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Central bankers and finance ministers from the world's top-10 economic powers,
huddled behind closed doors in Tokyo last weekend, trying to work out a joint
strategy to rescue the global stock markets from another possible meltdown.
Roughly $6-trillion was lost on global stock markets in the month of January,
triggered by the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression, and a
US housing slide, that could topple the giant US economy into recession.
Central bankers from the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Canada, Britain,
Italy, China, South Korea, and Russia, collectively control the money spigots
in three-quarters of the world's $65 trillion economy. "We are not yet at the
end of the market crisis," warned Euro-group finance chief Jean-Claude Juncker. "The
corrections will drag on for a few weeks, or months. We have agreed in Tokyo
that if there are irrational price movements in the markets, we will collectively
take suitable measures to calm the financial markets," he said.
Asked what type of collective action the G-7 might take during another stock
market meltdown, Juncker said, "Whoever has a strategy should not lay it out.
Otherwise it will lose its effect, if it is explained." Russian Finance Minister
Alexei Kudrin hinted at a coordinated round of G-7 rate cuts. "Coordination
of efforts between central banks on their refinancing rates may soften the
consequences of the global credit crisis, because this is the key factor supporting
financial systems," he explained.
Other weapons in the G-7's arsenal to counter a bear market for equities include
brainwashing investors thru the media, fudging economic and inflation data,
inflating the money supply, managing the "yen carry" trade, and outright intervention
in stock index futures, championed by the US "Plunge Protection Team."

After surveying the global landscape, the G-7 warned, "Downside risks still
persist, including further deterioration of the US residential housing markets
and tighter credit conditions." Bank of Italy chief Mario Draghi added, "Risks
are further shocks may lead to a prolonged recurrence of the acute liquidity
pressures experienced last year. We face a prolonged adjustment, which could
be difficult," he warned.
Banks and brokerage firms around the world face $400 billion in write-offs
of toxic sub-prime US mortgages, said German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck
on Feb 11th. "The crisis that spread from the US property market to global
financial markets may continue well into 2008," he warned. The US credit crisis
is no longer just a sub-prime mortgage problem. Many prime loans made in recent
years also allowed borrowers to pay less initially, but with higher adjustable
payments in later years.
With US home prices falling and lenders clamping down, homeowners with solid
credit are also under the same financial stress as those with sub-prime credit.
Over 40% of all mortgages issued from late 2005 to early 2007 are based on
adjustable rates, so about $45 billion would reset each month this year. The
expected tax rebates from Washington will cover less than two months of home
payments.
Wall Street fueled the growth of sub-prime lending by packaging $1.8 trillion
of risky home loans into bundled securities, and then marketing them as high-grade
investments. But with US mortgage foreclosures set to top 1 million this year
and home prices falling at the fastest pace since the Great Depression, the
same Wall Street investment banks who profited by putting buyers into properties
they couldn't afford, are begging central banks and governments to manage the
bust.

In Chicago, futures contracts for the Case-Shiller Home Price Index in the
20-biggest US cities are 9.4% lower from a year ago, and the slide might get
worse as $550 billion of sub-prime adjustable rate mortgages adjust upwards
this year. The Fed's rate cutting spree since September, slashing the fed funds
rate by 2.25%, might help by reducing the reset rate for many adjustable-rate
loans.
But US consumers are hobbled by falling stock prices, tighter credit conditions,
high gasoline prices, and a soft labor market. Sliding home values are also
eroding the equity US households can tap for cash at the same time banks are
tightening credit, threatening the consumer spending that the economy needs
to dodge recession. "Going forward, we will continue to watch developments
closely and take appropriate actions, individually and collectively, in order
to secure stability and growth in our economies," the G-7 said after their
secret meeting.
The big threat to US household spending is primarily focused on the slumping
housing market, but a double-barreled assault can be disastrous, so if the
US stock markets keeps sliding, it would probably tip the economy into recession.
And a US recession could undermine the global economy, like tumbling dominoes,
since the US consumer buys about 20% of the world's $14.5 trillion of exports.
The Federal Reserve has been the most hyper-active G-10 central bank in pumping
liquidity into the global markets, slashing the fed funds rate to a negative
1%, in inflation adjusted terms. The Fed "will be carefully evaluating incoming
information bearing on the economic outlook and will act in a timely manner
as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside
risks," Fed chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee on
Feb 14th.

Since the Fed began lowering rates in August, the Dow Jones AIG Commodity
Index has jumped +22% to a record high of 200-points, while the MSCI All World
Index, measuring the top-43 stock markets, has tumbled 7-percent. Commodities
have historically been regarded as wildly volatile and risky, but since 2006,
crude oil, gold, copper, silver, platinum, cocoa, and grains have soared, hitting
record highs, and have trounced returns in the mis-managed G-7 stock markets.
G-10 central bankers are ignoring the deleterious side-effects of their super-easy
money policies. The Fed and G-7 central bankers have injected hundreds of billions
of dollars into the global money markets, fueling the "Commodity Super Cycle," and
intensifying global inflation. Central bankers in Canada and the UK have joined
the Fed's rate cutting spree. But the big surprise for G-7 central bankers
might be how high commodities can fly, even in the face of a global economic
slowdown.
The G-10 central banks will tolerate an upward creep in global inflation,
because the pain required to kick the money printing habit is deemed too high. "Downside
risks to the US economy are the most important factor for Federal Reserve interest
rate policy for the time being," said Chicago Fed chief Charles Evans on Feb
14th. "The Fed's focus needs to be on those risks, even though inflation has
been running a bit higher than we would like," he said.

A remarkable run-up in prices of wheat, corn, oilseeds, rice, and dairy products,
along with sharply higher energy prices, have been blamed on supply shortfalls,
strong demand for bio-fuels, and an inflow of $150 billion from investment
funds. From a year ago, Chicago wheat futures have soared +120%, corn +20%,
and soybeans are +80% higher. Rough rice is up 55%, and platinum touched $2,000
/oz, up 80% from a year ago, while US cocoa futures hit a 24-year high.
In agricultural commodities, there are supply constraints in terms of the
amount of arable land available. There are huge shifts in demand from the emerging
economies, where populations are moving to cities, and incomes are rising,
and changing dietary patterns. Entering energy into the food equation, the
surging ethanol industry has put a squeeze on the corn market, causing prices
to be demand driven. Bio-diesel traders are looking at soybean and vegetable
oils.
Fund managers are pouring money into commodities across the board as a hedge
against the explosive growth of the world's money supply, and competitive currency
devaluations engineered by central banks. Wheat had climbed nearly 10% since
the beginning of the year, hitting an all-time high of $11.50 /bushel, as investment
funds kept buying futures with US wheat supplies at the lowest level in 60-years.

Because most global commodities are traded in US dollars, the Federal Reserve
has a special role to play in defending the value of the US dollar in the foreign
exchange markets. On Dec 27th, Hu Xiaolian, director of China's Foreign Exchange
wrote, "If the US federal funds rate continues to fall, this will certainly
have a harmful effect on the US dollar exchange rate and the international
currency system," Hu wrote.
Central banks are flooding the markets with paper, and nobody takes the dollar,
the Euro, the yen, or the pound seriously. Investors are turning to gold because
it is the only true store of value. The Arab oil kingdoms and Asian exporting
nations are importing inflation through their currency pegs and dirty floats,
but their patience with the US dollar is near the snapping point.
OPEC may abandon the US dollar for pricing oil and adopt the Euro, said OPEC
Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri on Feb 8th. "Maybe we can price the oil
in the Euro. It can be done, but it will take time. It took two world wars
and more than 50 years for the dollar to become the dominant currency. Now
we are seeing another strong currency coming into the frame, which is the Euro," said
Badri.
The US Treasury and the Fed are risking a disastrous replay of the 1970's,
when high oil prices fueled double-digit inflation. Every time the Fed lowered
rates to boost job growth, inflation took off, causing a vicious price spiral.
The Fed let inflation rage for so long that it took a strict monetarist approach,
adopted by Paul Volcker in 1979 to finally defeat inflation. However, the cost
of subduing the inflation monster was a deep recession, with unemployment hitting
11% in 1982.
Excessive monetary accommodation just takes the economy from bubble to bubble
to bubble. This time around, the Fed's devaluation of the dollar, based upon
Mr Greenspan's 2001-02 blueprints, has unleashed the biggest wave of commodity
inflation seen since the 1970's.
Bank of England follows in Fed's Footsteps
With 1.5 million adjustable rate mortgages due to reset in the UK this year,
the Bank of England has joined the Fed's money printing orgy. On Feb 7th, the
BoE lowered its key lending rate by a quarter-point to 5.25%, following a similar
cut in December. Pressure has increased on the BoE's Monetary Policy Committee
to slash borrowing costs, even as soaring energy and food bills are driving
inflation higher.
Britain's factories are facing the strongest input price pressures on record
and are ramping up prices to compensate, but that didn't stop the Bank of England
from lowering its base rate to 5.25% last week, to shore up the Footsie-100
stock index. And there is little sign that UK price pressures are set to ease
with the cost of raw materials surging 18.9% from a year earlier, the fastest
rate in 22-years.

UK producer prices are surging at an annualized 5.7% rate in January, a 16-year
high, not surprising, given the bullish trends in the global commodity markets.
The price of imported food into the United Kingdom rose by nearly 15% in the
past 12-months. But the bigger fear haunting the BoE is that weaker growth
will undermine housing and stock prices, putting further pressure on bank balance
sheets, and prompting a further tightening in credit conditions.
On Feb 13th, the BoE projected an economic slowdown to zero percent in the
first two quarters of 2008, with a high probability that the UK economy will
contract in at least one quarter. BoE chief Mervyn King's message was blunt. "Tighter
credit conditions will bear down on demand, while rising energy, food and import
prices will push up on inflation. Both developments are now more acute than
in November," he warned.

Mr King says the BoE is powerless to counter surging commodity prices, which
he believes "will result in a genuine reduction in our standard of living.
However, there is no point in us going mad and pretending it is sensible to
double interest rates in order to bring inflation back to target in the next
six months," he argued. Instead, King thinks that slower growth over the coming
year will "reduce pressures on capacity" and bring inflation down to target
towards the beginning of 2009.
"The Bank of England needs to stop worrying about inflation and cut interest
rates to prevent a sharp slowdown in growth," said BoE policymaker David Blanchflower
on January 27th. "It's essential that the BoE get ahead of the curve, as the
current level of UK interest rates are restrictive. Evidence from the housing
and the commercial property market is worrying. It is time for the MPC to lead
not follow. Worrying about inflation at this time seems like fiddling when
Rome burns," he declared
Herein is the crux of the "Stagflation" trap. Lowering interest rates to bolster
the local economy can backfire by igniting faster inflation, and erode the
purchasing power of local citizens. But the BoE has been destroying the purchasing
power of UK citizens for years, by inflating the British M4 money supply, up
12.4% from a year ago. Gold has risen by 110% against the British pound from
four years ago, and is a proven vehicle for protecting asset wealth from abusive
central bankers.

To ease the plight of its exporters, the BoE engineered a 10% devaluation
of the British pound, from a 26-year high against the dollar in November. Britain's
goods trade deficit with the rest of the world ballooned to a record at 87.4
billion pounds ($170.4 billion) last year, up 10% from 2006. The UK's current-account
deficit widened to 5.7% of gross domestic product, the highest of G-7 nations.
But a weaker pound also exacerbates Britain's inflation problem, by lifting
import prices.
"The BoE needs to balance the risk that a sharp slowing in activity pulls
inflation below target against the risk expectations keep inflation above target," the
BoE said. Given the choice of defending the purchasing power of the British
pound or rescuing the housing and stock market, the BoE will eventually show
its weak hand, and lower its interest rates further, spinning its citizens
on the treadmill of inflation.
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