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


To: Knighty Tin who wrote (44011)1/6/2006 3:37:01 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Hi, this is Tim Hannagan and it is Friday, January 6th and this is my weekly review-
CORN--- A short four day week left us little room but being the New Year on we saw plenty of volume and price movement. Let us cover our demand reports first as crops are in and demand fundamentals are now the driving force of the market. Tuesday’s weekly export inspection report showed 31.9 million bushels of corn was inspected for near term export, unchanged from the week prior and a year ago, so it was stable on price gains. Friday’s weekly export sales report showed 536 t.m.t. of corn was sold last week, thought up 49% from the week prior, we were 25% below our four week average. Demand signals are neutral and do not tell bears to see or bulls to buy, for at least near term. We could not have had a better December as prices did exactly as we expected with March futures having maximum upside potential of 2.20. Note, my recommendation for a December rally was all based on short covering ahead of year end and we got it. Now, wee are back to all the underlying fundamentals. After hitting 2.21 Tuesday prices fell back on several reasons. One, equity fund buying never occurred. It still may, but only time will tell. Funds have 70 billion dollars to play with but smart money buys the breaks not the rallies. We also saw farmer selling of cash grain this week after hitting a 22 cent four week high Tuesday also allowing the farmer to defer tax liabilities into 2006 all lending to a pull back. Next week we have our USDA crop report out at 7:30 a.m. central time Thursday, January 12th. The common thinking ahead of the release of report estimates are the report will show a slightly higher production and ending stocks or a marginally bearish report. We entered today Friday with March resistance at 2.20 and first support at 2.12. A close under 2.12 and 2.09 is next support.

BEAN--- Tuesday’s weekly export inspection report showed 13.8 m.b. of beans were inspected for near term export, down from 22 m.b. the week prior and 27 a year ago. Our weekly export sales report Friday showed 461 t.m.t. of beans were sold last week off 48% from the week prior and 40% under our four week average. Sales are poor but we have to consider that we had a holiday shortened export week and the Chinese New Year. Like corn, beans too gave us the December short covering rally to resistance of 6.32 before falling back this week on weak demand indicators and farmers taking advantage of the price rally to sell cash grain. The wild card for beans to have any hope for a rally comes from weather in South America. Currently Argentina and Brazil have had minor weather issues but over all are at a normal yield estimate pace. Brazil’s ag minister stated as of January 1st their production was up 1 m.m.t. over their November estimate but the next 60 days are the key months for yield development. If we turn dry we can expect a weather rally here. Wxrisk.com the weather site says, Argentina looks to be hot and dry through January 13th, but appreciable rains could come by the 15th, before turning warm and dry again. Brazil also looks to turn warmer and drier over the weekend and all next week. When we come in Monday and the moisture for the 15th is looking less likely we could rally. If it looks wet the trade will back away. Support today , Friday, is 6.16 basis March then 6.02. Resistance is 6.32 then 6.50. Buy the weather report near term.

WHEAT--- Tuesday’s weekly export inspection report showed 9.9 m.b. were inspected for near term export, down from 24 the week prior and 18 m.b. a year ago. Friday’s weekly export sales report showed 224 t.m.t. of wheat was sold last week, a new marketing year low and 37% below our four week average. Needless to say, all demand indicators are weak. We sold some wheat to Iraq this week but the trade sees Iraq sales as political while number one world wheat buyer Egypt came in for 320 t.m.t. Thursday and bought it all from Australia and Russia. Well, if demand was weak three week’s ago at 3.10 what should we expect over 3.40. the only bullish fundamental comes from the supply side concern over the condition of our winter wheat crop now lying dormant until March, especially in our driest states Texas and Oklahoma which by the way look to remain warmer and drier than normal for the next 6 to 10 days says wxrisk.com the weather site. Here is some of the latest private state by state quality conditions. Number one US wheat producer Kansas at 61%, good to excellent condition, down 2% from the month prior. Nebraska unchanged at 64%. South Dakota 37% versus 48. Illinois 77 versus 86%. Oklahoma 21% versus 41% G-E and Texas too poor to rate. These are poor ratings but it is what happens after dormancy and the period of April and May when yields and quality can worsen or improve dramatically. One thing is certain, the winter wheat crop will be challenged this spring to find better than perfect weather to play catch up. Friday’s first support was 3.31 basis March. A close under here then 3.25 and next 3.18. Major resistance remains 3.46.

End.



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (44011)1/6/2006 3:40:46 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Hedge Funds
Hedge Fund Asset Bonanza
By Emma Trincal
Staff Reporter

1/6/2006 12:29 PM EST
URL: thestreet.com

The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed a little-noticed bill that could make it a lot easier for hedge funds to attract money from pension plans. The consequences could be meaningful, as pensions are by far the largest investors in hedge funds.

"It's a significant proposal. It would make it easier for hedge funds to raise substantial amounts of capital from pensions," says William A. Schmidt, a partner at law firm Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Nicholson Graham. "It is perceived as very good news by the hedge fund industry."

Although only a few hedge fund institutions lobbied for the bill, most are very supportive of it, another lawyer says.

The bill would also apply to funds of funds.

"No doubt the bill, if passed into law, will have the potential to increase the size of the hedge fund market. It would change the financial markets altogether," this lawyer says.

Under the proposal, a hedge fund that has less than half of its assets sourced from U.S. corporate pension plans wouldn't be subject to the stringent Employee Retirement Income Security Act (Erisa) of 1974, a set of rules that protect workers' retirement assets by limiting the flexibility of fiduciaries in how they manage the money. Today, the threshold is 25%.

The bill, called Pension Protection Act, was passed by the House Dec. 15. It was sponsored by Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, chairman of the House Committee on the Education and the Workforce.

This legislation is still pending because the Senate and House have yet to reconcile it in conference. A conference committee could meet as early as February, says one Washington official who is familiar with the bill. But some lawyers speculate that the committee will be pushed off until early spring. "I heard different things. At this point, it's anybody's guess," one lawyer said.

The bill sponsors want to raise the threshold over which hedge funds are subject to Erisa rules to 50% because they viewed 25% as low and restrictive, says the Washington official.

Other restrictions would also be relaxed. Under current law, pension plans that are not subject to Erisa -- such as government, state or foreign plans-- count toward the calculation of the 25% test, making it difficult for investment managers to stay below the threshold. As a result, most hedge funds have limited the amount of pension money they take in.

For example, let's take a billion-dollar hedge fund with a total of $250 million in pension assets. About $10 million of the pension assets come from General Motors (GM:NYSE) plan governed by Erisa and $240 million come from British Telecom (BT:NYSE ADR) , a foreign plan. Since the combined amount is $250 million, the manager is treated as a fiduciary for the General Motors money, meaning he is subject to Erisa.

The bill proposes to exclude from the calculation of the new threshold those plans that are not subject to Erisa. In the former example, only 1% would be counted toward the 50% threshold.

Raising the percentage test to 50% from 25% and easing the Erisa calculation would make it much easier for managers to accept pension assets.

For hedge funds, that would be big news. Although pensions don't allocate as much to hedge funds as foundations and endowments, their massive volume of assets represents a sought-after market. A typical first foray into hedge funds may be as high as 10% of the pension's assets. With pension plans controlling hundreds of billions of investable assets, the stakes are huge for hedge funds and funds of funds.

New doors would open -- doors that have so far remained shut.

"Hedge funds do whatever they can to avoid Erisa," says a veteran industry executive.

"Hedge funds have held less than 25% of their assets in pension money in order to avoid being subject to the Erisa rules," says Don Carleen a partner in the executive compensation and employee benefits group of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson.

It is not uncommon for managers to allow pension assets to rise to 24.9% of their total. "They don't want to be bothered. Especially the well-established and top hedge funds will reject pensions," says another attorney.

So what's the problem with Erisa?

First, Erisa rules prohibit fund managers from conducting transactions with third parties involved with the plan. For instance, a pension may be dealing with several brokers. The hedge fund is prohibited from doing business with the brokers. The tracking of those third parties can be a due diligence nightmare for hedge funds, especially if they have several pension investors and if the parties are brokers.

Another way hedge funds have avoided Erisa, although it is less common, says Carleen, was to take on only non-Erisa money, such as public pension plans and foreign pension plans.

But whether they capped pension money to 25% or eliminated Erisa plans altogether, the result was that pensions grew more and more frustrated as they were being denied access to some pretty powerful hedge funds or funds of funds.

"A lot of pension plans view hedge funds as a very appropriate means of investing, and a lot of pension money has been looking for ways to invest in hedge funds. But so far, those rules have prevented them to invest in hedge funds," Carleen says.

Indeed, more often than not, consultants recommend that their pension plan clients diversify and hedge their portfolio via alternative investments.

"This bill will be beneficial for the industry all across the board," says the head of a multibillion-dollar fund of funds.



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (44011)1/6/2006 3:52:51 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
A surprising good Roach for a change.
Looks like his recent optimis has waffled.
What does that mean if anything?
morganstanley.com

Global: Fleeting Lessons
Stephen Roach (New York)

Confession time: I am still not ready to let go of 2005. I’ve gone through my annual ritual of trying to make sense of what went right and wrong on the global macro scene in the year just ended (see my 3 January dispatch, “The Lessons of 2005”). In the spirit of mark-to-market accountability, it was as dispassionate and honest an assessment as I could muster. But the catharsis that normally accompanies such an introspective endeavor is missing. As I look back, I still have a gnawing feeling in the pit of my stomach that 2005 was a year of suspended animation.

The year just ended most assuredly did not go according to my script. An unbalanced world turned out to be more stable than I had thought. And despite a wide array of serious shocks -- from hurricanes to spikes in energy prices -- the expansion was both resilient and durable. The broad consensus of investors, businesspeople, and policy makers has taken great comfort from this benign outcome -- hoping that a similar scenario is in the offing for 2006. A frothy start in the first few trading days of the new year underscores this hope. While I’ve learned never to say never, I must confess that I will be stunned if this year unfolds without a hitch.

It is quite possible that we’re being too analytical in attempting to discern why it all went so well on the global macro front in 2005. It may simply be that the stars were in near perfect alignment, enabling the world to buy an extra year of time. I think the odds are low that an unbalanced world economy will continue to draw support from such a favorable constellation of forces. Reversals are possible on three fronts -- the liquidity cycle, the US property market, or the dollar. Shifts in any one of these areas could well be enough to transform the global outcome from benign to malign. The interplay between these forces could be especially lethal.

A turn in the global liquidity cycle would be the most worrisome development. This will come about only through the conscious design of central banks. Yet that’s exactly what now seems to be under way. The world’s major central banks all seem focused on the same objective -- a normalization of policy rates. The Federal Reserve was first to embark on this campaign, and some 325 basis points later, America’s monetary authorities are signaling that their mission is just about accomplished. The ECB has just begun the march toward normalization, but with Euroland activity now on the rebound, there is reason to believe that additional progress will occur sooner rather than later. Even the Bank of Japan, which has gone to extraordinary measures with its zero interest rate policy for nearly seven years, is dropping strong hints that the first step toward normalization -- in its case, an end of “quantitative easing” -- is just around the corner.

This shift in monetary policy represents a sea change for the global liquidity cycle. Even if persistently low inflation allows central banks to stop short of taking their policies into the restrictive zone, the transition from extraordinary accommodation to neutrality is a big deal. That’s because it entails a meaningful increase in real short-term interest rates -- long the most powerful transmission mechanism of the impact of monetary policy on the real economy. In the case of the US, for example, the real federal funds rate (as calculated relative to core inflation) has already gone from “zero” to 2% in a span of 18 months -- a meaningful tightening by standards of the past. Moreover, it is important to remember that the impacts of such policy shifts typically hit with 12-18 month time lags. That means that the impacts of the current tightening cycle are only just now beginning to trickle into the system. The flat to microscopically inverted yield curve underscores the pressure on the liquidity cycle; banks, for example, are finding it far less attractive to provide new credit at lending rates that are at, or below, deposit rates. Moreover, as Andy Xie notes in today’s Forum, the recent deceleration of growth in Asian foreign exchange reserves may be an important early warning sign of a turn in the global liquidity cycle (see his 6 January dispatch, “Liquidity Receding”).

A post-bubble shakeout of the US housing market is a second factor that I believe would challenge the extrapolation mindset of momentum-driven financial markets. That’s because the ongoing support of the seemingly unflappable American consumer has been heavily dependent on the wealth creation of the Asset Economy. In that vein, a mere slowing in the rate of residential property appreciation would represent a significant headwind for a still income-short consumer. With annualized housing inflation still running at a 20% annual rate, or higher, in 40 major metropolitan areas in the US and with most gauges of national house price inflation now looking “toppy” at best, there is good reason to believe that a significant slowdown in the pace of asset appreciation is in the offing. At the same time, a shift in the liquidity cycle points to reductions in home equity extraction -- the monetization of property-based wealth creation. With interest rates on home equity loans having risen from 4% to 7% over the past 18 months, that’s hardly idle conjecture. Reflecting the impacts of higher energy prices, real consumption appears to have expanded at less than a 0.5% annual rate in 4Q05. Most believe this was an aberration that will be followed by a sharp bounceback in consumer demand in early 2006. If the housing market fades, any such rebound is likely to be fleeting.

The dollar is a third leg to this stool. Last year’s surprising rebound in the US currency short-circuited much of the market-based venting that normally drives a current account adjustment. In momentum-driven financial markets, currency trends and capital flows tend to be self-reinforcing. The more the dollar strengthened, the more confident foreign investors -- private and official -- became in US assets. It was the ultimate virtuous circle that then gave foreign investors little reason to seek concessions in the form of real interest rate adjustments that would provide compensation for taking currency risk. In the currency business, circles can quickly turn from virtuous to vicious -- especially for economies with massive current account deficits. With the dollar having been under renewed downward pressure over the past couple of months, and with Chinese and Korean authorities hinting in recent days at official shifts in foreign exchange reserve management practices, this is a risk to take seriously, in my view.

Nor should these potential adjustments be treated in isolation from one another. If, for example, the dollar goes and real interest rates are bid up in response, adjustments to the US housing market will undoubtedly be more severe. Under those circumstances, overly-indebted American consumers will then be squeezed by higher debt-servicing expenses. If, on the other hand, the US housing market simply falls under its own weight -- a distinct possibility given the major overhangs in property values in many segments of the nation -- the hit on wealth-dependent consumption and GDP growth could then be a major negative for the dollar. This is a point that Stephen Li Jen has been making for some time. And, of course, if the American consumer fades for any reason, the impacts on the rest of the world would be especially acute. With growth in internal private consumption remaining anemic in Asia and Europe, a loss of support from US-centric external demand could deal an especially harsh blow to the global economy. That’s when the pitfalls of a US-centric global economy come home to roost. Relative to sanguine expectations, the US economy could well be the weakest link in the global growth chain -- underscoring the possibility of another year of under-performance for dollar-denominated assets.

In the investment business, we always caution, “…past performance may not be indicative of future returns.” Yet the broad consensus of market participants seems intent to throw such caution to the wind in extrapolating the experience of 2005 into 2006. To the extent last year’s lessons are applicable this year, there would be good reason for optimism on the prognosis for the global economy and world financial markets. But the chances of ongoing support from the liquidity cycle, the US housing market, and the dollar are fading quickly. Stars rarely stay in perfect alignment for long. My advice: Don’t rework your life around last year’s lessons -- they stand a good chance of being far more fleeting than normal. And, now, I’ll let go of 2005.