Global “Oil Shock” Rattles World Stock Markets
By Gary Dorsch, Editor, Global Money Trends
Cleaning up the mess that Mr Greenspan left behind was never going to be easy. Banks
and brokers around the world face more than half-trillion dollars in write-offs
as a consequence of the US
sub-prime mortgage crisis, which is spreading from the US
property market and roiling global stock markets. It’s toppled the US
economy into a recession and the tremors are also rattling Asian stock markets.
Roughly $7 trillion has been
wiped from world stock markets since the beginning of the year amid fears of a
severe US
economic recession and financial institutions reporting more mega losses. “The
market crisis will preoccupy us well into 2008,” he said German Finance Minister
Peer Steinbrueck on Feb 15th. “The
financial risks securitized by banks contained packaged explosives,” and he
accused rating agencies of having a conflict of interest in the role they
played in the process.
So far, the Bernanke
Federal Reserve has pumped more than half-a-trillion dollars into the markets with
open market operations and special emergency lending schemes, to help cushion
the blow to the US economy and stock
markets. However, there’s evidence that the Fed’s prescription
for dealing with the sub-prime debt crisis, is actually making matters much
worse, and leading to “Stagflation.”
As the Fed’s rate cuts and
massive money injections filter through the financial system, it weighs heavily
on the US dollar, and in turn, a weaker dollar inflates huge bubbles in the
global commodities markets. Fund managers have already poured an estimated $200
billion into commodities across the board, as a hedge against the explosive
growth of the world’s money supply, competitive currency devaluations, and the
negative interest rates engineered by central banks.

The price of crude oil was
trading near $70 a barrel as recently as last August, when the Fed suddenly
jolted the markets, by lowering its discount rate to 5.75% on Aug 17th,
timed to squeeze short sellers in the stock market, on options expiration day.
The Fed’s abrupt shift towards easy money fueled a 1,500-point rally for the
Dow Jones Industrials over the next two months to a record high of 14,100.
But the stock market’s
“irrational exuberance” didn’t last long, once the unintended consequences of
the Fed’s rate cuts, a - Global “Oil Shock” – began to settle in. In trying to
rescue the Dow Jones Industrials from the claws of a grizzly bear market, the
Fed has sacrificed the US dollar, and in turn, ignited a powerful surge in the
price of crude oil to $110 /barrel. And most US recessions in the post-World War II era were preceded by
sudden spikes in oil prices.
On Feb 15th, Fed chief
Ben Bernanke played down the threat of spiraling
energy and food prices, saying “inflation expectations remain reasonably well
anchored,” then signaled another rate cut in March, as an “insurance policy to
head off an economic recession.” Since then, the price of crude oil has surged
$17 /barrel, and is wrecking havoc on Wall Street and other major stock markets
around the globe.

Global investors are plowing
money into crude oil, because the longer-term fundamentals are bullish. The
International Energy Agency is predicting that global oil
demand will rise 2% this year to a record 87.5 million barrels per day.
And a growing number of oil investors subscribe to the “Peak Oil” theory that
holds to the belief that the global oil supply has already maxed out at 85
million per day.
The “Peak Oil” theory refers
to the inevitability of a peak in global oil production. Oil is a finite,
non-renewable resource, and once half of the original reserves are depleted,
oil production is likely to stop growing and then begin a terminal decline. Of
the 65 largest oil producing countries in the world, 54 are past their “Peak
Oil” production and are now in decline, including the USA,
down 11% since 1971, and the UK’s
North Sea down 27% since peaking in 1999.
Other big oil producers in
decline include Australia,
down 26% since 2001, and Norway,
down 13% since 2001. The Cantarell oil field, Mexico’s
largest has also peaked with its output falling to 1.7 million bpd in 2007,
down from its peak output of 2.1 million bpd. Thus, global oil demand is
expected to exceed supply in the second half of this year, and the oil deficit
will only grow wider in 2009, unless the global economy sinks into a sharp
recession.

It’s increasingly obvious that
the Fed is targeting the stock market, and is trying to put an artificial floor
under the Dow Jones Industrials at the 11,650 level, similar to central bank
intervention in the foreign exchange market. “We have the tools,” said Fed deputy Donald Kohn
on Feb 26th. “As Chairman Bernanke often
emphasizes, we will do what is needed, to respond to difficult
times,” he said.
But former US Treasury secretary
Robert Rubin was once asked by his boss Bill Clinton, if he could be
re-incarnated, what would he like to be? Rubin replied, “The bond market,
because it controls everything.” Nowadays, the “bond vigilantes” are asleep in
a coma, and unlikely to be resurrected anytime soon. Emerging in their place
however, are the “crude oil vigilantes” who jack up the price of “black gold,”
whenever the Bernanke Fed turns up the printing
presses.
Thus, attempts by the Bernanke Fed to jig up the stock market with a money
injections, are short-circuited, by the “crude oil vigilantes”. And the OPEC
cartel recognizes the Fed’s sleight of hand, and wants to be compensated for a
weaker US dollar, with higher oil prices. “The oil market will stay above $100
during the current financial year,” said OPEC chief Chakib
Khelil on March 10th. “The factors driving
the market include speculation, geopolitical tensions, particularly the Iranian
nuclear affair, and the crisis between Venezuela
and Exxon-Mobil,” he said. However, “oil prices could retreat in 2009 with a
recovery of the US dollar in foreign exchange markets and the election of a new
US president.”
Shanghai Red-chips Rattled by “Peak Oil”
China
emerged as an economic superpower amid the fastest industrial revolution the
world has ever seen. China’s economy has grown at 10%
or more a year since the 1990’s, and is expected to surpass Germany to
become the world’s biggest exporter, after sales of $1.2 trillion abroad in
2007, and reaping a staggering $262 billion trade surplus. China
alone contributed 20% of the world’s economic growth last year.
It only took the Shanghai
red-chips slightly more than 2-years to gain 500% from below 1,000 in June 2005
to above 6,000, while the Nasdaq
bubble returned 240% in less than two years to reach the record of 5,000 in
March 2000. The Shanghai index
reached a P/E ratio of 68, identical to the Nasdaq’s P/E right before the tech-bubble burst. The
combined market capitalization of the Shenzen and Shanghai
exchanges hit a high of $3 trillion dollars, or 115% of China’s
$2.6 trillion GDP.

Chinese exports to the US
have been a key driver behind the highly volatile Shanghai
red-chip market. Exports to the US
peaked at a record $21.7 billion last November, but then tumbled to $15.5
billion in February. Chinese exports typically fall sharply in February,
during the New Year holiday, when factories close for at least two weeks. But
for the first time this decade, Chinese exports to the US were 5% lower on a
year-over-year basis, indicating that an economic recession in
the United States is beginning to chip away at demand for Chinese exports.
But China’s
Achilles heel is its voracious appetite for oil. China
accounted for half the rise in global oil use this decade. Its industrial
revolution led by construction and manufacturing, is highly energy-intensive,
and a major reason why crude oil is above $100 a barrel. But with crude oil and
other commodity prices spiraling higher, its mammoth trade surplus is narrowing,
exporter profit margins are shrinking, and China’s
economic output is descending into single digits.

China
ranks as the world’s #2 oil consumer after the US,
and demand is expected to grow 500,000 bpd annually in coming years, driven by
industrial growth and consumer demand as incomes rise. China
imported 1.1 billion barrels in 2007, up 12.3% from the previous year. China
supplied its fuel needs for decades from domestic fields but rising demand made
the country a net importer in the late 1990’s. Imports now account for 50% of
consumption.
India
and China are
two Asian giants that consume only a third as much oil as the US
today. But if the Chinese and Indians consumed as much oil per capita as
Americans do, the world’s oil demand would be closer to 200 million bpd,
instead of 85 million barrels today. And with the world running on a limited
cushion of Saudi spare capacity, any interruption in supplies from Mexico,
Nigeria, or hurricanes
and talk of armed conflict with Iran,
causes oil prices to spike higher.

While China’s
more affluent classes are nervously watching their savings erode in the stock
market, the rest of the population is watching its purchasing power erode from
soaring food prices. China’s
annual consumer price inflation surged to 8.7% in February, the highest since
May 1996, from 7.1% in January. Food prices, which make up a third of the consumer
basket, were 23.3% higher in February from a year earlier,
compared with an increase of 18.2% in the 12-months to January.
Beijing
is in a quandary on how best to fight inflation, since a tighter monetary
policy won’t produce an extra grain of rice nor an
extra bushel of corn. Yet if food inflation stays too high for too long, it
could ignite non-food inflation, and social unrest, since the average Chinese
household spends 37% of its disposable income on food.
For now, Beijing
is allowing the yuan climb at a faster rate against
the US to hold
down import prices, and is aggressively draining excess cash from the Shanghai
money markets thru open market operations. Still, the Bernanke
Fed is fueling higher oil prices around the world with its cheap dollar policy,
and the Global “Oil Shock” is rattling Shanghai
red-chips.
South Korea Stuck in “Stagflation” Trap
High prices of crude oil and raw
materials are posing a serious threat to resource-deficient South
Korea, with slowing growth raising the
specter of “Stagflation,” a toxic combination of stagnation and inflation.
Local manufacturers are striving to secure raw materials amid soaring prices,
but troubles may worsen, putting a heavy burden on the nation’s
import-dependent economy.
With high-flying prices of crude
oil, iron ore, and coal, South Korean imports of raw materials last year hit
$201.7 billion, up 16% from $173.9 billion recorded a year earlier, and more
than half of the nation’s total imports. South
Korea’s raw material imports, which stood at
$79 billion in 2000. Higher oil prices could swing the external current account to a deficit
of -$7 billion this year, the biggest gap since 1997, from a surplus of +$5.9
billion in 2007, the Finance Ministry said.

But Korea is also the world’s
fourth-largest crude oil buyer, and depends entirely on imports to meet its oil
needs. A doubling of oil prices from a year ago has already contributed to a
20% slide in the Kospi blue chips. South
Korean import prices were 21.2% higher in January from a year earlier, the most
in more than 9-years, adding to inflation pressures, even as the economy is set
to run out of steam. The surge in import prices were led by a whopping 48.7%
gain for raw materials.
To help the local economy and
stock market cope with the doubling in crude oil prices to 110,000-won /barrel,
the Bank of Korea, (BoK) is rapidly inflating its
money supply, - morphine to ease the pain of the Global “Oil Shock.” Korea
imported 80 million barrels of crude in January, up 12.3% from a year earlier,
but its bill soared 78% to $7.3 billion. The average price of imported Dubai
crude stood at $89.6 per barrel in January, up from $56.6 in the same month
last year.

The clandestine practice of “monetizing”
higher oil prices is back-firing, since it simply fuels even higher prices for
energy, food and other key commodities. On March 7th, Bank of Korea
warned that chances have increased for inflation to exceed its previous
forecast. “You may think the slowing global economy would help to ease
inflation pressures, but there are no signs in sight that the high pace of
growth in crude oil and grains prices will turn around soon.”
BoK chief
Lee indicated that South Korea
is sliding into the “Stagflation” Trap. “Chances have increased both for
economic growth to fall and price growth to get higher. International prices of
crude oil and grains are now growing faster than we had forecast several months
ago. Whether the BOK will move as markets expect depends on the future consumer
price and economic trends. I can say clearly is that we manage the rate policy
in the belief that rate increases will slow money growth and that rate cuts
will boost money growth,” Lee said.
Global Oil Shock Rattles Tokyo,
as dollar hits 100-yen
For most of this decade, Japan’s
ministry of finance, has worked tirelessly to defend the US dollar against the
yen, to support exports overseas and artificially inflate multi-national income
earned in the US.
Exports drive almost 20% of Japan’s
economy. Half of Japan’s
shipments overseas are settled in US dollars even though China
and Hong Kong overtook the US
as Japan’s
largest export market in 2007.
In the past, Tokyo usually
intervened in the market to defend the dollar at 106-yen, which is the average
break-even level for most Japanese exporters. The Bank of Japan, acting on
behalf of the MoF, sold a record 20.4 trillion yen
($199 billion) in 2003 and 14.8 trillion yen in the first quarter of 2004, when
the yen traded as high as 103.42 per dollar, the biggest intervention stint in
history. The dollar also fell towards 100-yen in 1999, 2000, and again in 2003,
prompting Japan’s
central bank to massively sell the yen each time.
But Fujio Mitarai, chairman
of the Japan Business Federation (Keidanren), told a news conference on March
10th, that Japanese exporters should be able to cope with dollar/yen
exchange rate around 105-yen. “I don’t think we will call for intervention for
a while, as long as exchange rates stay around present levels,” Mitarai said. Then on March 13th, Japanese
finance chief Fukushiro Nukaga
didn’t threaten to intervene on behalf of the dollar as it fell to 101-yen,
prompting nervous traders to quickly dump the greenback to the psychological
100-yen level.

Japan
imports almost all of its oil, and is the world’s third-largest oil consumer
after the United States
and China. Tokyo
has striven in vain for decades to reduce its dependence on oil from the
volatile Middle East and thereby insure stable supplies
by diversifying oil sources. But in 2006, Japan
imported 4.2 million bpd, with 88.6% originating from the Middle
East. Japan
also imports 65% of its food consumption.
Traders are wondering whether Tokyo
has adopted a new stance on the dollar /yen exchange rate, and is ready to live
with a stronger yen, to hold down the costs of imported food and oil. On Feb 22nd,
BoJ chief a Toshihiko Fukui said he was paying close
attention to how rising food and gasoline prices could affect personal
consumption, which makes up roughly half of Japan’s
economy. “A stronger yen will ease
any negative effect from rising costs of crude oil and commodities,” he said.
“The yen’s rise,
a decline in the dollar, and rises in oil prices are beginning to have a
negative effect on corporate profits,” warned Japanese Economics Minister
Hiroko Ota on march 11th. The dollar slid as low as 99.77 yen,
breaking below the 100 level for the first time since November 1995. Already this
year, the dollar has tumbled 10% against the yen, and is fast approaching the
point at which many Japanese exporters say they won’t be profitable.
The negative impact from a weaker
dollar has already knocked the Nikkei-225 index 20% lower to a 2-year low. “The
factors we must monitor with utmost caution in guiding monetary policy are
stock and exchange rate movements,” said Bank of Japan member Atsushi Mizuno on
Feb 28th. “If such high volatility continues, it could hurt the real
economy through worsening corporate and consumer sentiment. Given that Japan’s
recovery is an external-demand-led one backed by exports, downside risks are
heightening on mounting risks to US
growth,” he warned.
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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.
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