Fed Rate cuts Back-fire, lead to
Quagmire of “Stagflation”
By Gary Dorsch,
Editor, Global Money Trends
“Too much money, chasing too few
commodities,” might be the best way to explain the historic rally that has
lifted the Dow Jones AIG Commodity Index into the stratosphere. Central bankers
in 18 of the top-20 economies in the world have been expanding their money
supplies at double digit rates for the past several years, trying to prevent
their currencies from rising too quickly against the terminally ill US
dollar.
In response, fund managers have
turned to commodities, as a hedge against the explosive growth of the world’s
money supply, competitive currency devaluations, escalating inflation, and the negative
interest rates engineered by central banks. To the chagrin of central bankers,
much of explosive money supply growth is flowing into the commodities markets,
and elevating inflation rates to multi-decade highs.
The Federal Reserve is the chief
culprit behind the explosion in global commodity prices, slashing its federal
funds rate at a frenzied pace, to arrest a year long slide in US home prices,
which if left unchecked, threatens to topple the US economy into a severe
recession. Nearly 8.8 million US
homeowners hold mortgages that are larger than the value of their homes,
providing an incentive to abandon houses bought on speculation. And according
to the Mortgage Bankers Association, the delinquency rate for 3.6 million sub-prime
mortgage loans was 17.3% in the fourth quarter.
Wall Street is worried that
foreclosures and delinquencies will escalate when many sub-prime loans face
built-in interest rate resets that could lift borrowing rates as much as 3%
higher in coming months. The worst payment problems have been among sub-prime
adjustable-rate mortgages, and more than one-fifth of these outstanding loans were
seriously delinquent at the end of 2007.

But as the Bernanke Fed slashes
interest rates to stop a slide in the US housing and stock markets, and expands
the MZM money supply, at a hyper-inflation rate of +15.7%, it’s also simultaneously
blowing enormous bubbles in the precious
metals and commodities markets. The surge in agricultural and energy prices
have led to a +7.5% jump in US producer prices, the biggest 12-month gain in
27-years, and consumer prices are up +4.3%, a 17-year high.
However, “In my view, the adverse
dynamics of the financial markets and the economy present the greater threat to
economic welfare in the United States.
Policy-makers must take into account the possibility of very unfavorable
developments,” said Fed deputy Donald Kohn on Feb 26th. “We have the tools. As Chairman Bernanke
often emphasizes, we will do what is needed!!” Kohn warned.
Such tools include driving the
federal funds rate to zero percent if necessary, pumping the MZM money supply
growth to above 20%, or buying long dated Treasury securities with printed
money. So far, the Bernanke Fed’s aggressive rate cuts have done more harm than
good for the US
economy, leaving the US
consumer with slumping home prices on the one hand, and soaring food and energy
prices on the other hand, caught in the
“Stagflation” trap.
Such reckless policies could also
unleash hyper-inflation in the US
economy, and trigger capital flight from the US dollar. On Dec 27, China’s
powerful FX chief, Hu Xiaolin warned, “If the US
federal funds rate continues to fall, this will certainly have a harmful effect
on the US dollar exchange rate and the international currency system,” Hu warned.
China’s foreign
exchange reserves jumped $61.6 billion in January to reach $1.59 trillion in January, after
growing $462 billion last year.
Yet even with crude oil closing
at a record high of $104.50 /barrel on March 5th, and gold trading
near $1,000 /oz, Cleveland Fed chief Sandra Pianalto, said the Fed should continue
to err on the side of easing. “Because credit contractions can emerge and
spread rather quickly, the central bank must be prepared to act in an
aggressive and timely manner to counteract their effects,” she explained. The
Fed has room to maneuver, because, “Inflation expectations appear to be
anchored,” she added.
Foreign Central Banks decline to Follow the Fed
However, most other central bankers
are not willing to follow the Fed’s strategy of hyper-inflating the money
supply, despite the extraordinary risks associated with deteriorating credit
conditions in the global banking system. Banks and brokers world-wide could
recognize more than $500 billion in losses from toxic sub-prime US mortgage
debt in the year ahead, blowing big craters into their balance sheets, that
won’t be plugged by sovereign wealth funds from the Middle East
and Asia.
Yet central banks from Brazil,
the Euro zone, England,
Korea, Japan,
and New Zealand
left their lending rates unchanged this week, while the Australian central bank
hiked its cash rate a quarter-point to 7.25%, a 12-year high. The People’s Bank
of China drained a net 226 billion yuan ($32 billion) from the Shanghai
money markets this week, after it drained a net 164 billion yuan ($23 billion)
last week.

Earlier today, the Euro soared to
a new all-time high of $1.5370, as interest rate differentials continue to move
in the Euro’s favor over the terminally ill US-dollar. Tough anti-inflation rhetoric from European
Central Bank chief Jean “Tricky” Trichet snuffed out expectations for a Euro
zone rate cut anytime soon. “The ECB is strongly committed to preventing second
round effects and the materialization of upside risks to price stability over
the medium term,” Trichet declared.
Apparently, the ECB is guiding
the Euro higher to help offset some of the surge in energy and food
price-fuelled inflation, despite the potential hit to Euro zone exports. Contrast
that with the Fed, which has already slashed rates 225 basis points and is
constantly trying to brainwash the American public and global traders into
believing the fairy tale that “Inflation expectations are well anchored.”
As the marketplace continues to
lose faith in the Fed’s anti-inflation credibility, it will complicate the
central bank’s ability to put a safety net under the stock market. “Any
tendency of inflation expectations to become unhinged, or the Fed’s
inflation-fighting credibility to be eroded could greatly complicate the
flexibility of the Fed to counter shortfalls of growth in the future,” Bernanke
admitted on Feb 28th.
In a world of fiat (paper)
currency, the full faith and trust in a nation’s currency often lies in the
policy actions and honesty of its central bankers. Under the Bernanke Fed,
global confidence in the US dollar is being torn apart, and the Fed rookies
hand picked by Mr Bush, are not telling the public the truth about the
inflationary consequences of their actions. The Bernanke Fed is playing Russian
roulette with the greenback, and a speculative run on the dollar is now in
motion. Yet the Fed’s propaganda machine remains defiant, “I don’t think that
foreign investors have lost confidence in the United
States by any means,” Bernanke told the
Senate on Feb 28th.
Fed rate cuts Lift Crude oil above $100 /barrel
Expectations of a 0.50% Fed rate
cut to 2.50% on March 18th has already greased the skids under the
US dollar, and convinced speculators to bid crude oil to $105 /barrel. The
OPEC-10 cartel wants to be compensated for a weaker US$ with higher oil prices,
and held its oil output quotas steady at 27.2 million bpd, insisting oil
markets are well supplied and blamed record prices on factors outside its
control.

OPEC chief Chakib Khelil said the
Federal Reserve, not OPEC, is to blame for high prices. “The US
slowdown and lower interest rates have lowered the value of the dollar, and
encouraged speculative flows into oil and other dollar-denominated commodities.
What’s happening in the oil market is due to the mismanagement of the US
economy, which is affecting the rest of the world,” Khelil told a news
conference.
Saudi oil chief Ali al-Naimi
noted on March 4th, the growing influence of financial traders who
have ploughed $200 billion into oil and commodity markets as a hedge against
inflation and the weakening US dollar. “The current oil price has no relation
to market fundamentals. It is linked to oil futures, which are witnessing
tremendous speculation. There are even those who buy futures and speculate that
oil prices will reach more than $200 in 2013,” he told the London-based daily
al-Hayat.

Right now, futures traders are
debating whether the Fed will slash the fed funds rate by a half-point or 0.75%
on March 18th, but in either case, the US$ index could be stripped
of its life support, and left sliding into a bottomless pit, which in turn,
could lift crude oil higher in the weeks ahead. Worse yet, the US
economy imported $330 billion of oil from abroad last year at an average price
of $64 /barrel. If the US
is forced to pay an average $100 /barrel this year, it could boost the import
bill by $175 billion, and completely wipe out Washington’s
$152 economic stimulus package.
Gold set a historic high near
$1,000 an ounce and silver jumped to a 27-year peak, as a record low dollar and
soaring oil triggered a fresh wave of bullion buying. Spot gold rose as high as
$991.80 an ounce before slipping to a low of $960 /oz. Europe’s wealthiest
families are planning to shift more of their investments further away from stocks
and bonds and into alternatives such as hedge funds and commodities.

While gold’s spectacular rally
against the pathetic US dollar usually gets most of the world’s attention, the
yellow metal has also soared by 20% against the Euro, from four months ago. The
Euro M3 money supply is expanding at a +11.5% annual rate, or three times faster
than the ECB’s original target, which was deemed consistent with low inflation.
The ECB hasn’t met its 2% inflation target for the past six years, and
inflation is now 3.2% higher from a year ago, a 16-year high, according to
calculations that have been heavily doctored by apparatchniks at Eurostat.
But gold’s rally against the Euro
has become more restrained, as Euro Libor futures contracts begin to slide in Frankfurt,
and wipe out any hope of an ECB rate cut for the first half of 2008. On Feb 14th,
Bundesbank chief Axel Weber warned, “current interest rate expectations on
financial markets do not reflect an appropriate assessment of the inflation
risks, at least for a stability-oriented central banker.”
For now, the ECB wants to see if
a steady repo rate at 4% can block gold’s advance at 650 euros /oz. But with
the Fed determined to slash its federal funds rate in the months ahead,
regardless of the inflationary consequences, and other foreign central bankers
unwilling to tag along, the stage is set for extreme volatility in exchange
rates, which in turn, can trigger wild gyrations in the commodities markets.
To stay on top of volatile
markets, subscribe to the Global Money Trends newsletter today,
for insightful analysis and predictions of the future for the (1) top stock
markets around the world, (2) Commodities such as crude oil, copper, gold,
silver, and related gold mining and oil company indexes (3) Foreign currencies
(4) Libor interest rates, global bond markets and central bank monetary
policies, and (5) Central banker "Jawboning" and Intervention
techniques that move markets.
GMT filters important news
and information into (1) bullet-point, easy to understand analysis, (2)
featuring "Inter-Market Technical Analysis" that visually displays
the dynamic inter-relationships between foreign currencies, commodities,
interest rates and the stock markets from a dozen key countries around the
world. Also included are (3) charts of key economic statistics of foreign
countries that move markets.
Subscribers can also listen
to bi-weekly Audio Broadcasts, with the latest news on global markets,
and view our updated model portfolio for Q’1, 2008. To order a subscription to Global
Money Trends, click on the hyperlink below,
http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php
or call toll free to order, Sunday thru Thursday, 8 am to 9 pm EST, and on Friday
8 am to 5 pm, at 866-553-1007. Outside
the US call 561-367-1007.
This article may be re-printed on other internet sites for public viewing, with
links required to,
http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php
Mr Dorsch worked on the trading
floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for nine years as the chief
Financial Futures Analyst for three clearing firms, Oppenheimer Rouse Futures
Inc, GH Miller and Company, and a commodity fund at the LNS Financial Group.
As a transactional broker for Charles
Schwab's Global Investment Services department, Mr Dorsch handled thousands
of customer trades in 45 stock exchanges around the world, including Australia,
Canada, Japan, Hong Kong, the Euro zone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico,
and New Zealand, and Canadian oil trusts, ADR's and Exchange Traded
Funds.
He wrote a weekly newsletter
from 2000 thru September 2005 called, "Foreign Currency Trends"
for Charles Schwab's Global Investment department, featuring inter-market
technical analysis, to understand the dynamic inter-relationships between
the foreign exchange, global bond and stock markets, and key industrial
commodities.
Copyright ©
2005-2008 SirChartsAlot, Inc. All rights reserved.
Disclaimer: SirChartsAlot.com’s analysis and insights are based upon data gathered by
it from various sources believed to be reliable, complete and accurate. However, no guarantee is made by
SirChartsAlot.com as to the reliability, completeness and accuracy of the data
so analyzed. SirChartsAlot.com is in the
business of gathering information, analyzing it and disseminating the analysis
for informational and educational purposes only. SirChartsAlot.com attempts to analyze trends,
not make recommendations. All statements
and expressions are the opinion of SirChartsAlot.com and are not meant to be
investment advice or solicitation or recommendation to establish market
positions. Our opinions are subject to
change without notice. SirChartsAlot.com
strongly advises readers to conduct thorough research relevant to decisions and
verify facts from various independent sources.