|
Gold Forecaster - Global Watch
Below is a snippet from the last week's issue from www.GoldForecaster.com | www.SilverForecaster.com
The
gold price has not only been reacting to the absolute levels of the oil price
and the fall of the $, but to the instability, uncertainty and downright
fear in the Capital markets and the banking system. Two reasons why there
is such a drama has been the activities of the "Carry Trade" and the resultant
Capital Tsunamis, or even the complete lack of available capital [much as
the shoreline pulls right back before the Tsunami hits].
"Carry Trade"
One wrong picture we must correct is that it is Japanese Housewives who are
behind the "carry trade". This is a cute but ridiculous concept. The "carry
trade" is a group title for a type of trading carried on all over the world
where interest rate differentials allow borrowing in one currency to lend in
another. Any currency trader anywhere in the world can do this is he has the
requisite standing with the banks. The bulk of these traders are housed in
massive dealing rooms in the vast majority of the banks in the world. These
operations may sound simple on the surface, but in reality can be difficult
to assess accurately and even more difficult to execute. The currency traders
at the world banks and they watch their screens every moment, moving and trading
with every change in exchange rates, closely in touch with in-house research.
These are clever young lads; working for their annual bonus with an eye on
the latest Porsche. They have enormous financial power, but are held on a tight
leash by their bosses.
The 'carry trade' concept comes with exchange rate risks, which are part of
the assessment of potential profits. The Yen was ideal because it was relatively
stable against the U.S.$ until recently after a weakening trend over the last
year as it fell from around Y100:$1 to Y122:$1. Then in the last month the
Yen turned viciously onto a strengthening trend, taking it back to Y109:$1.
The question now is will the Yen weaken again? If it does then the 'carry trade'
opportunity reappears.
But to even think that only the Yen has to be part of this business is again
naïve. The speed of the change in the Yen's value was probably precipitated
by these traders as they saw the dangers of a Yen strengthening and a $ weakening.
What would you do in that position? Why, close out your borrowing in Yen and
open it in the $ where interest rates and the exchange rates turned down. If
you had lent into the € or the NZ$ or the Australian $, or even the € and
you would hold that position, setting it against the U.S.$. With a strengthening
of the Yen, you wait until it peaks [in your opinion] then reopen your borrowing
in Yen and close it in the U.S. $. These are short-term traders who like positions
to hold as long as they can to maximize interest income, but stay nimble on
their toes, grabbing each opportunity as it rises and closing positions in
a heartbeat. At times working these desks can be as exciting as driving a Ferrari.
No wonder these Traders are burned out by the time they reach 40.
They contribute heavily to the creation of massive Capital flows that create
the rising volatility in the markets that we are seeing right now. Combine
these with other Soros like Traders alongside genuine Investors like Sovereign
wealth funds, you not only have potentially massive Capital Tsunamis, you have
a very real precipitant for much more uncertainty and instability. One crack
in the hull of the global monetary system and the capital will flood out or
in.
The Capital Tsunami's won't go away
Using the $ to pay for purchases of currencies with higher yields is proving
to be the most profitable trade in the foreign-exchange market amongst the "Carry
Trade".
A basket of currencies including the British Pound, Brazilian Real, and Hungarian
Forint financed with dollars returned 17% this year, compared with 9% when
funded in the Yen and 7% in Swiss Francs. Falling U.S. interest rates and increasing
volatility in the Yen and Franc are making the trade even more appealing. With
the $ giving the appearance of being in free fall, it increases the attractiveness
of using the currency to fund investments.
The last time the U.S. $ was used for so-called "carry trades" was in 2004,
when the Federal Reserve's target rate for overnight loans between banks was
1%. Since then, it has weakened 18% on a trade-weighted basis. The International
Monetary Fund says the $ made up 64.8% of central banks' currency reserves
in the second quarter, down from 71% in 1999, after the € was introduced.
Investors are borrowing the $ and using the money to buy assets in countries
with higher interest rates even though U.S. borrowing costs are 4% points more
than the Bank of Japan's and 1.75% points above the Swiss National Bank benchmark.
Investors may switch more than $100 billion of borrowing from Yen or Francs
into the $ in the next two years for 'carry trades'.
The value of futures contracts held this month by hedge funds and traders
betting against the $ was a record $33.9 billion more than contracts that profit
from a gain. Pacific Investment Management Co., which oversees the world's
biggest managed bond fund, is selling dollars against the Brazil Real, Mexican
Peso, Korean Won, and Singapore $. "When we think about currencies on a three-to-five-year
basis we're very bullish on emerging markets versus the U.S. dollar," said
Pimco. "That view is only reinforced when you look at interest-rate differentials."
The Real rose 18.5% this year and Singapore's currency strengthened 6.4%,
while the Won was little changed. The Mexican Peso fell 1.4%, the only one
of the 16 most-traded currencies to do worse in the foreign exchange market.
Using
a currency to finance trades does drive down its value as we saw in the exchange
rate of the Yen. Former Japanese vice finance minister Hiroshi Watanabe said
in May that one reason the Yen had fallen to a record low against the € was
because it was funding about $500 billion of "carry trades".
All in all the above information confirms that "Carry Trading" is here to
stay and getting bigger and bigger. It is a large contributor to the volatility
of exchange rates and financial ruptures in the world money system. It is "hot
money" and likely to fuel speculation against vulnerable currencies.
The instability and uncertainty such trading fuels will continue to make gold
more and more attractive and the foundation of paper money more and more fragile.
When one hears the Fed Chairman reflect this atmosphere, you just know some
will seek the safety of gold, at least. But some will become many as instability
and uncertainty is reflected in many market places.
Shortly in our pages, we will be covering just how "Marginal Supply" and "Syndications" have
also contributed to the instability and uncertainty has and will contribute
to making gold attractive, short, medium and long-term.
Please subscribe to: www.GoldForecaster.com for
the entire report or to the www.SilverForecaster.com.
|