Saturday, May 26, 2007

The Markets, A Week in Review an International Perspective

May 25, 2007

Credit Bubble Bulletin, by Doug Noland
http://www.PrudentBear.com

For the week, the Dow slipped 0.4% (up 8.4% y-t-d) and the S&P500 0.5% (up 6.9%). The Transports dropped 1.3% (up 12.9%), and the Utilities were clobbered for 4.4% (up 10.5%).
The Morgan Stanley Cyclical index dipped 0.5% (up 18.7%) and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index 0.3% (up 7.0%).

The S&P Homebuilding index actually jumped 3.8% this week. The small cap Russell 2000 gained 0.8% (up 5.4%), while the S&P400 Mid-Cap index slipped 0.2% (up 11.4%).
The NASDAQ100 declined 0.4% (up 7.5%) and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index 0.2% (up 7.1%). The Semiconductors fell 2.3% (up 2.7%).

The Street.com Internet Index posted a slight gain (up 7.9% y-t-d), while the NASDAQ Telecommunications index declined 0.9% (up 4.4%).

The Broker/Dealers declined 0.3% (up 5.0%) and the Banks 0.8% (down 0.4%). With bullion down $5.45, the HUI Gold index declined 1.9% (down 4.7%).

Two-year U.S. government yields rose 4 bps to 4.86%. Five-year yields jumped 6 bps to 4.79%.
Ten-year Treasury yields gained 5.5 bps to 4.86%. Long-bond yields increased 4 bps to 5.0%. The 2yr/10yr spread ended the week at zero.

The implied yield on 3-month December '07 Eurodollars increased 2 bps to 5.225%. Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields jumped 7 bps to 5.99%, this week underperforming Treasuries.
The spread on Fannie's 5% 2017 note was little changed at about 38, and the spread on Freddie's 5% 2017 note was little changed at 37.

The 10-year dollar swap spread declined 0.25 to 53.5. Corporate bond spreads narrowed, with the spread on a junk index sinking 17 bps.

Investment grade issuers included CVS Caremark $5.5bn, Amgen $4.0bn, Residential Capital $2.25bn, Travelers $1.5bn, M&T Bank $300 million, and Broadridge Financial Solutions $250 million.

May 23 – Bloomberg (Jeff Green): "General Motors Corp….plans to bolster its cash by raising $5.2 billion selling convertible bonds and obtaining a line of credit."
Junk issuers included Enterprise Products $700 million, Fontainebleau Las Vegas $675 million, Tesoro $500 million, Rural Cellular $425, Psychiatric Solutions $250 million, Tampa Electric $250 million, Universal Hospital Services $230 million, Neff Corp $230 million, Mystic RE $150 million, CHR Intermediate $150 million, and Bonten Media Acquisition $125 million.
This week's convert issuers included General Motors $1.5bn and Lifepoint Hospitality $500 million. International dollar bond issuers included Credit Agricole $4.75bn, Pakistan $750 million, Lebanon $650 million, Standard Chartered $750 million and Bancolombia $400 million.

May 21 – Financial Times (Lina Saigol and Joanna Chung): "A dramatic increase in initial public offerings by emerging market companies this year has raised $53.7bn on global markets.
The level of funds raised is the highest on record for the first five months of the year, according to Dealogic, and represents half the volume for all of 2006.
The spree of new issues in the developing world has been fuelled by ample liquidity in the financial system, a strong appetite for risk among investors and growing demand for new equity from fast-growing companies."

German 10-year bund yields rose 7 bps to 4.38%. Japanese 10-year "JGB" yields jumped 8 bps to 1.72%. The Nikkei 225 added 0.5% (up 1.5% y-t-d). Emerging equities markets were mostly higher, while debt markets sagged (as global yields marched higher).

Brazil's benchmark dollar bond yields jumped 12 bps this week to 5.74%. Brazil's Bovespa equities index declined 0.9% (up 16.1% y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa was little changed (also up 16.1% y-t-d). Mexico's 10-year $ yields jumped 10 bps to (5.59)%.

Russia's RTS equities index dropped 3.4% (down 6.5% y-t-d). India's Sensex equities index increased 0.2% (up 4.0% y-t-d).

China's Shanghai Composite index surged 3.7%, increasing y-t-d gains to 56% and 52-week gains to 163%.

Freddie Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates surged 16 bps to 6.37% (down 25bps y-o-y), the highest rate since October. Fifteen-year fixed rates rose 14 bps to 6.06% (down 17bps y-o-y). One-year adjustable rates jumped 16 bps to 5.64% (up 3bps y-o-y), the high going back to August.

The Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Applications Index added 1.3% for the week. Purchase Applications were up 10.4% from one year ago, while dollar volume was 17.2% higher.
Refi applications rose 1.9% for the week, with dollar volume up 53% from a year earlier. The average new Purchase mortgage increased to $242,300 (up 6.1% y-o-y), while the average ARM jumped to $408,700 (up 19.9% y-o-y).

Bank Credit dipped $0.9bn (week of 5/16) to $8.501 TN. For the week, Securities Credit increased $1.2bn. Loans & Leases declined $2.1bn to $6.234 TN. C&I loans rose $6.3bn, while Real Estate loans declined $8.7bn.

Consumer loans gained $1.7bn, while Securities loans slipped $0.2bn. Other loans fell $1.1bn. On the liability side, (previous M3) Large Time Deposits jumped $9.1bn.

M2 (narrow) "money" dipped $1.9bn to $7.226 TN (week of 5/14). Narrow "money" has expanded $183bn y-t-d, or 6.7% annualized, and $445bn, or 6.6%, over the past year.
For the week, Currency added $0.2bn, while Demand & Checkable Deposits declined $5.8bn. Savings Deposits fell $3.3bn, while Small Denominated Deposits added $0.6bn. Retail Money Fund assets increased $6.3bn.

Total Money Market Fund Assets (from Invest. Co. Inst.) jumped $13bn last week to a record $2.498 TN. Money Fund Assets have increased $116bn y-t-d, a 12.0% rate, and $423bn over 52 weeks, or 20.6%.

Total Commercial Paper added $0.8bn last week to a record $2.088 TN, with a y-t-d gain of $113bn (14.2% annualized). CP has increased $318bn, or 18.0%, over the past 52 weeks.
Asset-backed Securities (ABS) issuance jumped to $32bn. Year-to-date total US ABS issuance of $285bn (tallied by JPMorgan) is running little changed from comparable 2006. At $144bn, y-t-d Home Equity ABS sales are 29% below last year's pace. Meanwhile, y-t-d US CDO issuance of $142 billion is running 24% ahead record 2006 sales.

Fed Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt last week (ended 5/23) increased $4.8bn to a record $1.945 TN, with a y-t-d gain of $193bn (27.2% annualized). "Custody" holdings expanded $328bn during the past year, or 20.3%. Federal Reserve Credit last week increased $2.3bn to $850bn. Fed Credit was down $2.1bn y-t-d, while increasing $27.3bn y-o-y (3.3%).
International reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg's Alex Tanzi – were up $558bn y-t-d (29% annualized) and $965bn y-o-y (22%) to a record $5.368 TN.

Currency Watch: The dollar index gained 0.2% to 82.27. On the upside, the Colombian dollar increased 2.7%, the Iceland krona 1.4%, the Thai baht 1.1%, and the British pound 0.6%. On the downside, Israeli shekel declined 2.6%, the Slovakian koruna 1.3%, the South African rand 1.1%, and the Polish zloty 1.1%. The Canadian dollar this week gained 0.4% to trade to a 30-year high.


Commodities Watch:

May 24 – Financial Times (James Mackintosh): "Retail food prices are heading for their biggest annual increase in as much as 30 years, raising fears that the world faces an unprecedented period of food price inflation. Prices have soared as the expanding biofuels industry, climate change and the growing prosperity of nations such as India and China push up the costs of farm commodities including wheat, corn, milk and oils. Food companies have started passing on these increases to consumers but the prospect of sustained commodity price rises means the industry's profits could be hit as it is forced to absorb the higher costs itself."

May 23 – Financial Times (Jenny Wiggins): "The old adage that "as goes silver, so go soybeans" is more than just a whimsical piece of American farming folk wisdom. That commodity prices tend to rise and fall in unison is a deadly serious economic phenomenon for consumers around the world as food costs increase sharply, in some countries at the fastest pace for decades.

Agricultural commodity prices are often volatile, in part due to weather fluctuations that affect crops. But what is unusual about recent price increases is that so many prices – everything from grains to ground nut oil – are rising simultaneously. Market observers say raw material prices are being driven up by shortages in supply…combined with increases in demand from countries such as China and India. They warn the world could be facing a period of `unprecedented food inflation' over the next 18 months… `It could become a perfect storm scenario,' says Michael Steib, food analyst at Morgan Stanley."

For the week, Gold declined 0.8% to $656, while Silver was unchanged at $13. Copper was little changed. July crude declined 78 cents to $65.20. June gasoline was about unchanged, while June Natural Gas fell 3.8%. Soybeans traded to an almost 3-year high. For the week, the CRB index was unchanged (up 1.9% y-t-d), while the Goldman Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) dipped 0.6% (up 9.6% y-t-d).


Japan Watch:

May 21 – Financial Times (David Turner): "Direct investment by foreigners in Japan's commercial property market more than tripled last year as low interest rates created money-making opportunities. Foreign investment ballooned to $13bn from an already substantial $4bn in 2005, according to international property company Jones Lang LaSalle."

May 24 – Bloomberg (Lily Nonomiya): "Japan's exports to the U.S. fell for the first time in two years… Shipments to Asia and Europe grew. Exports rose 8.3% in April from a year earlier, cooling from 10.3% in March, the Ministry of Finance said… Shipments to the U.S. dropped 4.8%..."


China Watch:

May 22 – Financial Times: "In any ordinary economy, a triple-barrelled announcement of the kind issued by China's central bank on Friday evening might have made more of an impression. …The People's Bank of China tightened lending and eased controls on its currency, policy prescriptions that touch all their host's concerns about Beijing's seemingly unstoppable export-driven economy. The announcement…that Beijing's new state investment agency had put $3bn of foreign exchange reserves into Blackstone… added further ballast… But such is the velocity and momentum of Chinese growth, and the sheer weight of money in the system, that financial markets soon shrugged off the monetary measures…

For more than three years, Beijing has shouted from the rooftops that its economy is out of balance: too reliant on exports and investment for growth, with a dangerously high share of output from energy-intensive, polluting heavy industries. But the plethora of policies rolled out to rebalance the economy has had little, if any, impact…"

May 21 – Financial Times: "With its $3bn investment in Blackstone, China's new state investment corporation has delivered an emphatic message at home and abroad that it will be a very different kind of Chinese company from other state enterprises heading offshore… Beijing announced the establishment of the investment corporation earlier this year, giving it a mandate to manage more aggressively a portion of China's $1,202bn in foreign exchange reserves."

May 23 – Bloomberg (Kelvin Wong and Bernard Lo): "Macau drew 2.23 million visitors in April, 19% more than a year earlier, as the opening of new casinos spurs growth…"


India Watch:

May 24 – Bloomberg (Kartik Goyal): "India must learn to manage money flows from overseas as economic growth lures companies and global funds, Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram said… `Copious inflows of investment creates problem. We must learn to manage inflows… We must not do anything to restrict flows, both foreign and domestic…'"

May 24 – Bloomberg (Abhay Singh and Anand Krishnamoorthy): "A cacophony of horns, revving engines and squealing brakes fills Jagdish Khattar's 11th-floor office in…New Delhi's central business district. The company Khattar runs, Maruti Udyog Ltd., makes half of the cars jostling on India's roads… This year, India's 1.1 billion people will snap up vans, small trucks and cars… more quickly than anyone except the Chinese, according to research firm Global Insight Inc. From 2006 through 2011, India will be the fastest-growing auto manufacturer among the world's top 20 car-making countries…"


Asia Boom Watch:

May 22 – Bloomberg (Kelvin Wong): "Hong Kong is the world's most expensive city to rent an apartment, followed by Tokyo, according to a survey by ECA International… An unfurnished three-bedroom apartment costs an average of $8,592 monthly in the former British colony, ECA said… Five Asian cities were among the world's 10 costliest…"

May 21 – Financial Times (Louise Lucas): "Asian companies are rushing to cash in on the confluence of cheap credit and booming markets by issuing record levels of convertible bonds. Asian companies have issued $15.9bn worth of convertible bonds so far this year, according to Dealogic, more than the amount issued in any of the last five full years."

May 24 – Bloomberg (Theresa Tang and Tim Culpan): "Taiwan's economic growth accelerated in the first quarter, buoyed by increased Chinese demand for the island's electronic exports. Gross domestic product expanded 4.15% from a year ago, the fastest rate in six months…"

May 23 – Bloomberg (Theresa Tang): "Taiwan's export orders increased more than 10% for a second straight month in April, as electronics demand from China…made up for slowing sales to the U.S. Export orders…advanced 11.3% from a year earlier…"

May 21 – Bloomberg (Shamim Adam): "Singapore's economy expanded 7.6% in the first quarter amid a boom in construction, exceeding all forecasts and increasing the likelihood that growth this year can withstand a U.S. slowdown."


Unbalanced Global Economy Watch:

May 21 – Financial Times (Martin Arnold): "Lax monetary policy in countries such as China and Japan is fuelling the boom in private equity buy-outs that is worrying regulators and unions across the world, according to a report published today… `The [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development] report says `distortions' in the global financial system - similar to those created by the Louvre Accord to shore up the US dollar in the late 1980s - are being exploited by the use of new derivatives products.

The resulting excess liquidity is pushing up asset prices, increasing the risk of over-leveraged deals. `It is a basic proposition that if one fixes the price of money in parts of the world economy, one will not be able to control its supply,' says Adrian Blundell-Wignall, deputy director of financial and enterprise affairs at the OECD, who wrote the report. `The recycling of this money is an integral part of the arbitrage opportunity that is driving the private equity boom,' says Mr Blundell-Wignall, a former Citigroup analyst…"

May 24 – Bloomberg (Simon Kennedy): "The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development raised its forecast for global growth this year, predicting the economies of Europe and Japan will together outpace the U.S. for the first time in 16 years. The economy of the group's 30 members will expand 2.7% this year, stronger than the 2.5% expected in November…"

May 24 – Bloomberg (Brian Swint): "U.K. manufacturers had the most confidence about raising prices since 1995 this month as orders rose, adding to the case for higher interest rates, a survey by the Confederation of British Industry showed."

May 21 – Bloomberg (Brian Swint): "U.K. money supply growth unexpectedly accelerated to the fastest pace since October last month, giving the Bank of England room to raise interest rates again. M4…rose 13.3% from a year earlier…"

May 23 – Bloomberg (Robin Wigglesworth): "Norway's economy expanded 1.4% in the three months through March, more than expected… First quarter annual growth was 4.9%..."

May 25 – Bloomberg (Maria Levitov): "The International Monetary Fund expects Russia's economy to expand at least 7% this year."


Latin American Boom Watch:

May 24 – Bloomberg (James Attwood): "Argentina is facing its biggest power crisis since 1989 as natural-gas demand, both domestic and from neighboring Chile, outstrips supply, La Tercera reported."

May 23 – Bloomberg (Matthew Walter): "Chile's economy expanded at its fastest pace in almost two years in the first quarter, powered by higher exports, investments and industrial output. Gross domestic product grew 5.8% in the first quarter from the year-ago period…"
Central Banker Watch:

May 23 – Bloomberg (Simone Meier): "The European Central Bank's so-called monetary pillar remains an `indispensable element' to measure inflationary pressures stemming from money-supply growth, Germany's Bundesbank said in a research paper. `Monetary indicators contain important information for future inflation and should therefore play a role in the monetary-policy decision-making process,' the bank's economics department wrote in the paper published yesterday. `It can be safely concluded that the monetary pillar is an indispensable element of the eurosystem's monetary policy strategy.'"

May 23 – Market News International (David Barwick): "The European Central Bank, which is in a stance of `very strong vigilance,' has not yet taken monetary policy where it needs to be and will act in a firm and timely manner to ensure price stability, ECB Governing Council member Axel Weber said…"

May 21 – Bloomberg (Christian Vits and Matthias Wabl): "European Central Bank council member Klaus Liebscher [who also heads Austria's central bank] comments on monetary policy and inflation in the 13-nation euro area: `Monetary policy has to act pre-emptively, there is no doubt. Secondly, you always have to have in mind the medium-term goal, and we have of course certain upward pressures' on inflation."

May 23 – Bloomberg (Joao Lima): "Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan comments on income inequality in the U.S. and the setting of monetary policy. He spoke to a conference in Madrid via satellite. `In the United States the greatest threat that we have to our market capitalist system is the increasing degree of income inequality.

On decision making at the Fed: `We were wrong on numerous occasions but on the actual procedure of coming to a conclusion, I think we right… Dealing with the world economy, which is in flux and which is to a very substantial extent very difficult to know and to detail, you have to formalize views of how you look at problems to reduce the risk of error.'"


Bubble Economy Watch:

May 23 – Bloomberg (Kathleen M. Howley): "Ron Baron, founder of the investment company bearing his name, didn't hesitate to pay $103 million for a 40-acre parcel in East Hampton, New York. It is the record for a residential property in the U.S…."

May 23 – The Wall Street Journal (Ryan Chittum): "Despite some concerns about the health of the American consumer, the shopping-mall industry's annual deal fest shows few signs of a slowdown. Strong consumer spending has bolstered the retail real-estate industry in the last seven years… But the industry received a warning sign in April: Retail spending was down for the first time in several months… `The middle market has slowed down' says David J. LaRue, president and chief operating officer of…Forest City Enterprises. `The consumer is not feeling as wealthy. But they still have jobs.' He notes that luxury retailers are still `banging on all cylinders'"


Financial Sphere Bubble Watch:

May 21 – Bloomberg (Hamish Risk): "The global derivatives market grew at the fastest pace in at least nine years during 2006 as the amount of contracts based on bonds more than doubled to $29 trillion, the Bank for International Settlements said… Derivatives covering bonds and loans rose by $15 trillion last year…The total amount of over-the-counter contracts whose value is derived from price changes of bonds, currencies, commodities and stocks, or events like interest rates or the weather rose 39.5% to $415 trillion, the biggest jump since the BIS began compiling the data."

May 23 – Financial Times (Gillian Tett andTony Tassell): "The number of Asians sitting for the west's benchmark qualification for financial market literacy has outstripped candidates from the US - marking another milestone in the region's rapidly growing influence on global markets.
This year's crop of candidates for the Chartered Financial Analyst exam will mark a dramatic reversal from earlier decades, when candidates from Wall Street dominated the test for what is considered a core qualification for work in the securities industry. Asia will this year field 52,900 students for the exam, against 45,400 from the US, with the fastest growth coming from India and China…"


Mortgage Finance Bubble Watch:

May 24 – Reuters: "Angelo Mozilo, the butcher's son who built Countrywide Financial Corp. into the largest mortgage lender in the United States, was in no mood for soul-searching over the subprime home crisis. Perched on an arm chair on a ballroom stage, Mozilo, who made $387 million in pay and stock options over the past five years, disavowed blame for the collapse, pleasing his audience of fellow mortgage-banking industry leaders and foot soldiers. `You've got to be careful here about blaming ourselves too much,' the deeply tanned and sharply dressed chairman of Countrywide told the Mortgage Bankers Association this week.

The real culprits, he argued, are the Federal Reserve with its series of interest rate hikes, crooked real estate speculators, falling housing prices and regulators' attacks on interest-only and other risky subprime loans. His take contrasts starkly with the view of those who blame loose lending policies and oversight, and a get-rich-quick culture in the mortgage industry.

The consequences of the housing collapse, however, are not open to debate. Tens of thousands of loans have failed, pushing subprime borrowers out of their dream homes, and many economists blame subprime lending woes for a slump in the housing market that could get worse. The downturn is likely to sap overall economic growth for the rest of this year."


MBS/ABS/CDO/Derivatives Watch:

May 21 – Financial Times (Gillian Tett): "The total outstanding value of all derivatives contracts arranged in private deals around the world has now surged above $400,000bn for the first time, new estimates from the Bank for International Settlements will show today. The rise…means that the sector swelled by more than a third during 2006, from a total of $297,670bn in December 2005 to $415,183bn in December last year.

The dramatic increase highlights the frenetic pace of financial innovation currently under way in the banking and hedge fund world, as these institutions use increasingly sophisticated ways to manage their risks and create investment strategies. And this is posing new challenges for regulators and investors. This is not least because most of this activity is now occurring in private deals away from regulated exchanges."


Real Estate Bubbles Watch:

May 25 – The California Association of Realtors (CAR): "Home sales decreased 27.8% in April in California compared with the same period a year ago, while the median price of an existing home increased 6.2 percent [to $562,820]… `April sales fell in part because of tighter credit standards and growing concerns about the impact of subprime loans on the market…Throughout the state inventory levels have increased to their highest levels in recent years… C.A.R.'s Unsold Inventory Index for existing, single-family detached homes in April 2007 was 10 months, compared with 5.7 months for the same period a year ago."



Energy Boom and Crude Liquidity Watch:

May 22 – Financial Times (Simeon Kerr): "The emergence of Gulf funds with significant stakes in HSBC and J Sainsbury this year has thrust the region's investors onto the British high street for the first time… Gulf money has flooded into the UK before. In the 1970s, the Kuwait Investment Authority led the way, buying slices of large western groups such as BP. But the current wave, driven by an oil boom that has seen oil prices peak at $78, has been on a different scale."


May 24 – Bloomberg (Nariman Gizitdinov): "Kazakhstan plans for its economy to grow by 9.4% to 14.874 trillion tenge ($123.6 billion) next year as an oil-fueled boom drives expansion in the former Soviet Union's second-biggest energy producer."



Climate Watch:

May 21 – Financial Times (Ed Crooks): "World energy consumption and consequent carbon dioxide emissions will rise by about 60% between 2004 and 2030 under current policies… In its annual International Energy Outlook, the US Energy Information Administration predicts oil consumption will grow by 42%, natural gas consumption by 65%, and coal consumption by 74%. As a result, unless policies are changed, energy-related carbon dioxide emissions will rise by 59% to 42.9bn tonnes a year by 2030, the EIA believes."


May 21 – Bloomberg (Alan Bjerga): "Worsening drought, global climate change and overgrown forests are increasing firefighting costs for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a Brookings Institution study found. Some 9.9 million acres of U.S. forest land burned in 2006, the most since at least 1960 when the government began keeping consistent records…"


Speculator Watch:

May 23 – Financial Times (James Mackintosh): "The biggest hedge funds tightened their grip on the industry last year, with the top 100 passing the $1,000bn mark for the first time and holding more than two-thirds of all hedge fund assets… The 100 largest hedge funds increased assets 39% last year, Alpha magazine found… Two investment banks, JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, topped the rankings published yesterday for the second year in a row, with $33.1bn and $32.5bn respectively, followed by Bridgewater Associates…with $30.2bn. New York's DE Shaw…was fourth with $27.3bn."

May 24 - Dow Jones (David Enrich and Kaja Whitehouse): "In the wake of Fortress Investment Group LLC's successful initial public offering, more hedge funds are likely to go public this year, according to investment bankers… The desire for a currency to attract and retain talent in a competitive industry environment is a key force behind the increased interest in IPOs. Bankers say that many of their hedge-fund clients are looking at the possibility of going public. Souren Ouzounian, managing director in Merrill Lynch…, said he has about six hedge-fund clients that are mulling IPOs. Michael Rees, a Lehman…investment banker, said four of his clients are positioned to file in `the fairly near term.' `They're big firms,' Rees said…"


May 24 – Financial Times (Gillian Tett): "Imagine for a moment that you were suddenly told that 700 hedge funds had collapsed. Would you react with merely a nonchalant shrug of the shoulders? Or experience a sense of panic? It is not a hypothetical question. Last weekend the Financial Stability Forum – a committee of international policy makers – released its most comprehensive analysis of the hedge fund sector since 2000… This provides a fascinating snapshot of the explosive growth seen in this sector this decade. But it also highlights a fascinating fact: namely that while 1,518 new funds were apparently created last year, another 717 were liquidated too. That represents a death rate equivalent to about one 12th of all funds."


`A Scary Proposition':

May 25 – Financial Times (Tony Tassell and Joanna Chung): "Highly solvent SWF seeks mutually rewarding relationship. That might sound like an advert in a singles column but it is in fact shorthand for what is rapidly becoming a huge force in global markets and economies. A vast arsenal of money to invest in markets is fast being built up by the swelling ranks of so-called sovereign wealth funds (SWFs), schemes set to invest the growing foreign exchange reserves and savings of countries from Norway to China.


Driven by trade surpluses unequalled as a percentage of the global economy since the beginning of the 20th century, official reserves held by some governments are now astronomically high and there is pressure to earn a better return by putting the money with specialised investment agencies. Morgan Stanley estimated in March that the total funds at the disposal of SWFs may be as high as $2,500bn, already around half the gross official reserves of all countries.

By comparison, the global hedge fund industry is thought to manage about $1,500bn to $2,000bn of assets… The SWFs are growing fast as countries reap the benefits of high oil prices or large trade surpluses. `If we are right that these funds will grow by roughly $500bn a year, at the expense of official reserve growth, the total size of the SWFs should be as big as the official reserves in only five to six years' time,' Morgan Stanley estimated.

How and where this massive - and often secretively managed - pool of funds is deployed will be one of the big investment themes of coming years. The evolution of these funds will have huge implications for financial markets."


May 25 – Market News International (David Barwick): "The potential rise in Chinese foreign exchange reserves to $2 trln sometime next year is a `scary' proposition, People's Bank of China advisor Fan Gang said… But Fan ruled out any sharp appreciation of the yuan to counter the accumulation of forex reserves, insisting that doing so against a continually depreciating dollar would have only a limited and short-term impact.


`We don't want to go (with) those big jumps in revaluation, because if we do this next year, or the next year, two years later it will come again, because the U.S. dollar will continue to fall. That's the kind of turbulence we don't want… The currency (exchange rate) is two sides of the (same) coin -- one side is the U.S. dollar, the other is the Chinese renminbi. If the U.S. dollar always has the intention to devaluate, it always becomes your problem to revaluate. And the U.S. dollar always has this tendency to devaluate.'


The practice of devaluing the U.S. dollar, Fan asserted, began in the 1960s with the German mark and continued in the 1970s with the Japanese yen. `Now it's the turn of the Chinese currency. This is an international problem,' he affirmed. `Because the U.S. prints money to buy things.' He said that China's growing current account surplus is a `really a serious issue' and that the associated pile of foreign reserves, now at some $1.3 trln, `could be two trillion next year; that's scary.'"
It is Scary.


Global Credit and speculative excess are these days as rampant as they are conspicuous. And as the number sympathetic to the Bubble hypothesis grows, I guess we shouldn't be all that surprised by the genesis of an illusory notion that Bubbles "are great for the economy." It's all rather astounding and adds only more support for the view that, once they catch a head of steam, inflationary excesses will surely take on powerful lives of their own. This is especially true when the prevailing inflation is in asset prices. As ECB council member Klaus Liebscher stated this week, `Monetary policy has to act pre-emptively, there is no doubt."

It is most regrettable that the Federal Reserve (and Wall Street "mavens") has been fixated on aggregate measures of ("core") consumer prices instead of the actual underlying monetary (Credit) inflation. It's flawed doctrine being discredited before our eyes.


Importantly, a stable monetary environment would have safeguarded our Current Account from ballooning to today's unmanageable Deficits. I don't mean to suggest that our trading partners are not without some responsibility. But the Chinese and others can make a very strong case today for pinning blame for global imbalances on our financial excesses and inflationary policy biases.
There is inevitably a high price to pay for inapt policies that explicitly disregarded money and Credit, stubbornly refused to address asset inflation and Bubbles and, worse yet, promised aggressive reflations as needed.


Today, we negotiate and prescribe policy from a sadly weakened stature. After all, how can we earnestly stipulate fair trading practices when, as Fan Gang noted, "the U.S. prints money to buy things" – and floods the world in dollar liquidity in the process?


It's rather foolhardy to expect the Chinese to implement radical policy adjustments (including major currency revaluation) that they view, on the one hand, as highly risky and, on the other, as unlikely to rectify (U.S.-induced) imbalances. And how can you blame them?


Our policymakers are resolutely averse to decisive policy action (with the exception, of course, of aggressive easing). Moreover, the Chinese look to Japan's experience and believe the dire Japanese predicament has been very much the outcome of allowing domestic policies to be dictated out of Washington.


For a variety of reasons, Chinese policymakers are a different breed than their Japanese counterparts. They will act in what they believe is in the best interest of the Chinese, and they will not respond favorably to outside pressure. They are steadfast and today hold a strong hand.
Fifty years from now, when economic historians look back at this period, my hope is that they recognize that U.S. financial excess was the fountainhead for the massive – and increasingly unwieldy - global pool of finance/"liquidity." It is not that I am obsessed with pointing fingers as much as I seek recognition – or more clearly stated - the return of understanding with respect to the dangers of ongoing Credit and speculative excess.


This week from Alan Greenspan: "In the United States the greatest threat that we have to our market capitalist system is the increasing degree of income inequality." He has often in the past made similar warnings regarding the risk of rising protectionist sentiments. I can only hope that at some point an understanding emerges that income equality, protectionism, and other serious "threats" to Capitalism are the inescapable handiwork of protracted Credit inflation and attendant Bubble excesses.


Back in 2003, Mr. Greenspan professed that "spreading globalization has fostered a degree of international flexibility that has raised the possibility of a benign resolution to the U.S. current account imbalance." Since then our Current Account Deficit has ballooned uncontrollably and global imbalances have worsened dramatically. Greenspan committed a historical policy blunder. As such, it would today be more seemly for him to direct his attention to U.S. policy issues and address imbalances that are clearly not going in the direction of "benign resolution" (or at least he should not ignore them).


It is certainly time to rethink bullish notions related to "globalization" and "international flexibility" and recognize that we must take responsibility for returning our financial and economic houses to some semblance of order.


Let's return to the "Scary" thought of Chinese reserves hitting the $2 TN mark next year. Massive Current Account Deficits and escalating dollar outflows to play ("undollar") global markets now combine for a parabolic surge in dollar liquidity outflows to the world. And from foreign official comments and the emergence of these so-called "sovereign wealth funds" it is equally clear that there is now a major shift afoot to "diversify."

It's no longer a safe bet that dollar flows will be recycled predictably back almost exclusively into the comfortable confines of the Treasury and agency marketplace. On the margin, global "official" flows have an increasing appetite for "risk assets," a major reversal that will go anything but unnoticed by the enterprising global leveraged speculating community.

And it's all quite illustrative of the powerful dynamic of inflationary excess begetting only greater excess. For some time, escalating dollar outflows and requisite foreign central bank recycling made Treasury/agency yields unattractive (the "conundrum"), squeezing the leveraged speculators further into riskier assets.

The resulting Credit boom then engendered only more enormous dollar flows to be recycled, along with greater outperformance of global risk assets vs. U.S. Treasuries.
Not surprisingly, the central banks (and "SWFs") desire a piece of the action, exacerbating the flood of finance into global equities, M&A, CDOs and structured instruments, junk bonds and leveraged loans and other higher yielding instruments.

I am not going to claim any great insight into possible ramifications for ballooning pools of finance prospecting the world for better returns. I'll suggest it's historic and warn it's precarious.
I'll proffer that this unfolding dynamic (ongoing heightened Credit Availability, Marketplace Liquidity, and Inflationary Biases) will in general necessitate higher global official short-term interest rates.
The U.S. bond market, in particular, has been positioned for a faltering economy and Fed rate cuts – a scenario less likely near-term because of the unfolding extraordinary global liquidity and risk-seeking backdrop. And I can appreciate that savvy bond fund managers would hesitate remaining on the wrong side of this Official Treasury for Risk Asset Trade.

I also ponder the possibility (and ramifications) that the "SWFs" are now consciously seeking opportunities to hedge against rising inflation. So much for the Myth of Stable Inflationary Expectations.

Such a backdrop would also be expected to support the runaway booms in the heavily populated economies of China, India, Russia and elsewhere, ensuring little respite from pricing pressures throughout the global energy and commodities complex.

The Myth of Price Stability is taking yet another blow with recent strong inflationary pressures engulfing food and staples (see Commodities Watch). Today, it is almost a case of mounting global inflationary pressures everywhere outside of manufactured goods prices (held in check by Credit-induced "Investment Inflation").

I'll suggest as well that we've entered a dangerous period of Bubble-on-Bubble Excess. Despite several years of significant stock market inflation – three-year gains of 46% for the Russell 2000, 51% for the S&P400 Mid-Cap index, and 40% for the Wilshire 5000 - liquidity abundance has nonetheless nurtured a fanciful view that U.S. equities remain "undervalued."

The S&P500 this week traded back to year-2000 record highs, with the bulls keen to note that earnings have risen markedly since then (corporate profits have doubled since 2000 in total from the National Income and Product Accounts, and similarly for S&P500 companies).

So the bulls today trumpet the case that U.S. stocks are cheap in real terms (S&P500 at "only" 18 P/E) and relative to global equities prices. The reality of the situation, however, is that years of U.S. Bubble excess have significantly inflated "fundamentals" such as corporate earnings and cashflows and personal incomes, along with global asset prices generally.

Bubble-on-Bubble excess today inflates the perceived reasonable bounds for valuation to extremes - on top of an earnings base that is acutely vulnerable to a post-Bubble collapse. Yet perceptions hold that market risk is today much lower than during the 2000 Bubble.

As we now witness, financial excess inflicts its most seductive distortions to underlying "fundamentals" during the late phase of Credit Bubble excess. There is an argument that lingers to this day that stocks were not overvalued in the late twenties. And while P/E ratios were modest right up to the '29 crash, underlying boom-time earnings had become grossly inflated - and vulnerable. Similar dynamics are at play today. I fully expect corporate profits, personal income, and government tax receipts to all prove highly susceptible to the inevitable Credit cycle downside.
Some choose to define Bubbles as a divergence between asset prices and underlying "fundamentals". I would instead stress how profoundly and surreptitiously late-stage Bubble dynamics distort fundamentals – as both Credit and asset prices lose their moorings to anything of stable value. It's when the pendulum inevitably swings back and the market places cautious multiples on post-boom earnings (that can be abruptly sliced "in half") that create devastating losses for unsuspecting "investors."


Visit The David W. Tice & Associates Wed site PrudentBear.com at:http://www.prudentbear.com/articles/show/2024David W. Tice & Associates, LLC. (DWTA) is the investment advisor to two mutual funds. 1.888.778-2327

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Our U.S. Economy - A Commentary in the making

By Benjamin Train
May 12, 2007

Several well-paid talking heads have taken aim at the U.S. economy and the forces of global influences on our economic policies. Many more have opinions that counter common sense, just to make you feel good. Below I have posted simple, easy to understand facts that may help you be better prepared for what is about to come, and further commentary by Mr. Norcini.

1. The U.S. trade deficit widened more than forecast in March as higher crude oil shipments drove the biggest increase in imports in more than four years. The gap in goods and services trade widened 10.4 percent to $63.9 billion from $57.9 billion in February, the Commerce Department reported today in Washington. Imports and exports were the second highest on record.

2. The Bank of England increased its key interest rate to 5.5% today and the European Central Bank signaled it will follow next month as policy makers seek to contain inflation.


"The risks to the outlook for inflation in the medium term remain tilted to the upside,'' the U.K. central bank said in London. " Strong vigilance is of the essence to ensure that risks to price stability in the medium term do not materialize,'' ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet told reporters at a press conference in Dublin today.

Foreign interest rates are rising despite the fact the British Pound and Euro have already made strong gains against the U.S. dollar, causing one to wonder whether U.S. economic policy has a serious disconnect with the rest of the world.

3. One day after the Federal Reserve failed to recognize the weakness in April payrolls and March consumer expenditures, U.S. retailers posted their biggest sales decline on record in April (negative 2.3%) as reported by the International Council of Shopping Centers.

The report prompts worries that Friday's release of April retail sales will come in negative, in which case will begin to weigh on the US dollar on resurfacing expectations of a Fed easing.

4. Thursday, May 10, 2007 Morgan Stanley put out a number of comprehensive analyses of the demand for commodities and the outlook for some mining companies. In short, they remain bullish and the main reason is demand by Chinese and other Asians (especially Indians) as their wealth continues to grow. They raised their price objective for gold and the platinum group metals for 2007 and 2008 as well.


Are Precious Metals a headge against inflation?
If so, what is driving the price of Gold Down this Week?
Commentary from Dan Norcini Thursday, May 10, 2007:

Gold was obliterated today as long liquidation was forced by predatory shorts that began in yesterday's session.

There is really not a lot to say about this other than the fact that ECB gold sales prevented gold from breaking through first, the $700 barrier, and then, the $690 barrier.

Seeing that overhead gorilla and bullion bank price capping, longs have thrown in the towel out of disgust while brand new fresh shorts are coming in as well leaving an absence of buying.
Such is the nature of this gold market.

It can never set back slowly and gradually but instead goes into free fall mode as the black boxes all get out at the same time and trample each other in the process.

The good thing about that is they finish up the liquidation process very quickly and get it over with. The physical market buyers then show up and bid it back up as they see value and the funds then come pouring back into all over again and we repeat the process for the umpteenth time.

There are two things you can say with certainty – the sun rises in the East and gold will get bashed periodically, scare the dickens out of gold longs and then climb higher on its next leg back up again.

Another thing is that these gold bashings tend to occur very close to rollover time in the lead month contract. That means a large number of speculative long index fund positions MUST be rolled into the next month, in this case the August.

It has been my observation that these predatory gold bear raids are timed to coincide with the rollover period. Again, there is nothing particularly skillful about the trading tactics of the perma gold shorts – they telegraph their intentions so clearly that anyone can see what they are up to.

Skillful traders manage to conceal the brunt of their buying and selling. These guys are big gorillas. The problem is not the skill of the gold perma shorts – it is the lack of skill among the hedge funds that play gold. They simply have not learned how to play the gold game and their lack of discretionary trading allows them to be quite easily preyed upon.

By the way, one of the culprits for the gold sales coming out of the ECB has been largely the Bank of Spain. They announced that they sold 40 tons in March.

Euro gold was set at 498.667 for the London PM Fix. It dipped under the psychologically significant 500 euro level for the first time this week.

So much for all the ra-ra from the talking heads about the improving US trade deficit picture. It shot up by an astounding $6 billion from February coming in way above analysts' projections at $63.9 billion. February was revised to $57.9 billion.

The dollar ignored the data as it always seems to do when this data is released any more choosing instead to focus on the "inflation fighting Fed". Remember, these are the same guys who continue to flood the system with massive amounts of liquidity judging from the cleverly reconstructed substitutes for M3 out there.

They are talking out of both sides of their mouth or better said, what they are taking back with their mouths, they are giving away with both hands.

Another good idea for a cartoon about these guys would be a picture of Chairman Bernanke dressed up in buckskins wearing a coonskin hat looking like Daniel Boone and holding a nice Kentucky long rifle.

He has his foot on the dead carcass of a `possum with the word, "inflation", scribbled on it. As he stands there proudly basking in his triumph, his powder horn is leaking gunpowder causing a large pile of the stuff to accumulate behind him. Another fellow has crouched down next to the pile with a flint and is making sparks – he is named "Speculator and Stock Market Bull".

As a general note - , the USDX was trading between 85.00 – 83.50 for the month of February – the month that the trade data released today was detailing.

It has put in a near term bottom above major support which is not too surprising given the interest that all of the major Central Banks of the world have in preventing a dollar collapse right now. That serves no one's interest at this point in time.

Incidentally, anyone who does not believe that the major Central Banks of the world do not communicate with each other about forex levels needs to be in a different profession.

Dollar bears have covered and are in the process of further covering shorts which should provide a bit more of a lift to the dollar unless we get some data release which shows an abrupt slowdown in the US economy.

Euroland rates are going to go up next month but that has been factored into the price of the euro already so we will need to see something else to push the dollar down against the euro for now. It will probably have to come in the form of a further narrowing of the interest rate yield between 10 year German paper and 10 year US paper.

The retail sector reported disappointing April sales. That got the attention of some who are worried that high gasoline prices are cutting into consumer spending. As I write this commentary the stock indices are all sharply lower for the day.

U.S. trade deficit widened in March 2007 - And a way to overcome its effects

Friday, May 11, 2007
http://www.freemarketnews.com/Analysis/178/7495/mike.asp?wid=178&nid=7495
The trade deficit numbers released today were a stunner.


The U.S. trade deficit widened in March, as higher crude oil prices failed to prevent a jump in American demand for crude oil.

The U.S. deficit in international trade of goods and services rose 10% to $63.89 billion from February's revised $57.89 billion, the Commerce Department said Thursday. (when will the MSM stop comparing March, 2007 with February, 2007 instead of March, 2006?)

2006 Jan.- Mar. -191,648

January -66,470
February -62,912
March -62,266
April -63,598
May -65,340
June -64,695
July -67,882
August -68,915
September -64,603
October -58,926
November -58,214
December -61,453

2007Jan.- Mar. -180,661
January -58,877
February (R) -57,893
March -63,891

Blame the bad news on higher prices for imported oil and higher prices for imported goods. The fall in the USD has not improved the numbers.

DON'T SAY YOU WEREN'T WARNED
By Gary Tanashian
Owner: www.biiwii.com
Owner: American Manufacturing Business
http://www.freemarketnews.com/Analysis/48/7481/gary.asp?nid=7481&wid=48
Thursday, May 10, 2007

Since its inception in 2004, Biiwii.com has sought to provide balanced analysis during a time of unbridled bullishness in most global markets (two notable exceptions being the US Dollar and the Japanese Yen).

Along with this bullishness comes ever increasing risk however and as any good trader knows, managing risk vs. potential reward is of utmost importance. If you have followed the site from the beginning, you have noted a disdain for perma-bearishness along with a sort of resignation that a liquidity fueled global casino atmosphere has replaced any semblance of organic economic and market fundamentals.

I have personally done well casting my trades bullishly over the last four years and the few bearish bets I have placed have been met with disappointing results on balance.

The first article I ever wrote, FrankenMarket Lives ended with this...
"As entitled modern Americans, I can envision the majority seeing this as bullish, and Alan Greenspan gaining even more accolades as the celebrated maestro. Frankenmarket will probably get an extra bounce in its step.

A warning before you go full-bore bullish longer term though; for a reality check on what hyperinflation means, do a little research on what Germany experienced in the 1920’s. By contrast, a garden variety Japan style deflation would have seemed very tame. But it is too late for that now."


Well, the mechanics of the inflationary liquidity fest proved different than I thought at the time with the Yen Carry Trade (YCT) taking center stage over any outwardly obvious operations by the US Fed. But the result has been the same; ongoing expansion of munny (def- a: funny munny, b: FrankenMunny) with various global origins with no source more powerful nor influential than the YCT.

This is munny created through key strokes and leverage. It is munny that thinks it is real or at the least wants to transform itself into something real. Hence its desperation to convert itself into the hottest of plays like the industrial commodities in service to the China growth story or the miraculous US stock market that is trying to signal that all's well on the deck of the good ship America. Much of this munny is even smart enough to try to hide in the precious metals.

But in an age where debt and leverage giveth, what do you suppose will happen when it taketh away? The Yen and the USD appear to be at important crossroads and they hold the keys to near term market events. Being a natural bottom feeder in my trading practices I would be buying Yen and USD here, which means I would be selling stocks, commodities and be guarded on the precious metals.

In a future article I will explain why I do not plan to be without at least a core of gold stocks and why I will plan to add to existing positions if they are wood shedded along with most other assets. I also want to keep a close eye on the US Dollar. But for today, I would like to present three charts of the Yen, which I consider the most important potential trigger to what may be radical changes in the investment landscape to come.

Yen daily sports a set up I just love to buy; a falling wedge down to support. The noted area is not only short term support, but as a look at the monthly chart to follow shows, it is actually very important long term support as well.

Yen weekly offers a view of strong bullish divergence in momentum indicators even as the whole world seemingly either scoffs at the possibility of a strong Yen rise or chooses to ignore its implications. Also, the Yen has clung to the vestiges of a modest up trend and could be in the process of forming an inverted head & shoulders pattern, which would be bullish.

Not concerned yet? Just a bunch of TA mumbo jumbo on a weekly chart? Well, here is a simple monthly chart of the Yen showing a symmetrical triangle pattern in the making since 1995. The Yen is at major support. The whole world is on the other side of the boat. You do the math and please do not say you were not warned.

Being long over-pumped equity markets, China stories and commodity assets would not be the place to be if the Yen makes a major move and all that funny munny stops dead in its tracks.

Over at Trending123.com, John Lansing notes that "cash is a position" and has backed this up by getting his subscribers out of the markets in the last week or so. I have known about this cat for years and in fact became interested in technical analysis in no small part due to his influence and talent with charts.

"Cash is a position" and risk vs. potential reward must always be a primary consideration. Right now I would rather be long caution than long CNBC.

For those who may agree with this analysis and are interested in the Yen and USD for diversification and/or risk management purposes, Rydex offers its CurrencyShares ETF's including Japanese Yen Trust (FXY).

We currently have no position but are strongly considering one in this vehicle as well as a strengthening dollar fund such as the Rydex RYSBX to serve as hedges against current gold stock holdings and the very few other stock market longs currently held in the semiconductor and airline sectors. But again, keep in mind Mr. Lansing's position: Cash is a position also... and it's currently paying 5%.