oil sales of 2.4 million bpd.
Such a stunning move by King Abdullah to price Saudi oil in Euros or a basket
of foreign currencies would knock the US dollar into a tailspin. "There will
be journalists who will seize on this point and we don't want the dollar to
collapse instead of doing something good for OPEC," whispered Saudi Prince
Faisal al-Saud, during a key closed meeting, when microphones were not cut
off.
The Fed Monetizes Record high Food and Oil Prices
Ahamdinejad's assertion that foreign central banks are printing worthless
paper currency in exchange for OPEC's oil is right on target, and fully understood
by the political leaders, who control 75% of the world's proven oil reserves.
The Federal Reserve has allowed the MZM money supply to expand by $850 billion
this year, up 13% from a year ago. The broader US M3 money supply is 15.8%
higher, it's fastest in history, monetizing the prices of crude oil and gold,
key hedges against inflation, to all-time highs.
Explaining the Fed's reason for ignoring sharply higher food and energy prices,
on October 20th, Federal Reserve governor Frederic Mishkin said, "Changes in
price indexes without food and energy provide a clearer picture of underlying
inflation pressures. If the monetary authorities react to headline inflation
numbers, they run the risk of responding to merely temporary fluctuations," he
said. At the same time, Mishkin said it was the Fed's job to "counteract negative
shocks to the economy," from high oil prices, suggesting a further expansion
of the money supply.

"Our emphasis over the years has been more on core inflation, which strips
out food and energy, because we think that's a better predictor of future total
inflation than today's total inflation has been," said Fed governor Donald
Kohn on Nov 28th. Instead, "Uncertainties about the economic outlook are unusually
high right now, and require flexible and pragmatic policy-making," Kohn said,
widely interpreted by traders as a signal the Fed would continue to inflate
the money supply to pump up the stock market in the months ahead.
The price of crude oil has finally caught up with rate of inflation. Depending
on how the adjustment is calculated, crude oil's price spike to as high as
$38 a barrel in the 1970's, would be the equivalent to $96 to $103 /barrel
today. But it's not just the US central bank that is clandestinely monetizing
the high cost of oil these days. China's M2 money supply is 18.5% higher, and
India's M3 is up 21% this year. If the Chinese and Indians consumed as much
oil per capita as Americans do, the world's oil demand would be closer to 200
million bpd, instead of 86 million barrels today. That day is expected to arrive
around 2030.

With oil prices approaching $100 this month, the United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organization (FAO) reported that at $100 a barrel, the price of oil has sent
the cost of food imports skyrocketing this year. What's more, worldwide food
reserves are at their lowest in 35-years, so prices are likely to stay high
for the foreseeable future. The Baltic Dry Index, which measures the cost of
shipping agriculture and minerals, is up 150% from a year ago, to all time
highs.
"Past shocks have quickly dissipated, but that's not likely to be the case
this time. Supply and demand have become unbalanced, and can't be fixed quickly," the
FAO warned on Nov 16th. The world's food import bill is on course to rise 21%
to $745 billion in 2007. In developing countries, imported food costs will
go up by 25% to nearly $233 billion, due to strong global demand for bio-fuel
crops, extreme weather and growing demand from countries like India and China.
Yet the Fed still clings to the "core rate" of inflation, which strips out
the essential costs of life, when setting monetary policy. As the famous economist
John Maynard Keynes, used to say, "By a continuing process of inflation, governments
can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of
their citizens. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing
basis of society than to debase the currency. The process engages all the hidden
forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner
which not one man in a million is able to diagnose."
Fed Rate cuts wreak havoc on Saudi Riyal
The Fed's daily money injections and expectations of more rate cuts, are threatening
to transmit hyper-inflation to the Persian Gulf kingdoms. The Bernanke Fed
is pursuing a radical monetary policy, expanding the US M3 money supply at
a 15.8% annual rate, its fastest in history, and inviting speculators to sell
the dollar in exchange for Saudi riyals. To counter the dollar's weakness,
the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) is expanding the Saudi M3 money
supply at a 19.5% annual growth rate, engaging in a round of competitive currency
devaluations with the Fed, to keep the 21-year old dollar - riyal peg intact.
Last week, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), reduced its reverse repo
rate by 50 basis points to 4.25%, and the UAE's central bank cut rates by as
much as 20 basis points, despite inflation raging a decade highs, to relieve
pressure on the weak dollar. But the dollar remains pinned at a 17-year low
against the UAE dirham surged and a 21-year low against the Saudi Arabian riyal,
as traders bet the Persian Gulf kingdoms would be unable to maintain their
pegs to the dollar and fight inflation at the same time.
And because the Saudi riyal is pegged to the US dollar, the Euro is 50% higher
from five years ago to a record 5.5 Saudi riyals, increasing the costs of import
prices from Europe. Inflation in Gulf countries is leading to calls for a wage
hike in Saudi Arabia, rent caps in other states, widespread complaints from
business leaders, and riots by migrant workers in the UAE demanding better
pay. Further Federal Reserve rate cuts designed to bail out Wall Street from
the sub-prime debt crisis, could put unbearable pressure on Saudi Arabia and
other Gulf oil producers to drop their currency pegs to the tumbling dollar.

So far, despite the enormous pressure to revalue the dollar peg, King Abdullah
has been holding the line with the greenback. The Saudi royal family has a
secret agreement with Washington, dating back to the early days of Saudi oil,
which barters US military protection for the desert kingdom, in exchange for
the Saudis making sure that crude oil stays priced in US dollars. The US military
umbrella also extends to the tiny Persian Gulf satellites. That forces oil
importers to buy roughly $1.5 billion per day of US dollars, in exchange for
the oil that OPEC sells on world markets.
Behind the smiles and handshakes in Riyadh last week, Saudi king Abdullah
is very worried about Iran's growing military might, and fears Tehran could
stir up the kingdom's own Shiite minority, suspected as a fifth column by Saudi
leaders. Saudi Shiites represent 15% of the population and live in the oil-rich
Eastern Province, adjacent to Kuwait and Bahrain, which both have sizable Shiite
populations.
The Saudi royal family is also worried about Iran's drive for nuclear invincibility.
On Nov 15, the UN's nuclear watchdog confirmed that Iran has 3,000 working
centrifuges in its nuclear facilities, a ten-fold increase from just a year
ago. If those 3,000 centrifuges can be made to work efficiently, Iran could
manufacture a nuclear bomb in 12-18 months. Iran said on Nov 27th, it has a
new missile named Ashoura, with a range of 1,250 miles that will enable Iran
to aim at targets in Europe.
Will Venezuela's Chavez dump the US Dollar?
On Nov 27th, Venezuela Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez stepped up his call
for OPEC member states to bill their oil sales in currencies other than the
weak US dollar. "The oil price is at $100 a barrel, but what dollar are we
talking about? It's a dollar that makes you laugh. The dollar has devalued
and it is distorting the oil market because there is a financial crisis knocking
on the US door," Ramirez said. He also pointed to US economic sanctions on
Iran that helped push crude toward $100 a barrel.
Until now, Chavez's outlandish comments have been brushed off as the ranting
of a raving madman, or a tin-horn crack-pot. But Chavez is one of the most
powerful political figures in the world today. He controls the Orinoco oil
fields, recognized as the world's single largest known oil deposits, and with
the proper development could help Venezuela surpass Saudi Arabia with the most
oil reserves. Last June, Chavez ousted US oil giants Exxon Mobil and Conoco
Phillips from the Orinoco Belt to consolidate his control.
If
Chavez gathers the courage to demand non-dollar payments for Venezuelan oil,
he could knock the dollar sharply lower, overriding Riyadh's artificial support.
Venezuela exports 1.5 mil barrels per day (bpd) to the US, out of a total of
2.6 million bpd, fetching close to $7 billion per month. "We better understand
the vulnerabilities to our economy and our lives, when we're dependent on Iranian
mullahs, and whackos in Venezuela,'" warned Arizona Senator John McCain on
January 22, 2007.
State-run Petroleos de Venezuela is sending more tankers of oil and fuel to
India and China this year, markets that are up to seven times more distant
than the US, to reduce Chavez's dependence on the US. "The US depends on us,
not we on them,'" Chavez said on May 16, when he predicted oil prices would
soar to $100 a barrel, if he chose to send its oil to China, Europe and other
countries instead of the US.

Chavez has boosted oil sales to China and India to 360,000 bpd this year,
and is shouldering the higher tanker carrier rates. Soaring global oil prices
have made up for lost revenue. Global tanker rates to transport crude oil were
stuck at four-year lows this past summer, but have doubled in the past two
weeks. That could cost Chavez an extra $6 /barrel to ship his oil to the Far
East.
So what's preventing Chavez from switching to non-dollar currencies for Venezuelan
oil right now? The maverick Venezuelan leader has often accused President Bush
of plotting to invade his oil-rich country, to bring down his regime. Switching
oil sales away from the dollar could mean Chavez would suffer the same fate
as the late Saddam Hussein. Last year, Chavez signed a $1 billion arms deal
with Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin, but 30 Russian fighter jets and a few
hundred thousand rifles are not enough to wage a war against a leading military
power.
Focus Turns to OPEC meeting in Abu Dhabi on Dec 5th,
Already, the Western media is fanning speculation of a boost in Saudi oil
output at the upcoming OPEC meeting in Abu Dhabi, to placate its military patron
in Washington and cool oil prices. Within OPEC, Saudi Arabia is the only producer
with any capacity to pump more oil. Saudi oil chief, Ali al-Naimi indicated
the kingdom had spare oil capacity of 2.3 million bpd. Total OPEC spare capacity
is 3 million bpd.
On Nov 21st, former Saudi oil minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani was engaging in psychological
warfare with crude oil traders, attempting to "jawbone" oil prices lower. "If
there are no disasters, then oil prices could fall to $75 per barrel after
the winter," he said. Already, crude oil has tumbled to $91.50 /bl on expectations
that Riyadh will boost its oil output by 500,000 bpd. How myopic have equity
traders become, now that $91 for oil is considered cheap, after seeing $99
last week?
"We observe with great concern the recent escalation of oil prices. But we
believe that the world market is well supplied and petroleum inventories are
comfortable," said Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi, on Nov 28th. Asked if OPEC
would agree to a second output increase on Dec 5, Naimi was non-committal, "We
need to look at the data, at the information, and then we will decide.

But on Nov 27th, Qatar's Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah downplayed speculation
of a boost in OPEC oil output next month. "My personal belief is that for the
moment there is no need to increase production. The market is saturated," he
said. Qatar is one of OPEC's smallest producers with oil output of around 830,000
bpd, but its final decisions are usually closely aligned with Saudi Arabia.
OPEC blames foreign central banks for printing too much money, which in turn,
encourages speculation in the oil market. "Please don't blame us for $93 oil," said
Qatari Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah on Oct 30th. "The market is increasingly
driven by forces beyond OPEC's control, by geopolitical events and the growing
influence of financial investors," said UAE oil chief Mohammed bin Dhaen al-Hamli.
Riyadh's ability to keep the crude oil market under wraps, by pumping more
oil might fizzle out by late 2008. The International Energy Agency is forecasting
that global demand will climb by 2.1 million bpd to 88 million bpd next year.
Global supply however, is forecast to rise a scant 200,000 bpd to 85.6 million
bpd, leaving a growing shortfall that would exhaust all of Saudi's spare capacity.

In the short term however, the direction of oil prices might depend upon the
Federal Reserve. "Nobody should ask OPEC to do something to lower oil prices,
because even if OPEC introduces another 500,000 barrels of oil next month,
the price is not going to change unless the dollar corrects itself," said Iranian
Oil Company chief Hojatollah Ghanimifard. "The US Treasury should take measures
to strengthen its currency if it doesn't want oil prices to continue rising," he
said.
There are some voices of sanity in the Federal Reserve network, calling for
the US Treasury to halt the reckless debasement of the US dollar. On Nov 27th,
Philly Fed chief Charles Plosser said, "In the current environment, providing
insurance through a reduction in the fed funds rate creates its own set of
additional risks. A lower funds rate creates a risk that inflation may be exacerbated
and inflationary expectations may begin to rise. In some circumstances, lowering
interest rates may prolong the painful process of price discovery," he said.
"In my view, if the FOMC members already expected some bad economic numbers
and had already taken those into account in their outlooks when they set the
fed funds rate target, then you should only see policy-makers take action when
the outlook changes significantly, not on a few bits and pieces of news," Plosser
added. However, the Philly Fed chief will not have a vote at the Fed's next
meeting on Dec 11th. His job is to sound hawkish, and create doubts and confusion
in the minds of dollar bears and gold bugs.

Clearly, the US Treasury expects a quick fix to the Global "Oil Shock" from
King Abdullah to cap global oil prices, by boosting Saudi oil output next month.
That would permit the Fed to lowers its lending rates and inject more dollars
into the hands of Wall Street dealers, while keeping the "crude oil vigilantes" at
bay. But a move by the Saudis to knock oil prices lower could also inflict
damage on its own stock market, which is just starting to shake off a nasty
two year hangover.
The Saudi All Share Index (SASI) has surged 20% over the past five weeks,
kicked off by a rush of Gulf capital into the local markets, and the recent
boom in oil prices. Saudi Arabia lifted remaining restrictions on citizens
from Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain, for trading
in the biggest Arab stock exchange, unleashing SASI from its two year slump.
But the rally could fizzle out, if king Abdullah knocks oil prices sharply
lower. Since an estimated 7,000 princes in Saudi Arabia own 70% of the stock
market, most likely, Abdullah will take the best interests of the royal family
into account.
Whether the historic rise in crude oil towards $100 /barrel heralds the arrival
of "Peak Oil," or is just a speculative bubble that will deflate, are just
some of the tough questions in today's brave new world of investing.
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