TBOND-BUND-EUROSTOX-FIBMERD fine del capitalismo(V.M.98anni)

Floors, Ceilings, Camels, Straw

There was a very interesting article in the Pimco Investment Outlook for December 2006 by Bill Gross entitled "Reality Check." Gross talks about a new derivative credit product retailed to institutional buyers under the sticker known as a CPDO or "constant proportion debt obligation." It is a very interesting conversation, so let's tune in:

"Things are seldom what they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream.
-- Gilbert and Sullivan, H.M.S. Pinafore...

"I write today not to expound on the cyclical economic outlook nor to unnecessarily repeat observations of prior Investment Outlooks conceding that risk spreads are compressed and potential alpha generation likely 'anemic'...What I would like to speak to now is the current pricing (overpricing) of certain risk assets even under the idyllic conditions of continued Fed transparency and globalization and all of the other components which may have seemingly produced cream out of skim milk...Volatility and growth rate assumptions dominate risk asset prices, as do presumption of future real interest rates, liquidity, etc. The list of variables, if not endless, is certainly long and therefore more and more subjective the further one ventures out on the pricing limb. I, and I'm sure you as well, am always amazed at the pundits who claim that certain just-released information is already 'priced in' to the markets. How do they know and who did they ask?...But there are certain points in more definable, less 'BS-able' asset markets that approach certainty if only because they are more mathematically based. When the Fed cut interest rates to 1% in June of 2003, I could guarantee you that they could only cut them 100 basis points more. When 10-year yields on Japanese JGBs hit 0.35% at the same time, I could almost guarantee you that their incredible bull market run was coming to an end. Nasdaq 5,000? Easy in retrospect, but harder at the time, if only because the mathematics of value were being biased by the phantasms of hope. The floor was 5,000 points below, but the ceiling somewhere in the wild blue yonder.

"Because the bond market is more mathematically oriented than riskier asset markets, it stands to reason that a quest for certainty and reality in financial markets would begin there. Fed funds at 1%, JGBs at 0.35%, and ?. Where is the present-day counterpart where one could claim that prices could go no higher or risk spreads compress no further? We are beginning to find such evidence in the investment-grade corporate bond market, the narrowing spreads of which are displayed in Chart 1.

1165696761protectfinance.gif


"While a rather obvious 25 or 35 basis points to 0 analogy could quickly be advanced here, a finer, more precise analysis emanates from the quantitative dissection of a new derivative credit product retailed to institutional buyers under the sticker known as a CPDO or 'constant proportion debt obligation.' Without too much explanation, these multibillion-dollar instruments lever investment grade indexes up to 15 times the amount invested and offer or have offered a spread of 200 basis points over LIBOR with a AAA rating. Hard to pass up, I suppose, recognizing that AAA securities are by definition blue chip with rare, only infinitesimally small annual default rates. But this AAA rating is subject to numerous (more numerous than usual) subjective assumptions on the part of the rating services and in turn vulnerable to quicker downgrades than your normal AAA GE credit rating (there GE, I've paid you back). My purpose in bringing up the CPDO, however, is not to denigrate the rating sources or to praise GE, but to state that under PIMCO quantitative modeling, current investment grade CDX spreads, shown in Chart 1, can only narrow by 3 or 4 more basis points before these CPDO instruments can no longer earn a AAA rating or offer such an attractive 200 basis point spread. More importantly, increasing multiples of leverage beyond 15 times near current yields spreads cannot maintain either a AAA rating and/or the 200 basis points in yield spread that have made this derivative so attractive and in turn helped to reinforce a declining trend in all credit spreads over the past few months. The increasing use of leverage, in other words, at least as applied to this particular area, appears to have run out of its magical ability to increase returns. Investment-grade corporate spreads, therefore, are not likely to narrow further. The perceived fat content in this supposed AAA 'cream' is as high as it's going to get, and skim milk may eventually be the reality."

Summary of Key Observations:

CPDOs have reinforced a declining trend in all credit spreads
Increasing leverage "appears to have run out of its magical ability to increase returns"
"Volatility and growth rate assumptions dominate risk asset prices, as do presumption of future real interest rates, liquidity, etc." Those assumptions just may not be correctly "priced in"
We are much closer to the floor than the ceiling when it comes to corporate spreads
"Investment-grade corporate spreads, therefore, are not likely to narrow further"
The ability to lever any or all asset returns via increasing leverage is reaching a climax.
Gross goes on to say, "No gloom and doom message here" (refer to the article for context), but I think the implications are obvious and can hardly mean anything but doom and gloom when this mess starts to unwind. I encourage everyone to read the entire article.

Default Insurance

John Rubino on DollarCollapse asserts, "Everyone Is Writing Default Insurance!":

"The stocks that make up Bearing's Credit Bubble Index (banks, brokers, homebuilders) didn't miss a beat when tech crashed in 2000; they kept on rising and have now, despite the homebuilders' recent weakness, hit levels comparable to the Nasdaq before its crash
Subprime lending has driven the latest stage of the credit bubble, which puts it on very shaky ground, indeed. From Bearing: '32.6% of new mortgages and home-equity loans in 2005 were interest only, up from 0.6% in 2000; 43% of first-time home buyers in 2005 put no money down; 15.2% of 2005 buyers owe at least 10% more than their home is worth (negative equity); 10% of all homeowners with mortgages have no equity in their homes (zero equity); $2.7 trillion in loans will adjust to higher rates in 2006 and 2007'
Instead of a single isolated bubble, there has been a series of rolling bubbles, with new ones forming to replace those that burst. Each, in other words, is part of one mega-bubble that's fueled by an ongoing flood of new dollars."
Click on this link to see some interesting charts with thanks to John Rubino and Bearing Asset Management. Even as some components of subprime lending are now blowing up, expanded leverage in CPDOs was ready and waiting in the wings. One can only wonder, "What the BLEEP is next?"

Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac

I find it interesting that the "Treasury Drops Demand That Fannie, Freddie Cut Their Portfolios":

"Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Treasury is no longer demanding that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac reduce their combined $1.4 trillion mortgage portfolios as part of legislation creating a new regulator for the government-chartered companies, according to a document the Treasury gave to Democrats in Congress...

"Treasury officials in July backed legislation that passed the Senate Banking Committee requiring a new regulator to cut the mortgage assets, rather than just giving it authority to do so.

"Fannie Mae says such constraints could reduce its portfolio to less than $100 billion, from $720.9 billion. The bill hasn't moved to a Senate vote, because of opposition from Democrats."

Inquiring minds are probably wondering what happened to that systemic risk at Fannie Mae that the Fed and the Treasury department had both been harping about for several years now. Bear in mind that Fannie Mae also has a derivative mess so big that it still has not filed is annual report for 2004 or any quarterly reports since then.

Forbes talked about the filing problems of Fannie Mae on Nov. 8, 2006:

"Fannie Mae said it determined financial statements from January 2001 through the second quarter of 2004 should no longer be relied upon, due to issues with accounting practices and material weaknesses in internal controls over financial reporting.

"The company plans to restate earnings for fiscal years 2002 and 2003, as well as the first and second quarters of 2004.

"The company plans to file restatements, its quarterly report, and annual report for 2004 by the end of this year. In the meantime, because of the late filing, Fannie Mae will need to request extensions from the NYSE in order for its shares to remain listed on the exchange."

Let's review the testimony of Secretary John W. Snow on proposals for housing GSE reform before the U.S. House Financial Services Committee:

"In order to protect against the systemic risks posed by the GSEs' mortgage investment business, the administration recommends that limitations be placed on the size of the GSEs' retained mortgage investment portfolios. An appropriate phase-in period for the reduction of the existing portfolios would be needed so as not to disrupt mortgage or financial markets."

In addition to Snow's testimony, various Fed members have also talked about systemic risk at Fannie Mae numerous times. Am I the only one who finds it odd that the Fed is no longer concerned about the systemic risk at Fannie Mae or the derivative mess it is in, even though Fannie Mae has not filed a quarterly report since 2004? Did systemic risk vanish overnight? Or is the Fed now more fearful of the housing implosion than the systemic risk it was previously worried about? If Bernanke sends me an e-mail answering those questions, I will be more than happy to post it.

Harvesting Currencies

I am wondering how long it takes before this "harvesting operation" blows sky-high.

"PowerShares DB G10 Currency Harvest Fund Description: Seeks to track the Deutsche Bank G10 Currency Future Harvest Index by (1) entering into long futures contracts on the three G10 currencies associated with the highest interest rates, (2) entering into short futures contracts on the three G10 currencies associated with the lowest interest rates, and (3) collateralizing the futures contracts with United States 3-month Treasury bills."

Derivatives Trading

Bloomberg is reporting, "Derivatives Trading Soars to $370 Trillion":

"Nov. 17 -- The use of derivatives grew at the fastest pace in eight years during the first half of 2006, boosting earnings at securities firms and reducing costs for investors.

"The face value of derivatives based on corporate bonds, currencies, interest rates, commodities, and stocks jumped 24%, to $370 trillion, according to the Bank for International Settlements. It was the biggest percentage rise since the bank began keeping records in 1998.

"Trading in credit-default swaps, the fastest-growing derivatives market, helped spur record earnings for banks, including New York-based Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. At London-based Barclays Capital, derivatives accounted for more than 60% of revenue and profit, Chief Executive Officer Bob Diamond said in May.

"'The pace of growth is going to have continued unabated in the second half of the year,' said Kit Juckes, head of fixed-income research in London at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

"The amount of outstanding credit-default swap contracts jumped to $20.3 trillion, from $13.9 trillion at the end of last year, the Basel, Switzerland-based bank said on its Web site today. The securities are financial instruments based on bonds and loans that are used to bet on an increase or decrease in indebtedness...

"Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, has been saying since 2002 that derivatives reduce risks by making financial markets resilient to shocks. In May, he told a Bond Market Association gathering in New York that derivatives are the most significant change on Wall Street 'in decades.'"

Modern Financial Wizardry

In other news, a spokesman claiming to represent Greenspan reported that the entire risk of all derivatives trading to date has now officially been offloaded to Mars. A Martian spokesman verified that claim and went on to state that Martian risk has been offloaded to France. France in turn claims to have offloaded the risk to the MMMM corporation better known as Madame Merriweather's Mudhut Malaysia, the ultimate guarantor of $370 trillion in derivatives.

Leverage on the trade has not yet been calculated, but Madame Tandalayo Merriweather of Kuala Lumpur has e-mailed me personally, stating, "Don't worry, my Mudhut is priceless." The key point here is the priceless nature of the Malaysia Mudhut, which is a good thing given that it has taken two years and counting to straighten out the derivatives mess at Fannie Mae alone. In a miracle of modern financial wizardry, no one, it seems, has any risk associated with these derivatives, given they are all backed by something priceless. This is exactly as Greenspan envisioned.

Citadel

It is staggering the amount of credit that is sloshing around on totally unproductive activities. As proof, I offer "Citadel Trading Costs Hit $5.5 Billion":

"The importance to Wall Street of a handful of large hedge funds was starkly illustrated by the disclosure that Citadel Investment Group paid more than $5.5 billion in interest, fees, and other investment costs last year.

"Although the net asset value of Citadel's two funds is only about $13 billion, its costs are high because its managers trade frequently and take on huge leverage...

"Citadel is raising $2 billion in a debt issue managed by Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs. Fortress Investment Group, which has $26 billion in hedge fund and private equity assets, last month filed for an initial public offering that is expected to value it at about $7.5 billion.

"But the banks are expected to fight hard to retain hedge fund business. Sylvie Durham, a lawyer at Greenberg, Traurig who represents hedge funds, said: 'They will cut spreads on deals and loosen restrictions they have on how money they lend can be used.'"

Banks "will cut spreads on deals and loosen restrictions they have on how money they lend can be used" in order to retain business. Well, isn't that special?

GDP vs. M3

Credit is soaring in every which way, but none of it is benefiting the real economy. One can look at the plunging GDP and increasing inventories as proof. No additional production capacity has been added by any of this financial activity, and none is needed anywhere in anything anyway, as I pointed out in "Bernanke's Box." Thus, we have finally reached the point at which all credit expansion is now nothing but pure speculation. This is an extremely dangerous limbo of sorts, in which monetary policy is actually restrictive on real-world productive activities, and also restrictive on individuals overleveraged in debt, but nowhere near restrictive enough (for the time being) to stop further speculation by financial wizards seeking profit. See "An E-mail From Bernanke" for the problems facing Bernanke.

Let's now return to floors and ceilings for a bit:

Floors

Credit standards
Corporate spreads
Volatility
Interest rates.
Interest rates are closer to the floor than the ceiling, but still are quite far above where they are in Japan. One difference now is the fact that the U.S. dollar index was at 120 when the Fed started its last slash-and-burn operation, but is now sitting at 82.5.

Ceilings

Leverage
Risk-taking
Bullishness
Housing starts
Housing permits
Credit default swaps
Derivatives in general.
As Bill Gross points out, it is easier to estimate the bottom than the top, but if credit standards and credit spreads are at the bottom, it is likely to imply the top is near at hand on all kinds of things. The top is clearly in on housing starts and housing permits, and in spite of a significant plunge in both, they remain much closer to the ceiling than the floor on a historical basis.

It has been amazing, to say the least, to see the progression that has taken place. Anything and everything was done to keep the credit bubble expanding.

Credit Bubble Expansion History

In the wake of a dot-com bust that Greenspan refused to let play out, interest rates were slashed to 1%
Low rates fueled massive overinvestment in housing
The Fed started hiking
To keep the housing bubble going, credit lending standards dropped with each rate hike
Housing prices soared and pay-option ARMs and other products were invented to keep housing affordable
Stock funds resorted to selling options to "gain income"
Speculation in credit default swaps soared
With each rate hike in the U.S., the carry trade in yen became more and more attractive. Speculation in various carry trades soared
Carry trade speculation compressed yields across the board in all kinds of things
The housing bubble eventually burst due to pure exhaustion, but CPDO speculation came to the forefront to keep things humming. This further suppressed credit spreads
Hedge funds unhappy with gains on CPDOs resorted to increased leverage
Derivatives trading soared to $370 trillion
Running out of room on CPDOs, money started pouring into leveraged buyouts
End of the line?
Leveraged Buyouts

Leveraged buyouts appear to be the latest toy for the speculative crowd. Leveraged buyouts are not a new concept. Can this rehash be the end of the line?

The Atlanta Business Chronicle is reporting, "Texas Pacific Eyeing Home Depot":

"According to a New York Post report Thursday, Fort Worth, Texas-based Texas Pacific and New York-based Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. are among the buyout firms considering a buyout deal that could be worth $100 billion...

"The buyout, if it occurs, would be the largest leveraged buyout in history, according to the news reports."

On Friday, Dec. 1, John Succo, one of my favorite Minyanville professors, wrote about The H boys...

"Home Depot (HD) is up over a dollar preopen on LBO rumors. My firm's thoughts are that an LBO for HD (or any retailer) makes little financial sense. Most of these rumored and actual transactions these days are making little sense, but companies like this, it is especially the case. The only positive factor going for such a deal is that HD has virtually no debt. But it has little in the way of hard assets and thin margins, which makes an LBO very dangerous.

"But crazier things have happened. After all, that delevering by companies in 2002 they are now all in a rush to relever. Lessons not learned.

"If the U.S.'s new Treasury secretary wants to worry about financial meltdowns as a function of risk-taking by hedge funds, he needs to call up Mr. Bernanke and talk about the real source of risk: super-easy money finding its way into pure speculation. Today's LBO funds are a form of hyperspeculation, as they are forcing too much risk into the system."

Although $100 billion is clearly not what it used to be, the proposed leveraged buyout of Home Depot is still the largest in history. Can this be the proverbial camel that breaks the straw's back?

Regards,
Mike Shedlock ~ "Mish"
 
Throwing More Dysfunctional Fuel on the Forest Fire
The last week has brought on some real stress in the asset backed securities market. A thinking person would naturally ask why this hasn’t spread to equity and other markets? The answer is no particular surprise, foreign central banks (FCBs) rode in with an enormous and record one week $16.8 billion infusion of Treasury and housing agency purchases. Who is doing this? May not be your typical suspects, and illustrates in spades why the Middle East is critical to the US Ponzi finance and energy dependent scheme. If you are pinning your triumph of hopes on it, pray hard (facing Mecca) for the stability of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE. Others (Iran) in the region, have the exact opposite approach.

1165697521oilreserves.gif


Additionally, the US Wizards (Fed) intervened in the market with a string of four coupon passes (total of $3.847 billion) over the last two weeks. A partial offset comes from Japan, who has drained off reserves to a new low of $7.17 billion, a level perhaps suggesting a rate hike is finally coming on Dec. 19th. However, heartening news for the carry trade Riskloves comes out of the blue here, as Japan’s Ministry of Truth (see primer on Winterisms in side bar for my terms) rectifies down it’s 3Q GDP numbers. The US Dollar is then strengthened via management of expectations– translate: just make up economic data to suit the situation. Beats actually using tighter money any day. Superficially, the Rube Goldberg machine is working superbly for now, except for the brewing consumer credit crisis.


All in all, the feedback mechanisms in the market remain distorted and giddy. Just picture Soviet Union style economics and it’s corresponding “economic data” at work, and you will be close to visualizing what is transpiring. The end result is that overpriced debt instruments get piled ever higher into the coffers of these FCBs. Yet at the same time, many issue statements about out of control Riskloves and their concerns about holding US Old Maid cards. Psychologists have a term for this behavior: dysfunctional.

Still, what interests me now about this heavy handed manipulation is that ABS credit spreads blew out anyway, as apparently the Riskloves and players are saying, “You want Old Maid Cards at absurd prices? You can have them.” In other words the failures going on in the subprime enabler market are already baked in, and Wizards buying their toxic waste, may not have any effect except to dig themselves into an even bigger hole.

In fact, the flow of this new distortion money may now find its way into something else altogether, such as the Pinocchio trade: for instance oil or gasoline. Interestingly, gasoline and distillate inventories have fallen sharply during a period when they should have built. If Riskloves decide to exploit this market (instead of stuffing themselves on more ABS paper) this sets up another potential consumer backwash situation and more high cost fumes for the Brazil America class (lower and middle class) to eat. Little wonder that Rasmussen polls reports that 53% of Americans feel the economy is getting worse.

1165697552distllates.gif

1165697573gasolineinventory.gif


To quote Martin Meyer in his book, The Fed, “The truth is that liquidity, the only significant weapon remaining in the central bank’s arsenal as decision making moves to the markets, will not necessarily go where you want it to go when you need it to go there.” In fact, our Middle Eastern “friends” who are actually the ones now supplying a large measure of this liquidity, may have every incentive to provide it for Pig Men and Riskloves, for them to use in another speculative “Flucht in die Sachwerte” run on energy prices.

It is starting to appear that the latest ploy to try and control the market’s excesses, and at the same time “go on the record” for butt covering purposes, is to ratchet up regulation and suasion. In other words, various Wizards are talking a mean story. Although it is far too late to cure the damage already inflicted, this effort may have the effect of influencing extreme risk taking behavior at the margin. At any rate, that could be a prospective theory to consider? Here, we see US regulatory apparatchiks issuing new guidelines and warnings on problematic commercial lending, especially on concentration issues. “Misgivings” elsewhere: criminial probes on Pig Men are picking up in the muni market. Guess once in awhile somebody has to pretend to be “on it”, and bribes–I mean hand slap fines–collected?

And speaking of once in awhile, I have something positive to report for the forces of goodness and light in their difficult battle against the scamsters and exploiters. Kudos to New York City and Chicago for taking a stab at the sickness care and junk food rackets. Will be interesting to see if they can overcome these lobbies, and good luck! And to the purveyors of this “food”, I say quit your whining, and get to work on those menus. Unfortunately, the public doesn’t seem to support the measure, with 70% voting for overrated “consumer choice” instead. Of course they also expect great, cheap medical care when they get sick and obese. There’s that dysfunctional theme again. Going to be tough, turning this thing around, when 70% of the American population has their heads up their asses.
 
gipa69 ha scritto:
http://www.decisionpoint.com/ChartSpotliteFiles/061208_crash.html



Insomma, siamo nella stessa situazione del 1929, affrettiamoci o il crash ci travolgerà... così dice più o meno quest'articolo... :-?
http://www.bullnotbull.com/archive/shorting-opportunity-2.html


ma no, ma no, ma quale crash? siamo ben lungi da qualsiasi indicazione di crash.... così dice quest'altro... :-?
http://www.decisionpoint.com/ChartSpotliteFiles/061208_crash.html



la vita è bella perchè è varia... :D :ciao:
 
leo-kondor ha scritto:
Insomma, siamo nella stessa situazione del 1929, affrettiamoci o il crash ci travolgerà... così dice più o meno quest'articolo... :-?
http://www.bullnotbull.com/archive/shorting-opportunity-2.html


ma no, ma no, ma quale crash? siamo ben lungi da qualsiasi indicazione di crash.... così dice quest'altro... :-?
http://www.decisionpoint.com/ChartSpotliteFiles/061208_crash.html



la vita è bella perchè è varia... :D :ciao:

Gli articoli postati servono per dare un contributo alle varie posizioni ma non sono un'indicazione di acquisto o di vendita.

Quell'articolo BulltoBull parla di lungo periodo e sebbene propenda per lo short anche di breve è evidente che dice che il consolidamento di inizio novembre poteva poi risolversi in una nuova gamba rialzista e riporta anche il detto che il mercato può restare irrazionale più a lungo di quanto tu possa essere solvente indicando chiaramente quindi il rischio di adottare una strategia del genere con eccessiva leva o aggressività.

La dicotomia economia/mercati finanziari è un qualcosa che non risolve in qualche settimane ma c'è la possibilità che possa durare mesi se non in qualche caso anche anni.

Condivido invece il discorso sugli indici in termini reali.

Il link a DecisionPoint vuole far vedere una opinione contrarian rispetto alle solite similitudini con i crash ma anche in questo caso farsi una opinione di lungo periodo con due indicatori, per quanto affidabili essi siano è a mio avviso errato.
Ed infatti il realizzatore di qull'articolo è lo stesso creatore dei sito DecisionPoint che mostra centinaia di indicatori :rolleyes:

Personalmente penso anche io che gli indici siano saliti eccessivamente così come quasi tutti gli asset finanziarizzabili (infatti vi è una forte dicotomia tra commodity con futures e commodity senza futures) e questo trend ha prolungato oltre misura il ciclo economico/finanziario.

Da una parte l'ingegneria finanziaria ha permesso di prolungare oltre misura il ciclo del debito individuale dei paesi più avanzati (e a anche di quelli più arretrati..)
Dall'altra la leva finanziaria ed i carry hanno permesso di mantenere sostenuta la liquidità finanziaria anche in presenza di una contrazione (parziale vedi articolo sul repo di qualche settimana fa...) della liquidità negli USA a causa del rialzo dei tassi (rialzo nominale ma non reale...).

E quindi possibile che nel giro di qualche settimana/mese una seria correzione causata da una crisi sistemica possa verificarsi ma sarà il comportamento dei prezzi dei vari asset e le loro correlazioni ad indicarcelo.

In caso contrario come scritto nell'articolo da te postato ormai diverse volte bisogna seguire i punti 3) 4) e 5) della strategia di trading dell'autore. :rolleyes:
 
Economy on the Upswing
Friday's Bureau of Labor Statistics' Employment Report appears to have put an end to the fears of recession as it reported upward revisions to prior jobs figures, confirmed the figures released earlier in the week by ADP's Employment Report, and also gave a preview of inflation to come.

The report showed 132,000 new jobs created in November while the unemployment rate remained essentially unchanged at 4½%. As you know, the BLS has a history of undercounting the number of workers, but even their count showed almost a million new jobs had been created in the last year. Revisions pointed toward higher numbers for September and October as those two months combined for an increase of 282,000 jobs. According to Fed Governor Moskow, if the US economy were running at full capacity, it should be creating an average of 100,000 jobs per month. If the latest figures are not revised further, the new jobs creation figure for the latest three months (414,000) was running 38% faster than its trendline growth rate. This is good for workers, but bad for inflation because it means upward price pressure is building an inflationary surge.

That assessment was bolstered by a rise in wages over the last year -- 4.1% -- more than twice the pace of inflation the Fed has set as its upper target. As you know, the real inflation rate is probably much higher than the government reports. This is the reason the Fed is constantly talking about the danger of inflation -- they know that the economy is not in danger of going into recession with so many new jobs being created and wages rising so quickly. Instead, the problem is that there is an increasing danger of an inflationary spiral getting out of control. If it does get out of control, the Fed will be forced to hike short term rates until a recession ensues, bringing inflation under control.

Wall Street has been betting that the Fed will be cutting short term rates in 2007. This is the "Soft Landing" scenario so many have been talking about. The evidence suggests they are exactly wrong and that the Fed will be hiking short term rates to attempt to rein in inflation before it rises at an even higher rate. There may have already been a Soft Landing in the summer, followed by a Takeoff since then. The stock market has been saying that whatever pullback the economy was having is already over and a pickup in economic activity is well underway right now.

And, evidence from a proprietary econometric model agrees. That model has correctly forecast the last three US recessions. More importantly, it has never forecast a recession which failed to appear. Right now, that model is saying the US economy is likely to continue expanding. In addition, it is saying that inflation is relatively high and likely to go even higher in the months ahead.
 
Michael Pento - 12/7/2006

Difficult Balancing Act

Economists are now arguing over whether it will be a hard or soft landing for the U.S. economy. The fact that a landing will occur is no longer debatable. Empirical evidence demonstrates that the fragile U.S. economy is growing weaker with each passing piece of government data. Anemic GDP, durable goods, Chicago PMI, ISM-Manufacturing, and Factory orders, along with rising unemployment claims are suggesting that the Fed will stimulate the economy with yet more liquidity in 2007. The Fed and the economy/market may find itself in a box next year—a Bernanke Box—one that puts the economy squarely at odds with the dollar.

The Fed’s mandate is to maintain dollar stability. However, they may have to decide in 2007 whether to rescue a falling currency by hiking rates or to lower rates in order to stave off a recession. Which posture they take will have major ramifications for the bond, stock market and the economy.

We are all aware of the reasons for the long term negative outlook for the U.S.D. There is the trade deficit mandating we entice foreigners to commit 2 billion dollars per day into our markets in order to maintain dollar stability. In addition, the total U.S. debt is now over $8.6 trillion. This debt has allowed China to hold $1 trillion in foreign reserves (70% of reserves in U.S. dollars). Chinese officials have recently expressed an interest to diversify their dollar holdings. According to Bloomberg, foreigners now hold nearly 50% of our publicly traded debt. The major holders of our debt are Japan, China and the U.K. They currently hold 639.2, 342.1 and 207.8 billion dollars of our treasury debt respectively. In all, foreigners hold about $9 trillion of U.S. financial assets.

The U.S. has developed a dependency and an addiction to these foreigners who hold our dollar and subsequently our economy hostage. Former President Clinton’s Treasury Sec. Robert Rubin said in November, “The U.S. is five years away from rapid acceleration of spending tied to Social Security and Medicare.” At the same time the esteemed former Fed head Paul Volcker proclaimed, “It’s incredible people have gone on so long holding dollars.” and was unwilling to extend a prediction of a dollar crisis in the next two and one half years. Trustees from the Medicare and Social Security trust funds estimate that 26.6% of Federal income taxes will be needed to fulfill obligations in 2020, up from 6.9% today. By 2030 that number will increase to 49.7%. Bear in mind the U.S. has a negative saving rate, which further underscores our reliance on oversees borrowing.

So the Fed must appease foreign holders and prospective buyers of our treasuries by offering higher relative yields. That interest rate advantage the U.S. currently holds is expected to decline in ’07 as central banks in Europe and Japan raise rates. With real rates of return after taxes in negative territory, bonds currently offer little investment value. It will not be an easy task to attract foreign buying especially in light of our falling currency. If Mr. Bernanke decides to raise rates, it should bolster the dollar short term but at the same time crater a housing market that is on life support and drive the economy into a deep recession, which may still prove pernicious for the currency in the longer term. Or, he may choose to rescue the economy by cutting rates that should provide short term stimuli for the economy and the markets but could engender a dollar crisis. The latter may send foreign holders of our dollar denominated assets to flee, sending bond and stock prices much lower.

It is my contention that the Fed will attempt to keep the Fed Funds rate at 5.25% and talk about the dangers of a falling dollar and inflation. Concurrently, while ostensible appearing to be an inflation hawk, they will monetize newly issued treasury debt and flood the economy with new money. If successful, they may delay the dollar’s ultimate fate and bolster the faltering economy. The above balancing act is very difficult to pull off and can be only temporary in nature. For investors, keep a close eye on economic data and especially Friday’s non-farm payroll data. If weaker than expected (layoffs from the decline in the housing market should suppress the number), look for a further sell-off in the dollar while the stock market supplicates for a rate cut. And look for Mr. Bernanke’s balancing act to become a bit more precarious.
 

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