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European Central Bank chief, Jean "Tricky" Trichet, likes to operate behind
a veil of "Smoke and Mirrors" in managing the Euro zone's monetary policy,
which is designed to fool most people, most of the time. Most importantly, "Tricky" Trichet,
has fueled the fastest growth in the Euro M3 money supply in history, running
at three times the rate of the ECB's original guidelines, deemed consistent
with low inflation.
So it shouldn't have been a surprise to learn that inflation in the Euro zone
hit an all-time high of 3.2% in January, and far above the ECB's inflation
target of 2 percent. Euro zone producer price inflation picked up to an annual
4.3% in December, led by higher food and energy costs. Trichet and his band
of propaganda artists have given plenty of lip service to fighting inflation
in recent months, but behind the veil of "Smoke and Mirrors", haven't lifted
a finger to put empty words into action.
"We are ready to act pre-emptively, if longer-term inflation expectations
threaten to persistently deviate from our inflation goal," warned Bundesbank
chief Axel Weber in the Jan 25th edition of the German newspaper Boersen-Zeitung.
On Jan 24th, Bank of France chief Christian Noyer said, "On European interest
rates, our principle objective is price stability, our duty is to defend purchasing
power," he said.

Yet under the leadership of "Tricky" Trichet, the purchasing power of the
Euro in "hard money" terms, measured against the price of gold, has collapsed
by 90% over the past four years. Speaking to the World Economic Forum in Davos
on Jan 24th, "Tricky" Trichet told central bankers that under the capital market
system it was natural for risks to emerge, but central bankers' main job is
to solidly anchor inflation expectations. "There is one needle in our compass
and it is price stability."
"What is extremely important is to offer as steady grounds as possible. First,
price stability and then solidly anchor inflation expectations. If risks did
not materialize you would not be living in a market economy, you would be living
in the Soviet Union," Trichet explained. Yet 2-weeks later, Trichet was shifting
his vigilant stance against inflation, and leaving the door ajar for ECB rate
cuts in the months ahead.
On Feb 7th, the ECB kept its repo rate steady at 4.00%, but Trichet placed
equal stress the downside risks to the Euro zone economy, on par with worries
over inflation. "Uncertainty about the prospect for economic growth is unusually
high and the risk surrounding the outlook for economic activity lies on the
downside. Looking ahead, the slowdown in the economies of some of the euro
area major trading partners is likely to have an impact on euro area real GDP
growth in 2008," he said.

Trichet's comments about a slowdown in the Euro zone economy were viewed as
a sign of capitulation, and that the ECB is open to cutting its interest rates
for the first time in almost five years. The Gold market knows what nobody
knows, and understands that lower ECB interest rates will further inflate the
Euro M3 money supply. The yellow metal jumped to a record 630 euros/ oz, during
Trichet's press conference, and is up roughly 16% over the past three months.
Slowing euro zone growth, a slowdown in the Chinese and global economy, financial
market turmoil and the strong euro might eventually compel the ECB to cut interest
rates rather than raise them. Financial markets in Frankfurt have already priced
in rates falling to 3.5% by year-end, after cuts by the Fed and central banks
in Britain and Canada to bolster their stock markets from the toxic sub-prime
debt bomb.

For the past few years, the ECB has pursued a policy of "Asset Targeting" adjusting
its repo rate in baby steps, and in-line with the direction of the Euro zone
stock markets, such as the benchmark German DAX Index. In the aftermath of
the German DAX's sudden 15% devaluation, traders expect the ECB to follow suit,
with a small round of rate cuts to 3.50% in the months ahead.
The yield on the German 2-year schatz has tumbled to 3.25%, far below the
ECB's 4.00% repo rate, another strong signal that the ECB will eventually abandon
it empty "war of words" against inflation, and exercise the "Trichet Put" by
lowering the repo rate. Very few traders in the gold market or German schatz,
believe the rhetoric of Greek central banker Nicholas Garganas who warned on
Feb 1st, "Our monetary policy is not led on what the markets expect. I'm very
concerned about the high inflation rate. Inflation risks remain on the upside," he
said.
Garganas said the ECB has noted that risks to the Euro zone economy were on
the downside, but "Our baseline scenario has not changed. The impact of the
slowdown in the US is to some extent offset by continued strength in emerging
market economies," he said. At the same time, strong demand for commodities
has contributed to unprecedented inflationary forces that are pushing global
prices up.

Commodity prices, as measured by the Dow Jones AIG Index, in euro terms, are
soaring to all-time highs, led by corn, soybeans, rice, wheat, sugar, platinum,
gold, silver, and high energy prices. Tracking the general direction of commodity
prices, Euro zone factory prices are 4.7% higher from a year ago, so an easier
ECB money policy, would simply generate faster inflation, and bury the Euro
zone economy deeper into the dreaded "Stagflation Trap."
"Tricky" Trichet is well aware of the inflation risks of slashing interest
rates to rescue the stock markets. In a speech delivered on April 23, 2002,
he said, "My feeling is that we should remain extremely cautious about it,
because it would be like opening Pandora's Box, if we start setting our key
policy rates according to asset price changes. Not only could large swings,
misalignments and bubbles of assets prices endanger price stability, which
is the main objective of most central banks, but also they could impinge upon
financial stability," he added.

Yet global traders expect "Tricky" Trichet to eventually show his weak hand,
and follow Fed chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke, who has pumped tens of billions of
dollars into the banking system since August, desperately trying to place a "safety
net" under the US stock markets. "B-52" Ben used a chain saw to cut the US
fed funds rate by a hefty 0.75%, the biggest single rate cut in more than 23-years,
after global stock markets melted own, and lost $7.5 trillion of value last
month.
Easy" Al Greenspan had a magic formula for rescue operations during times
of financial distress. From the stock market crash of 1987, to the S&L
crisis of the early 1990's, to the Asian crisis and the collapse of LTCM, to
the feared Y2k crisis, to the bursting of the tech stock bubble, Greenspan
simply injected massive doses of monetary morphine to bailout over-zealous
speculators in the stock market.
Global traders must see thru the ECB's game of "Smoke and Mirrors" designed
to fool most people, most of the time." Follow the money, and not the ECB's
empty rhetoric and propaganda that fly across the newswires each day. And remember,
gold knows what no one knows. "At some point, you have to choose between trusting
the natural stability of Gold, and the honesty and intelligence of members
of the government. With due respect for these gentlemen, I advise you, as long
as the capitalist system lasts, to vote for Gold," said George Bernard Shaw
in 1928.
To stay on top of volatile markets, subscribe to the Global Money Trends
newsletter today, for insightful analysis and predictions of the future
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(3) Foreign currencies (4) Libor interest rates, global bond markets and
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Gary Dorsch
http://www.sirchartsalot.com/
Mr Dorsch worked on the trading floor of the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange for nine years as the chief Financial Futures Analyst
for three clearing firms, Oppenheimer Rouse Futures Inc, GH Miller and Company,
and a commodity fund at the LNS Financial Group.
As a transactional broker for Charles Schwab's Global
Investment Services department, Mr Dorsch handled thousands of customer
trades in 45 stock exchanges around the world, including Australia, Canada,
Japan, Hong Kong, the Euro zone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico, and
New Zealand, and Canadian oil trusts, ADR's and Exchange Traded Funds.
He wrote a weekly newsletter from 2000 thru September 2005
called, "Foreign Currency Trends" for Charles Schwab's Global Investment
department, featuring inter-market technical analysis, to understand the dynamic
inter-relationships between the foreign exchange, global bond and stock markets,
and key industrial commodities.
Disclaimer: SirChartsAlot.com's analysis and insights
are based upon data gathered by it from various sources believed to be reliable,
complete and accurate. However, no guarantee is made by SirChartsAlot.com as
to the reliability, completeness and accuracy of the data so analyzed. SirChartsAlot.com
is in the business of gathering information, analyzing it and disseminating
the analysis for informational and educational purposes only. SirChartsAlot.com
attempts to analyze trends, not make recommendations. All statements and expressions
are the opinion of SirChartsAlot.com and are not meant to be investment advice
or solicitation or recommendation to establish market positions. Our opinions
are subject to change without notice. SirChartsAlot.com strongly advises readers
to conduct thorough research relevant to decisions and verify facts from various
independent sources.
Copyright © 2005-2008 SirChartsAlot,
Inc. All rights reserved.
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