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The Future of the Dollar
By Clyde Harrison
04 Jun 2005 at 12:03 PM EDT
CHICAGO (ResourceInvestor.com) -- Leo Malamed is known as the Father of the derivatives market. I started in the investment business in 1968, so I was around when the baby was born. In 1968, the Mercantile Exchange wasn’t well known as they only traded eggs and pork bellies. The Exchange being made up of capitalists, were willing to try to trade anything. They tried to trade potatoes and they tried to trade turkeys. Neither one flew.
Leo Malamed and his family escaped Nazi Germany when he was 7. His father was a mathematician. Every time they fled to a new country his father would explain the new exchange rate to Leo. Before coming to the United States they lived in Japan. Leo’s father explained that the official exchange rate was 100 yen to the dollar but on the black market; the real market, you could get 300 yen to the dollar.
Leo had developed an interest in trading and currencies.
In 1979 Leo was convinced the Bretton Woods Agreement was disintegrating. Milton Friedman had written many articles on why Bretton Woods would fail. Leo set up a meeting with Milton at the Waldorf. He told him of his idea to trade currency futures at the MERK. Milton responded by immediately standing and embracing Leo stating, “it was a wonderful idea.” Leo asked Milton to write a paper on the benefits of currency futures as a hedging vehicle. Milton said he would, but he reminded Leo he was a capitalist. Leo wrote Milton a check for $5,000 and the rest is history.
Currency trading, the dollar, gold, oil, trade deficit, budget deficit, interest rates…. none of them matter to the value of the currency. There is no correlation to the foregoing and the value of the dollar.
Oil is going higher until there’s a bounty on caribou, you can see an oil rig from every beach in California and there’s a drilling rig in Barbara Streisand’s yard.
In the 60’s, we had a trade deficit with Japan. The exchange rate was 300 to the dollar. Every year we’ve had a trade deficit with Japan and today the exchange rate is 105 to the dollar; a 60% plus decline. If you add up all countries trade deficits, you would find that the earth has a 100 billion dollar trade deficit with the moon. The numbers are garbage. If you use them for investment decisions you will have to eat cat food when you retire. What about budget deficits? US debt to GDP is 55%. France is 70%. Italy is 110%. Japan is 140%. There is no correlation. The regulatory nightmare in the US is heading for the critical stage. In Europe it’s past the critical stage. Who would want to start a business there? It’s so expensive to fire someone businesses don’t hire anyone. They go over seas.
When Russia collapsed, the third world discovered capitalism. Capitalism is easy to understand, it’s nature with a balance sheet. If you’re wrong, you go broke instead of being eaten.
India and China contain 2 ½ billion people; 9 times the population of the US. They use 2% of the world energy. We use 25%. They have 13.5 million autos vs. 130 million in the US. They have 280 people per car. We have 2 people per car.
As real incomes rise, demands for raw materials increase.
In 1900 in the US we used one barrel of oil per person per year. By 1970 we were using 27 barrels per person per year.
In 1950 when Japan started to industrialize, they were using one barrel of oil per person per year. By 1970, they were using 17.
In 1965, when South Korea started to industrialize, they were using one barrel of oil per person per year. Today they use 17.
Currently, every country south of the United States uses 4.5 barrels per person. China uses 1.3 and India uses .7.
In 1950, Japan’s per capita income was 18% of US per capita income. Today, Japan is 96%. In 1965, South Korea per capita income was 16% of the US. Today, they’re 53%. India today is 11% and China is 8%.
These figures include normal government inaccuracies but the direction is undisputable.
The demand for finite resources is increasing exponentially with rising standards of living.
Asian countries, excluding Japan are the growing entrepreneurial countries. They will have the stronger currencies.
Currency values are the markets perception of future government policies and central bank actions.
Government policies are determined by politics. The definition of politics is the advance auction of goods that have not yet been stolen.
Democracy, at it’s base is Mob rule. Many uninformed voters choose the guy that promises the most. They forget that whenever the government does something for someone it must do something to someone.
Bush Sr. simplified taxes. Now we only tax the living and the dead. Clinton promised to tax only the rich. Once in office, he defined rich as, “Those Americans with Indoor Plumbing.”
The demands of the majority are always greater than taxation alone can provide and that’s where the Fed comes in.
When the Fed was created in 1914, government was 8% of the GNP. Today, it’s 37%.
God, who created everything, only wants 10%.
Since the creation of the Fed, the dollar has lost 97% of it’s value. The value of the dollar has dropped 37% since Allen Greenscam took over.
Guns and Butter have returned. The result will be stagflation and a lower dollar.
Allen Greenscam and the Fed are planning to drop money from helicopters if necessary to keep the economy from collapsing under the weight of the debt.
The last central banker to get it right was Joseph, in the Bible. Seven good years followed by 7 bad years. I thought central planning was totally discredited when Russia collapsed but Greenscam and the Fed keep trying. The Fed is like the post office giving out money instead of stamps. Faith in the Fed is based on elaborate mathematical models relying on the breathtakingly faulty assumption that human beings behave rationally.
Greenspan’s invisible hand of intervention is trying to keep interest rates as low as the world will allow. But the world is becoming a bit nervous. The US has borrowed over $1 trillion from overseas. Some day it will be repatriated. The exchange of paper for wealth will go into reverse. We will get our paper back and have to return real wealth. Recently, the dollar has been rapidly declining against the euro and gold but at a much slower rate against the Asian Tigers.
Japan and China have purchased massive amounts of US treasuries to stem their decline. They loan us money to buy their products because they need the US as a customer. When will this end? When the Asian Tigers develop a consumer credit system and their three billion plus citizens become the customer. At that point we will no longer be able to live beyond our means - the dollar decline will accelerate and interest rates will rise.
The dollar has instructions in Faith right on it, “ In God We Trust.” Placing your faith in the Fed could be a dangerous plan. Prior to the creation of the Fed, the worst bank panic caused 2.8% of the banks to fail in 1873. Following the creation of the Fed, almost 50% of the banks failed during the 30’s. The Fed made a local problem national - now the problem is global, a brilliantly executed, bad plan. Someday, the dollar could fall to its intrinsic value. Denial is not just a river in Egypt. Currencies do not float, they sink at different rates. Currencies are abstractions not redeemable in any specific amount of anything, they are an I owe you nothing certificate.
If you’re using government statistics to follow the economy, they’re useless. The GNP and the CPI are hideously weighted and stupidly adjusted. The government assumes that if the price of energy goes up we will burn computers to heat our homes because their price went down.
Last year if you didn’t buy a home, didn’t use energy, didn’t eat, didn’t see a doctor, didn’t buy insurance of any kind, didn’t have a child in college and didn’t pay local or state taxes your family price index agrees with the governments.
I wish I could seasonally adjust my checkbook.
Since the Feds creation there has been deflation – deflation of the currency. It shrinks on average 2.5% to 3% per year. In the US, we have voters who are deep in debt. Deflation would crush the voter. Currency deflation will help the debtor. Expect stagflation - the value of the currency goes down while the economy goes nowhere; an, “L” shaped recession.
Prices will be lower for every thing that can be manufactured in China or serviced in India.
Prices will be much higher for what can only be made in the US; medical care, insurance, plumbers, trash collection, raw materials, real estate, and government.
In the next 10 years, the government will lie about the deflation of the currency so, (when the baby boomers retire) their social security check will be worth half of what they anticipated in real terms.
When the Fed fine-tunes, the orchestra gets fired. All soft landings by the Fed have resulted in thousands of casualties. Ever since the earth was cooling the Fed was headed by a banker. Greenscam is the first economist. Karl Marx was an economist!
If you believe Alan Greenscam and the Fed guides the economy you must also believe the twelve birds sitting atop the rhinoceros guide him through the jungle.
Recently Allen stated interest rates are a conundrum. Which in English means the head of the Federal Reserve doesn’t understand why long rates are declining while he raises short rates.
From now on I will refer to him as Allen in Wonderland. His answer to any and every problem is to print more money.
I expect the dollar to stay in a trading range like the last 6 months. And sometime in 2006, when we’re in the next recession, the Fed will lower rates, print, and the dollar will head to new lows.
The Federal Government and the Federal Reserve are completely incapable of keeping tomorrow from coming.
Mr. Harrison is the Founding Member of Beeland Management Co., L.L.C., which manages the Rogers Raw Materials Index Funds.
Rogue
Interesting Oil post from another board....
To: whitepine who wrote (44543) 6/5/2005 4:22:33 PM
From: SliderOnTheBlack Read Replies (3) of 44634
re: so called "attacks" on Matt Simmons, Don Coxe et al...
whitepine... I acknowledge that Don Coxe "has" been a respected Broad Market Analyst.
But in my personal opinion; he is guilty along with Matt Simmons for "pimping" (and that IS the most appropriate term) one of the great Economic Rip Off's of Modern Times...
The Blatant Price "Manipulation" of the Oil & Gas Markets that is Funding the Bush-Cheney pOILitical machine and is sucking the Economic Viability of America's Future out of the hands of the Working Poor & Middle Class and transfering it into the Hands of the New World Order, Globalist, Industrial Defense-Complex, Oil & Banking Cartel....and "Peak Oil" is their Red Herring.
It is now obvious to everyone that we are in Iraq for one and only one reason ... Oil, or more specifically for "pOILitic's" - which is the Oil Money that drives, fuels and funds the Bush-Cheney Political Machine.
Where do you think all of that money that is coming from that is being circulated thru unregistered, unregulated "Carribean Hedge Funds" that is suddenly propping up and buying all of our Treasuries & funding our Deficits; keeping a lid on Interest Rates, the meltdown of Fannie Mae, the Derivatives Bubble, the Housing Bubble, our Markets and a freefall in the US Dollar ?
Much of it is recirculated OPEC Petrodollars....the proverbial "Deal with the Devil."
OPEC not unlike the rest of the World...doesn't want anymore Bernanke Helicopter, Mad-Money & Printing Presses Gone Wild - US Fiat Dollars than does China, or anyone else... Saddam made the mistake of moving to demand payment in Euro's vs. US Dollars for Iraqi Oil...and obviously, Saddam & Iraq were not nearly the potential WMD threat that North Korea, or China are to the US...but, we don't have America's Military building bases in and occupying Yongbyon North Korea, or Guangzhou China now do we ?
So the Price of Oil is manipulated in the Futures Markets by the likes of the Worlds Largest Derivatives Traders of Energy - Goldman Sach's and their incredulous call for a Super-Spike & $105 Oil, just as Oil was teetering on a technical price collapse created by ramping US Inventory Levels and Big Oil CEO's saying their is "no shortage of Oil" and the Saudi's saying they have no customers for additional Oil ?
...whodathunkit ?
Raise the Price of Oil High Enough and not only does the Bush-Cheney pOILitics Cartel get Rich long with the Military Industrial-Defense Complex supplying the Global War on Terrorism and Global Bankers who are financing it along with the Debt, Credit, Derivative & Housing Bubbles; but we acquire a new Geopolitical and Economic-WMD to use vis a vie controlling China and give the Saudi's a Windfall that they in return partially kickback to help fund our Deficit's and to keep the US House of Cards propped up and afloat....untill Bankruptcy, Social Security and Energy Bills are all passed completing and controlling the Greatest Transfer of Wealth in History.
Warren Buffet warned that we are about to become the great American "Sharecropper Society"...and he has chosen the perfect terminology imho.
All the while the Global Elitist Bankers, Oil and Defense-Industrial Complex literally loots the Economic Future of America and the American Working Poor & Middle Class - assuring them a future of near perpetual Economic Serfdom.
- load them up with an unprecedented level of Credit & Debt, while Manipulating Markets and sedating them with the Opiate of cheap Credit and a Housing Bubble to replace the losses & damaged confidence they suffered in the collapse of the Tech & Internet Stock Market Bubble...then pass new Bankruptcy Reform Laws - guaranteeing that the Company Store will own their Soul for perpituity... and at the same time; finance the Global Elitist Bankers Exit from the Markets with Mr. & Mrs. Main St USA's entrance to it...via transfering the responsibility of Social Security Retirement Benefits from the Profligate Spending US Government to the backs of the ShareCropper Society and a propped up and manipulated Market, a Currency and an Econonmy held together by manipulation and smoke & mirrors...and create a Peak Oil & War on Global Terrorism Red Herring in which to blame the coming collapse upon...
A vastly politically diverse group of the best & brightest Financial, Market and Economic Minds in America, ranging from former Reagan Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volker, to former Clinton Treasury Secretary Paul Rubin, to International Financeer Sir John Templeton, to Morgan Stanley Chief Economist Stephen Roach; to the recent commentary on CNBC by legendary Investor Julian Robertson...they have all warned America of our coming Economic Fate.
Specifically concerning the blatant manipulation of the Energy Markets; here is some commentary and perspective from a very well known and respected Commodity Industry CEO who should be well known to many on this thread -
Peter Huntsman, CEO of the Huntsman Chemical Corp with $11 Billion+ of Commodity/Chemical Revenues.
******************************************************************************************************************
Natural gas traders on the NYMEX
Posted at 13:56 in exchanges.
THE WOODLANDS, Texas, June 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
Peter R. Huntsman, President and CEO of Huntsman Corporation , today blasted natural gas traders on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) for continuing to foster high and volatile natural gas prices at consumers’ expense.
"Government data released today show a record amount of natural gas in inventory for this time of year, and demand for natural gas remains flat," said Mr. Huntsman. "Yet in the last two trading sessions the price of gas on the NYMEX shot up more than 65 cents and closed up 44 cents. On an annualized basis that cost the U.S. economy between $10 billion and $15 billion. Why? Because, according to one analyst, ’Fund buying jumped in ... and sent prices racing.’"
"In other words, hedge funds and other paper traders on the NYMEX continue to enrich themselves while U.S. gas consumers are forced to endure the result of the world’s highest and most volatile natural gas prices," said Mr. Huntsman. "Industries continue to close and move off shore, American jobs continue to be lost, the nation’s farmers and senior citizens continue to suffer. The only ones who prosper are financial markets and traders that do not produce, transport or consume natural gas.
"Just this morning one of our nation’s largest financial institutions, in reporting on gas price futures, referred to the forecast of a worse than normal hurricane season and the possibility of decreasing gas imports, which would be excuses to force up the price, as ’good news.’ It makes absolutely no sense."
Mr. Huntsman said he is surprised more natural gas consumers are not outraged with the imbalance in the U.S. economy created by "a natural gas pricing system that has been out of control since Congress enacted the Commodities Futures Modernization Act in 2000."
He pointed to bi-partisan legislation working its way through Congress that "would go a long way to restoring some common sense" to natural gas markets.
HR 1638 would, among other things, restore pre-2000 transparency to natural gas trading markets, give the Commodities Futures Trading Commission real-time oversight of all natural gas trading, and re-impose pre-2000 limits that gas prices may move in a trading session.
"HR 1638 is not a cure-all," said Mr. Huntsman. "But it certainly would help restore sanity to the market and reduce the harm being inflicted on the U.S. economy. Demand for natural gas has eroded in the past five years. We have record amounts of storage for this time of year. There is no fundamental reason for this nation’s gas prices to be this high or this volatile."
Huntsman is a global manufacturer and marketer of commodity and differentiated chemicals. Its operating companies manufacture basic products for a variety of global industries including chemicals, plastics, automotive, aviation, footwear, paints and coatings, construction, technology, agriculture, health care, textiles, detergent, personal care, furniture, appliances and packaging. Originally known for pioneering innovations in packaging, and later, rapid and integrated growth in petrochemicals, Huntsman today has revenues of $11.5 billion, 11,300 employees and 62 operations in 22 countries.
**********************************************************************************************************************
I know, I know... those continually rising inventory numbers are an illusion... they don't matter - we are somehow able to defy supply/demand mathematic's and simultaneously refill our SPR and build inventories to 5 year highs while Prices do the exact opposite that fundamentals would seemingly dictate.
Somehow it all brings a sense of the Enron/California Black Out - Deja Vu all over again....and we all know that the Nat Gas Market was not manipulated then either...
Nahh... Skilling & Lay et al are as pure as the driven snow ~
Peak Oil... the "sound-byte" theme of one of the greatest Transfers of Wealth in Modern History....we've debased our Currency, sent out Son's & Daughters to War, Financed that War via Spiraling our Deficits out of Control, Placated the Masses via the Optiate of an Easy-Credit Debt & Housing Bubble and are just about ready to pull the rug out from them...but, first we've got to finance Wall Street's exit with their entrance of wheelbarrows of Social Security Money...while the only exit door open - Bankruptcy...is firmly nailed shut.
...only time will tell if the American People wake up before the Day of Reckoning Arrives.
Instead of Instituting a call for Energy Conservation and INVESTING Billions & Billions into safe, renewable, alternative Solutions that will build and create Longterm Energy Independence for America... we are instead transfering Billions & Billions into the coffers of the Military Industrial Complex, into Bush-Cheney pOILitics and into the Global Bankers Pockets....while sending our Son's & Daughters to fight a War for Oil, while destorying our Markets, our Currencies, our Financial Standing in the World, potentially our Banking System, our Pension and Social Security Retirement Systems... while mainlining the opiate of cheap credit & debt and mindlessly allowing one Asset Bubble to be traded for yet another ...with a Wag the Dog - Peak Oil & War on Terrorism Cloak pulled over our eyes...
If we are this stupid - maybe we are getting what we deserve...
Re: Sinking of U.S. Navy Aircraft Carrier in Indian Ocean to Trigger War with Iran?
It is something that could happen.......they will create the scenario to invade Iran however they want.
Frightening and sad.
Rogue
GM....I expect to see the share price at a buck or two sometime. They've got real financial problems. I'm short from $43 and not expecting to cover until then. When it get's to a buck....who knows??
Will the company be "saved" like Chrylser was in 1980 by government bailouts?
Rogue
Amnesty defends 'gulag,' urges Guantanamo access Thu Jun 2, 9:51 AM ET
TOKYO (Reuters) - Human rights group Amnesty defended its description of Guantanamo prison as a "gulag" Thursday and urged the United States to allow independent investigations of allegations of torture at its detention centers for terrorism suspects.
A verbal feud between Amnesty International and Washington has escalated since Amnesty last week compared the prison at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to the brutal Soviet system of forced labor camps where millions of prisoners died.
President Bush dismissed as "absurd" the Amnesty report, which also said the United States was responsible for an upsurge in global human rights violations, and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld called the description "reprehensible."
"The administration's response has been that our report is absurd, that our allegations have no basis, and our answer is very simple: if that is so, open up these detention centers, allow us and others to visit them," Amnesty International Secretary General Irene Zubaida Khan told a news conference.
"Transparency is the best antidote to misinformation and incorrect facts," said Khan, who is here to meet with Japanese officials.
The United States holds about 520 men at Guantanamo, where they are denied rights accorded under international law to prisoners of war.
Many have been held without charge for more than three years.
Khan rejected a suggestion that Amnesty's use of the emotive term "gulag" had turned the debate into one over semantics, and distracted attention from the situation in the detention centers.
"What we wanted to do was to send a strong message that ... this sort of network of detention centers that has been created as part of this war on terrorism is actually undermining human rights in a dramatic way which can only evoke some of the worst features of human rights scandals of the past," she said.
"I don't think people have got off the hook yet."
Khan also said Japan's bid for a permanent seat on the U.N. Security Council meant Tokyo should play a bigger role in the global fight for human rights and improve its own record at home.
Japan has stepped up its campaign for a permanent seat as part of an effort to boost its global clout in security affairs.
"Japan, by its strong bid to become a U.N. Security Council member, is subjecting itself to greater international scrutiny and that creates an imperative for change," she said.
Khan urged Japan to abolish the death penalty, improve the treatment of prisoners, revise a strict stance toward refugees -- only 15 refugees were accepted last year -- and do more to prevent and protect victims of human trafficking.
Rogue comment..........it is shameful and frightening that the supposed "leader" of the free world has these concentration camps.
Who will be deemed the next "terrorists"??? US citizens who don't go along with the "program"????
"you're either with US or AGAINST US!!!"...George Bush....shades of NAZI Germany.
Rogue
STUOF/San Telmo Energy......added some more down here at .36 cents. Could be due for a rally soon?
Rogue
HEMA....Yes, it was a classic value stock at a buck and change a few months ago. I loaded my boat on the oppurtunity.
Still holding a block.......it still looks like a good value microcap stock.
Rogue
Home prices up 12.5% in year By Sue Kirchhoff, USA TODAY
Thu Jun 2, 6:16 AM ET
The average price of a U.S. home jumped 12.5% from the first quarter of 2004 to the first quarter of 2005 - one of the heftiest increases in the past 25 years, the government said Wednesday.
........but of course the government tells us the next minute there is very little "inflation" so interest rates and easy credit must remain!!!
The criminals have taken over he jail. I guess it's easier to be bullish on continued inflation in real estate property than it is to be bullish on the purchasing power of the US dollar.
Rogue
The US Trade Deficit is Unsustainable
Bud Conrad
Jun 2, 2005
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/conrad/conrad060205.html
Introduction
The US has been borrowing from willing foreigners to maintain its lifestyle, even as we have become uncompetitive in world manufacturing markets. This article examines how big the US trade deficit is in comparison with other economies, and what this may mean for investment. First I simply show the size of the deficit, and then I show how dependent the US housing market and US government deficit spending is on re-investment by foreigners. I then examine the details of the situation, building on a speech given by ex-Secretary of the Treasury and now President of Harvard, Dr. Larry Summers. This analysis shows how dangerous the US trade balance is to the stability of the US and world economic systems.
The Trade Deficit of the US is at unsustainable levels
The trade deficit is the difference between how much we buy and how much we sell to foreigners. Economists like to use a more precise measure of the net amount of money that flows across a country's border, so they add in the net returns on investments as well. The investment flows are much smaller than the trade differences. The combination of investment returns and the trade deficit is called the current account (CA). I will show current account data below but it can be thought of as very similar to the trade deficit. How big is the current account deficit? The chart below shows the history since 1959:
The US is importing $700B more in goods and services than it sells abroad. The shape of this change is not one of a cycle that gets pushed to one side and then swings back to the other. It is more like a cliff. Our situation is unprecedented. No G7 country has ever had as big a deficit. Axel Merk, who runs a foreign currency fund (www.merkinvestments.com) points out that the US CA deficit could reach $900B in 2006. He references the Bank of International Settlements for this estimate. To see if this is reasonable, I calculate what would happen if crude oil went to $100/ bbl. We import 34 of our 20M bbl per day usage. That calculates to (20 X 34 365 =) 5 billion barrels per year. At $100/ bbl this bill would be $500B. All other cars, computers and clothes would be in addition. If the dollar's purchasing price dropped as the quantities of goods stayed the same, the deficit would also rise. A $900B deficit is possible.
The situation is even worse when looking not just at what happened each year, but at the accumulated deficit of the US. This accumulated deficit over time measures how big the US indebtedness has become. The chart below, which is even more dramatic, shows that we have accumulated a $4 trillion debt.
This astounding amount is 40% of GDP and shows no signs of slowing. To put this $4 trillion in perspective, the comparable base of what the whole country is worth is only $48.5 trillion. This total value of the nation is the sum of all real estate, all equities and such personal possessions as cars and furniture. So we are approaching having given away 10% of our net worth as collateral for importing the oil, cars and computers we use for our life style.
The chart below shows the size of flows to and from individual nations. The US stands out with the biggest deficit by far.
The problem of big debt for a country the is same as for an individual: they have to pay the growing interest to service the debt. A rough calculation of how big that interest is on the outstanding debt is shown below by multiplying the amount outstanding by the interest rate of the 5-year note in the chart below:
All these pictures show that the deficit is big and growing.
The Trade Deficit links to the US housing bubble and government deficit
The most basic view of the economy is diagramed below. Households earn the wages they spend on the goods and services from businesses:
The following chart adds that consumers spend a portion purchasing foreign goods. The foreigners then recycle the dollars they collect from this trade into the US government debt by buying Treasuries and into Agency debt of Government Sponsored Enterprises like Fannie Mae, which then provide money for housing.
Foreigners have funded our housing boom and provided enough credit that the growing federal deficits have not driven interest rates up. Much is simplified out of the above explanation, but the value is that we can see the biggest and most important money flows.
The US credit market matches the amount borrowed and lent. The accumulated foreign contribution of $4 trillion of lending (investment) has provided the credit for the borrowing by the US government whose debt held by the public is now similar in size to the accumulated foreign loans to the US. The chart below shows the size of Federal government debt and the foreign accumulated current account debt to point out that foreigners are funding credit at comparable levels:
A comparison of Mortgage Debt and Current Account shows similar growth rates:
If foreigners were to look for other investments, such as gold, or to cash in their current investments by buying assets like stocks or real estate, there would be a big increase in the amount of dollars in the US borders, and a big increase in US prices. The implication of impending inflation is that investors would see the risk, and expect higher interest rates to cover their loss to inflation.
An ex-Secretary of Treasury views the deficit as dangerous
Larry Summers (see web for a bio - www.president.harvard.edu/biography) spoke at a meeting of the Stanford Institute of Economic Policy Research on the problems of the US current account deficit. He is analytic and convincing. In summary, he painted a very bleak picture as to how serious the situation is. He used the Mutual Assured Damage analogy of the cold war, as a model for countries holding our debt but not wanting to lose by cashing it in and forcing its value down. He even suggested that foreign debt holders might get the rip-them-off strategy of letting the dollar drop so much that our debts to them evaporate. He implied that there could be a serious calamity in financial markets. He concluded with "I don't know the answer" to fixing the problem. I asked him to explain why interest rates were so low in the face of the situation. He said the 10-year note should be at 5.5% at least. He had no economic rationale for the low rate, but proffered that maybe investors who had been betting on the rate rise had decided to "throw in the towel" much like NASDAQ shorts did at 3,000 on the way up to 5,000. By buying back short positions they may be contributing to the low rate.
The current account deficit is now unsustainable at 6% of GDP. Since imports are bigger than exports, if they grow at a similar rate, the deficit will grow. The accumulation of debt means that we have to pay increasing interest on the debt making the balance worse. Historically, as the US GDP grows 1%, the current account deficit has grown 2%. But foreigners grow their CA by only 1% for a 1% of GDP growth. The conclusion is that the CA will get worse.
The 6 measures to identify if the CA is a problem:
Is it too big? At 6% of GDP it is bigger than the level that brought Argentina into collapse. Mexico got to 8% before its last collapse. The US absorbs 75% of the world's export surplus. A G7 country has never had such a big deficit before. The conclusion is that 6% is already too big.
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Is it rising? Yes, suggested by the measures mentioned above.
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What is the comparative rate of National Investment compared to the National Saving rate? If a country is making investment for future production and has a strong savings rate, it is in a stronger position. The US has the opposite with big government deficit, and little savings.
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Does the composition of the deficit indicate weakness? If a country is running a CA deficit, by importing the means of manufacturing for example, it can be expected that investment will improve output, and thus be more sustainable than if the imports are for consumption. A measure of composition is whether the goods are traded goods, or not. The composition of the CA for the US is for consumer products, and therefore more dangerous.
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Where are wealthy locals moving their money? The US is expanding its buying of foreign stocks. We are making foreign direct investment outside the country. The net flow out of investment adds to the view that US decision-makers do not find good value in US.
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Is the capital flow to the US coming from private investors, who tend to be more concerned about returns than politics, or more from central banks, who may have other reasons then just profits? The US was getting about 2/3 of its investment from Central Banks, and this could be a weak position.
By all 6 measures the CA deficit is judged to be a serious risk to the US economy.
There are 3 counter arguments that the situation may not be serious:
We are the Reserve Currency. The large liquid market for US Treasuries has given us leverage and speed. It looks like local stability, but if there is a big shift, the speed could lead to explosive results. The global capital market my not give that much edge to the dollar.
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"We will rip the foreigners off." We will depreciate the dollar enough that they will be left with less than they paid for. In fact, this has been happening. The foreign debt to GDP (nominal) ratio hasn't been expanding much. The weaker dollar means that the purchasing power of the accumulated foreign debt is not growing so rapidly. The argument has short-term merit, but the obvious flaw is that foreigners can see what is happening and may not allow it to continue. An expectation of a weaker dollar would drive the dollar down even more.
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Bretton Woods II Co-dependency. The term refers to the regime of using the dollar, which is no longer based on gold, to manage the world economic system. The cold war term of Mutually Assured Damage can be applied to the very big holders of our debt. The foreign country that accepts US dollars in trade transactions and re-invests them in US Treasuries may not be so concerned about the dollar drifting lower, if they believe that keeping the dollar strong will benefit their own economy. We have the odd policy of asking China to raise the value of their currency, leaving them holding claims on us of decreasing value.
There will be substantial adjustments ahead:
The most similar historical time was the mid-1980s when the CA peaked at 3.5% of GDP. The fall of the dollar after 1985 caused the CA to come back in line.
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The 1987 crash might have had some input from these unstable antecedents.
.
Japan had several parallels in its situation in the late 1980s with seemingly unending growth. China today looks like Japan of the 70s and 80s.
The trade imbalance is a substantial problem not only in the US, but globally. US purchases of world goods are necessary for other countries' economic growth. If the US fixes its CA deficit, then the rest of the world will have excess capacity. So the US fix is a problem for the world.
The relationships of the US savings rate, CA, and investment rate, leave us only limited options. The US investment (borrowing, including the government) has to be funded out of US households' savings, or from foreigners as investment of their trade-won dollars. For all these things to work, as the US cuts its CA deficit, foreign countries must stimulate their own demand to provide markets for their output. There is no simple path here. With US consumers not saving much at all, the funding of credits must come from foreigners. Asian consumers have been held back by lack of long-term mortgage lending and retail constraints. Commensurately, currency adjustment of the weaker dollar should occur against Asian currencies more than European. The economic link of the CA deficits and the budget deficit, is that a smaller fiscal deficit would help improve the CA deficit.
Summers' concluding comment was to say "I don't know the answer." His arrival at such a dire evaluation, suggests reason to be cautious about the economy and the value of the dollar for the future.
My Conclusion
I think the US trade deficit will lead to a weaker dollar. That means alternatives to US-dollar-denominated assets must be an important part of a portfolio. The US avoided a serious recession in 2001 by letting the consumer expand his spending by borrowing. We now have more debt than ever, not only internationally as described above, but also for government, and for mortgages. If foreigners were to consider other options for holding these dollars, there could be a glut of dollars in the world that would drive the exchange rate downward and prices in the US upward. If inflation rises, US interest rates could rise, and many parts of the economy could turn down, like housing, stocks and consumer spending. Because of the size of the amounts involved, and the speed of today's currency and interest rate markets, the shift could move very fast in a downward spiral.
Bud Conrad
email: budconrad@earthlink.net
Originally published on KitcoCasey on May 31, 2005.
Mr. Conrad holds a Bachelor of Engineering degree from Yale and an MBA from Harvard. He has held positions with IBM, CDC, Amdahl, and Tandem. Currently he serves as a local board member of the National Association of Business Economics and teaches graduate courses in investing at Golden Gate University. Bud Conrad has been a futures investor for 25 years and a full-time investor for a decade. In his spare time, he produces Conrad's Charts, published by Casey Research, featuring unique charts and analysis on the economy and investment markets.
321gold Inc
Rogue
YDHCF/Yantai Dahua Holdings Company.... I still own 30,000 shares. Sold 30,000 shares after the last rally attempt above .20 cents failed.
I still think this has 10 or 20 bagger written all over it. If I live long enough (LOL!) the annual dividends (if ever declared) should surpass the current .08 cents bid. I saw that happen before with my purchase of Telefonos de Mexico(TFONY) at .12 cents in 1985 and China Yuchai Diesal(CYD) in 2001 at .26-.29 cents.
I would like to think that China has huge growth ahead of it and their currency will show extreme strength versus the US$ like the Japenese Yen did when it went up seven-fold against the US dollar in the 70's and 80's.
I'm dissapointed this hasn't taken off yet.....but I'm sticking with it and may add more. It's an option on China growth and better odds than a foolish lottery ticket.
I think earnings will be great when announced (just a guess) and the market makers are shaking the tree for shares ahead of an earnings news rally.
I rate YDHCF a strong long-term speculative buy at these prices.....an inexpensive "option" that never expires on the growth of the Chinese economy.
Rogue
Call in the Scoops! Call in the Scoops!......
Soylent Green is People!! Tell them........Soylent Green is people! LOL!!
Seriously, excellent post Lentinman. It says eloquently what I had not so eloquently stated in post #22.
It's really very sad what's happened to our country. Lot's of blame to spread around. Real estate has become the band-aid holding this whole rotten mess together.
Rogue
www.theinternationalforecaster.com
Train Wreck of the Week
By Bob Chapman
May 29 2005
The elitists think we are dumb and they could care less what we think. The neocon version of democracy is a sham and a cover, which they hope lends an aura of legitimacy to what they are doing. The media, of course, trumpets the triumph of this so-called democracy when in fact it harks back to the 1930’s Triumph of the Will.
In Afghanistan we are told Hamid Karzai was freely elected, but the media leaves out the fact he was a paid consultant for Uocal, a CIA operative and a front-man for elitist interests.
In Palestine Mohammad Abbas was elected with little support from the people. He is another stooge for US, UK and Israeli interests. He sits in power as Palestine’s real leader Marwan Barghonti sits in an Israeli jail.
In Iraq we have Iyad Allawi who has been an asset of MI6 and the CIA since the 1980s, another stooge for elitist interests.
All three elections were rigged just like George W. Bush’s last two elections to become president. A consistent pattern of rigged elections. It is not the voting that is democracy; it is the counting. In Iraq it took a week or more to count the votes in secrecy of course. All was well though because the UN lent its veneer of legitimacy. As you can see, all is not as it seems. There is no question that there is widespread voter fraud in every election in the US and as well in foreign elections in which the elitists have a stake.
In the real estate market the question is who will get the ax first. Will it be San Diego, Los Angeles or perhaps Phoenix? Let’s take a shot at San Diego where we once lived in the hamlet of La Jolla. The California Association of Realtors Affordability Index recently put San Diego affordability at 10%, meaning that only the 10% of San Diego wage earners could afford to buy a median priced home. First-time buyers are just about locked out of the market. Other buyers are stretched to the financial limit. Just five years ago the 30-year fixed was 7.91%, today it is 5.71% and ARMS are 50% cheaper. If the economy was strengthening it would be different, but the only strength in the economy is real estate itself. Over 75% of San Diego Mortgages are some form of ARMS. Twenty-five percent do not make a down payment and mortgages are being written for as much as 125% loan-to-value ration. Even if interest rates remained the same you will have a topping in the market and some correction. We see rates moving up. How much is dependent on the ability to fund the current account deficit and reduce government’s fiscal budget deficit.
If the San Diego market would revert to mean prices, it would fall by 50% and that is only to the mean. They could and would likely overshoot the mean. Rising mortgage rates should decrease housing demand as more and more buyers are priced out of the market or cannot qualify.
Foreclosures would follow and that will feed upon itself. This is the third real estate bubble in Southern California in 35 years, so we know how it works having lived there for 36 years. This boom is little different than the stock market bubble in 2000, except you will find real estate is relatively illiquid in a falling market. This time Americans are way in over their heads in debt and over 50% of loans are ARMs and 50% of loans are sub-par. You talk about a dog’s breakfast – this is it. Households are carrying overall debts equal to 80% of their annual disposable income. Yes, whom the gods will destroy, they first make mad. A major question is, if individual bankruptcies were close to 10 million over the past five years – could they double or triple over the next five years? The answer, of course, is yes.
We are wondering if the pressure on China to revalue is just a ploy and part of the propaganda crusade to blame America’s financial and economic woes on China.
If China were to revalue there would be some nasty consequences. Interest rates would rise as would mortgages. The stock, bond and real estate markets would fall and unemployment would increase. The budget deficit would grow larger but the current account deficit would ease somewhat. Thus, you say to yourself, isn’t it better for the Fed and the neocons to postpone the inevitable and let the yuan remain pegged. You also have to remember China conscientiously enabled the US government to continue its fiscal irresponsibility. Could China have made a deal with the neocons? They have and we will find out in time. Last year China bought $200 billion of dollar assets. This year they have sold $20 billion in treasuries net in the first quarter. Up until the end of last year China and Japan carried the US Treasury. Incidentally, Japan has been a net seller of US Treasuries by some $30 billion in the first quarter. Keeping the Treasury solvent has been Caribbean offshore accounts, which the establishment tells us are hedge funds. We believe it is the US Treasury and the Fed buying our own paper. Thus, the administration just might be making noises about China to keep American manufacturers happy – what there are left of them. No one in Washington wants to face a depression in office, so they will float this game as long as possible as Americans have there wealth stolen by real inflation. How can you protect yourself? Easy, be in gold related assets. George and the neocons’ puppet dictator in Uzbekistan were responsible for the murder of 600 Muslims last week. This is a bloodthirsty, brutal, corrupt dictatorship, which George Bush has chosen for our ally. His forces fired on peaceful demonstrators, including women and children by helicopter, as trigger-happy militia plowed through the crowd three times randomly murdering people who could no longer tolerate the vileness of George W. Bush’s friends. This is democracy neocon style. This is the same dictator who stashed his gold at the Bank of England, whose daughter was caught with a plane-load of gold in Moscow and who approves of boiling people alive.
Eighty-percent of the citizens of Uzbekistan are impoverished with no quality controls on food or products. Healthcare is being privatized with the careful guidance of the US government. You can open a business only by bribing public officials. It is a society being run by criminals and it stands 114th out 144 in the world index of corruption. These are our new friends. The country exports gold and cotton and lives on handouts from the US and Europe. Ninety-percent of the country is desert. These are our partners in crime.
Fitch has downgraded the senior unsecured ratings of GM and GMAC to BB+ from BBB-. The move reflects the continuing decline in GM’s North American sales of key mid-sized and large SUV products, increasing product and price competition in the larger pickup market, and their affect on productivity. They said the rating for GM remains negative.
Rogue
From Bob Chapman....at www.theinternationalforecaster.com
In the real estate market the question is who will get the ax first. Will it be San Diego, Los Angeles or perhaps Phoenix? Let’s take a shot at San Diego where we once lived in the hamlet of La Jolla. The California Association of Realtors Affordability Index recently put San Diego affordability at 10%, meaning that only the 10% of San Diego wage earners could afford to buy a median priced home. First-time buyers are just about locked out of the market. Other buyers are stretched to the financial limit. Just five years ago the 30-year fixed was 7.91%, today it is 5.71% and ARMS are 50% cheaper. If the economy was strengthening it would be different, but the only strength in the economy is real estate itself. Over 75% of San Diego Mortgages are some form of ARMS. Twenty-five percent do not make a down payment and mortgages are being written for as much as 125% loan-to-value ration. Even if interest rates remained the same you will have a topping in the market and some correction. We see rates moving up. How much is dependent on the ability to fund the current account deficit and reduce government’s fiscal budget deficit.
If the San Diego market would revert to mean prices, it would fall by 50% and that is only to the mean. They could and would likely overshoot the mean. Rising mortgage rates should decrease housing demand as more and more buyers are priced out of the market or cannot qualify.
Foreclosures would follow and that will feed upon itself. This is the third real estate bubble in Southern California in 35 years, so we know how it works having lived there for 36 years. This boom is little different than the stock market bubble in 2000, except you will find real estate is relatively illiquid in a falling market. This time Americans are way in over their heads in debt and over 50% of loans are ARMs and 50% of loans are sub-par. You talk about a dog’s breakfast – this is it. Households are carrying overall debts equal to 80% of their annual disposable income. Yes, whom the gods will destroy, they first make mad. A major question is, if individual bankruptcies were close to 10 million over the past five years – could they double or triple over the next five years? The answer, of course, is yes.
Rogue
Can anyone dispute the "STRENGTH"(LOL!) of our US economy as "money from heaven" comes in the form of "WEALTH" from home equity????
It's making us "RICH" without working or producing anything. What a wonderful GIFT it is from Alan "Mr. Bubbles" Greenspan and his wonderful and plentiful credit and all the great little mortgage brokers everywhere(not to mention Fannie Mae) and their "relaxed" lending standards.
The EASY money and EASY wealth is quite an intoxicating little distraction for the average American as our society is turned into a Fascist Police State.
The "free lunch" won't last forever.....just probably long enough to let this country go down he drain.
When this all ends..........and it certainly will, we're going to wonder what happened to the country we knew and loved. The price we will have paid for our passive ignorance may be truly astonishing and frightening for the American "sheople".
I hope I'm wrong....but I truly fear I'm not.
Rogue
Bones / VFIN.....I think now is the time to start accumalating VFIN too.
Rogue
AWRCF.....looks pretty cheap. Will it stay cheap forever? I own it and and wait patiently for the value to be unlocked. I think it will payoff very, very well someday.
A dividend announcement sometime in the future could be a cataclyst.
Rogue
VFIN.....Vfinance brokerage firm starting to look interesting again.
Price has been marked down quite a bit since I sold out my position a few months ago at .35 cents. Now trading at .17-.18 after a bad earnings quarter. Starting to nibble at this area......could be a big winner someday IMHO.
Rogue
Great interview on Gold from another board......check it out!
To: ItsAllCyclical who wrote (25352) 5/29/2005 1:55:31 PM
From: basserdan Read Replies (1) of 25419
Hi IAC,
I rec'd the following Email from GATA earlier today and IMO, the Q&A periods alone are worth the price of admission -vbg-
Fwiw, Embry thinks Gold shares will outpace energy shares over the next 12 months!
"Le Metropole Members,
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
Sprott Asset Management's chief investment strategist, John Embry, got an hour on Canada's Report on Business Television last Thursday and in the opening few minutes called Canada's attention to the recent explosion in gold derivatives as reported by the Bank for International Settlements. This, Embry said, is powerful evidence of intervention against gold but, he added, it won't last much longer. He expects a four-figure gold price in a few years but notes that an ounce of gold is always an ounce of gold; what changes is not gold but paper money.
If you have a high-speed connection to the Internet and your computer has a media player program, you can watch Embry's interview for a few more days at the 12:30 p.m. section of ROB-TV's Thursday archive -- "Market Call with Jim O'Connell" -- here: http://www.robtv.com/shows/past_archive.tv?day=thur
By Wednesday night the ROB-TV archive will be jammed by the U.S. Army's 102nd Disinformation Battalion at Niagara Falls, N.Y."
===============================================================
"Market Call with Jim O'Connell"
Go to 12:30PM segment to view the interview.
http://www.robtv.com/shows/past_archive.tv?day=thur
Embry talks about some of
Rogue
Real Estate speculation/Easy money from Alan "Bubbles" Greenspan has much to do with it! Have they "repealed" the Boom/Bust Cycle??
From the STUOF board:........
Posted by: Jack Weaks
In reply to: piranhas2 who wrote msg# 2175 Date:5/27/2005 7:20:15 PM
Post #of 2180
I hope that it is as good as what is going on with Real Estate here in Vancouver, WA. The 20 Acres next door were offered to me for $65,000 12 years ago (I passed on it). Three months ago a fellow paid $760,000 dollars for it (I said wow!), yesterday after owning it for 90 days he sold it for $4,000,000 (I craped my pants, excuse the thought). NO Bull in the story, but it sure is bullish…
Have a great weekend!
JW
Rogue
Kozuh/Euro.....It wouldn't surprise me if the Euro took a hit on this NO vote from France.
It'll be interesting to see the reaction in the various markets.....especially Gold and Oil.
I still envision a great long-term buying oppurtunity in Gold/Oil sometime in the near future.
The US dollar rally is a temporary condition in my opinion.....long term I see the US dollar used as "toilet paper".
Rogue
From Jim Puplava.....
http://www.kitco.com/ind/Puplava/may242005.html
SUMMARY
As the Fed rate hikes continue, risk to the financial system increases because all markets are interlinked. Systemic risks to the financial system have increased and may converge. A misplaced bet in structured credit could backfire—causing interest rates to rise. Narrowing credit spreads could cause the carry trade to unwind—forcing leveraged players to dump their bond holdings—leading to a jump in interest rates. A trade war could create friction in the credit markets—forcing central banks to dump their Treasury holdings or go on strike with new buying. A rise in interest rates could make mortgage payments untenable for overburdened households—triggering bankruptcy. Increased bankruptcies would bring more homes on the market—increasing supply and causing home prices to fall. Falling home prices would increase homeowners and lenders risk as equity evaporates. Each tipping point could lead to the next as they are all connected in a daisy chain.
What is clear is that this rate cycle is different. The Fed has very little room to maneuver nor can it afford to make a mistake. The economy is more leverage today than back in 1999. Outstanding debt has grown by $10 trillion since the last time the Fed raised interest rates. The leverage in the financial system has grown exponentially with derivatives and the carry trade. The homeowner has gone deeper into debt, the government is running large budget deficits, and the trade deficit is the worst it has been in this country’s history with no sign of improving. We have no margin of safety. Things will have to workout perfectly in order to avoid a crisis. Will we be that lucky?
Jim Puplava
Rogue
The next reserve currency
By Toni Straka
Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.
Oil prices seem to have reversed their recent correction, capital inflows into the United States are falling, and there has been no significant moderation of producer and consumer prices. Under these circumstances, questions are being raised about America's preeminent economic status. Taking into account the slowing in US industrial production, worsening demographics in all Western industrialized nations and the general expectation that the global economy will slow in the second half of 2005, here's some historical perspective about reserve currencies - a status that many say the dollar is perilously close to losing.
Time-traveling from the Greek to the Roman empire, the British empire, and the young history of the US, one notes that the most widely accepted (reserve) currency always had its home in the political powerhouse of its times. Political power rests on three determining factors: the productive capacity of that nation; its international trade relations; and its capability to defend itself.
While there were several denominations of silver coins in circulation in the Greek empire that had their origins in the provinces of Byzantine, Macedonia and Peloponnesia, to name just a few, the Roman empire first introduced the silver drachmae in order to facilitate trade with the Greeks. The drachmae was followed by the golden aureus, the silver denarius and the bronze sestertius. One aureus was equivalent to 25 denarii or 250 sestertii.
Inflation, the beginning of the end
The aureus had a respectable lifespan of more than 400 years before inflation diminished its reputation. Nothing has changed since: whenever a currency loses its value, so does its popularity. First the Roman emperors started chipping away at the edges - the need to prevent this resulted in the edge grooves still seen on many coins now in circulation - and then the purity of the coins was tampered with until they became pieces of lead covered with a thin coat of gold.
As the Roman empire declined, so did the Roman money as a means of tangible form of payment for goods and services. In medieval times, all forms of money, and their respective strength, were mainly tied to the content of precious metals - a system that continued till World War I. One Swiss gold franc had the same value as one Austrian gold crown or a Dutch gold coin of the same weight. There was no need for a Bretton Woods agreement in these times.
The reserve currency of the 18th and 19th century was undoubtedly the British pound sterling. As the name says, a one pound note could at any time be redeemed against one pound of sterling (pure) silver at the Bank of England or before that at the treasury of the king. The sixpence stemmed from the custom of cutting a silver penny in six equal pieces for small purchases.
With the demise of the British empire, which went hand in hand with the outsourcing of its productive capacity to the colonies, where labor was cheap, the pound was replaced by the US dollar in the early 20th century, when the US ascended to the throne of the biggest economy in the world, a place it has held ever since.
Menzie Chinn of the University of Wisconsin and Jeffrey Frankel of Harvard look at the next 20-30 years and conclude, in their study entitled "Will the Euro Eventually Surpass the Dollar as Leading International Reserve Currency?" that "under any plausible scenario, the dollar will remain far ahead of the euro and other potential challengers for many years".
I wonder whether this Western approach will still be valid in 30 years. Under the assumption that the European Union with its strong productive base and its highly developed financial markets - especially once Britain joins the Euro - will come back to the path of stronger growth again, the euro could climb to the number one spot in the line-up of international currencies. But this might be for a transitory period only. Most forecasts see China becoming the biggest economy on the globe by 2020, give or take some setbacks along the way that are inherent with the growth rates that the country has been enjoying recently.
China is still some distance away from liberalizing its currency controls, not least for the reason that its financial sector is still in its infancy. But China will develop this sector and gain knowledge along the way. With a consumer base of probably more than 1.5 billion people by then, it will have a huge backyard on which it can rely for further growth to fuel its growing international importance. As the country has been on the path to a more liberalized economy for the last 15 years, taking one step at a time, its careful planning for the future will lead to a more prominent role in the capital sector. Those who produce can save, too, and therefore become a supplier of capital needed elsewhere.
Of course it is premature to speculate about the yuan becoming the reserve currency of the world. But it is not premature to speculate when the resource-rich countries will begin to favor the euro as the preferred means of payment for the riches in their soil. Until now, commodities have been predominantly priced in dollars on the world markets, stemming from the fact that the US is the single-biggest buyer and consumer of energy and has been the biggest buyer of most other commodities. In an age of global redistribution, this might change as the US gives up its number one purchaser position.
Staying with dollar-based prices - which could mean using the currency of a third country that is primarily known for its huge amount of debt and no plausible recipe for a turnaround - could become too costly a way for others to conduct their bilateral trade. After outsourcing American production, an outsourcing of control of international trade could well be on the way. The race for financial dominance is on. And it will be decided in favor of the country or region that manages to maintain a lead in production, which will inevitably be located in proximity to the world's largest base of consumers.
Toni Straka is a Vienna, Austria-based independent financial analyst and portfolio manager, who worked as a financial journalist for over 15 years and now evaluates global market trends. He runs a young blog, The Prudent Investor, where this piece first appeared.
--
Rogue
Today's Analysis: Showdown at the OPEC Corral
by Dr. Joe Duarte
Rigzone.com 5/23/2005
URL: http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=22667
OPEC is in the midst of a major showdown with regards to production quotas. On one side is the U.S. friendly cartel leader Saudi Arabia, while on the other is the increasingly anti U.S. and pro Cuba Venezuela. At stake could be the balance of power in OPEC, and a redefining of major producer/consumer relationships in the world of the oil markets.
The chatter before the June 15 OPEC meeting is already near fever pitch. Venezuela wants to keep prices higher, and is pushing for production cuts. Saudi Arabia wants to make no changes in production.
According to Bloomberg, Venezuela's oil minister Rafael Ramirez, in remarks to reporters on May 18, noted that "OPEC should evaluate a cut in oil output this quarter and guard against any sudden drop in prices." According to Ramirez "The world has ample supplies of oil and no extra production is needed." Readers of this space, and our recent article in CBS Marketwatch "Running on Empty" are aware of the situation in Venezuela, where reports from credible sources have built a case to suggest that Venezuela's production levels are significantly below the official government figures of 3.2 million barrels per day.
Bloomberg also quoted OPEC president Sheikh Ahmad Fahd al-Sabah, Kuwait's oil minister, in an interview in Jordan, where he is attending the World Economic Forum as having said that "OPEC, the supplier of almost 40 percent of the world's oil, will keep production near record levels to meet global demand regardless of whether it causes crude prices to fall further."
Yet, according to Reuters "Many OPEC and other oil producers believe an oil price range between $30 and $50 a barrel could be suitable for both producers and consumers. The very busy OPEC President Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd al-Sabah, on Sunday, "told Dubai-based Al Arabiya TV in an interview that additional crude oil output from a stable Iraq and new investment by OPEC and other producer nations to boost their production capacities could help ease global market worries over supplies."
Al-Sabah, in fact seems to be floating a new price range trial balloon. ["These are not prices as they once were -- $9 or $8, but also not $100 or $200," he said. "I think, now, there is a median that many of the OPEC members and producer nations are talking about, which is a range between $30 and $50."]
In fact, despite Venezuela's vocal opposition "On Friday, the OPEC president told Reuters the cartel would continue pumping in excess of its own official output limits, at about 30.5 million barrels per day (bpd), allowing stocks to build further on a comfortably supplied world market."
As it stands right now, according to Reuters: "OPEC is producing about a million barrels daily above its official 27.5 million bpd output target, with another 2 million bpd from Iraq not included in quota arrangements. Sheikh Ahmad said this volume of over-production would help bring prices down to $40-$45 per barrel."
And there is still spare capacity in the system as it currently stands, if you count Iraq, which current OPEC quota figures are not. "Sheikh Ahmad said that according to the latest figures, Iraq has a capacity to produce up to 1 million barrels per day above the 2 million bpd it has been producing on average since the start of this year. Iraq can reach total output of 4 million bpd to 5 million bpd in the future with more investments in its upstream sector, he said.
Conclusion
This may be the usual pre-OPEC meeting posturing. Typically, the hawks start pushing for price hikes and production cut backs in order to keep the doves from rolling over them.
The key is what the comments are doing to the markets. And so far, it looks as if the doves are getting the best of the price action, at least in the early going. The meeting is still some three weeks away, on June 15. So there is plenty of time for both sides to jawbone the issue, and for much to happen along the way.
What is really going on, though, is that OPEC has a major rift in its ranks.
On one side is Saudi Arabia, and apparently Kuwait. Both of these countries have a security debt to the United States, and also share Iraq as a point of contention. The Saudis did not want the U.S. to invade Iraq in 2003, while Kuwait was glad the U.S. invaded Iraq in 1991.
Recently, as we pointed out here, Saudi Crown Price Abdullah and U.S. President George Bush, seem to have agreed on some kind of broad outline used to strengthen the until recently strained relationship between Saudi Arabia and the U.S., in the post 9/11 period.
On May 19, in this space we made several points with regard to the newly re-energized relationship between the Saudi kingdom and the White House:
1) According to Reuters "The United States has quietly dropped a year-old warning it issued to its citizens to leave Saudi Arabia, but says they should still avoid travel to the kingdom because of possible militant attacks."
2) The coordinated effort by the Saudis to talk down the price of oil, "also coincides with high profile visits to the United States by Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi and a Saudi trade delegation which has been touring the United States to encourage investment in the pro-Western kingdom."
3) Indeed, there are very large sums of money and significant political changes afoot. According to Bloomberg, Saudi Arabia, "is inviting Exxon Mobil Corp and other US companies to invest in more than $1.4 trillion of natural gas, chemical and other business in a bid to create more jobs, the government said. " Much of the work has been quietly, but not secretly been ongoing for some time, as "A 50-strong delegation from Saudi Aramco, Saudi Basic Industries Corp and other Saudi organizations are touring the US speaking to companies about investment opportunities in the kingdom, including $140 billion in infrastructure projects and the sale to the public of up to $800 billion worth of shares in state-owned companies, the official Saudi Press Agency said on Monday, citing Khaled Al-Seif, head of the delegation. "
We concluded, on 5-19: "This is part of a much larger, and very long term strategy, which focuses on the business side, on the Saudi kingdom's bid to enter the World Trade Organization, which received public support from President Bush at the Crawford meeting, and includes key concessions from the Saudis, including allowing foreign investors to own up to 60 percent of shares in local banks by the end of the year. Currently, foreign investors can own up to 49 percent of capital in Saudi banks. As reported by the Arabic business daily, al-Eqtisadiah, ["Saudi Arabia has 11 banks, 7 of which are partially owned by foreign investors."] The plan also involves the selling of public stakes in Saudi companies. According to Bloomberg: "Saudi Arabia may offer to the public as much as a 40% stake in National Commercial Bank, the kingdom's largest lender, this year, the Riyadh-based Arab News has reported."
What makes the situation between Saudi Arabia and Venezuela interesting, is not where it differs, with regard to the U.S., where the former is getting closer and the latter is increasingly distancing itself, but in the similarities.
Both are major oil producers. Both are members of the ruling OPEC cartel. Both have embarked on ambitious wealth redistribution and social safety net programs lately, with the Saudis increasing theirs after 9/11, in hopes of quelling the formation and expansion of Al-Qaeda and similar types of militant organizations. And both are dependent on oil as their major source of financing for running their respective countries.
The difference, and an increasingly stark one, is in the way that both countries are moving with regard to the U.S.
Unless something changes, it looks as if over the next few months to years, Venezuela is going to attempt to significantly curtail its oil shipments to the U.S., as the Saudis increase theirs. Whether this is feasible or not is as important a question as any. That it will be attempted is almost certain, given the escalation of Venezuelan president Chavez' rhetoric toward the U.S., with his most recent pronouncement being that he is considering an "evaluation" of whether the U.S. and Venezuela need to have embassies in each other's capital.
Venezuela is a key provider of oil to the U.S. The geographical logistics of delivery are much easier than from the Saudi kingdom, a half a world away, and key U.S. companies, such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron Texaco have key facilities and major projects ongoing in Venezuela.
Further difficulties with Venezuela, in our opinion, have the potential of adding a nearly permanent surtax to every gallon of gas pumped in the United States.
Finally, the effects of a major rift in OPEC, or even the expulsion, or voluntary resignation of a member, such as Venezuela, for which there is no proof of at this point, could set in motion a whole new set of repercussions in the oil markets.
Oil Market Summary And Outlook: New Price Range From OPEC
OPEC's president is floating about the idea that a price range between $30 and $50 would be a good compromise for both producers and consumers. And the markets are thinking about it, as prices continued to slip in overnight trading.
Despite all the talk of record output from Saudi Arabia, oil prices remained above $47 in pre U.S. trading, although the June contract closed below the key 200 day moving average support level on Friday.
This could be the week that makes or breaks prices over the next few months, which means that the oil supply report on Wednesday will be as watched a set of statistics as any in the upcoming calendar.
U.S. oil supplies are some 14% higher than they were a year earlier, and there are signs of a slowing economy and the potential for decreasing demand, a continued set of pressures on prices.
Still, as we have noted lately, the oil markets are volatile by nature. And there is no certainty, other than the market will fluctuate. The big picture in oil remains technical, with the key are remaining the 200 day moving average, which is near $47, and near which crude futures for June are now trading. Further out, in September and December, the futures are still trading at higher prices, suggesting that over the longer term, the market is still betting on higher prices.
The 200 day line is not a perfect indicator. Indeed, what we expect is a lot of bouncing around near this level for at least a few days. We could even see a snap back rally from the area that could be very convincing and could take prices back above $50. If there is such a rally, though, the most important thing is to see how it resolves.
A sustained break below the 200 day moving average in June, though, could take oil prices to $40, the middle of OPEC's newly minted $30-$50 price range.
History shows that oil moves on supply, not demand. And supply, as of last week was at 10% above the levels at the same time in 2004, the major factor upon which the markets seized to accelerate the recent down trend.
Still, until the 200 day moving averages on futures contracts get taken out convincingly, we remain in a long term up trend in oil, and in our opinion, we are not very likely to see oil below $40 per barrel for some time, unless something very dramatic happens, such as a collapse of the Chinese economy, which as we've stated numerous times (see our archived IQ reports) is a plausible scenario.
Investors should remain wary of the oil market, and should use extreme caution in any exposure there. Aggressive traders should be looking to go both short and long at this point depending on the individual circumstances of each position.
The Philadelphia Oil Service Index (OSX) continued to struggle, and again closed below the 130 area, again stopping just at its key 200 day moving average. For more details on trading the energy sector visit our energy timing page, featuring our highly effective OIH timing model and our Top Ten Energy Stock List.
The Amex Oil Index (XOI) stopped falling, but could be headed to the 740 area, its 200 day moving average, although a bounce is possible.
Rogue
Hmmmm....Before too long we'll probably find out "al Qaeda" or is it "al CIAda"??? is hiding out somewhere near that "tyrant" Chavez!
LOL!....I really shouldn't be laughing though, this stuff is sad.
Central America on alert for al Qaeda suspects 2 hours, 7 minutes ago
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (Reuters) - Central American countries went on alert on Tuesday for two al Qaeda suspects, including a Kenyan on the FBI's most wanted terrorist list, who were said to be in the region.
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Nicaragua raised the alarm by warning that Kenya's Ahmed Salim Swedan and a Yemeni colleague could be somewhere in the tropical isthmus.
In a brief statement, the Interior Ministry said Nicaragua had tightened its borders to prevent the pair from entering the country.
Neighbors Guatemala and El Salvador, a close U.S. ally which has a small batch of troops in Iraq, also boosted security at their borders after the Nicaraguan warning.
Swedan is wanted for the U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa in 1998 that killed more than 200 people. He appears on the FBI most wanted terrorists' list with a reward of up to $5 million for his capture. The ministry gave only the surname of the other suspect, a Yemeni it said was called Altuwiti.
Nicaragua told its border officials "to maintain vigilance to guarantee our country does not become scene to the presence of elements linked to international terrorism."
It did not say how the pair were detected or what they were suspected of doing in the region, home to the Panama Canal. Panamanian officials said they were unaware of the alert.
U.S. officials have voiced concern that Nicaraguan anti-aircraft missiles left over from the Cold War could fall into terrorists' hands.
El Salvador sent photographs of the two suspects to border crossings, airports and sea ports, said Ramon Hernandez, spokesman for the immigration service.
An Islamist group claiming links to al Qaeda last August threatened attacks inside El Salvador unless the Central American country withdrew its troops from Iraq. El Salvador has kept its force there.
Last year, Honduras said Saudi-born Adnan El Shukrijumah, suspected of links to al Qaeda, was spotted there but fled the country before police could arrest him. He later appeared on a list of Washington's 14 most wanted al Qaeda suspects.
Rogue
Hmmmm....Before too long we'll probably find out "al Qaeda" or is it "al CIAda"??? is hiding out somewhere near that "tyrant" Chavez!
LOL!....I really shouldn't be laughing though, this stuff is sad.
Central America on alert for al Qaeda suspects 2 hours, 7 minutes ago
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (Reuters) - Central American countries went on alert on Tuesday for two al Qaeda suspects, including a Kenyan on the FBI's most wanted terrorist list, who were said to be in the region.
ADVERTISEMENT
Nicaragua raised the alarm by warning that Kenya's Ahmed Salim Swedan and a Yemeni colleague could be somewhere in the tropical isthmus.
In a brief statement, the Interior Ministry said Nicaragua had tightened its borders to prevent the pair from entering the country.
Neighbors Guatemala and El Salvador, a close U.S. ally which has a small batch of troops in Iraq, also boosted security at their borders after the Nicaraguan warning.
Swedan is wanted for the U.S. Embassy bombings in Africa in 1998 that killed more than 200 people. He appears on the FBI most wanted terrorists' list with a reward of up to $5 million for his capture. The ministry gave only the surname of the other suspect, a Yemeni it said was called Altuwiti.
Nicaragua told its border officials "to maintain vigilance to guarantee our country does not become scene to the presence of elements linked to international terrorism."
It did not say how the pair were detected or what they were suspected of doing in the region, home to the Panama Canal. Panamanian officials said they were unaware of the alert.
U.S. officials have voiced concern that Nicaraguan anti-aircraft missiles left over from the Cold War could fall into terrorists' hands.
El Salvador sent photographs of the two suspects to border crossings, airports and sea ports, said Ramon Hernandez, spokesman for the immigration service.
An Islamist group claiming links to al Qaeda last August threatened attacks inside El Salvador unless the Central American country withdrew its troops from Iraq. El Salvador has kept its force there.
Last year, Honduras said Saudi-born Adnan El Shukrijumah, suspected of links to al Qaeda, was spotted there but fled the country before police could arrest him. He later appeared on a list of Washington's 14 most wanted al Qaeda suspects.
Rogue
Len.....I like you for who you are!! LOL!
I'm pretty much in your camp too. Most people either Love me or Hate me.
Rogue
Real Estate and the credit bubble has been the glue holding this seriously troubled economy together.
Agreed!!
Rogue
Len....What do you currently own in energy/oil/gas?
Rogue
NASDAQ....I think getting short somewhere here is a great trade for this year. No "Value" here at all.....looking for a spot to sell.
I missed the NASDAQ top in 2000 but really made a killing that year. I WAS buying "DEEP VALUE" on the day of the Nasdaq top. Warren Buffet type stuff that only the "out of touch" old fogies would want. Real NYSE companies with real earnings and low P/E's.
I later saw the top for what it was and went short CSCO, YHOO, LU, JDSU. I was short 100% of my "VALUE" longs and made huge money on both sides. 2000 was my best year in recent memory. This year has been so-so at best......but it could be "shaping up".
I would be looking at getting long OIL companies as a value play. I may also get long GOLD and OIL futures sometime in the near future. Also looking and following most natural resource plays.
The US$ will top out sometime......the "game" should change when it does.
Rogue
ABRX....Chapter 11???.... Possible. Things will probably get worse before they get better.
Just keep an eye on it as time goes by. If the ticker symbol changes and it gets de-listed make sure you continue to follow it. From the depths of it's ultimate bottom it just may be a "spectacular" turnaround story down the road.
Then again......maybe not.
Rogue
ABRX....With all the margin calls and forced selling coming up in the next few days I believe we may see a $2 share price.
We still could have more bad news to digest too.......FDA reprisals??? Any thoughts on this?
Not ready yet to catch this falling knife.
Rogue
ABRX.....Watch out for the "short covering" rallys that will fake you out until the ultimate liquidatiion low is in. Trade them if you will.
I hope it get's liquidated to at least the $2 area.......below a buck wopuld be great! You never know with all the litigatiion and bad news right now!
I loaded the boat a few years ago on FHRX in the 2's(very similar situation at the time). I sold off thousand share blocks for the next two years at prices from $4 to $23 on it's way up to $26 and change. Just a few of these situations every few years is great for your net worth!
Rogue
XOM.....agree with your assessment. I think we still have a significant low coming.
I'm making a shopping list for the oils and when the time is right I'll re-load the boat.
Does anyone believe we will see an escalation of War and US involvement in the Middle East? Or do we pull out of there?
Rogue
ABRX.....Have no clue where it will bottom.......in the $3's or even lower? Nothing but bad news short-term here. Margin forced selling should also commence in the next few days or so.
I don't own any so I'm actually hoping for the lowest bottom possible. This would make an excellent long-term turnaround "campaign" stock once the ultimate Low is in.
Rogue
Train Wreck of the Week - May 22 2005
GM moves into China... free trade means free reign for elitists... Neocon travel notes.... a who's who... making the rest of the world hate the US... airbases in Azerbaijan....
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What if we told you General Motors’ demise was planned years ago, would you believe us? GM sold 30,000 plus cars in China in the first quarter. Since 2001 it has spent $3.5 billion to build manufacturing plants in China. GM last year bought $6 billion in Chinese auto parts and at the same time laid off 37,500 US workers. In 1985, GM started building transmissions in China. In 1990, it began to establish a light truck plant in Shenyang and it began building a $1 billion factory to produce 100,000 Buick sedans a year. In 1992, GM shut down its Buick plant in Flint, Michigan. This past April GM announced plans to build a $400 million engine and power drive plant in Russia, as it announced layoffs at US plants. It has a deal to build Russian-engineered cars to sell for $5,000. That deal is 40% underwritten by the European Bank for Reconstruction, which gets 10% of its funding from the US government, which is you and us. They sell the Niva sports utility vehicle that sells for $8,000 in Russia and for $11,000 in Europe and Mexico under the Chevy brand. In the late 1980s GM built a $150 million Hungarian auto factory and in the early 1990s built a plant in the Czech Republic. GM has a long record of offshoring and outsourcing. Making it even more insulting to American autoworkers, one of the chief conduits of this corrupt corporate welfare is the Export-Import Bank, which provides $15.5 billion in taxpayer-subsidized loans or loan guarantees annually. Since 1985, communist China has become the largest Asian beneficiary of Eximbank loans and guarantees. This is not only GM moving its business offshore, but we taxpayers are helping to finance the loss of our own jobs. Since 2000, GM has received over $500 million in direct loans and loan guarantees from the Export-Import Bank. The result has been GM has reduced its workforce from 559,000 to 314,000. GM has just announced it will close three major plants in the US.
The 1994 passage of NAFTA was a boon to GM and other manufacturers. We predicted a massive loss of US manufacturing jobs, but we were one of only a few lone voices in the wilderness. In 1999, Mexico was running an $11.9 billion trade surplus in autos, supplying the US with 560,000 cars while importing only 46,000. Soon we won’t export Mexico any cars as cheap Russian imports flood the Mexican market, thanks to GM. Free trade and globalization is the tactic being used to implement world government. Part of the groundwork of which was laid in 1965 in the Canada-US Auto Agreement. This was a precursor to NAFTA. Next are CAFTA and FTAA designed to bring about economic and political merging?
GM is the largest private employer in the world and has been a symbol of American prosperity and personal and social mobility. We expect, as was done in 1979 with Chrysler, as GM’s situation gets worse there will be a call for a similar bailout at taxpayers’ expense. This is an example of planned destruction and resurrection to advance free trade and globalization and to further destroy the American economy.
Free trade is the furtherance of elitist international cartels. It embraces many forms of government intervention that makes free trade not free, but robber baron globalization. In the process, government finances corporate welfare for the elitist insiders. The Fortune 500 and other major corporations are the major beneficiaries. Almost all of these corporations are being partially financed by the Eximbank, the European Bank for Reconstruction, the IMF and the World Bank. It’s a gravy train for rich corporations. Large orders for US goods are expedited often by retiring debt of the buying country owed to the US. The Eximbank has $260 billion at its disposal currently to subsidize the business of major transnational corporations. When deals do not work we get to pay for them. Not only does our government subsidize and bail out elitist corporations, but it also bails out countries that are customers. In recent years our government has bailed out Mexico, part of Asia, Japan and Long Term Capital Management, LTCM. There is no reason for these bailouts. They are pure corporatist fascism and not the province of our government. These bailouts are part of America’s imperial reach supposedly for our economic well being and our safety. They are the reflection that laissez-faire capitalism does not work and that isn’t so, it does work. Toady’s free trade doesn’t apply under that heading because the end product is destined to be the deliberate destruction of the US economy. Anyone who cannot see that is just plain dumb or opportunistic. Markets are no longer allowed to correct because our government wants to manage them all. That is government by regulation or fascism. It is your taxes and the debt you are responsible for that is bailing all these entities out. Whether it’s Mexico, LTCM or the investment markets. Almost all economic problems stem from government intervention. A good part of that is free trade. Another example of which is OPIC, the Overseas Private Investment Corp., which is an export subsidy program, and another form of corporate welfare. The subsidies are given out to US transnational corporations to do business in foreign countries to then undercut US domestic businesses. OPIC in 32 years has supported $150 billion worth of foreign investments that have helped foreign countries generate 700,000 jobs, most of which were at the expense of American workers. These policies by all these government agencies are championed by denizens of both political parties, because most of them are controlled by the same elitists behind the scenes. Both socialist and fascists love free trade and globalization. Needless to say, corporate fat cats and self-serving politicians love it as well. The wealthy get richer and the poor and middle class are forced to struggle harder. Internationalism is a state of mind, promulgated officially for the elitists via the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission and the Bilderberger group. They tell Americans it is good to be inter-dependent – it will lead to a better life, when in fact, it will lead to economic slavery under either socialism or fascism. Part of this game is the end of sovereignty and the amalgamation of nations into a New World Order. Free trade and globalization is the vehicle to take us there. If individuals in other countries disagree with elitist philosophy and goals they murder them and if they cannot do that they invade them, kill the populace and occupy their nation. You have recently seen that in Afghanistan and Iraq. Free trade makes America dependent on other nations. It steals America’s freedom and independence. That is why we have free trade agreements and production sharing. We also have it to create monopolies and cartels. We do not like being dependent or interdependent. We do not want NAFTA, WTO, CAFTA and FTAA. They all subject us eventually to tyranny. At home our fascist government has Patriot Acts I and II, and now a National ID card. Don’t you people get it, you are being enslaved.
We have just received the attendee list from the Bilderberger meetings in Rottach-Egern, Germany on May 5-8, 2005. We also received a number of pictures of attendees and also pictures of CIA and US Special Forces personnel. All at our expense, of course. The meeting was secret as usual and much of the elitists world press attended, but no one reported on the events because they are forbidden to do so. Some of the more notable attendees, Franco Bernabe, Vice Chairman, Rothschild, David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger, Martin Feldstein, Timothy Guthner, President Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Richard Haass, President CFR, Richard Holbrooke, Vernon Jordon, Henry Kravis and his wife, Michael Ledeen, Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz.
In a Star-Tribune poll, Minnesotans said President Bush’s job approval rating is 42%, an all-time low; 55% said the country was pretty seriously off on the wrong track. That is a drop of 6% in four months. The President is down 9% in four months. The biggest drop in approval was from those under 44 years old.
Soon the Gestapo at our airports will be strip-searching you with their new ex-ray machine. Screeners will get a clear picture of what is under passengers’ clothing. They see you nude. They are already being used at 12 airports to screen passengers suspected of carrying drugs.
Desperate, the US Army will allow recruits to sign up for just 15 months of active-duty service, rather than the typical four years. Fiscal 2006 will be tough after only getting 42% of needed estimated recruits last month. It has only met 18% of its yearly goal thus far.
Touching off renewed talk about stagflation, US wholesale prices rose at an accelerated clip in April, while industrial output was surprisingly weak. The Producer Price Index (PPI) was up 0.6% in April. This is after the BLS hedonics; goodness knows what the real figure is. Whatever, this will cause higher inflation and cut corporate profits. The year-on-year PPI increase is 4.8%.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has visited Azerbaijan twice in the last four months. The only conclusion can be that the US will increase its military presence there. That is a mobile Army base for local uses as well as to re-deploy US troops in Europe and Asia. The excuse for stationing troops there is the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and its protection. We do hope the oil companies are paying for this protection. Our government is ready to assign not less than $100 million during the coming 10 years for the development of a so-called Caspian Guard, which is now 1-1/2 years old. They and US troops will guard the pipeline so the elitist international consortium can get richer. The pipeline goes into operation this year. The neocons are also in negotiations with Azerbaijan for airbases, from which the US could attack Iran. Russia does not like the arrangement at all in Azerbaijan nor in Georgia, but they have remained quiet about the matter.
Millions of Muslims have been protesting from Gaza to Pakistan to Indonesia regarding the desecration of the Koran by American interrogators at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Many people were killed when protests turned into riots.
Violence also flared up in Uzbekistan in what essentially is an internal matter. Close to 1,000 people were killed. Uzbekistan is just north of Afghanistan.
Talk to foreigners in their home countries and you discover that George W. Bush and his neocons have ruined America’s reputation. Either the death of the President or impeachment would restore the world’s confidence in our country. These people have caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people justified by a lie and Congress refuses to initiate impeachment proceedings. They have devastated two countries and have several more lined up for destruction. Hundreds of millions of Muslims hate us. Worse yet, he has created a fascist police state at home. We have anti-American riots spread all over the world. It is difficult to believe that Americans were dumb enough to put this lunatic and his band of crazies back in the White House.
Next Tuesday George and the neocons will either anger China by accusing it of manipulating its exchange rate to gain an unfair trade advantage, or it will anger Congress by giving China a clean bill of health. This comes as Congressmen from both parties are clamoring for trade restrictions on Chinese imports, as well as expressing skepticism about trade-opening deals in general. Bush has to do something or Congress will pass trade tariffs. If China devalues, US inflation will rise even higher, as will interest rates as China stops buying US Treasuries. Our guess is that Bush will not confront China and the problem will go to the IMF and be solved over the next three years. This would be but another joke.
As economic problems start to show their ugly faces later this year, we will be fighting a new war for the neocon version of democracy in Iran or North Korea. As the tensions of the draft, layoffs, financial failure become ominous and living standards fall, there will be greater repression of Americans under Patriot I and II as our citizens shout their questions at government. Oil is being pumped at capacity well above amounts needed for commerce to suppress prices to try to temper rising inflation. They also need all the oil they can get in case of major destruction of Iran’s oil facilities. War will be blamed for economic failure and the morons in our society who voted for Bush will go right along with the subterfuge. These old Republican idiots will not even notice the collateral damage. Incidentally, we say that as lifelong republicans and real right-wingers. By the end of the year the invasions will have begun. Americans are about to experience their worst nightmare. The new world order thinks they know best how you should live and where you should work. We are about to experience darkness and evil as we have never known it before. We will win but because Americans have not been vigilant, they will pay a terrible cost. You can bet once action begins in Iran, Iraq will explode in escalating violence. We are essentially bankrupt and that becomes more evident as time moves on. There will be great difficulty ahead. Our elitists in Washington turned a blind eye to extensive sanctions busting big fellow elitists in the pre-war sale of Iraqi oil according to a new Senate investigation. We are glad the Senate is taking notice. We reported on this over a year ago. US oil purchases accounted for 52% of the kickbacks paid to the regime in return for cheap oil. On occasion our government even facilitated the illicit sales. It was also found that the US Attorney refused to take action against a Texas oil company, BayOil, which was then a conduit for payment to Saddam Hussein. The State Department gave a tacit green light for shipments of nearly eight million barrels bought by Jordan, a stooge for the US government. When UN monitors asked for information on BayOil, the US Treasury refused to comply. Our government assisted the theft of $11 billion and they will cover it all up.
Do you want to read more by Bob Chapman? There are 70 previous issues for you to read
Rogue
ABRX.....I think they will smash this one lower on the margin liquidation that will probably be coming.
Fundamentally the balance sheet will take a big hit on the total recall of all products and the halting of all production.
Who knows where the bottom in share price will occur???.......
It should be a spectacular gainer though for patient holders after the ultimate bottom is in.
Rogue
Marc Faber Says Asian Currencies, Crops Among World's Best Buys
May 23 (Bloomberg) -- Malaysia's ringgit and the Singapore dollar may give investors the biggest returns among Asian currencies because a U.S. slowdown may prompt the Federal Reserve to slow or stop its interest rate increases, Marc Faber said.
Faber, who oversees about $300 million as managing director of Hong Kong-based Marc Faber Ltd., recommends selling the euro to buy the ringgit or the Singapore dollar because they haven't appreciated and are therefore more undervalued.
Once the U.S. economy deteriorates, the Fed ``will go back to the old medicine, which is essentially to print money and the dollar will weaken again,'' Faber said in an interview with Bloomberg News today. ``Compared with the euro, the Asian currencies are very, very inexpensive.''
The ringgit, pegged at 3.8 to the dollar seven years ago to stem a capital flight, has tracked the dollar's 30 percent drop against the euro since the start of 2002. The Singapore dollar, which is linked to a basket of currencies, has weakened 12 percent versus the U.S. dollar in the same time.
Faber, 59, is the author of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, and has invested in Asia since 1973. He gained notoriety for being bearish on Asian assets before the Asian financial crisis in 1997 caused markets in the region, including those in Malaysia and South Korea, to collapse.
Bullish
Now, Faber is bullish on Asian currencies because of his view a surge in U.S. property prices, which has underpinned growth in consumer spending there, will stall and precipitate a slowdown in the world's largest economy. That will result in the Fed lowering borrowing costs and result in a weaker dollar.
``The foreign exchange market will anticipate this easing beforehand'' resulting in a drop in the dollar, said Faber, adding that he was a ``reluctant'' holder of dollars.
Some investors and traders disagree. Fifty-nine percent of the 54 strategists, investors and traders surveyed globally on May 20 said the dollar is poised for its longest winning streak against the euro since 2000 on expectations the U.S. currency's three-year bear market has ended.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said on May 20 that some regions of the U.S. housing market are showing signs of unsustainable price speculation and ``froth'' from rapid sales.
Greenspan also said there is a risk that consumer spending in the U.S. may decline if the housing market slows. The median selling price of a previously owned home rose to a record $195,000 in March, according to the latest statistics from the National Association of Realtors.
``The moment housing fails to increase to value or declines, household net worth will go down and contain spending,'' said Faber.
Loosening the Peg
He also favors the ringgit because speculation that China will loosen its currency peg may pressure Malaysia to follow suit and let its own currency to trade more freely.
Foreign investors have purchased $7.9 billion (30 billion ringgit) worth of ringgit-denominated assets, betting Malaysia will let their currency appreciate, according to an estimate by Standard Chartered Bank.
Faber is also betting on gold because it has become cheaper compared with commodities such as crude oil.
Today, one ounce of gold, trading at $417.60, is worth about eight barrels of oil, according to Faber. In 1998, when oil fell to less than $11 per barrel, gold was trading at about $285 an ounce. That's equal to about 26 barrels of oil per ounce of gold.
``You should be long gold and short oil,'' Faber said. Commodity markets ``aren't particularly attractive.''
Drought
The exceptions are agricultural commodities including wheat, corn and soybeans, which may ``easily double'' in price as demand from China increases as urbanization and global warming reduces annual harvests, Faber said.
Drought is harming 12 million hectares (30 million acres) of China's farmland, affecting spring sowing of the country's rice crop and the final growth stage for winter wheat, the China Daily reported in April, citing government data.
The price of wheat today is $3.17 per bushel, 20 percent higher than in December 1998, when oil fell below $11 per barrel. Oil prices have increased more than fourfold in the same time.
Soybean prices may climb for a second week on speculation drought-like weather in Mississippi will spread to Midwest states, threatening crops in the biggest U.S. growing region.
Thirteen of 17 farm advisers, grain merchants and traders surveyed May 20 recommended buying soybeans, which had the biggest weekly gain in 10 last week. Prices are up 25 percent from a 31-month low on Feb. 4, as drought damaged soybeans in Brazil, the second-largest grower after the U.S.
``Agricultural commodities have never been as inexpensive as right now. You will have more droughts, more flooding and more natural disasters'' causing harvests to fall and prices to rise, he said. In China, farming ``acreage is declining due to urbanization. In the long run, China will also be a stronger buyer of all agricultural commodities.''
Rogue
Latest update from Sir John Templeton
Sir John Templeton is Shorting U.S. and Japanese Stocks, According to Equities Magazine's 24th Consecutive Summary of His Current Investment Views
SCARSDALE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 20, 2005--The 54th Anniversary Spring issue of Equities Magazine also marks the start of Editor Robert J. Flaherty's 24th year as editor Of interest is his lead story "Sir John is Shorting!" At 92 and with some memory and hearing impairment, Sir John did not sit down for his usual interview. A streak ends. But by canvassing several who recently spoke or met with the still very alert Sir John, Editor Flaherty wrote an overview of his current investment strategy and then ran it by his cover subject Dr. John Templeton Jr., head of nearly $1 billion in assets John Templeton Foundation. After suggesting more emphasis on China, Dr. Jack gave the investment summary his thumbs up.
For the near term Templeton is very negative on U.S. equities, until we deal with our debt load, the housing and commodity bubbles and problems from globalization. He is also negative on Japanese stocks and he is shorting them too. Sir John currently likes Chinese stocks with their low relative P/Es and high growth as well as the stocks of India and Russia. Ideally, Sir John believes that investors should diversify globally so that stocks of no one country represent more than 25% of total assets and this would certainly be true of U.S. stocks at this moment. However, long term he is very optimistic about U.S. and world equities as spreading capitalism creates a more peaceful and more productive planet.
Rogue
Chavez going nuclear ?
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/printstory.mpl/editorial/outlook/3192626
May 21, 2005, 6:48PM
OMINOUS QUESTION
Is Venezuela going nuclear?
Conversations with Iran give cause for concern
By DOUGLAS MACKINNON
The most prominent development in U.S.-Venezuelan relations these days involves the case of Luis Posada Carriles and whether he should be extradited from the United States to Venezuela. There he would stand trial for a third time for his alleged involvement in the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner. Meanwhile, a story with the potential to be much more important is being ignored: The growing power and global ambitions of Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez.
To the minute number of people who understand the threat Chavez poses to the United States, his recent hosting in Caracas of Iranian President Mohammad Khatami was disturbing enough. But a high-ranking official for a Latin American government has disclosed to me details about that visit that should send shock waves throughout our government.
During a private meeting between Chavez and Khatami, I was told, Chavez made it known to the Iranian leader that he would like to "introduce nuclear elements into Venezuela." My contact said "nuclear elements" meant "nuclear weapons."
It will be easy for many to dismiss such talk as false or the fantasies of a madman, but that would be a critical mistake. I have no doubt that Chavez is mentally disturbed, and I also have no doubt that his hatred of the United States and President Bush in particular is dictating his erratic behavior. High oil prices have made Chavez an antagonist to be reckoned with, and we ignore such a menace at our peril.
Standing side by side with Khatami in Caracas, Chavez said, "Iran has every right to develop atomic energy and to continue research in that area. ... Faced with the threat of the U.S. government against our brother people in Iran, count on us for all our support."
After receiving the report that Chavez might be trying to acquire nuclear technology or weapons from Iran, I met with a high-ranking U.S. official to voice my concerns and ask what he thought about such speculation. He answered me point blank: "It would not surprise me. Chavez is dangerous, underestimated and capable of almost anything. We are hearing a number of curious and disturbing reports. He is actively working to recruit terrorist nations and developing countries into his campaign of hatred against the United States."
Toward that end, Chavez recently went on al-Jazeera television to call for Arab and developing nations to unite against the United States and President Bush. Terrorists use this network as a tool against U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq, and Chavez told its viewers, "We have already invaded the United States, but with our oil."
Coupled with the disturbing news that Chavez might be trying to acquire nuclear weapons is the fact that Chavez, a dictator in all but formal title, just concluded a deal with the People's Republic of China to launch a telecommunications satellite for him. So great is Chavez' interest in rockets, space and missiles that the government of Venezuela has created a special commission to advise him on such issues. Chavez with a nuclear weapon is bad enough. Chavez with a medium-range ballistic missile just minutes from the southern United States is a disaster waiting to happen.
I told the senior U.S. official that I thought Chavez posed a greater threat to our national security than Osama bin Laden or any terrorist operating out of the Middle East. He looked at me and said, "You know, I agree with you 100 percent."
So, while Cuban dictator Fidel Castro tries to manipulate world opinion by calling Posada "the most famous and cruel terrorist of the Western Hemisphere" (I was not aware that Castro had relinquished his crown), Chavez, Castro's puppet and a man who thinks he is channeling South American hero Simon Bolivar, may soon have his finger on the trigger of a nuclear weapon.
At what point do our nation and the world take this threat seriously?
MacKinnon was press secretary to former Sen. Bob Dole. He is also a former White House and Pentagon official, is married to a Venezuelan and has been to the country a number of times.
Rogue comment.....Oil rich Venezuela to be "Liberated" someday soon??? Stay tuned!
Rogue
ABRX....I think we won't see the bottom in share price until we get a few closes below $5 per share. That should get the margin liquidation out of the way and should bring in the selling capitualation that will clear the deck of weak holders.
I think the big money will be pushing for the margin washout below 5 bucks per share. It would fit all the bad fundamental news anyway.....and allow them to load up shares on the cheap.
Just my gut feeling.
Rogue