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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 374.22-0.2%Nov 21 4:00 PM EST

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To: RJA_ who wrote (53494)8/13/2009 5:19:11 AM
From: Amark$p  Read Replies (1) of 217975
 
Yes I really liked this e-book and his blog.

In regard to China, I fould this analysis of interest:
marketskeptics.com , especially this part:
How China's Dollar Peg Keeps Oil Prices High
by: Keith Schaefer August 11, 2009

Millions of consumers and investors in North America are wondering how the global oil price and the price of gasoline at the pumps can be going up in the face of rising global oil inventories and no significant increase in demand for anything in the US.

According to Philip Treick, Managing Partner of Thermopolis Partners, a large part of the reason oil and copper have been strong is because the Chinese have re-pegged their currency, the Yuan, to the dollar, since July 2008.

Without a peg, the Yuan would naturally rise against the US dollar, attracting capital as one of the few growing economies in the world (as the Yuan did when it floated up between 2005 - July 2008). But an increasing Yuan was causing China to lose manufacturing jobs to other countries and cause social unrest.

Simplistically, in order to maintain that peg - which means forcing the Yuan down - the Chinese must print Yuan out of thin air (just like the Americans) to buy US dollars. This increases their money supply. To offset that, they then need to sell Yuan via debt - create an obligation that is an offset to that new increase in money supply. But a couple of their debt auctions have failed recently, greatly increasing the monetary base in China.

This has had the effect of flooding the Chinese banking system with capital, which has gone into new lending by banks, the stock market…and hard assets like oil, driving up growth and prices in an otherwise contracting global economy.

Maintaining the peg is straining the Chinese economy - if and when something breaks, what will that mean for the oil price? It should be good for investors in oil if the thing that breaks is the peg.

QUICK HISTORY

China pegged its currency to the US dollar up until 2005. Bowing to international but mostly US pressure, the Chinese began a slow but steady upward revaluing of the Yuan from 2005 to July 17, 2008.

As this was a controlled rise, with very low volatility, investors and speculators poured billions of dollars into the Yuan to gain from its appreciation. Borrow from a declining US dollar, invest in a rising Yuan, and make 10-15% of low risk money. That’s called a “carry-trade”.

Understand that the international community wanted the Yuan to rise to make Chinese goods more expensive, and hopefully other nations could get back some of the tens of millions of manufacturing jobs that had been lost to China.

But as the Yuan rose, China started losing jobs to other countries, mostly in Southeast Asia. By July 2008, so many factories had been closed and jobs lost that the Chinese government made an un-announced policy decision to re-peg the Yuan to the dollar.

There would be no more appreciation of the Yuan against the US dollar. THE CARRY TRADE WAS OVER. Speculators short the dollar were forced to cover as the US dollar started to soar as this trade was unwound.

(Now, the end of the carry trade was well reported, but most media credit it to the subprime crisis in the US. But the mortgage crisis started in 2006 - the credit contraction started then. The crash of October 2008 was a full two years later - only weeks after the Yuan was pegged again.)

You can see the relationship between the Yuan peg and the oil price in the following chart:
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