Crisis Over, the Old Crisis Returns
by Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Wednesday, 30 April 2008
"...Is the
foreign US bond-buyer now going on strike, just when
the Treasury needs him to pay for tax rebates, investment bank bail-outs, and
the first raft of post-Election housing aid...?"
CRISIS OVER then;
the Fed has worked its magic! And things will only get better from here.
Equities are trading at the lowest price/earnings ratio in a
generation; unemployment is ticking lower; household balance sheets are fast
improving; confidence in the monetary and financial systems has been restored.
And the price of gold – that long-term indicator of
financial stress – has slumped, forcing wealth out of dead metal into
wealth-generating lending and business at last.
Oh, hang on...that was 1982.
Here in spring 2008, on the other hand, "the markets
are giving [Ben Bernanke] credit for having turned the corner and bringing
stability back," cheers Kenneth Hackel, a managing director at RBS
Greenwich Capital Markets in Connecticut.
"Our view is things are in a bottoming phase," agrees
a portfolio manager to the Associated Press. Why? Because the latest data –
showing the slowest US
economic growth since spring 2001 – "was modestly better than
expected."
Better than expected sits as near to brilliant as anyone's
got in the last 12 months. So it must signal good times ahead. Oh sure, not
quite the good times that followed the "emergency" Fed rate-cuts of
2001 to 2003; housing can't double again you know! Nor should you expect to
shoot fish in a barrel like stockholders did in the '80s and '90s, either. Last
time a bull market in Gold fizzled out, the Fed funds rate was heading south
from 19%, the Dollar was rising on the forex markets,
and the "long boom" lay ahead – rather than behind us.
But even so, "we are closer to the end than to the
beginning of this crisis," agrees Citigroup's new CEO, Vikram
Pandit. And with Pandit
asking shareholders to cough up a mere $3 billion on top of the $40bn already
laid out by Middle Eastern and Asian wealth funds, the end of the end is
getting so close, we guess he can smell it.
Not sold on the end of the end yet? Well how about
"more than half way through" as Jamie Dimon,
the head of J.P.Morgan, said of the banking crisis in
mid-April? "Both our sales desks and client visits report a significant
switch by real, long-only investors – such as pension funds and insurance
companies – towards investment-grade debt securities," claims Jan Loeys of the same bank, now the proud owner of Bear
Stearns...along with a $29bn guarantee of Bear's nastiest assets from the US
taxpayer himself.
The CEO of Goldman Sachs, Lloyd Blankfein,
also reckons "we're closer to the end than the beginning"; here in
Europe, the signs are "encouraging" said Josef Ackerman on Tuesday,
even as he reported Deutsche Bank's first quarterly loss in five years.
However you look at, in fact, the credit crisis will only
run on for "a couple of quarters" from here, in the words of John
Mack at Morgan Stanley. By Christmas, you'll barely remember it happened.
Except for all those empty houses and their weed-ridden
gardens down the street. Besides all the "position wanted" notes
piled onto the local store's notice board. Other than the relentless rise in
the cost of living every time you go shopping. Discounting those little
niggles, this crisis is finished. And they've got more to do with a wholly
different problem anyway. A problem the world can get back to now the credit
crisis is so clearly done.
"America relies on foreign investors who own more than
half the US government debt outstanding," as Bloomberg reports, "to
finance a deficit that New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicts will
expand to a record $500 billion for the year ending Sept. 30, after a $163
billion gap last year.
"Without their support," the newswire says,
"long-term interest rates [on US
debt] would be 0.9 percentage point higher, a 2006 Federal Reserve study
found." Long-time Dollar bears will recall this is where we came in.
The historic debts built up by Washington
made the US
currency a long-term sell long ago. And since Bear Stearns' "enhanced
leverage" funds first blew up last June – distracting the world with a
crisis in investment banking – the total outstanding debt owed by Uncle Sam has
ballooned by another $1 trillion.
Open the door to that other terrible twin – the $258bn trade
deficit for 2008 to date – and you might wonder why the Dollar just recorded
its first monthly gain vs. the Euro since New Year's Day.
Like us here at BullionVault, however, you'd be missing the point.
"It will be a great idea to stop cutting rates,"
says Andrew Busch, a strategist focusing on currencies for the Bank of Montreal
in Chicago. "It'll help the
Dollar stabilize and dampen commodity prices."
So far, all this talk about "pausing" the Fed's most
aggressive rate-cutting campaign since...well...since the last one...has indeed
put a floor beneath the Dollar on the currency, commodity and precious metals
markets.
Indeed, the triple whammy of oil, Euro and gold-denominated
doom just peaked out.

First gold, then the Euro and now crude oil have stopped
rising and fallen back – Gold most
obviously losing 16.3% from its last record high above $1,032 per ounce.
So "for now, all is quiet on our investment front and
the war appears to be winding down," says Bill Gross, founder and boss of Pimco, the world's biggest bond fund manager. And for an
added bonus, the slump in the Dollar starting when the credit crunch began last
summer means the value of America's
debts has also wound down. That's cost America's
foreign creditors real money as well as sleep.
Anyone dumb enough to invest in US Treasury bonds but live
in Japan, for
instance, now owns just ¥85 for every ¥100 they spent on T-bonds last August. And
guess what? "Japan
owns more Treasuries than any other nation," as Bloomberg relates.
But "after raising their holdings by $9.2 billion to $620.6
billion between March and July 2007, Japanese investors trimmed that stake by
$34 billion through February, the Treasury said April 15th."
So maybe a bigger crisis is developing on Ben Bernanke's watch; maybe the much-needed foreign bond-buyer
is going on strike, just when the Treasury needs him most – to pony up for tax
rebates, investment bank bail-outs, and the first raft of post-Election housing
aid.
"Exploding fiscal deficits, the housing correction,
protectionist threats and $200 billion in tax hikes scheduled for 2011 are
fueling loss of confidence in the US Dollar," as John Chapman, a research fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute, notes for the Wall Street Journal. "If foreign holders
of Dollars or Dollar-denominated assets sell them, all the good effects of
being the de facto international reserve currency start operating in reverse.
Until fiscal and monetary policies change, all this implies future inflation
and higher interest rates."
Who can blame Japanese investors for doing what Chapman
calls an "if" and refusing to buy greenbacks any more? The plunging
Dollar literally destroys the value of Dollar-denominated debt. Sadly for the United
States taxpayer, however, it only destroys
it for overseas lenders. Only a surge in overseas earnings will reduce the
burden of domestic debt, because the only thing America
can otherwise use to repay its debts are the Dollars it earns.
Which brings us to gold, the anti-Dollar and also the very
opposite of debt.
No one's to
create and no one's to default on, Gold
just closed out its second losing month on the trot in April. It also recorded
its sharpest drop in average daily prices since the 10% plunge of June 2006.
But given the bounce in the Dollar, only leveraged gold traders
whacked by big margin calls should act surprised. And given what's driven this
bounce in the greenback – an early (or false) dawn in credit, plus the bizarre
notion that Ben Bernanke's done cutting rates, and
wants to start defending the Dollar – it might yet prove a good chance to swap
a little paper for metal.
The US
twin deficits only grew bigger as the world's finance markets froze starting in
June 2007. The investment imperative to hedge against their implosion did not
get any smaller.
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of the
Gold Market
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and head
of editorial at the UK's leading
financial advisory for private investors, Adrian
Ash is the editor of Gold News and head
of research at BullionVault – where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in
Zurich on $3
spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2008
Please Note: This article
is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for
your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information
or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be
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