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Politics : Dutch Central Bank Sale Announcement Imminent? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill Murphy who wrote (1472)10/8/1998 9:30:00 PM
From: ForYourEyesOnly  Respond to of 81177
 
Great!!

Looking forward to it!

THC



To: Bill Murphy who wrote (1472)10/9/1998 4:33:00 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 81177
 
Bill: Looks like we might have to wait until next year for the big breakout. Near term a pullback to POG $290 and XAU 70 or so seems in the cards. Let's face it -- POG has not that done well these last few weeks considering the huge turmoil in global markets and the big smash in the greenback.



To: Bill Murphy who wrote (1472)10/9/1998 11:57:00 PM
From: ForYourEyesOnly  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 81177
 
*****Martin A claims that Buffet is selling and that the PMs will not function as a refuge of last resort.....

Will Leverage Cause

The Financial World to Blow Up?

By Martin A. Armstrong

Copyright October 9th, 1998

Princeton Economic Institute

There has always been the question of leverage that enters into the
process of any financial panic. The degree of leverage within the
system is a key factor in determining just how severe the panic
will become. However, the degree of leverage may also have a
neutralizing impact upon government's ability to manage and
control the economic forces at work. In short, even if government
reduces interest rates, increases the money supply and passes
sumptuary laws to deal with the effects of leverage, all such efforts
may have little impact upon the short-term while increasing the
amplitude of the next business cycle. It has always been the degree
of leverage that ultimately dictates the fate of mankind and his
political economy. Today's financial turmoil has shown precious
little evidence to suggest anything otherwise.

The amount of leverage within the system has always dictated the
degree of the overall decline in combination with the desire to
move toward liquidity. Whenever these two forces move together,
the degree of panic is raised exponentially. For example, let us say
that we have a lending ratio of 16:1, as was the case during the
Great Depression. If the desire to move toward liquidity causes a
contraction in leverage from 16:1 down to say 8:1 in combination
with at least a 25% decline in asset values, the net effect of these
forces upon an economy are magnified considerably. If a central
bank seeks to reduce interest rates, there will be little or no effect
during a period where the desire to move toward liquidity
dominates the trend. A reduction in interest rates will ONLY have
a positive impact upon the marketplace if there is a credit crunch
and NOT a desire to simply liquidate positions.

If we assume an overall leverage of 16:1 on the actual money
supply through the course of bank lending, then a contraction in
leverage will tend to be more than the ability of any government to
implement counter-trend measures. If the money supply were $1
trillion, which has been leveraged, into $16 trillion, then a modest
contraction back to 10:1 becomes a reverse leverage of 600:1
insofar as the destruction of paper wealth is concerned. Therefore,
even if the central bank doubles the money supply, such an
increase will not be sufficient to overcome the deliveraging effect.
This is the situation we currently find ourselves in as some of the
big hedge funds liquidate positions in an attempt to meet margin
calls.

We have warned that intervention is a dangerous game. It has been
used by politicians in recent years to support their own agendas
that have been counter-trend to the free markets. In the case of
massive liquidation that is causing a panic within the currency of a
nation, this is perhaps the only justification for government
intervention to buy back its own currency. The failure to do so on
the part of Japan now may put at risk the entire world economy
thanks to the hedge funds. There will be no way to stop the effects
that will now spread due to the shock in the currency markets. Yet
over time, governments will attempt to intervene in the process by
controls, regulation and sumptuary laws. All such efforts will risk
a further contraction in economic activity raising the risk of a
prolonged global meltdown.

The large hedge funds have placed vast sums of leveraged cash on
the line in trades that they thought were liquid, such as dollar/yen
and mark/yen. The problem that we are currently experiencing
has to do with the crisis in liquidity and not a flight to quality.
There is a subtle difference. A flight to quality is where capital is
rushing from one investment to another. What we are witnessing
is a crisis in liquidity caused by the liquidation of positions
seeking to move to cash. While hedge funds like Tiger have made
no public comment on their losses, they continue to make the
headlines of even the evening ABC national news. The manner in
which these positions are being liquidated is amatureistic at best
because they are being thrown on the funeral fires in a manner
that says, "just get me out!" However, if we assume that these
portfolio managers are NOT amateurs, then the only explanation
for such massive and relentless selling must be due to the fact that
they are under the gun in order to meet margin calls or face
forced liquidation by banks.

In any event, liquidation by one fund causes action to be taken by
others. We have argued for decades that ALL Panics are NOT
caused by short selling but by long liquidation. This is precisely
what is taking place and it is perhaps more visible now because
those funds that are liquidating are so few. As liquidation begins,
others are also forced to liquidate. The danger, is when this vast
leveraged hoard of cash forces normal economic flows to take
action. In this manner, the deflationary influences expand rapidly
spreading from economy to economy until the entire world is
engulfed in financial pain. The low comes about only when the
liquidation finally ends.

The damage now caused by the liquidation of yen positions against
the German mark and US dollar filters over beyond the mere
currency markets. This sudden drop in the dollar means that
whatever profits the Japanese banks did have on their foreign
investments was just wiped out in 2 days. There cannot possibly be
many Japanese banks that have a remote possibility of earning a
yen. The higher yen results in a collapse of the Nikkei as foreign
holders of Japanese equities rush to take immediate profits in the
face of a sudden 10% gain in currency. Domestic Japanese
selling comes in due to those who now see any earnings of the
corporates vanishing due to foreign exchange. Everything begins
to feed upon itself with one domino pushing into the next.

The US bond market was sent rushing upward due to Long Term
Capital Management (LTCM) who had a big bet on higher interest
rates. Their rush to cover positions sent the bonds from 125 to
135. However, the collapse in the bonds most likely came from
others like Tiger Management selling in an effort to meet alleged
margin calls on yen and equity positions. A third hedge fund is
said to have 30,000 long positions in the S&P 500 futures. If that
is true, then this liquidation panic can also crush the stock
markets. We have already seen relentless selling of the European
markets earlier without the slightest sustainable rally while the
US market held its ground. This was caused by other hedge funds,
perhaps including LTCM, who had been betting aggressively on
the coming Euro. They were long European markets and short the
US market.

The Euro has effectively been wiped off the face of the earth. LTCM
was the biggest player on the Euro. They were short the German
mark against just about every Euro currency through the bond
markets. LTCM was responsible for the miracle convergence
throughout Europe. Now the trade appears to be long marks and
short ECUs as the ERM simply blows up. In reality, Europe was a
giant emerging market play as fund managers were betting on
coming reforms to bring about "Euroland" as it was being called.

From here, this plague of liquidation appears to be spreading
around the world. We are witnessing the massive deleveraging of
our global financial economy. The degree of leverage is not known
at this point and we certainly cannot see any relaxation in
confusion or volatility. We can say that each market appears to be
turning on its own investors with the intent of creating as much
havoc as our human capacity for endurance can take. This means
that the stock market decline is NOT over. We will see a rally
first as the market attempts to squeeze out all the short positions.
However, lacking fresh buying, the markets will then turn south
with the speed of a thunderous crash. There will be NO flight to
quality trades that survive in the global mess short-term. Forget
about rushing into the metals. As reported on Reuters today, the
new German government will no longer oppose IMF gold sales due
to the fact that they need their own cash for home. This will lead to
more selling from additional central banks as well as they
themselves become caught up in the global liquidation crisis.

Even the silver market fell like a stone today. Selling in the cash
market of more than 12 million ounces already has sent silver
down from $5.45 to $4.76. Those who have taken issue with our
computer models on this market will curse the day they ever
bought silver. Dealers continue to talk about possible Buffett
selling. Tiger Management has also been a big player in the
metals markets, which could now lead turn into another wave of
liquidation. Everyone is now running out and buying puts on
metals for fear that the next wholesale liquidation will hit this
group sparing no one around the financial world.

There is no place to hide other than cash for the moment. We are
in the final stages of a global liquidity crisis and not a flight to
quality crisis. In this atmosphere, cash rules.




To: Bill Murphy who wrote (1472)10/10/1998 8:57:00 AM
From: unregmarket  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81177
 
Bill:
Are we seeing a temporary pullback or more long-lasting decline in au pricing - I sure timed GSR all wrong - bought in @ 2 1/2 and did not set stop loss for fear of MM's grabbing shares on retracement .. too bad for me.
Appreciate your comments, and I think I'll stay in silver for awhile (other than GSR).

Rick M.