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To: Sully- who wrote (52747)6/5/2002 8:27:06 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Greenspan between a rock and a a hard place.

Is The Declining Dollar "Checkmate" For Mr. Greenspan?
June 04, 2002

I have always maintained that so long as Mr. Greenspan could keep "printing" dollars at will, the
economic checkmate from the burst 1990s' stock market bubble could be delayed. And, as the
chart below shows, Mr. Greenspan did indeed print a lot of dollars last year. On a
year-over-year basis, M2 growth went from about 6% at the end of 2000 to about 9% just
before September 11, 2001. The spike right after September 11 was due to a lot of bank credit
extended to cover overdrafts resulting from disruptions in the payments system. Even though
M2 growth has slowed this year, the latest reading of 8% still implies a lot of overtime printing
activity at the Fed.

But if the US dollar continues to depreciate, which I think it will with only minor countertrend
rallies, then Mr. Greenspan is going to lose the policy latitude to keep printing greenbacks at
will. Ironically, though, until Greenspan takes action to slow the dollar's decline, he will be forced
to print even more dollars. Here's how that works. Once the forex sharks smell the blood in the
water, they will start to borrow dollars in order to sell them for euros, yen or gold. Currently,
they can borrow dollars for three months at a ridiculously low annual rate of less than 2%. As
the demand for short-term "shorting" US dollar credit increases, short-term U.S. interest rates
would "want" to rise. But by maintaining its fed funds target at 1.75%, the Fed is signaling that it
doesn't want short-term rates to rise. The way the Fed prevents rates from rising is to create
more credit - i.e., print more dollars.

But how does this limit Mr. Greenspan's latitude to keep on printing? Inflation. The cheaper
dollar is, all else the same, going to temporarily make US exports more competitive in world
markets. Why do you think that the National Association of Manufacturers has been lobbying for
a weaker dollar policy from the Bush administration, what ever that policy might be? So, foreign
demand for US goods and services will start to augment domestic demand. Unless aggregate
supply curves are infinitely elastic, which only "new era" types and Keynesians believe, then an
increase in aggregate demand is going to lead to an increase in prices, i.e., higher inflation.
Moreover, domestic producers will now have some "cover" to raise their prices inasmuch as the
dollar prices of their foreign competitors will have risen.

As of April, the year-over-year percent change in the US CPI was 1.6%. Thus, the fed funds
rate is only 15 basis points over the inflation rate. Unless Greenspan hikes the funds rate soon,
which he has shown no inclination to want to do, then, in the second half of this year, the CPI
inflation rate is likely to rise above the funds rate, in part due to the depreciating dollar. A
negative inflation-adjusted return on short-term US money will drive global investors out of the
dollar all the more. It's a Sid-vicious cycle.

Why doesn't Greenspan want to raise the funds rate now? For starters, have you looked at what
the stock market has done this year? If it keeps on its present downward course, 2002 will mark
the third consecutive calendar year in which the stock market has fallen. This hasn't happened
since the 1930s. Despite all of the bravado about housing being more important than the stock
market when it comes to augmenting consumer spending, Greenspan is frightened as to what a
continued bear market in stocks will do to aggregate demand. And speaking of housing, would a
Fed hike in interest rates be a plus for the residential real estate market and home-equity
borrowing? As Bill Gross has pointed out, Corporate America has borrowing in the bond market
and swapping this obligation for floating-rate exposure. If Greenspan hikes the funds rate,
Corporate America's interest costs will rise significantly, perhaps precipitating even more
bankruptcies. And, oh yes. Congressional elections are scheduled for November 5. If Greenspan
raises rate now and the Republicans lose control of the House, he might incur the wrath of the
Bush-family "enforcer" - Babs!

So, Alan, old buddy, it's beginning to look like checkmate. If you raise rates now to defend the
dollar, you run the risk of aborting the expansion. If you hold off, the dollar continues to
weaken, inflation continues to worsen, and you have to raise rates a lot more later this year or
early next. The expansion gains speed this year only to hit a brick wall next year. If you can
manage to avoid this checkmate, then Big Green(span) will have topped Big Blue.

Paul Kasriel
Director of Economic Research
Northern Trust



To: Sully- who wrote (52747)6/5/2002 10:57:04 PM
From: RR  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 65232
 
Hey Tim! Well, Jenny Wren finally built her nest in the garage again. Now we're having to park the cars outside so the cats can't climb on them and jump on the shelves where the nest is built.

She chatters up an storm if we go out there now.

We'd seen her in early spring flying through there but never found a nest. She probably built elsewhere back then, and now she came back to her regular spot and built her second nest for the year. She usually comes back to the same spot each year.

RR



To: Sully- who wrote (52747)6/6/2002 2:23:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Bush must press for comprehensive talks

Mayhem in Megiddo
The Guardian
Thursday June 6, 2002
guardian.co.uk

If one more message were needed for President Bush to use America's diplomatic muscle to help resolve the crisis in the Middle East, it came with yesterday's appalling bombing in Megiddo. The carnage which left 13 Israeli soldiers and three other bus passengers dead was caused by the first car bomb since the start of the Palestinian intifada, marking an alarming new escalation. Israeli security forces and alert civilians have recently managed to prevent several other suicide attacks but explosive-laden vehicles on the move are even harder to spot than suspicious individuals. Israel's prime minister, Ariel Sharon, has responded predictably with a new incursion into Jenin, but his tactics of meeting force with greater force are simply not working. Looking to Yasser Arafat to clamp down on the suicide bombers is not a sufficient solution. Diplomacy provides the only prospect of real progress. The EU is doing what it can to bring about an international conference, but it is clear that unless the US becomes fully engaged, the process will never start.

Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak will be making this point when he discusses his own plan, a variant of the Saudi peace proposals, with Mr Bush today. The Egyptian leader advocates international recognition of a Palestinian state with borders yet to be determined. At this stage details are not as important as a strong commitment by the US to a conference which will hammer out both a timetable and a final settlement based on the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel. It should give firm guarantees that the outside world will help to implement the agreement, in part by providing peacekeepers and monitors to patrol the new international borders.

Mr Sharon's call for a vaguer and shorter meeting focused largely on terrorism and security must be rejected. The Israeli prime minister and his powerful supporters in America have been clever at using Washington's "war on terrorism" to narrow the agenda. No one can deny that the Megiddo bombing, like the other suicide attacks before it, was an unacceptable act of terror. But terrorism is not an ideology or a creed. It is a tactic. The ground from which the attack of September 11 sprang is not the same as the one which motivates those who volunteer to commit atrocities like yesterday's. Mr Bush should see that, and put his weight behind serious talks.