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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: carranza2 who wrote (67785)11/4/2010 7:43:21 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 220045
 
at start of each day, after ebas and before arriving at office i check the news, namely e-mails and look for the summary at kitco, just that single number which is gold.

today started well, and could end better. if worse, then can buy more so as to feel better tomorrow, or the day after. good thing about bull market is that the object of bull goes up.

with silver, gold, and platinum all pissing in the general direction of the fed, i would have guessed there is fear in the air but for the truth that all are calm, meaning there is no obvious panic.

panic shall come later, when hopes are dashed and wishes flicked off.

oh, yes, we must not forget the obligatory downer that "gold is useless and earns no yields".

again, at some juncture, we must use substantial and sustained leverage, and stop being a girly man, else a golden opportunity is wasted.

in the mean time, just in in-tray per greed n fear

· The announcement of QE2 has come in as expected, namely an incremental approach. Still, the approach is sufficiently gung-ho to continue to give the benefit of the doubt to the risk trade. Investors should remain overweight Asia and emerging markets which will again prove to be the major beneficiaries of quanto easing. Macro investors should also remain long Asian currencies against the US dollar, with the Singapore dollar remaining GREED & fear’s favourite currency on a risk-adjusted basis.

· GREED & fear’s view on QE2 remains that it will not precipitate releveraging of the American economy, just like the first version did not. But it will probably take some time for the equity market to work that out reflecting the natural bullish bias. Still when the releveraging hopes are dashed attention will then turn to QE3, which next time may include a formal inflation target and purchases of private sector debt.

· Billyboy will likely carry on with his mad experiment until he precipitates the collapse of the US dollar paper standard. The Fed’s attempt to combat the perceived problem of deflation will end up creating a far bigger problem. That is the systemic risk posed by the anticipated ratcheting up of QE. This is why the view here remains that America will turn out to be a case of “Japan-heavy” not “Japan-lite”.

· GREED & fear continues to be surprised that US financial markets are not more concerned about the continuing foreclosure mess. There is also the separate but related issue of faulty representations and warranties made by originators of non-agency mortgage loans in the mortgage-backed securitisation process. The issue is whether this is institution specific or system wide.

· There is a small but not zero risk that this securitisation-boomerang problem could turn out to be systemic in nature in terms of the losses it could impose on prominent commercial banks and investment banks in terms of billions of dollars of mortgage exposure being put back to them.

· One way US consumption has been boosted at the margin in the recent past is the growing practice of “strategic default” where people stop paying mortgages but continue to live “rent free” on the increasingly correct view that the banks will take an increasingly long time to foreclose on them. Such a trend can only serve to delay further a housing recovery.

· The US housing crisis is somewhat unique in the sense that it is a product of a home financing bubble rather than a house price bubble. This is why house prices can get ridiculously cheap in the US before there is a final bottom. The systemic risk posed by the socialisation of the mortgage market is growing not receding.

· With some politicians already calling for a nationwide moratorium on mortgage foreclosures, it is surely only a matter of time that the same sort of people will be calling for mandatory mortgage debt relief. This is a good reason for investors to sell exposure to US mortgage paper and US financial stocks.

· The fundamental reason why such a mess exists is clearly that the repeal of the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act occurred without a realisation that such deregulation only made sense in the area of financial services if there was a similar deregulation in terms of allowing bad banks to fail. The most likely end game of a foreclosure crisis that turns systemic is another wave of taxpayer funded bank bailouts.

· The renewed rise in PIGS spreads has not been accompanied by renewed euro weakness. This market action presumably reflects the news that the German efforts to impose some discipline on Euroland’s fiscal targets gives the euro more credibility. Still given the way both the Germans and the ECB blinked when the Greek crisis came to a head, it would be dangerous not to assume a similar reaction the next time a crisis hits.

· The Indian central bank is about the only central bank in Asia fundamentally comfortable with tightening independently of the US. This reflects the longstanding domestic demand driven nature of its economy and the resulting almost total absence of the export-orientated mercantilist bias so deeply entrenched amongst East Asian central bankers.



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To: carranza2 who wrote (67785)11/4/2010 8:53:47 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 220045
 
recommendation: getmoregold, addmoresilver

just in in-tray, per stratfor

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2010 STRATFOR.COM Diary Archives
Washington's Warning Shot on the Currency Front
The U.S. economy is, somewhat cautiously, on the mend. We don’t mean to proclaim everything hunky-dory, but consumer spending is back up above the peak level of the last recession. Since consumer activity accounts for roughly 70 percent of the American economy — and at some $11 trillion, that American consumer market is more than the combined economies of China and Japan — it isn’t that big of a leap to say the American economy is at least moving forward, even if it isn’t firing on all cylinders.

“The United States holds both the only major consumer market showing signs of life and unfettered control of dollar policy.”

There are two veins of concern that branch from this. First, this lukewarm performance has now been the state of affairs for nearly a year (regular STRATFOR readers will recall that this situation is, in essence, what we described in our 2010 annual forecast). Americans like breakout and that simply hasn’t happened, ergo the malaise. Second, the United States is the only major advanced economy showing such signs of consumer recovery: Japan is mired in a stew of aging and deflation and is probably incapable of expanding its consumer spending for reasons that have nothing to do with its recession; southern Europe is sinking into a vat of debt that is dampening growth across the continent; and despite the much-mooted talk of the advanced developing world making up the difference, their combined consumer base is less than half that of the United States. It will take another generation of growth before they can be considered a major absorber of global exports — and that’s assuming you believe all the statistics.

In the meantime, basically all of the major economies are pushing to export to the United States, hoping that by maximizing their take of the global — which is to say, American — import market, they might be able to improve their chances of recovery. To this end, many countries are engaging in policies to maximize their chances of selling to the American market — in particular, the world’s second, third and fourth largest economies.

China maintains a de facto peg to the U.S. dollar to minimize currency risk and maximize reliability for their firms. True, Beijing had continually repegged the yuan higher bit by bit in recent months, but the yuan remains now roughly where it was four years ago. Add in that China funnels the savings of its citizens as loans to state corporations at subsidized rates and you have a country that could only consume more by transforming its entire financial system.
Japan faces the problem of demographics. Large numbers of aging (low consumption) citizens and very few young (high consumption) adults have cursed the traditionally export-oriented country with a strengthening currency (low consumption/imports and high exports lead to a stronger yen). No wonder the Japanese economy is approximately the same size in 2010 as it was in 1991. Consequently, Tokyo is unabashedly intervening in currency markets to drive the yen down and hopefully spur Japanese exports — and with them some sort of domestic revival.
Germany is in yet another situation. Situated at the heart of Europe, the only way Germany has ever been successful economically is to engage in massive projects that link the country’s disparate river systems and coastlines, with the autobahn perhaps serving as the most recognizable example. All this state-influenced investment provides Germany with not only a world-class infrastructure, but an extremely educated population and a top-notch industrial base. Modern Germany is by design an export juggernaut that favors investment over consumption. Luckily (for Berlin) many of its European partners’ debt problems are weighing down the euro, so German companies are getting a currency boost to their exports without Berlin having to engage in any currency manipulation strategies.
With economies No. 2, 3 and 4 all pushing for maximum exports, and import capacity weak at best, it should come as no surprise that the U.S. government is attempting to convince all the major states to agree to some sort of currency pact at the upcoming G-20 summit. Details are sketchy, but the bottom line is that Washington would like Germany, Japan and China — and many others — to publicly commit to refraining from currency manipulation, and let their currencies float to wherever the market will take them. To this point, such calls have largely fallen on deaf ears.

Then something interesting happened today. The U.S. Federal Reserve announced it would engage in a process called Quantitative Easing (QE), which in essence means printing currency and using the money to purchase assets that investors are shunning with the goal of stimulating economic activity. There are a number of reasons why a central bank might engage in QE, but none of them are conventional. For purposes of this discussion, there are really only two to consider. First, QE can be used as a sort of tool of last resort when tax cuts, deficit spending and interest rate policy are maxed out, as they arguably are for the United States. Second, large-scale QE can increase the money supply to a degree that it devalues the currency, a sort of semi-stealth means of driving the dollar lower.

Now, this batch of QE isn’t very big — “only” $600 billion over eight months. It is an amount that is not all that much larger than normal Fed operations for managing the money supply. It’s too small to have more than a marginal impact on either inflation or the value of the dollar. But the Fed manages the dollar, and the dollar is the only global currency. It is the currency that all commodities are bought and sold in, that two-thirds of global currency reserves are held in, and that everything coming in and out of the United States — still the world’s largest economy by a factor of three — is handled in.

None of America’s trading partners will think that this batch of QE is the beginning of a massive dollar devaluation — the change is simply too small for that. But it is a stark reminder that if it does come to an actual currency war, the United States holds both the only major consumer market showing signs of life and unfettered control of dollar policy. For states that have been tinkering with their currency policies, attempting to maximize their access to the American market, today’s QE announcement is a warning