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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 9:19:51 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116555
 
Japan, China Reaffirm Currency Policies After Greenspan Warning
March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Japan and China reaffirmed plans to buy U.S. dollars to prevent their currencies from appreciating after Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the two countries may soon have to reduce purchases.

``We haven't changed our stance that we will take appropriate steps'' when necessary, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda told reporters at a regular press conference in Tokyo. ``Our exchange-rate policy remains unchanged,'' Bai Li, a Beijing-based official with the People's Bank of China, said in a telephone interview.

Greenspan, speaking yesterday at the Economics Club of New York, said Asian central banks may have to reduce their ``extraordinary'' purchases of dollar assets soon. Japan may have to scale back its yen sales as its economy picks up and China will probably have to ditch the yuan's peg to the dollar in order to prevent excessive money- supply growth, he said.

``The current performance of the Japanese economy suggests that we are getting closer to the point where continued intervention at the present scale will no longer meet the monetary policy needs of Japan,'' Greenspan said. China ``will be confronted with the choice of curtailing its purchases of dollar assets or facing an overheated economy with the associated economic instabilities.''

Japan, China and other Asian nations' central banks have purchased $240 billion in dollar assets since the start of 2002 in an effort to keep their currencies from rising against the dollar, Greenspan said. These dollar purchases help Asian exporters compete and flood the region's economies with money, spurring borrowing, spending and investment.

Investment

Japan's economy, the largest after the U.S., grew in the fourth quarter at its fastest pace in more than 13 years as corporate investment picked up. China's central bank has taken steps to curb lending, citing concern too much investment is pouring into property development and other industries.

``Greenspan is right: China is in a dilemma now,'' said Chen Xingdong, Beijing-based chief China economist at BNP Paribas Peregrine. ``The big question is how China can maintain the peg without causing inflation.''

China's foreign-exchange reserves, the highest after Japan's, rose a record 41 percent to $403 billion last year. The nation's M2 money supply increased 20 percent last year, exceeding the central bank's 18 percent targeted growth rate, and inflation accelerated to a 6 1/2-year high of 3.2 percent in December.

The Bank of Japan, at the behest of the Ministry of Finance, sold 10.5 trillion yen ($95.3 billion) during the two months ended Feb. 25, more than half of the annual record amount spent last year, to protect earnings of exporters. Japan's economy, which grew at its fastest pace in 13 years last quarter, may not need those sales as growth continues and price declines slow, Greenspan said.

No Change

``Greenspan seems to be objecting to Japan's aggressive intervention stance,'' said Masato Degawa, who oversees the equivalent of $9.1 billion as chief investment officer at SG Yamaichi Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. ``Still, Japan's biggest agenda is to protect its export-led recovery so I don't think his comments will force Japan to change its stance.''

The yen traded at 110.23 per dollar at 5:06 p.m. in Tokyo, from 110.10 late Tuesday in New York.

The yuan, whose value is held at about 8.3 per dollar, would appreciate to 7.9220 in a year if freely traded, forward contracts show. Such contracts allow investors to bet on the future value of a currency that is not fully convertible, or hedge investments that are denominated in it.

The gap between the pegged and the implied rates narrowed to minus 3,550 as of 4:09 p.m. in Hong Kong from a discount of 3,600 late yesterday in Asia.

China is working toward letting market forces decide the value of the yuan, a move the U.S. has called for, Premier Wen Jiabao said Monday in a speech carried by the official Xinhua news agency. He didn't give a timeframe, adding China plans to keep the yuan ``basically stable.''

quote.bloomberg.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 9:32:29 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan says a declining dollar will help curb America's huge trade deficit but suggests it could happen sooner if Japan and China's currency interventions were smaller.

Greenspan also said that while U.S. interest rates have been very low for some time, they'll have to rise eventually.


"The currency depreciation that we have experienced of late should eventually help to contain our current account deficit as foreign producers export less to the United States," the Fed chief told the Economic Club of New York Tuesday.

Greenspan noted overseas claims on the United States -- represented by the U.S. current account imbalance -- have grown markedly and that it was hard to say when that will slow or even reverse, "but it is evident that the greater the degree of international flexibility, the less risk of a crisis."

He said the U.S. economy has demonstrated its increased flexibility by weathering a series of severe shocks since mid-2000 and posted only a small drop in national economic output.

In a wide-ranging address, Greenspan said he did not believe heavy currency intervention by Asian countries, including Japan and China, was driving the value of the euro up against the dollar, notwithstanding European nations' complaints that that was happening, and threatening their economic recovery.

"But a more likely possibility is that Asian currency intervention has had little effect on other currencies and that the trade-weighted average of the dollar is, thus, somewhat elevated relative to the rate that would have prevailed without intervention," Greenspan said, implying the dollar might have fallen more swiftly and thus slowed imports.

In early New York trading Tuesday, the dollar turned sharply higher against the euro and the yen, aided by a manufacturing report Monday that stoked speculation a forthcoming U.S. jobs report would show solid improvement.

On interest rates, Greenspan said: "The federal funds rate is accommodative and at some point it will have to rise back to a more neutral state, because it is inconsistent with general long-term stability.

"This is a very special case that we are dealing with," he added, since the fed funds rate -- the Fed's target rate for overnight loans between banks, is at 1 percent, the lowest in more than 40 years.


Analysts expect the central bank to start tightening policy at some point this year as the economic recovery strengthens.

edition.cnn.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 9:38:33 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Japan Plays Down Greenspan Remarks
Wednesday March 3, 3:14 am ET
By Mari Terawaki

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki on Wednesday played down U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's remark that Japan's economic recovery may soon no longer justify its large-scale intervention to hold down the yen.
Even though the economy logged its strongest growth in 13 years in the final three quarters of last year, deflation remains a concern and Japan's currency policy stance remained unchanged, Tanigaki told reporters.

"The Bank of Japan is committed to its monetary easing as long as deflation persists, but its policy will be different, naturally, when deflation has been overcome," Tanigaki said.

"Our policy (the Finance Ministry's currency policy) once deflation is overcome will also be different from that when deflation is still persisting."

Asked about the prospects for deflation, which has stifled investment and spending in Japan for nearly half a decade, Tanigaki said: "We cannot yet be optimistic."


Greenspan had said on Tuesday that Asian central banks' purchases of U.S. dollar assets resulting from their foreign exchange intervention had been "extraordinary" and, in the case of Japan, "awesome."

"The current performance of the Japanese economy suggests that we are getting closer to the point where continued intervention at the present scale will no longer meet the monetary policy needs of Japan," Greenspan told the Economic Club of New York.

NOT US

Ministry of Finance data last Friday showed that Japan's yen-selling intervention had topped 10 trillion yen ($91 billion) in the first two months of this year -- already half of last year's 20 trillion yen, which was an annual record.

As Japan's gross domestic product figures have shown growth picking up strongly over the last few quarters, Japanese officials have begun to cite deflation, rather than the impact on exports, in justifying their intervention to hold down the yen.

A higher yen adds to the downward pressure on prices as it makes imports cheaper. Yen-selling intervention also has a monetary easing effect as it tends to bring more yen funds into the private-sector banking system.

By last month, the yen had risen around 20 percent over the past two years to scale 3- year highs around 105 to the dollar (JPY=), but it has since pulled back about five percent to hit a four-month low of around 110.40 on Tuesday.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda, the Japanese government's top spokesman, insisted that Greenspan was not criticizing Japan's intervention.

"We do not take it as criticism toward us," he told a news conference.

"If there are rapid swings in the future as well, we will take appropriate measures as necessary," he added. Fukushiro Nukaga, the head of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's policy research council, concurred.

"I think the (Greenspan) comments were meant as a check, but at the same time there seemed to be a sense that Japan shouldn't be criticized too much," Nukaga told reporters.

"Japan's economy is finally starting to improve. It's natural to seek stability in foreign exchange," he said.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 9:47:41 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Greenspan: China could overheat
Value of yuan could rise if dollar purchases slowed

China could be forced to limit its dollar purchases to avoid excessive economic growth, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan warned Tuesday.

"China's central bank purchases of dollars, unless offset, threaten an excess of so-called high-powered money expansion and a consequent overheating of the Chinese economy," Greenspan said in prepared remarks to the Economic Club of New York.

And if the Chinese did limit their purchases of the greenback, the value of the Chinese renminbi, also known as the yuan, could rise in the short-term.

"Lesser dollar purchases presumably would allow the renminbi, at least temporarily, to appreciate against the dollar," Greenspan said.

In response to questions about the U.S. economy, Greenspan acknowledged that the Fed's interest rate target of 1 percent is "accommodative and at some point it will have to rise."

Interest rates of 1 percent are "inconsistent with long-term stability," he said.

Greenspan said China had accumulated $420 billion in foreign exchange reserves by November of last year.

China has fixed its currency at roughly 8.3 yuan to the dollar since 1994. The issue is a politically sensitive one for politicians in Washington during a presidential election year.

The comments come on the heels of a warning from Greenspan that the Chinese banking system could weaken and possibly hurt the global economy if the mainland government were to suddenly decide to allow the yuan currency to trade freely.

"Many in China fear that removal of capital controls that restrict the ability of domestic investors to invest abroad and to sell or to purchase foreign currency -- which is a necessary step to allow a currency to float freely -- could cause an outflow of deposits from Chinese banks, destabilizing the system," the Fed chief wrote to Senate Banking Committee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala., in response to questions presented at a Feb. 12 committee hearing. Read the full story.

In the speech to the Economic Club, Greenspan cautioned that it is unclear how much of the upward pressure is on the currency is a result of the capital controls.

"No one truly knows whether easing or ending capital controls would lessen pressure on the currency and, in the process, also eliminate inflows from speculation on a revaluation," he said.

Democrats and Republicans from key electoral college states have pushed the administration to talk tough to the Chinese to pressure them to allow the currency to float.

American manufacturers complain that the fixed Chinese exchange rate provides an unfair cost advantage to China's exports and is therefore costing thousands of U.S. jobs.

The U.S. manufacturing sector has shed 2.8 million jobs over the last three years.

Last month, the Bush administration sent six economic officials to Beijing for the first of several meetings aimed at providing technical assistance to China that could eventually allow China to float its currency.

Turning to Japan, Greenspan said the value of the yen appears to be "elevated" against the U.S. currency.

Investors in the world's second largest economy have a propensity to buy yen-denominated assets that "runs far beyond the normal tendency of investors worldwide" to stick with the familiar and is one reason for the boosted value of the yen.

"The degree of domestic currency bias in Japan, which far exceeds that of its trading partners, may thus have contributed to a foreign exchange rate for the yen that appears to be elevated relative to the dollar and possibly other internationally traded currencies as well," Greenspan said.

Still, he said, the persistent intervention by the Japanese government to weaken the yen's value has "at times ... overwhelmed" the preference for yen.

That policy of intervention, however, may soon be coming to an end as Japan breaks free from its deflationary spiral.

"The current performance of the Japanese economy suggests that we are getting closer to the point where continued intervention at the present scale will no longer meet the monetary policy needs of Japan," Greenspan said.

"As the present deflationary situation abates, the monetary consequences of continued intervention could become problematic," he added.

cbs.marketwatch.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:00:27 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
European Services Industry Growth Probably Slowed, Survey Shows
March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Growth in the euro countries' service industries, the largest part of the economy, probably slowed in February as the recovery in the dozen-nation region flagged, a survey of economists showed.

An index based on a survey of 2,000 purchasing managers compiled for Reuters Group Plc by NTC Research Ltd. probably fell to 57.2 from January's 57.3, the median of 20 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey showed. It would be eighth month of growth in a row in an industry that includes banks, airlines and hotels. A reading of more than 50 shows expansion.

Business confidence in the euro nations stalled last month and French consumer confidence unexpectedly fell, amid concern about the strength of the region's economic revival. HVB Group, Germany's second-largest bank, reported a record fourth-quarter loss in the fourth quarter and Deutsche Lufthansa AG, Europe's third-largest airline, will eliminate the dividend for 2003.

``The European economy is proving rather disappointing at the moment,'' said Martin Essex, an economist at Capital Economics in London, who expects the index to remain unchanged. ``We have a recovery, but it's not very strong and it won't be long lasting.''

Europe's economic growth slowed in the fourth quarter, to 0.3 percent from 0.4 percent in third as the euro's appreciation hurt exports. By contrast, the U.S. economy grew 1 percent from the previous quarter and Japan's 1.7 percent.

Lufthansa Adds Flights

Europe's services industries, which are less dependent on exports than manufacturers, have grown since the start of July last year as the global recovery prompted companies to spend more on services such as travel or catering. Lufthansa said last month it plans to add 25 percent more flights to Asia this year.

Investors are optimistic European companies will be able to increase profit. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 50 Index has gained 10 percent in the past six months. Germany's benchmark DAX Index has risen 14 percent in the same period.

``Services are profiting from the economic recovery,'' said Klaus Schruefer, chief asset strategist at SEB AG in Frankfurt.

Politicians including German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, unconvinced the euro won't hurt the recovery, have urged the European Central Bank to lower its benchmark lending rate to safeguard the recovery. Policy makers will decide on interest rates tomorrow.

``The euro has a lesser impact on services than on manufacturing, but it's still bad news all around,'' said Capital Economics' Essex. ``Should they cut? Yes. Will they? No.''

Consumer Spending

Only one of 36 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News on Friday expects the bank to lower rates on Thursday. Investors, too, see few chances of a cut, futures trading shows. The yield on the three-month Euribor contract for June settlement was at 2.03 percent on Tuesday, two basis points below the money market rate.

The ECB last lowered its benchmark rate in June last year, to 2 percent from 2.5 percent. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet told European lawmakers last month he expects the euro's appreciation to support disposable income and consumer spending, helping offset the currency's impact on exports.

So far, there's only scattered evidence consumers share that view amid unemployment near a three-year high. The unemployment rate in the euro nations stayed at 8.8 percent in January, the highest since January 2000, a report showed yesterday.

German retail sales rebounded in January after dropping in the previous two months, a separate report showed Tuesday. The jobless rate in Europe's largest economy probably stayed at 10.2 percent last month, the median of 29 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey of economists showed ahead of a report tomorrow.

``Europe is experiencing a difficult moment,'' ECB board member Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa told reporters in Venice, Italy, on Sunday. ``At this moment the signs of recovery aren't signs that have been fully consolidated.''
quote.bloomberg.com
===========================================================
Mish



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:06:08 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Oz Reserve holds rates steady
By NEWS.com.au staff and wires
March 3, 2004

THE central bank has kept interest rates on hold, opting instead to monitor the effects of a strong local currency on domestic growth despite evidence of a pick up in the US economy.

But economists said home owners should brace for a rate rise from the current 5.25 percent cash rate before the end of the financial year in June as the bank moves to keep control over the economy following two previous hikes coupled with a rebound in exports.

The Reserve Bank of Australia's board members met yesterday to review interest rate policy, and recently said current levels remained "mildly accommodative", leaving the way open for a rise.

But economists said the Australian dollar, up more than 40 per cent against the greenback in the past 18 months, was already putting the brakes on the economy.

However, the Australian dollar crashed US1c overnight and the euro had its biggest decline since its launch amid fears that the strengthening US economy would push up interest rates in the US, triggering panic selling of the currencies.

At 9.38am (AEDT) the dollar was trading at $US0.7613, compared with 0.7642 just before the Reserve announcement at 9.30am and yesterday's close of US77.37c. It moved down to $US0.7594-97 at noon.

Economists said disappointing current account figures yesterday would have been a contributing factor in the central bank board's deliberations.

The current account deficit narrowed slightly to $12.01 billion in December quarter - the third highest quarterly deficit on record, falling short of analyst expectations of $US11.7 billion.

Analysts said this was expected to contribute a negative 0.5 percentage in gross domestic product for the quarter, which expanded by 1.4 per cent, according to data released today.

Treasurer Peter Costello said the current account deficit was still significant and showed Australia's farm exports had not yet recovered from the drought.

The currency's impact was reflected in figures showing exports fell 9 per cent in calendar 2003 while imports rose 2 per cent.

Export volumes were up but the Australian dollar's strength meant exporters earned less for them.

The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Westpac survey also reported a fall in business confidence in the March quarter.

Official data released Monday showed a significant improvement in Australia's trade deficit in Janury, which narrowed 23 per cent as an increase in farm exports offset the negative effect on the stronger Australian dollar. The improvement came on the back of a 5 per cent rebound in exports, fuelled by a 14 per cent rise in farm exports – the biggest rise in eight years following a crippling drought.

But the chances of an April rate hike were firming according to some analysts. Separate ABS figures yesterday showed an unexpectedly strong rise in retail trade in January of 0.7 per cent to $15.76 billion, reinforcing the case for a rate rise in the short term.

RBC senior economist Su-Lin Ong said the strong retail figures showed there were still dangers lurking in the Australian economy and the central bank must leave rates steady until it had further information on the housing market, credit growth and the ongoing strength of the Australian dollar.

The bank lifted rates by 0.25 points in November and December to quell an over-heated housing sector and discourage any further blowout in soaring household debt.

HSBC chief economist John Edwards predicted another 0.25 per cent rise in April.

The Australian economy was poised for further growth in 2004 and the local sharemarket was on track to hit record levels combing to boast consumer sentiment - now at nine-year highs - while unemployment was at 14-year lows.

The Reserve strongly hinted in February that another rate rise should be expected if the stronger Australian dollar did not keep inflation in check and if the housing boom failed to slow.

Speaking at the Economic Club in New York today, US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said nothing to ease Wall Street's concerns, especially about interest rates. He focused his discussion on monetary exchange policy, and said broad intervention into currency markets to support the US dollar was unsustainable.

He said that extra-low short-term interest rates eventually will have to go up. He gave no clue when.

Since last June, the Fed's main lever to influence economic activity, called the federal funds rate, has been at 1 per cent, a 45-year low. Near rock-bottom short-term interest rates have helped motivate US consumers and businesses to spend and invest, an important factor to lift economic growth.

Some economists believe the Fed will start to push up rates this year. Others don't believe higher rates will come until 2005. Most economists expect the rate-setting Federal Open Markets Committee to hold rates steady when it meets next on March 16.

Private economists didn't view Dr Greenspan's remarks as signalling a change in policy, but they viewed the comments as a needed reminder to Wall Street and Main Street that superlow short-term rates can't go on indefinitely.

The European Central Bank governing council convenes on Thursday to review its 2.0 per cent benchmark interest rate.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:10:42 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Australia leaves rates on hold
edition.cnn.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:12:58 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
UK's Budget Deficit Woes
Brown golden rule 'under threat'

The UK's budget deficit will remain at around £40bn over the next two years, and not fall to the £30bn the Treasury predicts, according to a new report.
Accountancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers says this is despite its prediction that the UK economy will grow by an average 2.75% in 2004 and 2005.

Its findings raise the question whether Chancellor Gordon Brown will have to raise taxes or lower public spending. He may have to break his "golden rule" of borrowing only to invest, it says.

The PricewaterhouseCoopers report said it was "touch and go" whether the rule would be broken, despite the latest edition of its four-monthly UK Economic Outlook report envisages growth accelerating from 2.3% in 2003.

'Fiscal tightening'
And it says the government could begin the next economic cycle - post 2006 - with a "significant budget deficit" which would only fall if growth in public spending remained at the moderate rate mentioned in the last pre-budget report.

"Eventually the chancellor is likely to have to either increase taxes or tighten spending more sharply than indicated in the pre-budget report," said John Hawksworth, head of macroeconomics at PWC.

"There is no immediate crisis in the public finances that requires remedial action in the 2004 Budget, but some bias towards fiscal tightening might be desirable now that UK growth has moved back above trend."

The main reasons PWC gives for differing with the Treasury's budget deficit predictions is that it projects both less economic growth and higher public spending over the next two years to rebuild public reserves and increased borrowing to pay debt interest payments.

news.bbc.co.uk



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:21:06 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Traffic on the Road to Recovery
Economists expected some slowdown in 2004, and they may get a bit more than they expected. The main reason: Jobs

Economists have known for a while that the economy would slow this year from the blistering pace of the second half of 2003. After all, the 6.1% growth in gross domestic product in those six months was fueled by massive amounts of mortgage refinancing and by income tax cuts -- two sources of stimulus that have lost some of their oomph this year. The only question going into 2004 was, how much would growth slow?

In January, as fourth-quarter earnings surged, the bet was that the economic expansion would decelerate only slightly, to perhaps 4% to 5% GDP growth for 2004. But a recent spate of weaker-than-expected reports may be indicating that the economy has hit, if not a speed bump, at least those little warning washboards that tell you your car is straying onto the shoulder.

A serious dip in consumer confidence reported on Feb. 24 is the clearest recent indicator of this. In fact, for a while in late February it seemed that every economic number, from durable-goods orders to first-time unemployment claims and new construction to auto sales, was coming in just a little worse than anticipated.

OUT OF TOUCH? "Consumers began the year on a high note, but their optimism has quickly given way to caution," wrote Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board's Consumer Research Center, of last month's numbers. "Consumers remain disheartened with current economic conditions, and at the core of their disenchantment is the labor market."

True, that probably reflects disappointed expectations more than hardship. "There was a feeling after the third quarter last year and some of the early fourth-quarter numbers that the economy was really flying," says Milton Ezrati, senior economist and strategist at investment firm Lord Abbett & Co. "That was never in touch with reality. What we're getting here now is an expanding economy, but not one that is flying. And I think people are beginning to adjust to that from their former exuberance."

While economists started off the year betting on 5% GDP growth in the first quarter, it could come in at 4% or even a little lower, believes Greg Valliere, chief strategist of Schwab Washington Research Group. "I see the economy doing O.K., but leveling off for a while here before it gets a little better in the spring," he says.

SOME RELIEF. Valliere thinks tax refunds will drive stronger growth in the second and third quarters. "Maybe we're splitting hairs, but you get the sense that until these refund checks kick in, we could have moderate [growth]," he says.

So far, March has brought some relief from the negative drumbeat. On Mar. 1, an index of manufacturing activity came in stronger than expected and hinted at hiring in factories. A Mar. 2 government report on consumer spending also remained strong, showing that even if consumers are less confident, they remain ready and willing to shop.

However, the willingness of businesses to spend -- and hire -- remains a wild card. In reporting fourth-quarter numbers, many chief executives were subdued in their outlooks. Cisco (CSCO ) CEO John Chambers noted that the businesses that buy his company's networking equipment are getting a bit more optimistic about the overall economy. But they remain "perhaps surprisingly" cautious about their own capital spending and hiring plans, he added.

DISTANT VIEW. Investors worried about the recovery's sustainability are hoping for strong job growth in the government's monthly payroll report, to be released on Friday, Mar. 5. Any rise in unemployment could be a serious disappointment (see BW Online, 2/29/04, "What Investors Want Now: Jobs").

Plenty of economists see recent signs of weakness as nothing more than a blip. Bad weather in January certainly played a role in subpar housing and retail numbers, points out Valliere. One reason Ezrati isn't as worried about slack durable-good orders is that it was "all centered in aircraft orders, which tend to be extremely lumpy. You get away from that, and the numbers continue to expand, showing that there's some growth in capital spending."

Indeed, Lincoln Anderson, chief investment officer at LPL Financial Services, a brokerage firm that serves independent investment advisers, calls the recent weakness "short-term fluctuations" in monthly data. "My concern levels for the economy are near all-time record lows," he says. "When you stand back a little bit, it looks to me like there's tremendous power driving this economy forward."

Over the course of 2004, Anderson thinks, continued low interest rates and stimulus from tax cuts will spur spending by both consumers and businesses -- and lead to more job growth. "I think it just takes a while to knock down all that skepticism," he adds. In the meantime, though, as recent weakness in the markets shows, investors are keeping an ear tuned for even the subtlest signs of trouble on the road ahead.

businessweek.com
===========================================================
There's some rose coloured glasses views

Mish



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:40:56 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Renminbi to rise 13% by year end, says Merrill
Beijing will revalue the renminbi by 13 per cent at the end of the year to cool an overheating economy, Merrill Lynch predicted on Wednesday.


"We think China will make a big move this year," T.J. Bond, chief Asia-Pacific economist for the investment bank, told reporters at the launch of a report on Beijing's controversial foreign exchange regime.

Mr Bond said the renminbi, which trades in a very narrow band around Rmb8.28 to the US dollar, would probably be revalued by 10 per cent against the dollar and would then be pegged to a basket of currencies in a 5 per cent band, whereupon it would rise from an initial midpoint to the top of its range. The basket was likely to be dominated by the dollar, the yen and the euro.

China has been under pressure for more than a year to revalue its currency. US politicians complain that cheap Chinese exports compete unfairly with US products and put Americans out of work.

However, Mr Bond and other analysts believe China will act not in response to US complaints but because the inflationary pressures on the Chinese economy will become intolerable in the months ahead.

On Tuesday, Alan Greenspan, chairman of the US Federal Reserve, said Chinese central bank purchases of dollars could lead to excessive monetary expansion and overheating of the Chinese economy. He also said Japan's "awesome" accumulation of dollar reserves could become problematic for Japan.

According to UBS, the investment bank, January 2004 was a record month for Asian foreign exchange reserve growth. After adjusting for exchange rate effects, the 11 main Asian economies had official net foreign exchange inflows of $91bn in January, and total reserves reached $1,990bn. Japan and China are the main buyers of dollars.

Several economists in Asia predict that China will make a modest revaluation of the renminbi and will soon move from a dollar peg to a basket of currencies. Speculation has been fuelled by the government's move to limit discussions on the issue with foreign analysts since the middle of last year.

The Merrill Lynch forecast, however, is the boldest so far and is based on the assumption that Beijing knows a gradual revaluation would fail to have the desired effect and would in fact prompt further currency speculation. Billions of dollars of "hot money" have already flooded into China in the expectation of a rise in the renminbi.

A sharp revaluation of the renminbi would have an impact on other Asian currencies and on the market for US Treasury bills, and could prompt a slowdown for East Asian exports and economic growth in 2005 and beyond.

Mr Bond said the South Korean won and other regional currencies would appreciate on the back of a rising renminbi, and he predicted that the Malaysian ringgit would be unpegged from the US dollar next year.

news.ft.com
=========================================================
WTF?
Do these people read what China is saying or not?
Obviously they have their own crystal ball



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 10:49:21 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116555
 
U.S. February ISM Service Index Falls to 60.8 From 65.7
March 3 (Bloomberg) -- The Institute for Supply Management's index of U.S. service industries dropped to 60.8 in February.

The index, which covers the financial services, construction, retail and other non-manufacturing enterprises had been at a record 65.7 the month before. Readings higher than 50 indicate expansion.

Economists expected the Tempe, Arizona, institute's index to fall to 63.5, according to the median of 54 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from 60 to 65.5.

``It points to a slightly minor pullback in activity,'' John Herrmann, chief U.S. economist of Cantor Fitzgerald LP in New York, said before today's report. ``Profits are still growing well in the first quarter.''

quote.bloomberg.com
==================================================
Minor pullback?
WTF?
65.7 to 60.8 with 63.5 expected is minor?



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 11:06:55 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Greenspan clashes with White House
[greenspan is toast - he will not be reappointed chair]

The US Federal Reserve chairman fears the effects of floating China's currency

THE White House insisted last night that it still wants China to float its currency on world markets — despite a warning from Alan Greenspan that this would be a high-risk move posing serious dangers to global recovery.
The Federal Reserve Chairman’s stark advice on the potential fallout from a yuan float came in a letter that Richard Shelby, chairman of the US Senate’s powerful Banking Committee, released.

Mr Greenspan wrote that if China moved to abandon the yuan’s controversial peg to the dollar it could lead to a flood of money out of China, destabilising its financial and banking system. The Fed Chairman went on to give warning that if this were to happen the resulting upheaval could also undercut recovery in America and around the world.

The blunt comments from Mr Greenspan appeared to be a tacit warning to the growing band of US politicians responding to popular unease over Chinese competition for jobs and markets with demands that Beijing float the yuan.


But with the US presidential election only eight months away and Senator John Kerry, the leading Democratic challenger, increasingly leaning towards protectionist rhetoric, the White House insisted that it still wanted the yuan’s value set on the currency markets.

“Our policy remains the same. Our policy is very well known,” said Scott McClellan, President Bush’s press secretary.

In his letter to Senator Shelby, the Fed Chairman said: “Many in China fear that removal of capital controls that restrict the ability of domestic investors to invest abroad, and to sell and to purchase foreign currency, which is a necessary step to allow a currency to float freely, could cause an outflow of deposits from Chinese banks, destabilising the system.”

Up to 50 per cent of Chinese bank loans are going unpaid, Mr Greenspan noted. He said that this was only sustainable because Chinese bank depositors did not withdraw their funds.

The Fed Chairman suggested that if a yuan float did destabilise China’s vast economy, the consequences would not be restricted to within its own borders, nor to within Asia. “Financial instability in a major emerging market economy such as China would present a risk to the global economic outlook,” he wrote.

American critics of China believe its dollar peg is holding the yuan at artificially low levels, giving a huge boost to its exports to the US. The politically sensitive US trade gap with China hit a record $124 billion (£67.5 billion) last year.

Chinese exports to other countries have also surged as the dollar’s fall has taken the yuan’s value sharply lower against rival currencies, making Chinese goods cheaper worldwide.

Under China’s present policy, the yuan is kept in a tight range of 0.04 per cent around a peg of 8.278 per dollar.

But the stance also creates substantial problems for Beijing. All of China’s foreign currency earnings from its exports are converted into yuan by its companies.

Unlike Western central banks, the Chinese are unable to neutralise the inflationary effects by selling bonds to mop up the extra cash since there is no private market for such paper.

The result is surging foreign reserves at its central bank, and an overheating of the domestic Chinese economy.

For these reasons, most analysts expect that China will move to a more flexible exchange rate — but only gradually, and at its own pace.

“I think they will move to suit their own domestic needs,” said Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered.

“The key issue (for them) is domestic economic stability.”

Mr Lyons believes that the most likely first step would be for Beijing to widen the band in which the yuan moves, later this year. But he does not expect a revaluation of more than 10 per cent.

Mr Greenspan’s letter acknowledged first steps by Beijing to lay the groundwork for change. The Chinese Government “seems to be moving to strengthen their banking system”.

But the Fed chief added that steps to “eliminate state interference in banking decisions” and forge a “viable credit system” would be required before any eventual free float of the yuan.

business.timesonline.co.uk



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 11:16:59 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
The British Pound's Party Won't Last Much Longer: Matthew Lynn
March 3 (Bloomberg) -- In the past few weeks, British newspapers have run stories about the bargains to be scooped up by anyone heading to New York for a weekend's shopping.

A Feb. 20 headline in the Guardian ran: ``How the sickly dollar has spawned a shopping bonanza, New York style,'' while the story drooled over how you could pick up Jimmy Choo shoes for 302 pounds (about $575 when the article was written) compared with 360 pounds in London.

``Land of the Spree,'' reckoned the Mirror a day earlier. Its story pointed out that you can fly to the U.S., buy an iMac computer from Apple Computer Inc., and still save 100 pounds on making the purchase back in the U.K.

At $1.83, the pound is still close to its highest levels against the dollar in 11 years. It exceeded $2 in September 1992. In November 1980 it touched $2.44. And if your memory stretches back to March 1972, you'd find it at $2.64. Still, by any historical standards, the pound is now trading at high levels.

That doesn't look like it will change soon. Brian Hilliard, director of economic research at Societe Generale SA in London, forecast on Monday that 1 pound would soon be worth $2.

What's good for bargain-hunters looking for some cheap jeans or computers, however, is not necessarily good for the British economy.

A pound at $2 is going to put the U.K. economy on the rack. The trade deficit will widen. The consumer boom will get even more fevered. And the imbalances in the British economy -- between the people who make things and the people who consume things -- are going to worsen.

Benign Neglect

Britain has been pursuing a policy of benign neglect of the pound. The Bank of England has shown no desire to get the currency's external value to fall. If anything, by increasing rates to 4 percent, it has been the source of sterling's strength.

At its last meeting, the Monetary Policy Committee discussed the strength of sterling, but so far has not seen it as a reason to put a lid on rising interest rates. SocGen's Hilliard points out that some MPC members were ``suggesting that it could be treated as a `one-off' shock `which should be disregarded in setting interest rates.' The more sterling rises, the harder it will be to persist with this argument.''

Politicians have been just as relaxed about the strength of sterling. John McFall, the chairman of parliament's treasury committee, said last month the U.K. government wouldn't do anything to curb the increase of the pound, even if the currency went to $2 or more. Tony Blair, the British prime minister, agrees. At a press conference in February he ruled out intervention. ``It's not our intention to intervene in the market in relation to the pound,'' Blair said.

Tightlipped Politicians

That's a marked contrast with the rest of Europe. German and French leaders have been trying to talk the euro down, even if they have yet to follow their words with action. The U.K. has a disastrous history of currency management. Most British politicians would rather own up to tax evasion than express any kind of opinion on the pound.

Still, the wisdom of that course is questionable. Just because nobody wants to talk about it, it doesn't follow that the high level of the pound isn't going to cause problems.

While manufacturing may be recovering along with the global economy, British company profits are getting hurt. GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Europe's largest drugmaker, said in February that its earnings per share may be reduced by 7 percent this year if the dollar stayed at its current level. Pearson Plc said this week that 2003 revenue at its education unit, the company's largest, declined 11 percent, partly because of currency movements.

`Natural' Rate

Meanwhile, the trade deficit remains stubbornly large. It was 4.2 billion pounds in December, slightly down on November. For the whole of 2003, it came to 46.4 billion pounds, almost at the level it was in 2002.

In the past year, the pound has moved a long way from a realistic exchange rate. There is no ``natural'' exchange rate. It always depends on the state of the markets. Still, a rate of $1.40 to $1.60 would reflect the relative purchasing power of the two currencies.

When an economy is out of balance, at some point it has to snap back. That is seldom a smooth or easy process. The more out of balance you are, the rougher it is.

The foreign exchange markets are like men and relationships. They ignore all the problems for a very long time, then they suddenly get in a terrible state for no apparent reason. They ignored the U.S. trade and budget deficits for a long time. Now they are obsessed with them. Right now, they're ignoring the British trade and budget deficits (economists surveyed by the Treasury expect the budget shortfall to amount to about 37 billion pounds this fiscal year). At some point, the markets will notice those twin deficits and start hammering the pound.

Rough Patch

When it happens, expect the U.K. economy to hit a rough patch. Strong sterling has depressed manufacturing, while boosting demand for cheap imports, creating a retail and consumer boom. A fall in sterling will throw that into reverse.

At the same time, once sterling starts to fall, the Bank of England may have to keep interest rates high to make sure foreign money flows into the country to finance the trade and budget deficits. The Federal Reserve can ignore the decline of the dollar because governments hold the currency as a reserve. Nobody has to hold pounds. And if they see the U.K. currency fall, they won't want to buy it unless they're tempted with very high interest rates.


Everyone hopping across to New York for some new Jimmy Choo shoes may soon be celebrating the $2 pound. But at some stage, sterling has to go down again -- and when it does, it won't be a pretty sight.

quote.bloomberg.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 11:40:29 AM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Insanity and madness in the markets

financialsense.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 12:00:59 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
R. Russells take on the dollar is a very interesting one.....
"Or more ominously, it could be the first hint of deflation. As I've said over and over again -- somewhere ahead the debt bubble is going to burst. When that happens, we could see a panic for dollars. We'd also see prices of almost everything head lower, as the rush to get liquid begins.

How do most people get liquid? They sell something -- a house, a car, stocks, bonds, anything -- for cash. That's how most people get liquid. The result -- deflation."

Thanks to Richard at www.dowtheoryletters.com
=================================================
the above posted by westpacific



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 12:06:56 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
The three stooges of inflation

Message 19871774



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 12:10:55 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
China Seeks Mongolia's Copper, Ore as Imports Rise (Update2)
March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Dairy farming and steel dominate the economy of China's Baotou County, about 12 hours' drive west of Beijing in Inner Mongolia. The cows are about to be demoted.

Next to a 1950s Chinese government-built steel foundry in the main city, also called Baotou, is a year-old steel mill --and the foundations of another mill. Nearby is phase one of what will be China's biggest aluminum smelter and the beginnings of its second-biggest copper smelter.

This activity follows discoveries of an estimated 50 million tons of iron ore, 6 billion tons of coal and what might be the world's biggest deposit of copper and gold in the Gobi Desert of neighboring Mongolia, an independent state.

Mining companies such as AngloGold Ltd., BHP Billiton, Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. and Cia. Vale do Rio Doce are betting China and Mongolia will agree to build a rail link from the southern Gobi Desert to Baotou. That would place Mongolia's bounty, still being explored, among the world's most profitable strikes.

Minerals in southern Mongolia ``are probably one of the largest stories in the metals and mining industry right now,'' said Pierre Martin, a fund manager with DWS Investment GmbH in Frankfurt. ``It puts China in a better position.''

DWS Investment holds 8 million shares in Ivanhoe Mines, a Vancouver-based company that owns the rights to explore 111,000 square kilometers (43,000 square miles) in Mongolia -- an area the size of Honduras.

Mongolia says it expects to sign an agreement with China this month for a $300 million loan, offered through China's Export-Import Bank, to build the transport and power infrastructure needed to mine its minerals and get them to Baotou.

quote.bloomberg.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 12:14:49 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Correction, or resumption of a major downtrend?
Dr Faber believes equity markets may be forming a significant top between now and April. Tops tend to coincide with very high bullish sentiment and that is where we are today, with even Dr Faber's wife buying stocks! Inflation due partly to high oil prices is going to burst this bubble.

ameinfo.com

According to the Yale School of Management's opinion poll, currently 95% of individuals and close to 92% of financial institutions believe that the US stock market will rise over the next 12 months.

The bull to bear ratio has recently also reached extremely high levels, which are usually associated with major tops, while low readings such as we had in October 2002 occur near market lows

Incidentally, I encounter the same type of optimism everywhere around the world. The consensus believes that a small correction will unfold in the near term but that thereafter equity markets will resume their strong up-trend.

Always being skeptical of the consensus, I am afraid that the equity markets may be forming a more significant top between now and April, which may not easily be exceeded for quite some time.

First of all, more than 90% of all stocks listed on the NYSE are trading above their 200 days moving average, which usually is indicative of a market that is very overbought. Then, the Dow Jones Industrial Average at 10,500 is encountering significant overhead supply, which comes from the Dow's trading range of between 10,500 and 11,500 from the middle of 1999 to the middle of 2001.

Also, as I have pointed out before, stocks tend to reach bargain levels amid very negative news, whereas tops coincide with very high bullish sentiment and favorable economic news. Then, it is of some concern that despite all the 'good economic news' that the government publishes, the economically extremely sensitive airline shares have recently taken a beating and that the Dow Jones Transportation Average has broken down.

Particularly hard hit were the no-frills airlines such as Jetblue Airways (down 70% from its October 2003 high) and Ryanair (down almost 50% since mid-January of this year). Add to the weakness of airlines the recent decline of the economically equally sensitive semiconductor stocks, which are now (including Intel) no higher than they were in October 2003 and one begins to wonder whether the market isn't beginning to discount some renewed weakness in the economy later this year.

Another possibility is that the stock market doesn't entirely trust the glowing economic statistics published by the government, which don't seem to tally with the economic reality of most households, as discussed above.

In this respect, the recent strength in bond prices is interesting. Seemingly, the bond market isn't entirely convinced by the 'strong economy' statements by the US policy makers nor by the published glowing economic statistics. Still, what might unsettle the bond market is US dollar strength and rising inflation rates due to soaring energy prices.

Moreover, our readers should consider whether BBB corporate bond spreads over treasuries have collapsed because of a significant improvement in the quality of corporate debt or whether they have collapsed because of a significant deterioration in the quality of US government bonds. Could, as is frequently the case in the emerging markets, corporate debt have a lower yield than US government debt?

With respect to the strength in the bond market, I suspect that declining interest rates are an indication that the consumer has very little spending power left. Employment gains are minimal and real incomes are declining as prices are rising far more than what the government's statistician are publishing.

In this regards it is interesting to look at a recently article published by the Vancouver Sun in which the author, Chad Skelton, compares some prices of goods and services between 2002 and 2003. And while Vancouver is not in the US, I am sure - based on personal observations - that the price increases quoted - even if in some case atypical of consumer price increases - do suggest that the cost of living is presently rising at a far higher rate than incomes.

Bill King, the author of the excellent and highly recommended daily 'King Report' (kingreport@ramkingsec.com) recently also took the CPI figures published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics apart and concluded that they grossly understate the rise in prices in the US.

Among others, he cites a Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation study, which shows that health-care costs premiums have surged 42% over the last three years for employees and families. Hewitt Associates is projecting a further 15% hike for 2004. But the government's Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that health care costs only increased by 3.6% in 2003.

King believes that this is the way the government makes 'CPI behavior and inflation disappear, which overstates GDP'. In other words, it would seem that US households have difficulties to make ends meet and have only been able to support their consumption because of real estate asset inflation, which allowed them to take out additional borrowings.

Based on the asset inflation in Japan in the late 1980s and in Hong Kong prior to 1997, we know, however, how consumption driven purely by asset inflation ends when the asset inflation eventually turns into a bust – which in every case is sooner or later inevitable.

At the same time, not all is well in Asia, either. Whereas, so far, the bird flu outbreak has had a very limited economic impact, it nevertheless gave investors a reason to sell and led to a sharp correction in a large number of stocks.

In addition, we should be well aware that it is likely that the bird flu will one day mutate and will then be able to jump from human to human, which could lead to a pandemic of major proportions and have a devastating impact on the Asian and world economies.

With respect to the Thai stock market, I recently received the strongest sell signal I have ever experienced: my wife, who in the 25 years that I have known her has never shown any interest in buying stocks, wanted just recently to buy some Thai shares. Some friends had told her that you could buy in the morning and sell in the afternoon and make a profit!

Moreover, as is the case in the US, some stocks that are sensitive to Chinese economic growth have sold off quite sharply in recent weeks, confirming our suspicion that the Chinese economy is slowing down and may disappoint investors who are positioned in the various 'reflation trades'.

Among the sectors that have run into a serious bout of selling (down around 20% from their peak) we find Chinese oil companies as well as a number of resource stocks around the world, which investors bought on the back of the rising demand by China for commodities.

On a recent visit to Japan, I wasn't surprised to hear from several totally unrelated individual investors that they were buying steel stocks 'due to the strong demand for steel from China'.

Japanese investors, who have repeatedly shown an uncanny ability to buy near tops of a sector's popularity and price, are another warning flag that the 'reflation trade' is a very crowded trade.

We continue, however, to recommend that our readers increase their exposure to oil companies with significant reserves (Chinese oil companies don't have large reserves) and to oil servicing companies, as the fundamentals of the oil industry are compelling.

Asia, with 3.6 billion people or 56% of the world's population consumes less oil than the US with 285 million people. Based on recent trends in oil demand in Asia and given the positive growth prospects for Asia, I would expect Asian daily oil consumption to double from about 20 million barrels to anywhere between 35 million to 50 million barrels in the next ten years or so.

Since current oil production is running at 78 million barrels per day and can due to declining reserves in non-OPEC countries unlikely be increased much, I would expect prices to harden significantly.

In fact, I would not rule out another oil crisis should as a result of some political upheaval in the Middle East supplies be interrupted. Moreover, whereas the NASDAQ seems pricey, to put it mildly, oil companies command very undemanding valuations.

In sum, rising energy prices will lead to higher inflation and higher interest rates. A stronger dollar may hurt some big players who are short dollars and lead to less buying of US treasuries by Asian central banks and so depress the bond market.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 1:23:37 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
POLL-Euro seen rallying to $1.30 "pain barrier"
LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) - Many currency strategists are sticking by forecasts of a strong euro this year, according to a Reuters poll, and see it reaching the $1.30 "pain barrier" this year despite this week's dramatic dollar rebound.

The euro has fallen three cents since Tuesday to around $1.2170, but this week's poll of 60 strategists, whose views were gathered or confirmed on Wednesday, gave mid-range forecasts for it to recover to $1.25 by the end of this month.

In three months' time, the euro is seen just under $1.29, not far off February's record high, before easing to $1.28 in six months and $1.26 in 12 months' time.

Analysis of the individual forecasts shows 42 of the strategists expect that at some point this year, the euro will reach or breach $1.30, a level marked out by think tanks and official sources as a decisive "pain barrier" for euro zone exporters.

"Only rate hikes by the (U.S. Federal Reserve) are likely to help turn the dollar around on a more sustainable basis," said Mitul Kotecha at Credit Agricole Indosuez in London, forecasting the euro at $1.34 in six months' time.

"The euro...remains the path of least resistance to dollar weakness. Having been extremely short dollars, the market is now moving towards more neutral positions. Ultimately we're just rebuilding the base to move back higher again on euro/dollar."

The dollar has been spurred on its downtrend against the euro over the past two years by low U.S. interest rates and a blow-out in U.S. fiscal and current account deficits.

The euro has shouldered a large chunk of dollar weakness as euro zone policymakers have refrained from intervention either in the currency market or through interest rate cuts.

TALK OF ECB CUT

Industrialists and politicians complain that the strong euro is constraining economic recovery in the euro zone, fuelling market speculation that the European Central Bank will eventually have to cut interest rates to discourage the rally.

However, a euro zone monetary source told Reuters on Monday that it was hard to justify a cut when real interest rates -- discounting inflation -- were already around zero.

A Reuters poll of money market dealers on Monday was unanimous in forecasting the ECB would keep rates on hold at 2.0 percent when it meets on Thursday.

That leaves a significant differential with the 1.0 percent U.S. fed funds rate, leading many strategists to predict the dollar won't turn around decisively until the Fed does.

"The euro will regain the upper hand over the dollar over the next three to six months," predicted Niels Christensen at Societe Generale in Paris. "The dollar will struggle to stage a lasting recovery until the Fed validates the recovery scenario with the first rate hike."

TRADE GAP

Many strategists see the euro as overvalued based on economic fundamentals.

"The market is becoming more and more aware of the excessive degree of overvaluation the euro has been undergoing during the last year," said Asmara Jamaleh at Banca Intesa in Milan.


But most strategists still find plenty of justification for dollar weakness, including Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's comments that it should help curb the huge trade deficit.

"It's basically a current account-driven adjustment," said Daniel Katzive at UBS in Stamford, Connecticut, forecasting the euro at $1.40 by the year end.

"We think that there will be a tighter policy from the Fed over the course of 2004, but it won't be sufficiently aggressive to turn the dollar around for a prolonged period."

Meanwhile the U.S. recovery has been underpinned by low interest rates and tax cuts, but there are still concerns that jobs are not being created fast enough.

Adrian Hughes at HSBC in London said this week's shakeout had been prompted partly by talk of much stronger U.S. payrolls numbers on Friday.

"We don't think the market's going to be satisfied with that number," Hughes said, forecasting the euro back at $1.27 by the end of this month.

"At the moment you have a battle between speculative money buying dollars and real money (investors) scratching their heads, thinking: 'Is this a good level to buy euros?' And at $1.20, $1.21, $1.22, it certainly is for the rest of this year," Hughes said.

forbes.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 1:32:31 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Point/counterpoint from the FOOL

point Harmy:
The US has always seen itself as the worlds economic elephant but when you compare the population of the US to that of India and China combined you begin to see that whereas China and India can only sell to a market of 300m US citizens, the US has a market of over two billion it can sell to.

counterpoint Mcain:
Population alone is the wrong way to look at this, at least at this point in time -- wealth counts. From the Economist's World in Figures, for the year 2000 (most recent year given), the world GDP (income, in effect) was $31.5T. The G7 nations accounted for $21T, almost exactly two-thirds. The US alone accounted for almost 30%. If you are producing goods/services for exports, you target the US, the G7, and select smaller countries with high per-capita income. You don't target Ethopia, the country with the lowest per-capita income, even though its population is larger than any of the UK, France, or Canada.

Of course it's really even more complicated, since the distribution of income within the population can matter. The US has a per-capita income of $35,000 -- the distribution doesn't matter as much because "everyone" is relatively wealthy. Effectively all households have a color TV (in excess of 99%). The market for DVD players is a large percentage of households. In India, the per-capita income is $450, but that number is skewed by an enormous number of people with incomes in the range of $100, so you would have to ask how much of the population can afford imported goods/services. The market for DVD players is almost certainly smaller in India than in the US, despite the much larger population.

Can India and China grow their economies so that they become the dominant players on the world economic stage? Accounting for a share of the world's production (and more importantly, consumption) that matches their portion of the population? Put me down as a vote for "doubtful" for one reason -- energy. My own theory is that rich countries are rich because they consume large amounts of energy in their production processes. At a minimum, say that the lack of energy to apply to those processes will limit how productive (hence how wealthy) a country can become. The world does not appear to have the resources to allow India and China to consume energy at the per-capita level of, say, Japan.



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 1:35:25 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
The best of Richard Russell
[this is a good read - mish]

investmentrarities.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 1:47:02 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Pot shots and warning shots
[A good read on the euro rate debate - mish]

Mar 3rd 2004
From The Economist Global Agenda

The European Central Bank has come under pressure from politicians to cut interest rates when its governing council meets this week. Will it listen? Should it?

THE great European rate debate has turned. For many months, as euro-area inflation lingered above the 2% ceiling policed by the European Central Bank (ECB), politicians, traders and pundits wondered when the ECB would raise interest rates. Now, after inflation fell well below that ceiling last month, they are asking themselves, will it cut them? Some of Europe’s most powerful politicians have moved from asking to telling. Gerhard Schröder, Germany’s chancellor, and Jean-Pierre Raffarin, France’s prime minister, both called on the ECB to cut interest rates last week. When the ECB’s governing council meets to decide rates on Thursday March 4th, how will it resist such pressure?

Quite easily. The ECB, ensconced in its tower in Frankfurt, far away from any national capital, is probably the most independent central bank in the world. It is obliged to care about price stability über alles, and free to set whatever interest rate it deems necessary to achieve that goal. Indeed, it may be because the ECB’s independence is not seriously in doubt that Europe’s political leaders feel emboldened to petition it so directly. They hope to deflect some political heat to Frankfurt, secure in the assumption that the ECB can stand it.
What the politicians tell the ECB matters less than what the numbers are saying. For many months, despite sluggish growth and a strengthening currency, inflation remained stubbornly above the 2% ceiling. That made it difficult for the ECB to contemplate cutting rates, however much noise the politicians might make. With inflation falling to an estimated 1.6% in February, its lowest level for four years, a rate cut suddenly looks more plausible.

Of course, the ECB does not respond to one month’s figures—it looks for underlying trends. Nor does it respond to last month’s figures—it has to look ahead. Some analysts, such as those at Goldman Sachs, think the dip in inflation will prove short-lived.
This time last year, food was particularly expensive, because of frost damage to crops, and energy prices were much higher in euro terms: oil was over €30 ($32.40) per barrel, compared with about €24 now. Core inflation (excluding the ups and downs of these volatile prices) remains stubborn at 2%, according to Goldman Sachs. The euro has also fallen back from its new-year highs, trading at less than $1.22 on Wednesday.

But there are disturbing signs that some of the air is going out of the sails of the euro-area recovery. In February, the Ifo index of German business confidence fell for the first time in ten months. Wolfgang Clement, Germany’s economy minister, called it a “clear warning shot”. A second warning came from the monthly survey of purchasing managers in euro-area manufacturing firms, who reported that new orders for their goods were coming in at a slower pace than a month before. A similar survey of services firms also found businesses losing momentum, not gaining it as one would expect in the early stages of a recovery.

This is bad news for Mr Schröder. He has staked his political fate on a set of structural reforms of the labour market, pensions and health care, dubbed Agenda 2010. So far, he has prodded a few sacred cows, limiting the duration of unemployment benefits, for example, but he has precious little beef to show for his efforts. As the name implies, Agenda 2010 was always meant for the long term. But unless he shows results soon, the chancellor may never get to the end of the agenda. His party faces 14 state, local and European elections this year. It has already lost the first of them, going down to a devastating defeat in a local election in Hamburg at the weekend.

All of this is nothing to do with us, say the great and good of the ECB: Germany’s problems are structural, not cyclical; even if the ECB wanted to help, it couldn’t. A quarter-point interest-rate cut would not free up Germany’s labour market or shore up the finances of its health system. But this clean distinction between cyclical and structural factors exists only in theory. The fear is that by damaging confidence, sowing insecurity and raising taxes, Germany’s structural reforms may delay or derail the cyclical recovery. Conversely, a timely cut in interest rates might lift the mood, buoy Mr Schröder’s fortunes and sweeten the pill of structural reforms. If they are to stay on course, Mr Schröder’s reforms need a fair wind. And the ECB can provide it.

The ECB, of course, shouldn’t cut rates just because politicians ask it to. But neither should it not cut rates because they ask it to. The danger is that, in its eagerness to appear immune to the political flak, the bank ignores a clear warning shot from the economy.

economist.com



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1079)3/3/2004 1:55:02 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
FOCUS ON JAPAN'S ECONOMY
Is the sun really rising?
It would be foolish to take Japan's recent promising economic growth indicators at face value, but some things really do seem different this time round, despite what cynics say

straitstimes.asia1.com.sg