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Mauldin: The Weather Equalization Act
September 12, 2003
By John Mauldin
The Weather Equalization Act
Workers of the World, Unite!
Who Really Owns the Debt?
A Single Flight of Planes
A Question for my non-US Readers
This week we deal with tariff proposals and other absurdities, the Chinese and the huge rise in their holdings of US debt by foreign governments, plus one of the more profound pieces on the events in New York, presciently written more than 50 years ago. At the end, I ask my non-US readers a question about investment laws and practices in their country.
A good starting place this week is the legislation introduced in the Senate (SB.1586) to add a 27.5% tariff to Chinese goods unless they allow their currency to float. This is bi-partisan idiocy of the first order, sponsored by three Democrats (Senators Schumer, Bayh, and Durbin) and three Republicans (Senators Bunning, Graham, and Dole). It is legislation like this that sometimes makes me despair for the future of the Republic. It is pandering of the worst sort.
As an aside, if legislators want to pander, I suggest they pass a Weather Equalization Act to mandate that the temperature in Texas during July and August average 75 degrees (that is 24 degrees centigrade in the rest of the world). They could pay for the costs of such legislation by passing a Windfall Savings Tax whereby Texans would pay half the savings in their air conditioning bills as a tax to offset the costs for weather controls. If we were to ship our excess heat to the Southern hemisphere via a new hemispheric tunnel, we could even make a profit! Plus, think of all the jobs such a project would create.
Since everyone in southern California would come to Texas were our weather more like San Diego, our home values would rise. Local property taxes would then increase, solving our various current local budget crises. Business would boom, generating increased sales tax. Summer tourism would increase. Tempers would fall, as would the summer murder rate. I can think of no one against a cooler summer in Texas, except the power companies, who would see sales go down. I suppose we could pass some law to help those poor utilities so they would not have to lay off employees and spoil the otherwise perfect plan.
Trying to legislate the value of the Chinese yuan is about as silly. Exactly what is this evil thing that the Chinese have done to warrant the attention of the Senate?
First, they fixed their exchange rate in 1994, and have not changed it since. How sinister to want a stable currency by fixing it to the dollar. Of course, it did not seem to help Argentina, but that's another story.
Second, they sell us goods at a price not only less than we can find elsewhere, but at one which we freely agree to pay. No nuclear threat. No economic blackmail. A simple free market transaction. In short, the Chinese are behaving like capitalists. I suppose the senators would like them to return to their communist economy? They were certainly no economic threat to southern manufacturing with Mao running the show. (All the Republican sponsors are from the south.)
Third, they have taken the dollars we have given them and actually had the temerity to invest it in US government treasuries, rather than buying our companies and real estate. They actually seem to trust the Fed a lot more than many of my readers. They take our largest single export item, an electronic dollar, which has dropped 40% against the euro, and give us all manner of goods. Somehow, Wal-Mart is now part of that vast Chinese capitalistic conspiracy, as that company alone sells $15 billion of Chinese goods a year. How cunning these Chinese are!
Last year, over $56 billion dollars was invested by non-Chinese companies (mostly Western) into China to outsource manufacturing. Their exports have tripled to $365 billion in less than ten years. Over two-thirds of that is because of foreign investment. How dare they create economic conditions which force companies all over the world to invest tens of billions? Using competitive advantage is clearly something that only western nations can do in the eyes of these senators.
It would be helpful to remember at this point that while China is significant and growing, it is not all that large on the world economic scene, at least not yet. The US trade imbalance with China is about 1% of our GDP. Their entire foreign sales are less than 4% of US GDP.
Workers of the world, unite!
And the US senate is watching jobs move offshore. The data shows that August was more of a problem than we thought, and studies last week showed the 3,000,000 or so jobs we lost are not coming back. We are going to have to create whole new industries if we want to see large growth in unemployment.
What's a Senator to do? We have to show we care. Let's blame someone besides ourselves. Instead of getting rid of laws which hinder job growth, capital formation and entrepreneurs, let's see if we can destroy the economy of the world.
In 1930, two well-meaning US legislators named Smoot and Hawley persuaded Republican President Hoover to pass the Smoot-Hawley Act, which raised tariffs on foreign goods in order to protect American jobs. It started a world-wide trade war and turned a normal business cycle recession into a world-wide depression and led to the ripe conditions for WW II. The law of unintended consequences was never more harmful. Protecting a few American jobs ultimately cost millions of lives, both American and all over the world. There are certain aspects of US history I expect US senators (at a minimum the Republican versions) to know and religiously avoid. Starting a global trade war is one. Elizabeth Dole, ask your husband about international trade before you take such dangerous actions. Senators Graham and Bunning, you know better. Shame on you!
I am only mildly concerned that such legislation would violate all sorts of international trade treaties. I am significantly concerned that such an action would precipitate another world wide trade war. I have noted on a few occasions that a move on the part of the world economic powers to protectionism would quickly abort a Muddle Through Economy. Nothing could trigger a true and lasting Depression faster than the action suggested by Republicans Bunning, Graham and Dole.
What does such action say to third world countries that are coming to the next round of free trade talks in Cancun? Are we for free trade or not? Is free trade with the US ok, as long as you are not too successful? Is it OK for everyone else to change, just as long as the US does not have to? That it is ok to be protectionist when it is local jobs?
The steel tariffs that Bush '43 passed last year have cost the US far more jobs than the few thousand they have saved. US citizens pay far more for cars and other items which contain steel than the few dollars we get in tariff income. You do not mess with the free market without cost.
What the senators are saying is that they oppose a strong dollar. Of course, their press relations personnel would deny this. They would note they simply want a stronger yuan. But given the direct link between the Chinese currency and the rest of Asia because of competitive currency devaluation, when the Chinese allow their currency to float, the rest of Asia will rise and fall along with it.
What these senators also are saying is that they want the US consumer to pay more for their foreign goods. They want prices to rise and life-styles to diminish. They want to protect their voters from the forces of change. Why don't we outlaw tractors? We could create lots of jobs if we had to plow fields behind a mule. Let's legislate no more change in the US.
To my foreign readers who wonder about such things, let me explain this action. It is called pandering to the voters. Like my mythical Texas weather bill, each of these Senators knows there is no chance in hades of Bush signing such a bill, nor of it even getting to the Senate floor. But since their local manufacturing companies are losing jobs to China, this is a way to "show they care." They get local favor without having any real consequence attached to their actions.
Even if somehow they were to get such legislation passed, it would make no difference (apart from creating a Depression). As Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley notes, if it were not the Chinese, it would be some other country with whom we have the deficits. Do we pass legislation against those dastardly MBAs and phone workers from India next?
The US is running a monster federal deficit. Someone has to buy that debt. Either US citizens must save enough to do so, or we must buy lots of "stuff" from overseas from countries who will buy our debt. The equation between national savings and national debt must balance. That is a basic economic fact. I am working on the last chapter in my book which tries to explain this equation in simple terms, and I will give you a summary when I get it done. The upshot is that we cannot continue to see our twin deficits grow ad infinitum without real consequences. There will be an end to this trend, and no legislation, short of a balanced budget, will be able to avoid the consequences.
Who Really Owns the Debt?
Today, we read in the Financial Times that foreign countries now own 46% of US foreign debt not owned by the Fed. The US trade deficit over the next two years will be over $1 trillion dollars, so foreign debt holding must rise to even greater proportion. The "good news" is that since the US federal deficit seems to be rising faster than our trade deficit, there will be plenty of US treasury bonds for the Chinese and the rest of Asia to buy.
As long as Asian nations continue to buy US debt the dollar will remain roughly where it is today in regards to those currencies. Each individual nation believes it is in its own national interest to buy dollars, even though they know they are worth intrinsically less as we export more of them. Why do they do so? Because they want to keep selling goods and services to us to support their own economies. They clearly believe (or at least the politicians and those who control them do) that they would be worse off if they were to sell less to the US, even if the dollars are one day going to be worth less. It is a national equivalent of the "burning match theorem."
They all fear to let their currencies rise as long as their international "competitors" for the US consumer do not let their currencies rise as well.
This makes goods and services in those foreign nations cheap in terms of our dollars, and thus we see jobs leave the US. Thus the Senate angst and the target of their concern: those mean foreign nations who buy our government debt.
Why not target the Japanese, who are actively manipulating the yen? The Chinese merely maintain a ten year status quo, after all.
It is what Robert Alan Feldman (Morgan Stanley in Tokyo) calls a "sub-optimal Nash Equilibirum." This is in reference to a theorem by John Nash (which he termed his most trivial), which won him the Nobel Prize. The recent movie, A Beautiful Mind, was made about Nash. (Rent it if you have not seen it.)
A Nash equilibrium, is a set of strategies, one for each player, such that no player has incentive to unilaterally change her action. Players are in equilibrium if a change in strategies by any one of them would lead that player to earn less than if she remained with her current strategy.
The nations of Asia and the US are in a weird sort of equilibrium. None of them seem to feel they have an incentive to act first to change their policies. Yet the stand-off means that foreign nations take more dollars which will ultimately buy them far less than what it will today. And the US sees jobs go to foreign soil. This does not seem to be an optimum
Actually, if the Senators really thought further than their next election (which may be asking too much from some of them), they might require the Chinese to maintain their currency controls. Quoting Feldman:
"My own epiphany came from a chat with a Chinese economics professor a few weeks ago. When I brought up the issue of ending the RMB peg, he astonished me by saying that ending the peg would cause a massive RMB Devaluation. Why? Because people in central Chinese provinces in particular would rush to buy dollars. While simple comparisons may not be valid, it is important to remember that about 50% of deposits in Hong Kong are in US dollars, and a similar level in Taiwan. The levels of such deposits in China are currently estimated to be about 10%. At the least, these figures require us to take my professor friend's hypothesis seriously."
Let's look at yet another aspect. Most commentators, myself included, assume that when the Chinese revalue their currency, the dollar will drop significantly. But what if, as they float their currency, they also allow Chinese citizens to invest overseas? Might prudent investors wish to diversify? Would they buy US government Treasuries? Very doubtful. Or would they buy actual income producing property and businesses, just as businesses and investors all over the world do? Would they seek outlets they control in the US for their products?
Far-fetched? Outrageous? Think Japan and 1969. We laughed then. Detroit, among other industries, is no longer laughing.
There is always an end to every trend. We cannot grow our government and trade deficits at the current pace for too many more years. The stock market cannot grow faster than GDP plus inflation over long periods. At some point, one of the participants in what Greg Weldon calls the Competitive Currency Devaluation Raceway will exit the track. The dance to find a new equilibrium begins. The longer this takes to come about, the more difficult it will be to find an equilibrium which will make for a smooth transition. Indeed, I fear we are already past that point.
The real race is between this "new equilibrium" and continuing employment declines to see which triggers our next recession.
A Single Flight of Planes
As I read the moving words written everywhere on 9/11, I was struck by the quotes that Art Cashin brought to my attention written by E.B. White more than 50 years ago for the New Yorker. It was written as the UN building was rising and the threat of nuclear war was first making its way into our national psyche.
"The subtlest change in New York is something people don't much speak about that is in everyone's mind. The city, for the first time in its long history is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions. The intimation of mortality is part of New York now; in the sound of jets overhead, in the black headlines of the latest edition.
"All dwellers in cities must live with the stubborn fact of annihilation; in New York the fact is more concentrated because of the concentration of the city itself, and because, of all targets, New York has a certain clear priority. In the mind of whatever perverted dreamer might loose the lightning, New York must hold a steady, irresistible charm.
"....New York is not a capital city - it is not a national capital or a state capital. But it is by way of becoming the capital of the world....This race - the race between the destroying planes and the struggling Parliament of Man - it sticks in all our heads."
"The city at last perfectly illustrates both the universal dilemma and the general solution, this riddle in steel and stone that is at once the perfect target and the perfect demonstration of nonviolence, of racial brotherhood, this lofty target, scraping the skies and meeting the destroying planes halfway, home of all people and all nations. Capital of everything, housing those deliberations by which the planes were to be stayed and their errand forestalled."
A Question for my non-US Readers
I started putting the letter onto the internet with a few thousand readers back in the fall of 2000. Today, we are pushing 2,000,000 weekly readers. Essentially, the letter is my way to discipline myself to focus on what I think are the more important themes from the several hundreds articles, letters, and various publications I read each week. That is also why the topics are so varied.
My policy is that the letter is free, and anyone can use it however they like, quote it freely to their heart's content, as long as they mention the website. Scores of readers have asked to use it on their sites or on private bulletin boards. Larger publishers use the letter (or parts of it) to send to their lists, adding advertising or simply as a service.
I note with some amazement the growing number of non-US readers. I am told that beginning in a few weeks, my letter will be translated into Greek and available on a major Greek investment web site. I find my letters sometimes translated into Russian (thanks, Dmitri) and on well-trafficked Swiss and German sites as well as other international portals. Go figure. It is all somewhat humbling, and a lot of fun.
Now I want to briefly ask my non-US readers for some help.
Many readers write and ask about specific investment recommendations. Frankly, most of what I do involves private offerings, hedge funds and other types of alternative investments, about which I can say nothing in a public forum like this. If you are an accredited investor (generally, individual net worth exceeding $1,000,000 ), you can go to www.accreditedinvestor.ws and sign up for my free letter on hedge funds and private offerings. Please read all the material on the site so you can understand the process, especially the part about the risks associated with investing in hedge funds. (I do not like to limit the letter based upon net worth, but there are very specific regulations about who can get information about and invest in private offerings. I always follow the rules.) (John Mauldin is a registered representative of the Williams Financial Group, an NASD member.)
The "problem" is that about 15-20% of those who ask for such information are not US citizens or residents, and the number of such requests is starting to become significant. As noted above, I am registered in the US with Williams Financial Group (an NASD member) as a broker. My firm, Millennium Wave Investments is registered as an investment advisor and as a CTA/CPO (Commodities Trading Advisor or Poll Operator) with the NFA/CFTC (National Futures Association/Commodities Futures Trading Commission). I expect to soon be an IB, or Introducing Broker (again, commodities). All of these registrations are necessary for me to legally be able to do business in the US. Trust me, you do not do so for the fun of it.
The problem is that I do not have any registrations outside of the US. If, for instance, a citizen of Brazil, Botswana, Bahrain or Belgium (to use the "B" countries) asked to see my accredited investor letter, I am not sure what the legal requirements in those nations are for me to send you information. Would I violate some local law? If I partnered up with a local firm to represent the funds I find of interest, what registrations, if any, would I need? Is it legal for me to give that name (with the reader's express permission) to a Swiss banker or other international brokerage firm in another country? In legal terms, would the authorities in a particular country deem me to be "holding myself out as an unregistered investment advisor" simply because I am on the internet and communicate with one of their citizens if they invest in a fund which I recommend? Is registration required in Bahrain or Botswana or Brazil (I know it is in Belgium, but not the details)? Or any of the multiple scores of other countries from whom I get requests?
There is no problem with my regular weekly letter, as it does not have information about specific private offerings, securities or investments with which I may have an association. The tricky part comes when I take off my journalist/analyst hat and actually try to make a living.
Most of the funds I work with have offshore (to the US) versions. Are there restrictions on such within your country? Does one have to have a certain level of net worth to invest in private funds? Is working with local partners sufficient? Do you need local partners or is it possible to communicate directly (and legally, of course) with you?
This has been brought to mind many times, as I get letters from non-US citizens asking me why I can't send them my letter on private funds and offerings? Some of you get more than a little irate, thinking I am some parochial US-centric analyst. What I really am is slightly paranoid.
I suppose I could set up an offshore brokerage firm, work with those of an international persuasion and ignore the rules in the various countries, as some firms do. The argument is that since a person from a particular country could contact my firm that would mean I did not do business in their country. Many attorneys make such arguments, if you transact your business in such and such a manner. I am not persuaded that local regulators would buy such an argument. I certainly would not want them complaining to any of the above groups which regulate me in the US that I was doing business illegally in their country.
So I ask the following questions: Does anyone know of a paper or document which details the rules in non-US countries? Do the local laws require that I must work with a local firm? Are their local firms within a country who would like access to my research and funds and with whom I could "partner up?" Which countries are "wide open" and have no securities laws and which have specific and strict rules? Do you know the rules in your country? Does a private fund have to register in your country to be sold to one of your citizens? Do you have private offering rules?
Thank you for sending me any information you have, and any such communications will be kept confidential.
New Orleans,
As promised last week, here is a link to the web page for the New Orleans conference October 29 through November 1. Join me, Bill O'Reilly, Richard Russell and Jim Rogers, plus a host of excellent investment analysts at one of the more fun events I attend each year. http://www.neworleansconference.com/event/faculty2003.htm#mauldin
I will be in Chicago October 8 and New York around November 12. My bride informs me my presence is requested(!) in Puerto Vallarta in mid-October. My publisher informs me my book is due, I am way behind on the next accredited letter I mentioned above, I need to get into the gym more and my son tells me to stop writing and come home as it is time to go out. I see meat and movies in my very near future.
I just re-read this letter for the final time. I seemed to have let myself get a tad worked up. Life can't all be Muddle Through.
Your running as fast as my puppy dog legs will take me analyst,
John Mauldin
John@frontlinethoughts.com
Copyright 2003 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo091203
Hamilton: Trading the Relative HUI
http://www.zealllc.com/2003/rhui.htm
Fed. 6 Day RP + 3B
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Fed. 7Day RP + 6B = 11B today '911'
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Fed. 28Day RP + 5B
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Futures, WorldX, GoldFever, ChinaTheme, Puplava
Burr's AM Call
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=1197421
Peter Zihlmann: Why Buy Gold?
September 10, 2003
http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_03/zihlmann091103.html
Fed O/N RP + 2.5B another sm drain
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Gold soars on global tensions
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3096232.stm
Gold update iii
Gold set to run!
Enrico Orlandini
September 8, 2003
Every once in a while, usually early in the morning after gold has been beaten down on the Globex, you'll catch a glimpse of an article detailing how gold fell as a result of dollar strength. It's a half truth. Although the US Dollar Index has rallied from its 92.37 low to 99.50 early last week, gold has spent the last two months rallying against all the major currencies, including the U.S. dollar. So much for gold's rise being attributed to a weak dollar. Likewise, gold stocks have been rallying along with the stock market since the early March lows. If you listen to CNN-FN, you can't help but know that the NASDAQ has rallied almost 45% since making its Bear Market low in March. That's a great spurt by anyone's standard unless, of course, you use a gold standard. One of the best kept secrets around involves the fact that the AMEX Gold Bugs Index (HUI) has rallied more than 67% over that same time period. Now that gold has closed at a new high for this move up, I believe that the best is yet to come.
Physical gold is about to enter its most critical phase of the current move up. It will begin as soon as we close above US $380.00 in the DECEMBER GOLD futures contract and it will end when we top out at $408.90, $427.00 (which is my guess), $490.50, or wherever. I also believe that the move from $380.00 to our top will be completed in a relatively short period of time, possibly within three weeks. I originally thought the move up would require more time as I looked for a top on or about October 18th.
Assuming we reach a minimum of $408.00, it will be an important milestone for three reasons:
It's the first time that gold will have a close above $400.00 in more than seven years.
.
The first phase, or accumulation phase, of the gold Bull Market will end and we will enter the second phase where the funds and large brokerage firms begin to buy and recommend gold, and
.
It will, in my opinion, mark the beginning of a transitional phase whereby people stop thinking about gold as a commodity and start to see gold for what it really is, i.e., money.
That's a very important leap of faith. You see, the price increases of commodities are limited by supply and demand along with a hundred other things. Money, on the other hand, is a store of wealth and has no such limits. That's why wars have been fought over it. Why and how is such a transition possible? It all has to do with the fact that almost every major economy in the world is printing money like its going out of style. Even the normally conservative Swiss are printing Francs at an annualized growth rate of 14.7%, but that's nothing compared to places like Japan or some of the other Asian countries.
The logic behind such as strategy is as follows: the Japanese print Yen and use them to buy dollars (or U.S. bonds) on the foreign exchange markets thereby weakening the Yen in terms of the U.S. dollar. As a result of a weaker Yen, Japanese export goods become cheaper for American consumers. If just Japan engaged in such a strategy, you might expect some degree of success over the short and medium term. The problem arises when everyone does it; the print until you run out of ink concept turns into a recipe for disaster. Japan, along with any nation embarking on such a policy, ends up with a glut of production and the American consumer ends up in bankruptcy court. In short, I've sacrificed my tomorrow in order to live well beyond my means today. That's where gold steps into the picture and reaches prices that we can't conceptualize right now.
Like it or not, the U.S. dollar is going to devalue. Two years ago I told you that I expected to see the dollar trade one-to-one with the Swiss Franc, and that's if the wheels don't fall off. If we were to fall into a 1930's style Depression, the dollar could very well go the way of the old German Reich marc or the Peruvian Inti. I remember paying five million Intis for a Happy Meal at McDonald's. In the time it took to leave the house, drive to the restaurant and pay, the Inti would devalue one-half of one percent against the dollar. In retrospect, it seems kind of funny now but I wasn't laughing back then. I don't think this is something the average American is going to handle well emotionally. You might say that we're going to have a little bit of a problem.
In closing, the mining shares have been and continue to lead the way up but I look for them to slow down in another week or so and gold will go it alone until it exhausts itself and the inevitable correction begins. I suspect the correction will find a base around $370.00/ounce as the last ones in will be the first ones out of the market. What's more important, gold has been undergoing a 'quiet' accumulation by so-called smart money for well over a year now and this money won't exit in the face of such a correction. Instead, it will look at this decline as a last chance to buy gold and its related stocks on the cheap. I will lighten up on my futures contracts and exit some of my stock but I will not sell everything.
I'll have more on this next week.
In the mean time. . . you have to be patient!
Enrico Orlandini
Lasco Report
8 September 2003
Av. Pardo 224 Lima, Perú
Fax: 0051-1-435-0279
ebo@lascoreport.com
________________
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/orlandini/orlandini090803.html
Fed O/N RP + 4.5B about ave.
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
GATA: Blanchard & Co.'s Gold Price-Fixing Lawsuit Against Barrick and Morgan Chase Can Proceed
http://www2.marketwatch.com/news/newsfinder/newsArticles.asp?guid=%7B1C46EB4B%2DA8DF%2D422E%2D9DE6%2...
Cross-currents: Chrt/Mth 9/8 Gold Bullion
Prices
http://www.cross-currents.net/weekly.htm
Fed O/N RP + 3.75B
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Bill Fleck: Spitzer's mutual-fund fight deserves an A
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/P59639.asp
Fed Ops: Maturing Ops 7B on 9/11
28day from 8/14, the Greenie wave is low after last weeks drain.
Public Debt: $6,811,296,078,466.93
http://www.bullandbearwise.com/FOMOOutChart.asp
New York Institutional Gold Conf.
Sponsors and Presenters...quite a list also Keynote speakers
Jim Rogers & Jim Grant friend of Fleck. The more media we get the better, more up, these guys are in NY to sell/spin in the largest Market of the world.
http://www.iiconf.com/Conference_NewYork2003.aspx
Courtesy...ddfridd
NYT: From Canada, New Roads to Gold
By BERNARD SIMON
September 7, 2003
TORONTO
SENSING a renewed appetite among Americans, a small army of foreigners is invading the United States with new kinds of gold investments.
Ten small and midsized Canadian gold producers have been listed on the American Stock Exchange in the last year. The World Gold Council, a promotional group based in London, is awaiting approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission for a new exchange-traded fund backed by gold bullion. A similar fund was set up this summer on the Toronto Stock Exchange by a Canadian group with significant participation from American investors.
"When gold gets moving, there's nothing like it," said Ilja Graulich, general manager for investor relations at Durban Roodepoort Deep, a South African gold producer that also has interests in Australia and Papua New Guinea and is listed on the Nasdaq. "It's very easy to get hold of money at the moment," he said.
Gold is a part of many investors' portfolios, whether in the form of bullion, coins or shares of the companies that produce it. While the price of gold occasionally bursts higher on fear of runaway inflation, political instability or turbulence in financial markets, it has yet to come close to its peak, in January 1980, when it reached $850 an ounce. Gold investments were a big disappointment for much of the 1980's and 90's.
Investors in gold and the mines that produce it have done well in the last year. The metal was trading at $377 an ounce on Friday, about 18 percent higher than its 2002 average of $309. It briefly topped $380 this year, before the war in Iraq began.
The Amex's Gold BUGS index has soared 86 percent from its 52-week low, reached in October. (BUGS stands for basket of unhedged gold stocks.) The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold and Silver index, which includes some companies that hedge part of their output, has chalked up more modest gains, rising 17 percent so far this year.
American gold funds are reporting substantial inflows. "We're having our best year in quite some time," said Joe Foster, who manages the Van Eck International Investors Gold fund. The fund's assets have grown by 60 percent so far this year, to $250 million, with inflows from investors accounting for about three-quarters of the increase.
John C. Hathaway, manager of the Tocqueville Gold fund, said that the fund's asset value had grown more than 50 percent in the last year, to about $293 million. The rising prices of its holdings accounted for less than one-fifth of the increase, Mr. Hathaway said, with inflows making up the rest.
Big gold producers like Newmont Mining of Denver, AngloGold of South Africa and Barrick Gold and Placer Dome of Canada, have traded on the New York Stock Exchange for years. The 10 Canadian companies that have been listed on the Amex in the past year include the Iamgold Corporation, Northgate Exploration, Wheaton River Minerals, the Minefinders Corporation, the Eldorado Gold Corporation, the Miramar Mining Corporation and Great Basin Gold. The most recent was Gammon Lake Resources of Nova Scotia, listed on Aug. 29.
"We're hearing from the companies that now is the time when they can use the increase in the gold price to gain access to the United States capital markets," said John McGonegal, vice president for equity sales at the Amex.
The exchange has assigned one of its sales representatives to Canada virtually full time to attract listings and is sponsoring two conferences on gold this year. Officials of International Investment Conferences of Miami, which is organizing the events, said 252 analysts and fund managers had registered for one of them, to be held this week in New York, roughly double the number last year. About 3,000 individual investors are also expected to attend, a fifth more than last year.
Jon A. Douglas, the chief financial officer at Northgate Exploration, says that overall trading volumes in the company's stock, which was already listed in Toronto, have more than doubled since it was listed on the Amex on July 11. Trading on the Amex has accounted for 31 percent of Northgate's daily volume.
Barry Cooper, a metals analyst at CIBC World Markets in Toronto, wrote in a recent report that the stocks of smaller gold producers had become more attractive partly because of the weak financial performance of some large producers, despite higher gold prices. Mr. Cooper singled out Eldorado Gold and Cambior, which also trade on the Amex. On the other hand, he called Minefinders and Wheaton River "underperformers."
Mr. Hathaway, the fund manager, said, "People didn't know about a lot of those stocks a year ago; now they do know them."
STILL, Barry J. Landen, vice president for corporate affairs at Agnico-Eagle Mines, a Canadian gold company listed on the New York Stock Exchange, said that while investor interest was high, most of it was coming from familiar faces. "We want to see some new faces," Mr. Landen said.
In another move to expand choices for investors, the World Gold Council applied to the S.E.C. in May for approval to list its Equity Gold Trust, an exchange-traded fund, on the New York Stock Exchange. Richard Simonelli, a spokesman for the council, said, "Hopefully, sometime in the fall, we'll have a better understanding on the timing of the rollout."
A similar exchange-traded vehicle, Central Gold Trust, listed on the Toronto exchange through a public offering in July. The trust's president, Stefan Spicer, said that the 207 gold bars backing the trust were stored in the vaults of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and were not pledged as collateral on any loans. The trust has also said it will buy more gold whenever it issues new units so as not to dilute existing shareholders' interests.
Mr. Spicer said investors outside Canada had bought about 20 percent of the units. "The amount of interest in the United States has been very significant," he said. The trust's units are trading at about 23 Canadian dollars ($16.79), compared with the issue price of 20 Canadian dollars.
Of course, the performance of all these investments ultimately depends on the price of gold.
The current popularity of gold has stoked the exuberance of gold fund managers, newsletter publishers and others. Mr. Hathaway concluded in a recent article that "neither the stock or bond market is capable of delivering anything close to the returns of the last 20 years."
"Once investors `get real,' " he added, "they will migrate from paper to tangible assets."
Not everyone shares such enthusiasm. Observing that the gold market has its share of eccentrics, who tend to interpret a small rise in prices as the start of a major bull run, Mr. Graulich, the South African executive, said that "half the gold stocks are discounting a price of between $450 and $475 at the moment." If the price fails to reach those levels, investing in these stocks could lose much of its present allure.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/07/business/yourmoney/07GOLD.html?pagewanted=print&position=
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Mauldin: Market Timers or Market Cheaters?
September 5, 2003
By John Mauldin
Market Timers or Market Cheaters?
Trust, But Verify
Jobs, Growth and Spirals
Fool Me Once, Shame on You
Japan and China say: Go Away
Dallas, New Orleans and New York
Given the wide disparity of views about the economy, it is little wonder that the reaction to Greenspan's latest speech has been all over the board. That is compounded by the fact that bond price expectations are totally disconnected from Fed expectations. Are the bond market critics just a bunch of whiners (give me back my risk free trade!) or is there substance to their major beef? Who's really in charge here? Can the Fed trump the market? Predictably, I answer the latter question with both yes and no. It all depends upon your time perspective, but timing is everything. There's a lot to cover, of course, so we begin.
But first, while we are speaking of timing, I have to comment on the latest mutual fund scandal uncovered by Elliot Spitzer based on a tip from some (presumably) knowledgeable source. Basically, a hedge fund (Canary Capital Partners) was allowed to buy and sell mutual funds after the market close. Canary was allowed to do so because it was controlled by a mega-wealthy family (the Sterns of Hartz-Mountain) who gave Bank of America a lot of other business.
When Spitzer and/or the SEC went after the investment banks for analyst fraud, IPO scandals, self-dealing, etc., I was not surprised. In fact, I predicted that analysts would be targeted. Everyone knew the whole system did not pass the smell test. WorldCom, Enron and their kin were specific surprises, but certainly these types of scandals were to be expected somewhere at the end of a major bull run which so blatantly rewarded such hubris. In that respect, it was analogous to the end of other bull economies of different eras. Much of our current investment laws came about because of the scandals of the 20's. Human nature changes very slowly, if at all.
But I must confess to being shocked at this latest scandal. And for reasons which go deeper than this one incident.
First off, there is no gray to this violation. It is three feet the other side of the clear black line. There were no attorneys who would tell their clients that this was aggressive but within the guidelines. No counting of the angels on the head of a pin logic by the legal types who tell the client what they want to hear. This was clearly breaking the law.
I can see one guy doing so and getting kick-backs and bribes. But this was evidently sanctioned by management. They had to know that it was career ending, if not jail time, if they got caught. How can a few extra dollars be worth such a catastrophic risk if you get caught? If two people know a secret, it is no longer a secret. Someone was bound to find out.
It is a relatively easy crime to commit. You fax two mutual fund orders (both buy and sell) to the trading firm, they get stamped as coming in before 4 pm or the close of the trading day. At 5 pm, you decide which one you want to keep and throw the other in the paper shredder. (This is in all likelihood what broker Red Bones did for Hillary Clinton with her cattle futures trading. In 15 years of industry watching, I have never met a professional commodities trader with such brilliant trading; at least, not one who could stop after making only $100,000.)
Since most orders for mutual funds are consolidated later in the evening, it is not difficult to get a one or two hour edge. If you know the portfolios of the mutual funds (which the managers might show such large investors), you look to see who is making an earnings announcement after the close, wait for the reaction, and buy or sell based upon the reaction. You might make only a few pennies each trade in "alpha," but you get to do it a lot. It is an advantage of huge dimensions, like betting on a horse race with only a hundred yards to go. Not a slam dunk, but certainly more likely to succeed than betting before the race began.
Were the other investors in the fund robbed? The answer is yes, a percentage point here and there. A small enough difference to allow the human penchant for rationalization to perhaps begin its dark work. Let's set some background.
Market Timers or Market Cheaters?
First, while Spitzer was entirely right nailing these guys, he is wrong when he chose to lump a number of illegal or questionable trading activities in the mutual fund industry under the name of "market timing," citing this as a "banned" investment technique.
There is a clear difference between market cheating and market timing. "Mutual Fund Market Timing is a legal method of trade. In fact, Rule 3a4 of the Investment Company Act contemplates the timing of portfolios of mutual funds. This rule allows for baskets of mutual funds to be traded similarly - without this rule Registered Investment Advisors could not market time those baskets. The Securities and Exchange Commission's Form ADV requires Investment Advisors to check the boxes describing their investment approach. "Market Timing" is one of those boxes. There are thousands of managers who practice "Market Timing". Over the years the SEC has audited thousands of managers who practice one or more forms of "Market Timing." (CMG and Steve Blumenthal).
"Agree or disagree as to its benefits vs. a buy and hold strategy, market timing has never been banned. To the contrary, for many years, hundreds of investment firms have successfully served the investing public utilizing market timing strategies. There is absolutely no relationship between the strategies employed by these investment firms (who are registered with, supervised by and conduct their investment management business in accordance with the rules promulgated by the SEC and state regulatory authorities) and the example cited by Mr. Spitzer. To draw such an inference is both irresponsible and a disservice to the investing public." (Thomas Giachetti, attorney)
There are lots of hedge funds which do mutual fund timing. Many of them use the so-called "International trade." In essence, you see where the US market is closing and then buy or sell international funds, knowing that there is a statistical correlation between the US market today and foreign markets tomorrow. Given the recent so-so track records of most of these funds, it is a lot harder to do than it sounds.
As an aside, the mutual fund families know who these hedge funds are and allow such trades, for a variety of reasons. However, if as Spitzer alleges, they state in their prospectus they do not allow such practices and then let some violate their written policy, then throw the book at them.
I called around to some of my hedge fund friends to get their take on this. All but one had never heard of anyone getting after hour trades. One attorney tells me he was approached by a fund who was offered such an after hours trading deal in return for moving business to the service provider. After the attorney convinced both the fund and the provider that this was as illegal as hell, the offer was withdrawn.
But the concern I have is that this offer was made in the first place (most likely by what is known as a prime broker), presumably (only my guess) under competitive pressures to match other such offers. If this was a one time deal, I might shrug it off. But I fear it is not. As Dennis Gartman frequently points out, when you see one cockroach on the kitchen floor, there are another hundred in the baseboards.
Spitzer and/or the SEC are unlikely to catch this illegal trade by looking at mutual fund records. Vanguard or another mutual fund family just get a list of consolidated trades sent to them at the end of the day. The crime was committed at the service provider or broker level that consolidates the trades. It will take some good (some @#$@% very good) forensic accounting teams to catch this. I hope they nail them to their trading desks. Banning them from the industry should only be a start.
Trust, But Verify
Interesting reaction to the Greenspan speech and my analysis. Bob Prechter (of Elliot Wave Theory fame) wrote to say, "I concur with you on every point." David Tice of the Prudent Bear Fund also said he liked the analysis, as did many others. However, Paul McCulley of Pimco sent me his analysis, politely noting that he disagreed a bit with me.
Then Jim Bianco writes, "Last Friday Greenspan spoke in Jackson Hole in what we termed his worst speech since becoming Fed chairman in 1987. What made it so bad, in our opinion, was its unbridled arrogance. Essentially Greenspan said there are two outcomes to monetary policy (1) the Fed is right or, (2) the market doesn't understand and further transparency/ communication is necessary. Where is the option 'the Fed is wrong?' (or, the market does understand monetary policy but thinks it is wrong?) This is often the case.
"While this arrogance is bad enough, Greenspan then went on to defend the Fed's 'make it up as we go along' approach to monetary policy by rejecting any kind of guidelines or rules. So the Fed's never wrong and doesn't need any guidelines. Scary."
Bianco points out the Fed policy is in direct contradiction of what the market is saying. The bond futures market tells us short term rates are going to rise in our not too distant future. The TIPS market says inflation is going to rise, even as the Fed says further disinflation is a risk. Today and yesterday Fed governors were out in force, telling us they intend to keep rates low for a considerable period of time. Who wins this debate and why?
First, let me state outright that the collective wisdom of a million investors is not any more prescient, nor is it any more accurate, than is that of 12 men sitting around a Fed board room 8 times a year. Both make guesses, educated as they may be, about the future. To think either group possesses some true grip on the future is patently silly. Greenspan admitted as much last week, and we only have to look at the results of the investment markets to see how accurate the average investor is. 95% of futures investors, as an example, lose money over time. I can go on with many examples. This is not to say that 12 men should supercede, manipulate or over-ride the market. It is that the market is neither right or wrong when it forecasts (guesses) the future. It simply is what it is. To make it into more than that deifies collective wisdom, which does not even come up to the level of psychic, let alone demi-god status.
Jobs, Growth and Spirals
"It seems to me that, with inflation already low, disinflation risk will remain a concern for some time," said Fed Governor and intellectual force Ben Bernanke in New York. From the AFP summary: "He agreed with private forecasters that the US economy will grow quickly through next year as business investment improves but that growth probably won't be accompanied by any significant hiring. Because growth without new jobs will not reduce idle capacity in the economy, inflation rates are likely to fall to even lower levels. The Fed and private economists have expressed concern that weak prices could eventually lead to a crippling deflationary spiral." (AFP)
Depending upon which speech you read, the Fed is committed to keeping rates low for a "considerable" or "significant" period of time. "If we convey a sense we're serious about not raising rates, the market will see an arbitrage opportunity and interest rate will start to fall," said Bernanke.
Fool Me Once, Shame on You
The old line is "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." The bond market feels betrayed as Greenspan and the Fed meeting announcements did not follow through on the rhetoric that rates would remain low because the Fed was prepared to resort to unconventional methods. Now, the Fed governors are trying once again to talk interest rates down, but without the use of the word "unconventional."
So far, the bond futures market does not believe Bernanke and his fellow governors. The Eurodollar Deposit swap predicts the Fed will raise rates by at least 175 basis points in the next 18 months, and over 100 basis points in the last half of 2004. Or maybe they think that what the Fed means by "considerable" is 6 months.
The bond market thinks the economy is going to be so strong, or inflation will come back so quickly, that the Fed will be forced to raise rates, even in the months running up to a presidential election.
Or, there is one other possibility, which I find more reasonable and appealing.
Paul McCulley makes the argument today on Pimco's web site that it is precisely the lack of Fed clarity that is causing the bond market to price in rate hikes. It is "risk premium." Because the bond vigilantes don't know what the Fed is going to do, they have to hedge and make a bet that to the casual observer (me) doesn't make sense. (You should read both his and Bill Gross's latest excellent columns at www.pimco.com.)
McCulley argues for "constrained discretion" on the part of the Fed. By that he is not arguing that the Fed should not have discretion to make decisions and even to change its mind as the facts change. But these decisions should be constrained (limited) by a set policy which everyone understands. Quote:
"...since the passage of the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978 (commonly known as the Humphrey Hawkins Act), the Fed's operational autonomy has been under an enabling umbrella directing the Fed "to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates."
"...If PIMCO's Investment Committee were given the (intellectual only!) challenge of carrying out the Fed's legislated mandate, the first thing we would ask would be: How do you define "maximum, stable and moderate?"
"We would want to know what those adjectives mean, so that we could establish a benchmark for performance. We would also want to know the relative weights that we should put on the three objectives, on both a static and dynamic basis. Put differently, we would want to know the accepted deviation from target for all three of the objectives, so that we could use our fancy-dancy quantitative models to develop both an optimization framework and a risk-management framework. And finally, we would want to know the guidelines regarding which tools, with what horsepower, we could use in pursuing the objectives.
"We would treat the assignment as one of 'constrained discretion.' And once the terms of the portfolio management assignment were agreed, we would negotiate a communication strategy with the client, so as to minimize the chance for 'surprises' on either side. Yes, that's how we'd go about it. We would want flexibility in the day-to-day management of the assignment, but we would also want the terms of that flexibility to be well understood, all in the context of well-defined goals, objectives and reporting requirements."
Then McCulley gets down to his critical points:
"Mr. Greenspan would not be comfortable with the PIMCO style. He has long argued for maximum flexibility for the Fed, with minimum quantification of the Fed's goals. In a nutshell, Mr. Greenspan's management style is best described as 'trust me' - sometimes known as 'constructive ambiguity.'... Greenspan disagrees [with specified policies], when it comes to carrying out his job mission. His definitions of the Fed goals are what his gut says they are, but what he cannot bring his lips to say, subject to change when he has an undisclosed stomach ache. Broadly speaking, such a paradigm has worked for him, with both inflation and unemployment relatively low. Such a paradigm is not, however, an institutional framework for monetary policy management; rather, it is a maestro-digm."
"To be sure, the FOMC has told us that it will remain accommodative for a 'considerable period. But the FOMC has not told us either its definition of price stability or full employment. Therefore, the markets cannot reliably predict the length of a 'considerable period.' Accordingly, the fixed income market is "buying insurance" against uncertainty as to the Fed's intentions by pricing in some 200 basis points of Fed tightening next year...If Mr. Greenspan ever wanted evidence of the cost of his infectious hubris, he need not look any further than the money market futures market, as displayed on the cover. Unconstrained discretion, as Mr. Greenspan advocates, is not a free good, because it raises risk premiums for uncertainty about monetary policy, acting as a headwind to the FOMC's accommodative will."
The Fed and Greenspan have been given a free ride for quite a long time. As long as things were going well, who wanted to rock the boat, other than some bond traders and a few Austrian (economist) curmudgeons?
Why is Greenspan resisting such a reasonable guy like McCulley's request for transparency? Why is he saying "trust me" is a better policy than understandable parameters? And why, if the economy is growing so well, is the Fed telling us that rates will remain low for a "considerable" period of time?
Let's look at some uncomfortable long-term facts facing the Fed.
First, they must clearly mistrust that the current economic growth spurt that is forecasted has "legs." In my opinion, I believe if they thought that for one minute the economy was going to grow on its own at 5% real growth for the next 18 months, I cannot imagine they would not begin to raise rates, if for no other reason than to have some room to lower them the next recession.
Why mistrust this growth? Because much of the growth is from stimulus that is not lasting. This growth is caused by (1) Bush's tax rebates, which are clearly kicking in (Wal-Mart's sales are up 5-6% year over year), (2) a huge government deficit spending (more than half the GDP growth last quarter was government [mostly defense] related) and, (3) massive mortgage refinancing which was done in the second quarter which produced a huge amount of spendable cash, which is now being spent.
But where are the jobs, as I have been writing about for months? With productivity at 6% plus (a number about which I think there is reason to doubt), you would need somewhat more than 5% growth to produce jobs. A jobless recovery is not sustainable, and the Fed knows it.
Greg Weldon slices and dices the numbers from today's ugly jobs report. (www.macro-strategies.com) Employment is down 113,000 since June. Unemployment is down 453,000. That means 340,000 of those formerly classified as unemployed have now dropped out of the labor force. Part-time employment is down 200,000 in the month of August. Thus, the "lower" unemployment rate does not reflect any real growth in jobs, but statistical games.
He does an analysis of the breakdown by sector and sex and comes up with this conclusion: "Bottom line ... there is one macro-conclusion of significance to be gleaned from today's labor market input: 'second income jobs,' many of them part-time jobs, held primarily by women, are being eliminated."
The Fed is all too aware that even as GDP was revised upward for the 2nd quarter, that housing investment was cut by half from the first quarter, and this before rates began to rise.
Thus it comes as no surprise the Fed governor's are out and about, trying to talk rates down. It is apparent to me they feel the recovery is fragile and thus are willing to risk a return of inflation.
In talking today with one of the smartest analysts I know, Rob Arnott, he notes a concern that Ben Bernanke seems to be backing away from his former hard line of price stability. Is he saying that we are now targeting 2-4% inflation? From this, Arnott infers that the Fed won't raise rates until real inflation of more than 2-3% develops.
Japan and China say: Go Away
GM, Ford and Chrysler watch their domestic auto sales drop year over year by a respective -8.2%, -27.7% and -28.6%(!) as sales for Nissan and Toyota rise by over 17%. Thus, it must be frustrating in Detroit to see Snow rebuffed in Tokyo, when even as he was talking about letting the market set the exchange rates, the Bank of Japan was massively intervening again and again to force the yen lower, making Japanese automakers more competitive.
China said, "We will allow the yuan to rise when we decide it is in our own best interests and not a moment sooner."
This competitive currency devaluation cannot go on forever, and Bill Gross of Pimco points out quite succinctly what I have been writing for a long time:
"...In turn the hundreds of billions that the Japanese and other Asian countries have been buying in order to keep their currencies competitive with the Chinese Yuan (Renminbi) and the U.S. dollar will be subject to a sanity check as well. The currency/bonds/stocks of a reflating economy engaged in guns and butter, Hummer and Hummvee spending of near historical proportions are bad investments. Sooner, perhaps later, our Asian creditors will wake up and smell the coffee. Perhaps their java will take the form of dollar or Treasury Note sales. Perhaps the aroma will resemble a revaluation of the Yuan and then the Yen. Either way we pay the price: higher import costs, a cutback in spending on cheap foreign goods, rising inflation, perhaps chaotic financial markets, a lower standard of living. Mark these words well for what they're worth (not much some will say): China holds the keys to our kingdom, and our Hummers. Their willingness to buy our bonds, their philosophy of fixing their currency to the U.S. dollar will one day be tested. And should their patience be found wanting, all of their neighboring Asian China wannabes will move in near unison. Reflation's second round will have begun, U.S. interest rates will rise, our goods in the malls and the showrooms will be less affordable, and the process of national belt tightening and increased savings will have begun."
The Fed is between the devil and the deep blue sea. If the trade imbalance keeps at current levels, then foreign holding of US bonds will rise dramatically. At low interest rates, this is not a huge drag on the economy. But what if rates rise and we start having to send $100 billion or $200 billion to foreign bond holders which would only add to our trade deficit? Can the Fed really allow rates to rise prior to a drop in the trade deficit?
What's a central banker to do? The above problems if allowed to develop before the recovery is clearly established will mean a recession and deflation. Thus, the Fed must feel, as evidenced by their policies, that they have to do everything possible to get an economy to grow its way out of the problem, even if it means a little inflation.
And there is the disconnect. The bond market can see exactly what I have described. Inflation will ultimately mean higher rates. The Fed does not think we can afford higher rates, which might possibly choke off a fragile recovery.
Thus, just as Volker caused a recession to bring down inflation, the Fed is willing to risk inflation to try and avoid the scenario Gross describes.
Do you think the Fed governors do not see the same imbalances that Gross and a hundred other analysts, including yours truly, see? However, rather than acquiescing to the decline of our "hegemonic rule" as Gross terms it, it is ingrained within a central banker's DNA to at least attempt to fight the tides of said decline.
And thus, to establish a "reasonable" set of policies such as McCulley asks for would mean the Fed may to all too soon feel forced to abandon them in order to deal with the potential crisis resulting from today's imbalances. Such a reversal has the potential for creating far more havoc than the current environment of "guess what Greenspan is feeling today." Since the exact nature of the potential crisis is unknown, how can you set a proper course? Better, says Greenspan, to allow them ultimate flexibility than adopting polices. Trust me.
And maybe there won't be a crisis and we do grow ourselves out of the problems, at least for awhile. The current economic growth is very for real, at least for the next 6-9 months. What if oil then comes down in price? Rates drop again? Jobs pick up and the economy gets on sound footing. A new round of technology investment ensues. There are lots of good things that can happen in the short term on the road to balancing the twin deficits. If you are a central banker, you are counting on them.
At the end of the day, it does not matter whether McCulley, Mises or Greenspan is right. Greenspan is going to win this debate, as he holds the cards until someone takes them away. Rates will stay low until the recovery is on a sound footing and producing jobs or inflation is truly back. We will know when that moment is when he tells us. And therefore risk premiums are going to stay high.
Dallas, New Orleans and New York
It is time to quit as there are lots of family events tonight and all this weekend, and I need to go and prepare. The twins are home from college and the boys want a night out. I see meat and games in my future.
I will be the keynote luncheon speaker at the National Investment Banking Association meeting in Dallas September 18. I will be speaking at the New Orleans conference October 29-November 1 (details and sign-up forms next week). I am currently scheduled to speak in New York at a Bank of New York conference November 12, and will be in Chicago October 8. I am trying to stay close to my computer until then and finish my book so I can get on with my life.
I am behind on my writing (what else is new?) and will hopefully soon be back on schedule with my second letter. For those who are interested and who qualify, I write a free letter on hedge funds and private offerings called the Accredited Investor E-letter. You must be an accredited investor (broadly defined as a net worth of $1,000,000 or $200,000 annual income - see details at the website.) You can go to www.accreditedinvestor.ws to subscribe to the letter and see complete details, including the risks in hedge funds. (In this regard, I am registered representative of the Williams Financial Group, an NASD member firm. See the web site for details.)
Final note: I will be turning 54 on October 4. I started in business at 24, after graduating from seminary. Thus, it will be roughly halfway through my "working life," as I do not even want to think about retiring until my mid-80s (I am having way too much fun), so I will be doing a special letter on what the next 30 years could look like, given the acceleration of change that we are seeing, both technological and social. Please feel free to share your thoughts.
Your seeing lots of opportunity analyst,
John Mauldin
John@frontlinethoughts.com
Copyright 2003 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo090503
Bill Murphy: LeMetropole Cafe *Must Read*
To:russwinter who started this subject
From: ajonesy Friday, Sep 5, 2003 7:20 PM
Respond to of 19481
http://www.siliconinvestor.com/stocktalk/msg.gsp?msgid=19277181
September 5- Gold $377 up $4.70 - Silver $5.10 up 10 cents
Gold Closes in New Highs
Quite a day and one which made a number of things clear. Gold was once again bashed in London and was due to come in $2 lower in New York. It came in firmer than that and then ran when this news hit:
Sept. 5 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy unexpectedly lost 93,000 jobs in August, the most since March, and the unemployment rate fell to 6.1 percent as more discouraged workers dropped out of the labor force, government figures showed.
Payrolls fell after a revised 49,000 drop in July, the Labor Department said in Washington. The jobless rate fell from 6.2 percent in July and 6.4 percent in June, the highest since 1994. –END-
The jobs picture in the US is worsening, not improving, even after all the 13 Fed interest rate cuts, tax cuts and government stimulus. Simultaneously, the Iraq quagmire is accelerating as US expenses mount.
When job numbers were announced, the dollar swooned and S&P futures sold off mildly. Gold reacted very swiftly and went up a few dollars on the day. Comments then surfaced from THREE different quarters that central/bullion banks were capping the rally. It is nauseating how Groundhog Day won’t go away. The movie was funny. This is an outrage.
Gold calmed down and got very quiet, holding $2+ gains. When the stock market began to weaken late in the Comex session, gold burst $5 higher out of nowhere, taking out stops, and rallied up to $379.50. Once again, cabal forces regrouped and instituted their $6 rule. How many times has MIDAS brought the $6 rule to your attention over the years? I have lost count.
Even as the desperate Gold Cartel gradually loses their war, they continue to fight one losing battle after another. This is exactly why I have ranted for so long that the gold price would never soar to where it should be until these low-life bums are carried out on a stretcher. Yes, the GATA stretcher-bearers are standing by.
It is GATA griping these days. When the stock market really falls apart and US investors lose a good deal of their money again, there will be outcries how it could have all happened. One need only go to Wall Street, various banks, the US political leaders and the US financial press. Together, they have facilitated a monstrosity.
Back to the gold action. One of the Gold Cartel rats may be leaving the ship. Yesterday, Morgan Stanley (as a firm) advised all their branch offices to get out of the stock market. Today, when the stock market made new lows, it was Morgan Stanley’s enormous buying which took gold up through the day’s highs. My take is MS sees the handwriting on the wall. The financial market managing by the Fed, ESF, bullion dealers in the cabal, and various other Wall Street houses is about to blow up. Morgan Stanley is running for the hills while they can. They know what can happen to the price of gold because they have been part of the rigging process for so long.
Another Ground Hogger: once again we see gold moving higher first, which leads a dollar move lower. That said, we can see how frightened The Gold Cartel is of gold taking out the $370+ area. The dollar fell 1.14 to 97.13 and the euro rose 1.75 to 110.97, yet gold was only allowed to rally $4.70. Over a two-day period the dollar has dropped 1 ¾ points with gold only allowed to rise $3.80. Obviously, the crooked ones are hoping they catch a break early next week to do what they can to take gold down again.
John Brimelow tells me the volume on Comex was 19,000 contracts the last half hour, or 1/3 of what it was for the entire session. That will give you some idea what kind of Gold Cartel firepower it took to keep gold from taking out the $378/$380 area. What a bunch of desperados!
The dollar completely broke down technically:
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/US/93
Gold closed in new high ground, flying out of a small flag formation:
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/GD/C3
The gold open interest fell a miniscule 7 contracts. There was no shakeout on the setback.
Yesterday, I mentioned how gold sells-off the day after The Gold Cartel knocks gold down purposely and noticeably on the close. It always comes in lower the next day and stays lower. However, the day after that, gold has continually risen and usually quite strongly, mostly after another lower opening. Happened again today. This is important to keep track off because it shows a pattern of strong hand buyers laying in wait for the predictable Gold Cartel. This powerful buying group knows exactly what they are doing.
The gold trading action over the last many weeks suggests the info I received about a $4.6 billion buy order is right on the money. These big buyers are toying with the cabal, buying as much gold as they can on breaks and keeping the futures market from liquidating. When they are ready, they will pull the plug and jerk the futures market through the roof. It will cause our long awaited Commercial Signal Failure and cause some major shorts to cover out of necessity.
Perhaps we will get our long awaited break gap opening on Monday. It’s long overdue.
Silver bolted sharply higher and then was held in check the rest of the session. When the price managers lose control of silver, it is going to blow sky high. I am still looking for a $1 move up in one Comex trading session alone.
Silver
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/SV/C3
One of my reflections last night was on the Bernanke comments reported yesterday:
"The Federal Open Market Committee is likely to keep interest rates low even during a robust recovery because deflation remains the main risk to the economy, Federal Reserve Gov. Ben Bernanke said Thursday."
What could be more gold friendly and dollar bearish than a Fed announcing it is going to keep our short rates low regardless of how our economy is pumping along? To me it shouts, "BUY GOLD!"
The John Brimelow Report
Friday, September 05, 2003
Indian ex-duty premiums: AM $5.88, PM $6.67, with world gold at $373.25 and $370.70. Adequate for legal imports. India seems to accepting +$370 world gold. UBS, which has been stressing the possibility of physical demand faltering, conceded this morning:
"the market, finding decent buying each time the $370 level is breached, continues to surprise us and suggests that the market will be well supported into any selling pressure…".
TOCOM continued uninterested, with volume slumping a further 42% to the equivalent of only 15,767 Comex contracts and the active contract slipping 2 yen. World gold was firm in the Far East however, being above $373 most of the Japanese day and going out at $373.15, 55c above NY. One notes that The Shanghai Gold Exchange close, 90 minutes after Tokyo, reported local gold at a small (41c) premium to the world price, after showing discounts since mid August. (NY yesterday traded 33,418 contracts; open interest fell (finally!) by 7.)
Today, as on Thursday, attempts to get the gold price sliding in Europe ahead of the NY opening were ultimately routed by resolute buying in US hours, notwithstanding much heavy breathing about the size of the CFTC long to be reported later on Friday. One recalls the prominent Comex trader mentioned here a week ago saying "It feels different this time". Of course, those with truly long memories realize that an economic news pothole the size of the payroll news and revisions this morning would have caused a double digit move in gold prior to the 90s.
Consequently it is pleasant for the friends of gold to consider the extraordinarily ferocious attack on the Federal Reserve posted by Bianco Research on their invaluable "News Clips/Daily Commentary" today. Fresh off their triumph in correctly gauging the size of the Bond debacle this summer, the authors are unprecedentedly outspoken calling Greenspan’s Jackson Hole speech his
"worst speech since becoming Fed chairman in 1987. What made it so bad, in our opinion, was its unbridled arrogance. Essentially Greenspan said there are two outcomes to monetary policy (1) the Fed is right or, (2) the market doesn't understand and further transparency/ communication is necessary. Where is the option "the Fed is wrong?" (or, the market does understand monetary policy but thinks it is wrong?) This is often the case…."
"While this arrogance is bad enough, Greenspan then went on to defend the Fed's "make it up as we go along" approach to monetary policy by rejecting any kind of guidelines or rules. So the Fed's never wrong and doesn't need and guidelines. Scary."
"It appears the Fed now has its reputation (read: Greenspan's ego) on the line…..The Fed's chosen monetary policy is not about "the right policy". Rather, it is about "being right."… If the market senses that the Fed really means it will not change monetary policy anytime soon no matter what, the bond market vigilantes could send interest rates soaring until they either force the Fed to re-consider or take rates high enough to offset current monetary policy."
"Our hope is that it won't come to this, as a financial crisis could result." (BR emphasis)
"When it comes to Fed Governor Ben Bernanke (who has been (article-body)" href="http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,BT_CO_20030904_008677-searc... target=_blank called the primary intellectual force next to Chairman Alan Greenspan), his lack of understanding extends to a basic function of the markets……"
(This assertion is supported with a critique of Bernanke’s recent comments on the TIPS market.)
"The market is beating the Fed (and Mr. Bernanke) over the head with its message that a policy designed to hold the funds rate at 1% for a "considerable" or "significant" period of time is wrong. If Greenspan's "intellectual force" lacks a basic understanding of markets, no wonder he does not understand what the markets are telling him. Such ignorance should have every bond investor worried."
Lack of faith in the Authorities is of course meat and drink to the gold market. All this and Iraq too!
JB
CARTEL CAPITULATION WATCH
The US job news sent bonds soaring, almost two points, but didn’t phase stock buyers that much. The DOG fell 11 to 1868 after seven straight winning sessions. The DOW made it above 9500 RIGHT ON THE CLOSE at 9503, down 85.
I still say US stock investors are WAY too complacent. The big picture is worsening and we have had reports on these serious problems this week:
*Pension underfunding is growing.
*The US infrastructure is falling apart
*State budget deficits need to be dealt with.
*The Federal budget deficit is out of control.
*Credit and problems are mounting across the spectrum in America.
*Job losses are increasing in almost unprecedented fashion.
Stock investors and Wall Street touts have focused on the micro. Various economic numbers have been OK due to Fed and government policies. When they run their course, look out below.
GATA’s Mike Bolser this morning:
Hi Bill:
The fed has taken no action in repos today and let the pool fall to $20.25 billion. Perhaps the DOW is getting too far above its planned 30-day moving average?
While the administration touts a rising economy pointing to the DOW, even the mainstream reports that "The DOW is not the economy" in last night's edition of NBC Nightly News. Folks know something's afoot. Nearly 3 million unemployed [not counting chronically out of work] with a rising DOW?
China rebuffed yet again John Snow's pleadings for a higher Yuan, the US now faces a dollar devaluation. There is no escape. Greenspan will continue deep in denial to look for one or until things [all the rig jobs created to hide bad Fed policy] simply collapse.
All this under disintegrating geopolitical anarchy in Iraq. The US has "Gone it alone" and flopped. The multi-polar world of France, Germany and Russia is back on political steroids. Do not believe AP reports to the contrary.
It seems that the Fed, Treasury and Administration have been joined at their economic policy hips. This is an historical recipe for monetary mischief and mayhem. Bush's fiscal policies appear as unworkable as those in his geopolitics.
The DIVG closed at 341.79 while the EIVG closed at 376.99 closing in on a new high over 381. This action reflects a fierce battle between stubborn longs and weakening government gold sellers.
At Jackson Hole, Greenspan seemed under duress judging by his defensiveness which Bianco Research interpreted as arrogance. Combined with a number of anti-gold propaganda pieces one might conclude that the gold cartel is getting nervous and trying to marshal for a counter attack. But they already had time to launch one and here we are at DIVG 342 well inside their defense lines at 323. Our attackers aren't budging.
Their gold supply to sustain the charade is dwindling, hastening the arrival of whatever fanciful end-game escape scheme the Fed imagines this week.
Mike
Bill:
Going out on a limb. Today may declare the market even if it continues to try to rally as it has per usual. I think that the dollar is breaking badly, and the market will soon follow. It is incredible to believe that in spite of the amazingly poor technical condition that the street is still in there with their market orders as seen in the TICK figures, and with gold ready to explode here.
When the Israelites came out of Egypt, and complained against the Lord that they were sick of the heavenly fare he was graciously giving them, they demanded meat, and He gave them all that they could eat. But scripture says, that "While the meat was still between their teeth and before it could be consumed, the anger of the Lord burned against the people, and he struck them with a severe plague." Numbers 11:34
I don't mean to profane the Word of the Lord, but I am using this biblical lesson to show that those who are demanding to get even from the stock market bubble are getting all the stock that they wish now, primarily from the insiders of the companies, and soon will very painfully learn of their folly. We are very, very close to the unveiling of a new financial world.
This one cracks me up. The headline is about Smith Barney raising their target on metal stocks. Sounds bullish! You read on and they forecast gold to trade $360 for 2004 and $350 for 2005. So their BEARISH! Oh, I see, their bullish compared to The World Bank, which is looking for $300 gold. The gold market commentary and analysis out there in financial land is the most useless, pitiful and corrupt in history.
Smith Barney raises targets on metal stocks; copper, nickel strength cited; PDG upgraded
Firm expects copper to lead in nonferrous metals in 2004, while gold should test $400/oz. FCX target raised to $38 from $35; PD raised to $60 from $52; N to $28 from $24; NEM to $48 from $40; and ABX to $22 from $20. PDG was upgraded to in-line from underperform; target raised to $15 from $12. For gold, Smith Barney est. $360/oz. for 2004 and $350/oz. for 2005. Industry is rated marketweight…-END-
Insight from Australia:
G’day Bill,
"John Snow has again been rebuffed by the Chinese who insist on pegging the Yuan to the dollar and forcing the US to solve its many deficits via devaluation as the gold market keeps applying upwards pressure. The Fed appears to be attempting to perfume this smelly mess with a rising DOW."
Now, I may be a "wee" bit slow but it appears that China is ahead of the "game", the Currency Game .
China has now de-regulated Gold, and it currently produces the order of 3 million ounces per annum, and growing. China has produced Gold for over 3,000 years, and to my limited knowledge does not export Gold.
So, who has large reserves of Gold, China.
I would suggest that China has NO intention of re-valuing the Yuan. Why?
It has adopted the Swiss model, that is a duel currency system the Yuan and Gold. Thus it is creating a "double whammie" for the West, one the West cannot compete with.
GATA’s man in Italy:
Brit money managers are all over President Bush today about his comments with regards to China. Every manager believes Bush's words to be for "public consumption" due to the fact that the election cycle has started. Do Americans buy off on Bush's words?
Everyone knows that the US needs China to buy US assets (ie. bonds) or the US financial system is doomed and the busines of the US is finance.
No one believes China will adjust their currency peg anytime soon.
These types of imbalances are what wars are fought over.
The difference between the quality of people on CNBC Europe and CNBC in New York never ceases to amaze me.
Dave
From The King Report:
Fed Gov. ‘Weimar’ Bernanke surfaced to assure all that even though the economy is rebounding, the Fed will hold rates farcically low longer than previous economic rebounds because the Fed still fears deflation. What else does one need to know? The solons understand just how ugly the fundamentals are and fear debt deflation. They do not fear price deflation, which used to be called progress. Bernanke also uttered the mendacious comment that the Fed will make every effort to rectify its communication problem with the bond market. The Fed and some Wall St. barkers would like us to believe that the bond market collapse is just a Fed failure to communicate. We’re stunned that it took the bond market so many months to understand what Bernanke’s threat to ‘run the printing presses if needed’ meant for bonds. So there you have it. If bonds don’t rally soon, Bernanke will round up all the inmates and assert, "What we got here, is failure to communicate."
And we can expect warnings and threats from the Fed and its vanguard to the consequences of investor misbehavior: Any man who doesn’t believe that the economy is jiggy, spends a night in the box. Any man who shorts any dollar-denominated asset, spends a night in the box. Any man who buys gold or silver, spends a night in the box. Any man who suggests derivatives should be regulated, spends a night in the box. Any man who says ‘outsourcing’, spends a night in the box. Any man who mentions the words ‘deficit’ or ‘bear market’, spends two nights in the box.
If any trader or investor has ‘jackrabbit’ in them and tries to runaway from the stock or bond market, they will be chained to the markets. If you absolutely need to raise money to pay bills, you must first seek permission by saying, "Selling some stock/bonds here, boss". "That’s a cool hand, Luke."
If one takes the time to read the details of the factory orders report, they will understand why the market treated it as unsavory. Unfilled orders, which should indicate rebound and strength, fell 0.4% and the ratio fell to 3.94, the lowest ratio since Aug 2000. Inventories fell 0.5% to the lowest level since 9/97, but shipments fell faster, reducing the ratio to 1.31, the lowest reading since the bubble peak in Jan 2000. The gains in factory orders are due to a 3% jump in fabricated metals, autos, and a $3B jump in basic chemicals of which $2.5B are pharmaceuticals and drugs. Semiconductor shipments fell 10.7%; computer and related product shipments fell 3.8%.
Railcar loadings used to be closely watched to glean a true economic picture. These are industry numbers that are not seasonally, hedonically or chain-weighed adjusted. The Fed and administration have launched the equivalent of its nuclear economic missiles. And what is the result? Railcar loadings for 2003 YTD are DOWN 0.3% from 2002 YTD!
M2 fell a surreal $65.2B because savings deposits fell $43.2B and demand deposits (part of M1) fell $26.5B. Tax rebates passing through the system?
Goldie paid a $9.3m settlement for insider trading on the discontinuance of the 30-year bond. What’s the sense of hiring all those ex-Fed and Treasury officials if?
-END-
Veteran Café Café member James McShirley nails it with this commentary on lumber. Gold should have rallied $12 today and would have without cabal intervention:
Not to belabor the groundhog theme, but a couple points that keep sticking out:
Here are some OSB (oriented strand board) prices from Jan 3 based on Random Lengths 7/16 North Central Print:
Jan 3 - $148
Feb 14 - $197 +33%
June 20 - $282 +90%
July 1 - $352 +138%
Aug 22 - $380 +157%
Sep 5 - $425 + 187% (est., print out today at 3:30)
Pretty impressive, no? But wait, it is even better. You can't touch it for that print, everybody is so bullish they are getting closer to $550- closing in on the price quadruple. Why? I'll quote a couple sentences from a buying co-op market report:
"Mills continue to stay off the market with extended order files out until November.... record high new home starts and plywood being sent to Iraq has created a market unlike anything we have ever seen.... how much higher prices can go is anybody's guess".
A major OSB mill told me he wasn't even offering wood, he could make 2 phone calls and sell all of his production at practically any price. So different than the gold industry who will remain silent every time a gold rally begins or a gold trashing story like the World Bank's comes out. Also, curious that our government steps in to buy plywood for Iraq at the TOP of a raging bull market exacerbating a volatile situation. Apparently they couldn't forecast Iraqi reconstruction as a possibility when OSB was $148 instead of $550. It's the old $100 hammer again. When gold quadruples it will be in spite of the gold industry and their alleged industry analysts. The gold industry gets more profit from GATA for FREE than all the money wasted on the WGC and GFMS. Gratitude is not in their vocabulary.
Lastly, a quick point about the commercials and their supposedly being right all the time. I am a small spec gold trader (100 lot) and have been basically long since 1999 from $278. While I have been mostly able to defend the position and not get flushed out on cabal raids my account currently is handsomely rewarded. Have the commercials beaten me? I don't think so. My view is the trend is your friend and don't over trade your capital. There is a raging gold bull approaching and after watching an OSB quadruple I see at least the same for gold. Some day we won't wake up to a groundhog but a gold tiger that escaped his cage. He'll eat the cabal alive.
Best always,
James McShirley
The gold shares rose modestly with the XAU gaining 1.50 to 93.45, a new high and the HUI rising 2.40 to 198.35, a new high close. The HUI has run into big resistance at 200 three times now.
My Russian partner of the late 1970’s used to always say:
"Repetition is the mother of inventions."
Therefore, I repeat some things to keep in mind:
*Gold will explode out of nowhere.
*The Gold Cartel is being defeated.
*Investing in gold and the shares is the historic investment opportunity of a lifetime.
*We have a gold share buying panic ahead of us.
*Gold is going to $800/$1,000+ per ounce.
Calandra: Latin America yields cheap gold
Several miners capitalize on lucrative mines down south
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/yhoo/story.asp?source=blq/yhoo&siteid=yhoo&dist=yhoo&gui...
WHT: How a new gold player rose in the West
Once-small Wheaton River announced second-quarter earnings of 500 per cent
http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/story.asp?id=6ABF4B2E-D3AE-4D78-9267-5A5E5FF8020B
Fed. NO Action (huge drain)
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Fed says it will conduct weekly 14-day system repos
Thursday September 4, 4:42 pm ET
NEW YORK, Sept 4 (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Thursday that the open market desk of the Federal Reserve Bank (News - Websites) of New York will begin to arrange system repurchase agreements with an original maturity of 14 days, instead of 28 days, at its weekly auctions that typically occur on Thursdays.
The change, to start as of Sept. 18, is purely a technical measure to improve the efficiency of the operations that the Fed Bank of New York conducts on behalf of the Federal Reserve System, the Fed Bank of New York said.
The transition to weekly operations with an original maturity of 14 days will give the open market desk greater flexibility to address the demand for banking system reserves over the two-week reserve maintenance period, it said.
Chi, correction 9B expires Friday but Uncle Al usually
giveth O/Weekend RP so the draining will continue IMHO.
Nice day for the miners except CDE gave back its gains after hours on P/R, it started to slip just before close evidently
some had early info. Should we call Spitzer?
CDE: Coeur Announces Public Offering
Thursday September 4, 5:00 pm ET
COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, Sept. 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Coeur d'Alene Mines Corporation (NYSE: CDE - News) announced today that it will be filing a preliminary prospectus supplement with the Securities and Exchange Commission relating to a proposed public offering of 20,635,000 shares of its common stock. Coeur has also granted the underwriters a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 3,095,250 shares of common stock at the public offering price to cover over allotments, if any.
The offering is being managed by CIBC World Markets. A copy of the prospectus related to the offering can be obtained, when available, from CIBC World Markets by e-mail: useprospectus@us.cibc.com or fax: 212-667-6136.
The net proceeds will be used for exploration and development activities, debt reduction, acquisitions, and general corporate purposes.
Coeur d'Alene Mines Corporation is the world's largest primary silver producer, as well as a significant, low-cost producer of gold. The Company has mining interests in Nevada, Idaho, Alaska, Argentina, Chile and Bolivia.
This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of any offer to buy the securities described above, nor shall there be any sale of these securities in any state in which such an offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of such a state.
Contact: Tony Ebersole
Director of Investor Relations
208-665-0335
Wheaties® Breakfast of Champions, see reply to
Fed O/N RP + 9B = 13B today
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Fed 28Day RP + 4B sofar
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Wheaton To Acquire Gold Development Projects In Mexico Increasing Production To 700,000 Ounces
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/030904/35922_1.html
Got your Wheaties yet??
Raptor Group, World Indices
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=1231022
Fed Ops: Maturing Repos 17.25B Thursday
7day 10B from 8/28, 28day 5B from 8/7, O/N 2.25B from 9/3
Fed drained 3.5B today (Wed)
http://www.bullandbearwise.com/FOMOOutChart.asp
Fed O/N RP + 2.25B
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
Raptor Group, World Indices
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=1231022
fried rice shorts, ameritrade giving wrong quotes all day
this is my greeting this AM.
Please be aware, quote information displayed for the Daily Change is currently
being calculated based on the closing price from Thursday August 28th, 2003
instead of the closing price from Friday August 29th, 2003.
Fed O/N RP + 5.75B
http://app.ny.frb.org/dmm/mkt.cfm
A time of predators
http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_03/joubert090203.html
Economic Calendar this week:
9-2-03
ISM, August (10:00): 53.5 expected, 51.8 July.
9-3-03
Construction spending, July (10:00): 0.4% expected, 0.3% June.
Federal Reserve Beige Booke (2:00)
9-4-03
Q2 Productivity (8:30): 6.3% expected, 5.7% Q1.
Initial jobless claims (8:30): 395K expected, 394K prior.
ISM Services, August (10:00): 62.0 expected, 65.1 July.
Factory Orders, July (10:00): 0.8% expected, 1.5% June.
9-5-03
Non-farm payrolls, August (8:30): 15K expected, -44K July.
Unemployment rate, August (8:30): 6.2% expected, 6.2% July.
Hourly earnings (8:30): 0.3% expected, 0.3% July.
Average workweek (8:30): 33.6 expected, 33.6 July.
Contrary Investor: The Ultimate Relay Race? Sept 03
http://www.contraryinvestor.com/mo.htm