Tax Payer Bail-out Ideas Stabilize US
dollar, Trip Gold
By Gary Dorsch, Editor – Global Money Trends
It was “April Fools” day, and Wall
Street was busy spinning bad financial news into bouts of irrational
exuberance. News of a $19 billion write-down of toxic sub-prime mortgage debt
at Swiss bank UBS and a $4 billion hit at Deutsche Bank might have sparked a
panic sell-off in global stock markets a few weeks ago. But on “April Fools”
day, the Dow Jones Industrials soared 391-points, and the broader S&P 500 Index
jumped 3.6%, posting its best 2nd-quarter start since 1938.
Shares of UBS soared 18%, after the
Swiss bank said it could plug the craters in its balance sheet with a $15
billion rights offering, led by a syndicate of JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, BNP Paribas
and Goldman Sachs. Shares of Lehman Bros jumped 22% after it raised $4 billion from
the sale of convertible preferred shares, and squeezing bearish speculators in
LEH puts in the process.
Before the “April Fools” day
festivities, the S&P 500 Index had posted five straight months of losses, and a 10% slide
in the first quarter. In its infinite wisdom, the stock market has already
discounted a recession, which probably arrived in the first quarter. Earnings
for S&P 500 companies are expected -8.1% lower in Q’1 from
a year ago, down from rosy projections of +4.7% at the beginning of the quarter.

But the badly battered US financial
sector soared 15% on “April Fools” day, after British PM Gordon Brown called on
the Group of Seven central bankers, to stop worrying about “moral hazard” and
start backing a joint plan to recapitalize global banks and buy-out the toxic
sub-prime mortgages, to rescue the banking system. Of course, such a bailout initiative
would be funded with taxpayer’s money, with a small price of
tougher regulation of the industry. “We have got to make these changes
immediately,” Brown said on April 1st.
British PM Brown discussed his
solutions for the global banking crisis with US President Bush at a NATO summit
on April 3rd. “We were talking about major issues that we can
collectively do about the world economy,” he told reporters. Brown is also talking
with the leaders of Germany,
France, “about
how we can make changes that we need in the world economy, as quickly as
possible.”
Goldman Sachs figures losses from toxic sub-prime
mortgage debt at US banks could reach $460 billion, and only $120 billion have
been recognized so far. Losses worldwide could hit $1.2 trillion. Such a
meltdown could topple a few banks along the way, and unleash even more turmoil
in global stock markets. So many traders are now betting that the G-7 central
bankers and finance ministers will endorse a tax payer funded bailout for the
banks, at their upcoming April 11th meeting.
The earliest hint of a G-7 bailout plan was
first proposed by Japan’s
financial services minister Yoshimi Watanabe on March 24th. “It is
essential for the US
to understand that given Japan’s
lesson, public fund injection into the financial sector is unavoidable. We
could convey this lesson at the G-7 central bank meeting, and we are prepared
to take coordinated action, to help resolve the issue,” Watanabe said.


Free market capitalism is out of
favor in Washington, and in its
place, government intervention is the norm of the day. Voters are demanding
immediate help, especially after the Fed-engineered bailout of Bear Stearns and
its massive financial assistance to other Wall Street dealers. The Bear Stearns
bailout has opened the doors for US
politicians facing re-election to call for bailouts of distressed homeowners.
There is a long history of US government
bailouts. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, more than 1,000 savings and loan
institutions failed, leading to a federal bailout totaling roughly $125 billion.
In 1975, President Ford provided a struggling New York
City with a $7 billion loan package. President Clinton
came to Mexico’s
aid in 1995 after a sharp devaluation of the peso, with $50 billion of loans.
Congress bailed out Lockheed
Aircraft in 1971 and Chrysler in 1979 with loan guarantees. In 1984,
Continental Illinois was effectively taken over by the federal government. After
the Sept 11th terror attacks, Congress authorized $5 billion in cash
to help shore up the airline industry and $10 billion in loan guarantees. Most
recently, the Bernanke Fed guaranteed $30 billion of
toxic sub prime mortgage debt sitting in Bear Stearns, with taxpayer money.
Just how costly a US
government bailout
to purchase existing sub-prime mortgage loans is anyone’s guess, but it’s probably
much cheaper than the cost of the FDIC paying off depositors of failed banks. It
would certainly be much less than the $845 billion that Congress has already appropriated for
military operations, reconstruction, embassy costs, and US bases and foreign
aid programs in Iraq and Afghanistan.

A massive US
government bailout would add hundreds of billions to the outstanding supply of
US Treasuries, but greatly relieve the stress in the banking system. It could
unleash a rapid unwinding of “safe haven” positions in US 2-year T-notes, and lift
US interest rates sharply higher. It could also trigger a reversal of the Fed’s
rate cuts since September and a tighter US
money policy in the second half of 2008.
With the yield on the US
Treasury’s 2-year note jumping to 1.95% this week, from a record low of 1.35%
two weeks ago, it’s already narrowed the scope of a Fed rate cut in April to a
quarter-point. In testimony on Capitol Hill on April 3rd, Fed chief
Ben Bernanke said, “The effects of monetary of policy
are felt over a period of time and we expect to see positive effects of these
policies going forward.” Until then, Fed policy might stay on hold at 2%
because, “there’s a chance in the first half there might be a slight
contraction,” Bernanke said.

Expectations that the Fed’s rate
cutting campaign is nearing an end, has stabilized the US dollar, with the
greenback’s strongest gains seen against the Japanese yen, which offers
negative rates of interest after adjusting for inflation, and the British pound,
in anticipation of gradual rate cuts by the Bank of England. The Bank of Canada
is expected to match any residual Fed rate cut in this cycle.
The Gold market was rattled after
its historic rally fizzled out above the psychological $1,000 /oz level, and
surprising moves by the Federal Reserve to drain some excess cash out of the US
banking system, after the rescue of Bear Stearns. But Mr
Bernanke and his radical band of inflationists
at the Fed, have expanded the MZM money supply by 16.8% from a year ago, which
could ignite hyper-inflation in the US
economy, once the monetary stimulus in the pipeline starts to take effect.
Crude oil remains perched above
the once unthinkable $100 /barrel level, as global demand should outstrip
supply later this year, and as global investors seek a hedge against the Fed’s
cheap money policies. If a G-7 government led bailout of the banks should fail
to materialize, the Fed’s won’t be able to rescue the dollar with higher rates,
and sentiment in the gold market could turn bullish again.
Direction of Fed policy moving Japanese yen /US$
It’s the direction of US Treasury
yields and the S&P financial sector, that’s having a big influence over the
direction of the US dollar these days. The Japanese yen /US$ exchange rate is tracking
the interest rate differential between the US Treasury’s 2-year note and the
comparable Japanese 2-year note. So far this year, the dollar’s interest rate
advantage has shrunk to +132 basis points from +250 bp,
which in turn, has knocked the dollar from 114-yen to around 102.50-yen today.
The dollar briefly fell to
96-yen, it’s lowest level in 13-years, when the
interest rate spread plunged to as low as +75 basis points. Despite the
dollar’s sharp slide under 100-yen and the resulting havoc in the Nikkei-225
stock index, the Bank of Japan was under no pressure from Tokyo
to ease its monetary policy. Kaoru Yosano, a
heavyweight in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, said, “With short-term
interest rates being 0.5%, there is no room to cut rates, and therefore it does
not make much sense to do so,” taking the political heat off the BoJ.

Thus, the dollar /yen’s gyrations
have mostly focused on the direction of volatile US Treasury yields. Amid
sentiment that the Fed’s latest rate cutting campaign has almost run its
course, the dollar rebounded above 100-yen this week. Additional support for
the dollar came from global “carry traders” who borrowed funds in Japanese yen
at 1% or less, to buy US dollars, in order to buy stocks in New York.
Tokyo
has a long history of intervening in currency markets to support the dollar to
protect its exporters, yet the ministry of finance allowed the dollar to tumble
below 106-yen, without a fight against currency speculators. Exporters say they
lose money if the dollar is below 106-yen. Half of Japan’s
exports are settled in US dollars even though it’s relying more on China
for trade. China
and Hong Kong overtook the US
as Japan’s
largest export market in 2007.
“I don’t think we will call for
intervention for a while, as long as exchange rates stay around present
levels,” said Mitarai Fujio
Mitarai, chairman of the Japan Business Federation
(Keidanren), on March 10th. “Exporters should be able to cope with 105-yen,”
he said. But Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe complained on March 7th, “The
yen has strengthened too much (102-yen) and will have a big impact on us,” he
said. For every one yen that the Japanese currency appreciates, Toyota
says its operating profit declines by about 35 billion yen ($340 million).

Japan sold a
total of 35-trillion yen for $330 billion dollars in the foreign exchange
markets during the 15-months to March 2004, trying to defend the dollar between
104-yen and 120-yen. But “with the dollar at 100-yen, unrealized losses on Japan’s
$1 trillion stash of foreign currencies from its previous interventions, are
estimated at 18.5 trillion ($187.2 billion),” admitted Japanese finance chief Fukushiro Nukaga on March 27th. Tokyo
also issued short-term financing bills to fund its past intervention efforts,
saddling the government with debt that must be paid back.
Signaling a historic shift in Tokyo’s
foreign exchange policy, former Bank of Japan chief
Toshihiko Fukui said on March 7th, “A stronger yen will ease the negative effect
from rising costs of crude oil and commodities.” Finance chief Nukaga agrees and told the parliament on March 27th,
“If the yen rises, goods will be coming into the country cheaply and could turn
the economy for the better while benefiting Japanese consumers. I think it
would be good in the medium to long run,” he said.

If the crude oil market continues
to hover above $100 /barrel, Tokyo might
want to see the dollar trade below 104-yen, to keep energy import prices in
check. Japanese crude oil imports jumped 41% in January from a year earlier and
imports of natural gas rose 30% amid rising commodity prices. Japan’s
doctored inflation rate hit a decade-high of 1% in February, pushed up by
rising oil and food costs.
That means the Bank of Japan’s
overnight loan rate is a half-percent below the official inflation rate, or at
a negative interest rate, and leaves the yen vulnerable to speculative selling
pressure by carry traders. If correct, a weaker yen combined with high and
rising commodity prices could fuel even faster inflation in Japan.
In that case, intensified inflation pressures could eventually persuade the BoJ into hiking its overnight loan rate for the first time
since February 2007.
ECB Uses the Euro to Combat Inflation,
Compared to the political lackeys
at the Bernanke Fed, the European central bankers are
super-hawks, refusing to knuckle under to pressure from union bosses and
politicians for rate cuts. “There is no room for complacency and no reason to
believe that inflation has been brought under control. The ECB remains firmly
focused on price stability,” warned the Bundesbank’s Juergen Stark on March 28th.
“Not only are current price
pressures alarmingly high but, faced with moderate though basically robust euro
zone economic growth, and the continued strong money supply expansion, there
are medium-term upside risks to price stability,” said Bundesbank
chief Axel Weber. “In this volatile market environment, it is essential to
continue to anchor inflation expectations at a low level,” he added.
But for the past several months,
ECB official have refused to lift the bank’s repo
rate above 4%, where it’s been stuck for the past 10-months, arguing that a
central bank can’t produce an extra barrel of crude oil, nor
an extra bushel of soybeans, with a tighter monetary policy. But the ECB has
vowed to tighten monetary policy, if second round inflation effects, namely
wage increases, exceed the general inflation rate.

Yet last week, German public
sector workers won their biggest pay rise in 16-years, equating to a 5.1% rise
for 2008, the biggest pay increase since 1992, Germany’s
biggest industrial union also delivered a 5.2% pay rise for steel workers,
their biggest in 16-years. Boxed into a corner with their own empty
rhetoric, ECB officials are balking at lifting the repo
rate, to contain the Euro M3 money supply.
Instead, much like the Bank of
Japan and the Swiss National Bank, the ECB is utilizing a stronger currency to
fend off inflationary pressures from soaring commodity prices. But the rise in
the Euro /US$ exchange rate has still lagged behind the increase in food and
energy prices. As a result, inflation in the 15 countries using the Euro
accelerated to 3.5% in March, a 16-year high, and even further above the ECB’s long ignored inflation target of 2 percent.
A stronger Euro is a blunt
instrument for the ECB, because a weaker US dollar also exerts upward pressure
on crude oil and other international commodities that are imported into the
Euro zone. Therefore, although the ECB’s repo rate is officially pegged at 4%, the ECB hawks have clandestinely
pursued a quasi-tightening of monetary policy, by allowing the 3-month Euro
Libor rate to climb to 4.75%, or 40-basis points higher than it usual spread to
the repo rate.

Setting the stage for the latest spike
in Euro Libor rates, on Feb 27th, Bundesbank
chief Axel Weber signaled his support for lifting rates in Europe.
“While recent price shocks have so far had only a small impact on expectations
until now, that must remain the case in the future. If we were to see a clear
upward trend, that would be for us a clear signal to act with monetary policy,”
he warned.
“Market expectations that the
European Central Bank will cut interest rates fail to consider the dangers of
higher inflation. Be assured, our aim is and remains price stability in the
medium term,” Weber added. On March 12th, his sidekick Juergen Stark ruled out an ECB rate cut to cushion battered
Euro zone stock markets. “This correction we are experiencing is necessary,
it’s painful and it’s unavoidable. But I would warn against any knee-jerk
reaction,” he said.
The upward surge in Euro Libor
interest rates to 4.75% might have contributed to the stunning shakeout in the
gold market from March 17th thru “April Fools” day. In the
background, the New York Fed began shifting its tactics and lifted short-term
US Treasury yields. But the gold market in Europe found
an interim bottom at 560 euros /oz, after the ECB capped the rise in the Euribor rates at 4.75 percent.
How much longer will Saudi Arabia support the US$?
With oil soaring to a record $112
a barrel, and the Fed working overtime to prevent a meltdown in the global
financial system, US President George Bush was looking for a quick fix to
stabilize the US stock markets, and sent his trusted deputy Dick Cheney to the
Middle East to meet with Saudi King Abdullah, the de-facto leader of OPEC. In
advance of Cheney’s 4-˝ hour meeting at the king’s farm on March 22nd,
crude oil in New York tumbled by $5 /barrel, briefly slipping below $100 /barrel.
“Obviously, we want to see an
increase in oil production,” said White House spokeswoman Dana Perino. “The president wants OPEC to take into
consideration that the US
economy has weakened, partly because of higher oil prices. We think more supply
would help, and I don’t anticipate that the vice president would have any other
message than that one,” Perino said.
The US
“Plunge Protection Team” is struggling to rescue an American economy that is
sagging under the weight of sliding home prices, sharply higher food and energy
prices, and a banking crisis, and with little luck in persuading Riyadh
to increase oil production. Instead, OPEC blames the US Treasury, which has
done nothing to prop-up the weak dollar, which boosts US exports but makes oil
more expensive.

Two days later, Cheney hinted
there was no quick fix from king Abdullah. “We’ve seen the price of oil rise
dramatically to over $100 a barrel. It reflects the realities in the
marketplace. There is very little spare capacity in the global oil market, and
there is increasing demand for oil in China,
India and in
the oil producing nations themselves. The price of oil reflects the new
realities in the marketplace,” he said.
Cheney’s visit to the Persian
Gulf monarchs also included a personal plea to avoid pulling the
plug on the US dollar’s artificial life support. If the Arab oil kingdoms
decide to ditch their dollar pegs, to control inflation and diversify their
overseas assets to earn higher returns in other currencies or in gold and
commodities, the net result could be the loss of the US dollar’s reserve
currency status.
The vice president’s itinerary
for his nine-day tour, Oman,
Saudi Arabia, Israel
and Turkey, was
also designed for saber rattling with Tehran.
Cheney’s hawkish threats over Iran’s
nuclear weapons program keeps the Arab oil kingdoms wedded to the dollar, since
the US military
is the guarantor of the Arabian Gulf’s security. But the
cost of sticking with the archaic dollar peg is intolerably high, and
threatening social unrest in the kingdoms.

The Bernanke
Fed is expanding the US M3 money supply at a 17% annualized rate, the fastest
in history, so the Saudi central bank is expanding its M3 money supply at a faster
24% rate, in order to prevent the Saudi riyal from rising against the US
dollar. The Saudi central bank matched the Fed’s 75 basis point rate cut on
March 18th, cutting bank deposit rates to 2.25%, which is far below
the inflation rate.
In turn, the explosive money
supply growth and negative rates of interest are fanning the flames of
inflation in the desert kingdom, hitting 8.7% in February, a
27-year high. The dollar peg is fuelling inflation by making imports from Asia
and Europe more expensive as the US
currency sinks on global markets. Rents led the rise in Saudi inflation,
surging 18%, followed by food costs up 13 percent.

Saudi
Arabia, the United
Arab Emirates, Kuwait,
Qatar, Oman
and Bahrain
control 40% of the world’s proven crude oil reserves. And the recent commodity
price boom has swelled the coffers of governments that control commodity
exports or heavily taxes the revenues earned by private commodity exporters. As
a result, the assets managed by Persian Gulf sovereign
wealth funds (SWF’s), have ballooned to roughly $2.5
trillion from $472.5 billion in 2004.
Funds derived from oil and gas
export revenues account for roughly two-thirds of the total assets held by sovereign
wealth funds (SWF’s), with the rest controlled by
Asian surplus exporters. Saudi Arabia is planning a SWF for
$900 billion, and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority controls
$875 billion. The Kuwait Investment Authority oversees $213 billion, and the Qatar
Investment Authority had an estimated value of $60 billion at the end of February.
By 2015, the Persian Gulf SWF’s could grow to $6-7 trillion. If Chinese, Russian, and
Korean SWF’s are taken into account, the total global
SWF value could top $12 trillion, or nearly the size of the US
economy. One has to wonder what direction the Persian Gulf SWF’s
will take, if the Illinois senator, Barack Obama wins the US presidency in November, and hastily
withdraws US troops from Iraq.
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