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This week's announcement by the Fed that it will create a new mechanism to
provide funding for credit challenged banks has been lauded by Wall Street
as an innovative approach to solving the credit crisis. In truth, it is really
just the same response the Fed has had for all problems great and small: crank
up the printing presses, shower money on the problem, and hope that financial
pain can be obscured by the balm of inflation. Both the Fed and Washington
politicians are completely clueless regarding the ill effects of the plan,
and are simply acting in desperation to keep a ticking time bomb from exploding
before the next election.
The Fed and other foreign central banks will provide this liquidity by auctioning
low interest rate loans to holders of U.S. mortgaged-backed securities. The
loans will be made under the same terms currently in use at the Fed's "discount
window", with the added benefits of even lower interest rates and anonymity
(borrowers wish to avoid the public stigma that comes from utilizing the discount
window). Since the loans can be collateralized by mortgage-backed securities,
the Fed will be on the hook should these loans not be repaid. In other words,
the losses will simply be monetized, or more precisely socialized, as they
are passed to the public in the form of inflation.
To get a sense of the losses that potentially await the public, in a recent
transaction, E-Trade Financial liquidated its entire portfolio of subprime
mortgaged-backed securities for a mere 27 cents on the dollar!
The hope that this additional credit will somehow alleviate the problems in
the U.S. housing market is extremely naïve. Virtually none of this newly
created credit will find its way back into the domestic mortgage market. With
our real estate prices still too high, the gathering potential for lenders
to be forced to assume liability for "unsophisticated" borrowers, the added
uncertainty regarding mortgage terms, and the persistent weakness in the U.S.
dollar, such loans will be far too risky for most foreign lenders to consider.
Instead, these banks will take this cheap Fed money and invest it in higher
yielding assets overseas. Off-loading risky U.S. mortgages to the Fed in exchange
for cheap loans that can be used to finance better yielding foreign investments
could well develop into the next carry-trade of choice.
The real losers will be ordinary Americans, who do not get the benefit of
the newly created money, but merely suffer the consequences of rising domestic
prices and a falling standard of living. With this new plan, the Fed is laying
its cards on the table and its hand is a loser. If mortgage losses are socialized
through inflation, this new cure will be even worse for the economy than the "housing
bubble disease" the Fed infected us with in the first place.
Now that the Fed has upped the inflation ante it's time to press our bets
on gold. About two weeks ago Goldman Sachs predicted that shorting gold will
be the best trade of 2008. Call me cynical, but knowing Goldman Sachs, my hunch
is this shrewd investment bank, recently criticized for shorting the very subprime
loans it was touting to its customers, may be perusing a similar strategy with
gold. Perhaps Goldman has a current short position it needs to cover or wants
to buy a lot more gold, but needs to convince others to sell it to them.
Maybe Goldman will be right after all. Shorting gold could turn out to be
the best trade of 2008, but not for those who short it, but for Goldman Sachs
as it takes the other side of the trades. Recent moves by Paulson and Bernanke
virtually guarantee that gold will rise. It's good to be the king.
For a more in depth analysis of the inherent dangers facing the U.S. economy
and the implications for U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
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More importantly, don't wait for reality to set in. Protect your wealth and
preserve your purchasing power before it's too late. Discover the best way
to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com,
download my free research report on the powerful case for investing in foreign
equities available at www.researchreportone.com,
and subscribe to my free, on-line investment newsletter at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
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