G-7 Central Bankers Stymied by “Crude
Oil Vigilantes”
By Gary Dorsch, Editor Global Money Trends
The “Group of Seven” central
bankers, who control the money spigots in 2/3’s of the world’s economy, huddled
with their colleagues from China and Russia behind closed doors in Basel,
Switzerland this week, haunted by the “Crude Oil Vigilantes,” who threaten to
unravel G-7 schemes to rescue troubled global banks. Earlier today, the price
of West Texas Sweet traded as high as $124 /barrel, doubling from a year ago,
and guiding Chicago Corn futures to all-time highs.
European Central Bank chief, Jean
Trichet, chaired a meeting of central bankers from
the “Group of 10” industrialized nations on May 5th, and
acknowledged that, “Inflation risks are significant under the influence of oil and energy price
increases, commodity price increases more generally, and food and agricultural
products. This is perceived in all economies without exception.
This is no time for complacency for central banks in any respect,” he warned.
In China,
food prices rose 21% in the first quarter of 2008 from a year earlier. The Euro
zone’s figures showed that food prices surged 6.1% in March alone while prices
of basic staples such as bread, milk and cheese grew even faster. In the US,
bread prices have jumped 12%, milk 20% and flour 32 percent. A dozen eggs are
30% more expensive and tomatoes and bananas are up 13 percent.
“Food pressures are one of the
most serious problems that we have to face now,” added Poland’s
central bank chief, Slawomir Skrzypek.
“But central banks cannot use monetary policy tools to manage this problem,” he
said. Worldwide, food prices in March were 57% higher than a year earlier, according
to the United Nations. The price of rice is up 120% and wheat has climbed 65%,
triggering violent protests across Asia and the Middle
East, following reports of deaths from starvation.

Crude prices have doubled in a
year and risen four-fold since the US-UK conquest of Iraq’s
120 billion barrels of proven oil reserves in April 2003. Powerful economic
growth in emerging markets like China,
India and Russia
has increased demand for crude oil and other commodities, pushing up inflation
worldwide. China, India, Russia and the Middle East
for the first time will consume more crude oil than the US
burning 20.7
million barrels a day this year, an increase of 4.4 percent.
Yet emerging markets burn only a
fraction of the energy of the US,
leaving enormous room for growth in global demand for crude oil. The
2.45-billion people in China
and India used
only half as much crude as 300-million Americans last year. The average person
in China
consumed less than 20% as much energy as the average American, according to US
Energy Department. In India,
energy use is less than 10% of America
on a per-capita basis. Indeed, China’s oil imports grew
rapidly in the first quarter of 2008, up 15% from a year earlier, to 45.5
million tons.
Last year, the United States imported $330 billion of
crude oil from abroad at an average price of $64 per barrel. If crude oil were
to average $124 /barrel in 2008, the US oil import bill would nearly double by
$300 billion, and easily wipe-out the $150 billion of tax rebate checks going
out to American households in the weeks ahead. The US government is simply going
deeper into debt, to help Americans pay for higher oil prices. The global transfer
of wealth will add $1 trillion into the coffers of the OPEC cartel this year,
up from OPEC’s $665 billion of revenue last year.

US President George Bush, whose
approval rating has sunk to an all-time low of 28% in recent polls, said on
April 29th, there was no “magic wand” to bring down record-high fuel
prices, with angry Americans facing $3.65 a gallon for gasoline and soaring
grocery bills. “I firmly believe that, you know, if there was a magic wand to
wave, I’d be waving it, of course. I’ve repeatedly submitted proposals to help
address these problems, yet time after time Congress chose to block them,” he
argued.
Yet it’s increasing obvious to
most casual observers, that the biggest culprit behind the historic rally in
crude oil is the Bush administration itself, which has put enormous political
pressure on the Federal Reserve to slash the federal funds rate by 325-basis
points to 2%, and crushed the value of the US dollar in the process. That’s
unleashed the “crude oil vigilantes,” who have jacked-up “black gold” by $55
per barrel, since the Fed’s rate cutting spree began last August.
The Bernanke
Fed, working under the command of US “Plunge Protection Team” (PPT) chief Henry
Paulson, has doubled the growth rate of the US M3 money supply to 17.5% rate, its
fastest in history, and slashed the fed funds rate far below the inflation
rate, to “negative” interest rates. “The turmoil in some global equity markets and the
considerable depreciation in the US dollar have encouraged investors to seek
better returns in commodities, particularly in crude oil futures. This has
driven prices higher,” said OPEC Chief Adbullah
al-Badri on May 8th.

Sharply higher oil prices are likely
to lead to greater production of ethanol, and in turn, lead to greater demand
for corn. Earlier this week, corn futures surged to record highs of $6.28
/bushel, after crude oil spiked above $123 a barrel. As crude oil climbs
further into record territory, alternative energy markets have also risen,
boosting profits for US ethanol makers who use corn as their basic feedstock.
Worldwide demand for corn to feed
livestock and to make bio-fuel is putting enormous pressure on global supply. About 20% of the 13-billion
bushel US corn crop was consumed by
ethanol production last year. That percentage is expected to increase to 30% for
the next crop year, ending Aug
31, 2009. But with the US
expected to plant less corn, the supply shortage will only worsen. The USDA says farmers will
plant 86 million acres of corn in 2008, or 8% less than last year.
While corn growers are reaping record
profits, livestock producers are forced to pass on higher animal feed costs to
US consumers, who can expect even higher grocery bills. Corn and corn syrup are
used in an array of products, meaning the price of everything from candy to
soft drinks will eventually go up.
Are the Bernanke
Fed and the US Treasury largely responsible for the recent doubling of corn,
rice, and soybean prices? Earlier this week, after the US dollar rose to a
two-month high of 105-yen, and the Euro fell to a one-month low of $1.5400, on
ideas that the Fed was done cutting interest rates, the USDA said export sales of
corn sales in the week ended May 1st fell to 337,200 tons, down 39%,
from the previous week. Soybean export sales fell to 41,000 tons last week, a
marketing year low, down 87% from the previous week and 91% below the four-week
average.

Contrary to Mr
Bush’s feeble explanations, there is a “magic wand” that can rein-in the “crude
oil vigilantes,” - a quick reversal of the Fed’s aggressive rate cuts to defend
the US dollar. But PPT commander Paulson is loathe to hiking US interest rates
right now, since higher interest rates can undermine the fragile housing market.
Instead, Paulson has backed a G-7 plot to knock the Euro lower against the
dollar, aiming to wipe-off the speculative froth from the crude oil market.
The G-7 cartel of central bankers
agreed on April 11th, “to monitor exchange markets closely, and cooperate as
appropriate,” - secret code words for intervention in the marketplace, and ramped-up
a “jawboning” campaign to knock the Euro off its record high of $1.600. The G-7
enjoyed initial success, knocking the Euro to $1.5400, which in turn, knocked
the crude oil market for a $10 /barrel slide to $110.
But the G-7’s plot to knock oil
prices lower with a weaker Euro, began to unravel, when crude oil resumed its
upward thrust, fueled by the Bernanke Fed’s
quarter-point rate cut to 2%, on April 30th. The advance in crude
oil prices to fresh highs was aided by investment banker Goldman Sachs, which predicted
the world may face a “super-spike” into a trading range from $150 to $200 a
barrel as early as October, up from just over $120 now.
At the pump, $150 per barrel for oil
translates into gasoline prices of $4.50 a gallon, putting further strain on US
consumers, airlines, truckers, and utilities, and shaving roughly -1.8% off US
economic output. Seeking a quick fix to combat the “crude oil vigilantes,” the
Bush clan is exerting maximum pressure on Saudi king Abdullah to pump more oil,
from the kingdom’s 3-million bpd of spare capacity.
On May 8th, OPEC’s secretary
Adbullah al-Badri
responded, “There is clearly no shortage of oil in the market.” Still, “OPEC stands ready to act if
the market shows a need for any further measures,” he said. But OPEC chief Chakib Khelil doesn’t think an
increase in output would cool the oil market, because “there is no link between
price levels and supply, and inventories are already high.”

Meanwhile, the “crude oil
vigilantes” are receiving extra ammunition from the Bank of Canada, which has
slashed its overnight loan rate by 150 basis points over the past six-months,
including two half-point rate cuts. Canada’s
new central bank chief is 43-year old youngster, Mark Carney, previously a
Goldman Sachs investment banker. The rookie central bank chief is building a
reputation for himself as a “radical inflationist,” molded along the same lines
as Fed chief Ben Bernanke.
Carney is slashing Canadian
interest rates, fearful of a slump in Canadian exports to the US
economy, its biggest customer. However, over the past 12-months, Canada’s
employment has increased by 325,000 persons, including 104,000 new jobs in the
first quarter, and the jobless rate is just above a 33-year low of 5.8 percent.
There hasn’t been a meaningful slump in Canadian exports either. So what’s the justification
for such radical rate cuts by the central bank?
Carney hinted on April 30th,
that “Some further monetary stimulus will likely be required to achieve the
inflation target over the medium term,” he told the House of Commons. Most
likely, the Bank of Canada is slashing its interest rates to curb the Loonie’s strength against the US$.
Yet the un-intended consequence of the clandestine “competitive currency
devaluation” game is sharply higher oil prices.
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