Nadeem Walayat on Global Trends in 2008-09

“Major Trends – Inflation, interest rates etc
I am relying on previous analysis that the graph below illustrates on interest rate and inflation expectations in that once the US economy stabalise’s from the dropping like a stone phase, the Fed will reign in inflation during 2009, especially as the high rates of inflation from earlier months leave the 12month indices. The consequences of this is for a US dollar bottom BEFORE the event
– sometime this year and therefore become a disinflationary contributor to inflation during 2009.”

Read more of this interesting analysis at GoldSeek.

National Post: Global Casino Crashes…

“– The U.S. dollar will continue to fall against other currencies.
— Oil will march toward $150 a barrel and other commodity prices will continue to increase, as investors race toward holding real things instead of currencies.
— Gold will march toward $1,500 an ounce as worries about the debt contagion spread.
— Last week, the Euro zone of 15 countries became worth more than the U.S. dollar zone, and will continue to be used as a preferred reserve currency, thus aggravating the U.S. dollar’s decline.
— Central banks outside the U.S. will be forced to cut interest rates as the Americans must to prop up economies.
— Banks and brokers around the world will be shakier and more bailouts — possibly another on Wall Street — will occur.
— Canada’s spoiled chartered banks/brokers will start their whining to merge again, blaming the crisis as another lobbying technique.
— The credit bailout plus the U.S. Presidential election will postpone the bankruptcies, foreclosures and writedowns that must be made in mortgages in order to clean up the housing market. And a lousy housing market means the recession will take root in the U.S. and elsewhere.
— Canada and Australia are lucky. Both will continue to boom, along with commodity prices, and the Canadian dollar will move up in tandem.
— Economics will trump Iraq in the U.S. political contests this summer, forcing McCain to choose Romney as a running mate and the Democrats to sharpen up their CEO cred too.”

More by Diana Francis at The National Post.

Comment:

Since I posted this, the well-staged “rescue” by the Fed has occurred and gold has fallen dramatically, the commodity currencies and commodities along with it.

Is this the end of the PM (precious metals) bull? Probably not. We’re approaching the season when gold sells off, usually; we’ve had such a big run that a technical correction was long overdue. Add to that the intense safe-haven buying of recent months, and a downward move was inevitable. Especially with the dollar putting in its own technical recovery.

Note however, that the dollar’s recovery is only likely to be against the majors, like the Pound and the Euro, and the commodity currencies. Against the Yen and Franc, it’s likely to continue to weaken, with some technical bounces along the way.

Financial Fraud: Banks go from borrow… to beg….to steal

On FOX Business News this morning, former Fed Governor Lyle Gramley said Congress needs to impose a special tax to allow the goverment to step in and buy all the sub-prime-debt in the system. And it needs to do it now.

Yes. That was a former fed governor coming right out with it. Dispensing with the usual palaver about the banks rescuing people, he cut to to the quick with refreshing frankness – time for the people (otherwise known as savers, tax-payers, pensioners, and other assorted naifs and bag-holders) to rescue the banks.

Mind Body: Credit crunch also driven by panic…

“Household debt-service ratio is near a record high 14.3%, while the personal savings rate hovers near a record low 0.5%. Still, it is worth noting that in many cases debt service is as much about perception as reality. Optimistic social mood creates the right conditions for enhanced credit appetites and an optimistic view of how much debt one can service without stress. That is one reason the high-debt service ratio and low savings rate has been able to persist, and to grow to unimagined heights, for so long. A negative social mood can take things to an opposite extreme, where debt is repudiated or shunned…..”

More at Minyanville.com.

And this from The Big Deal.com:
“What makes me even more skeptical about the solidity and cogency of the financial market as a whole is the fact that this disaster was largely caused by panic, or “sentiment”, if you prefer.
Bear Stearns prime brokerage business, providing admin services to hedge funds with a fixed income bent, was the main source of liquidity for the now-moribund financial institution. Last week a rumor, which later led to rampant speculation, was put out about Bear Stearns fragility and its excessive exposure to US mortgages. Obviously all the hedge funds using Bear Stearns to deposit their assets panicked and were quick to terminate their relationship with the bank.
Without the funds’ liquid assets in its “vaults” Bear Stearns was not able to meet its running costs.

The worst part is that just a few days later, on March 27th, the bank would have been able to exchange its gigantic portfolio of mortgage backed securities for high quality, liquid US Treasuries…”

Wall Street Reaps Whirlwind: Bear Stearns mauled; loses 94% value

“As part of the deal, J.P. Morgan Chase, a major Wall Street bank, will buy Bear Stearns for a bargain-basement price, paying $2 a share for a venerable institution that still plays a central role in executing financial transactions. Bear Stearns stock closed at $57 on Thursday and $30 on Friday. J.P. Morgan was unwilling to assume the risk of many of Bear Stearns’s mortgage and other complicated assets, so the Federal Reserve agreed to take on the risk of about $30 billion worth of those investments….” and

“The Fed “is working to promote liquid, well-functioning financial markets, which are essential for economic growth,” Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a conference call with reporters tonight. Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., who was deeply involved in the talks though not a formal party to them, indicated support for the actions.”

Comment:

For the first time since the Great Depression (The Guardian) the Fed has extended credit to an investment bank (the normal recipients are the commercial banks). Thus falls an 85 year old Wall Street institution, the 5th largest investment bank, losing 94% of it value. Gold moved up $25 on the news and the dollar sank below 71 against an index of major currencies, hitting fresh lows against the Yen and the Euro.

We think J P Morgan, relatively undamaged by the sub-prime poison, is going to get toxic shock syndrome when this baby (a bank one quarter its size) lodges in its gut.
More at the Washington Post.

Stunning news, this, about Bear Stearns, if there could be anything more stunning than last week’s series of desperate deeds on the Street. There was that quarter of a billion infusion of liquidity from the Fed; there was Hank Paulson’s happy talk about a “strong dollar policy” that quickly morphed into a strangled cry for global central bank intervention; there was a slew of recession-worthy statistics on the economic news; there was gold’s lifetime nominal highs over $1000 and the sickeningly swift decline of the dollar. And to cap it all of there was the suspicious telephone sting operation that tripped up NY Governor Eliot Spitzer over long-term use of call girls as overpriced as any mortgage bond — an investigation that issued, of all places, out of the IRS. [As Greg Palast points out, the IRS is part of the Treasury Dept now overseen by ex-Goldmanite, Hank Paulson]. It couldn’t be a coincidence, could it, that Spitzer (the Sheriff of Wall Street) had earlier tangled with a Goldman Sachs chief over his prosecution of giant insurer AG’s CEO Maurice (“Hank” – they’re all Hank these days) Greenberg and and others in high places. All no doubt joined the traders on the floor to have the only chuckle to be had in last week’s preliminary belches from the financial Vesuvius now erupting in full throttle.

Bill Murphy at Le Metropole Cafe notes:

*Thornburg Mortgage was fine one day, bust the next.

*The Carlyle hedge fund was the crème de la crème one day, and tapioca the next.

*Alan Schwartz, chief executive at Bear Stearns, was on CNBC just the other day saying the rumors about Bear’s problems were UNFOUNDED. Today Bear is going bust.

*So, within 2 weeks, three of the most highly regarded financial entities in the US are gonzo.”

More Comment:

And the billion dollar (oops, Yen, Euro, Swissie..take your pick) question is this.

Who goes next? And for how long?

Stay tuned for more shocks from the United States of Zimbabwe….

Gold could go to $3000 this week or it could freeze and fall. But the odds are we are not just in a recession but on the brink of falling off the cliff.

Expect anything. (Note the resignation of Admiral Fallon, a vocal opponent of war with Iran).

None of the candidates really has a clue. They’re doing nothing more than waltzing on the graves of the middle class while promising them ten acres and a mule.

The only glimmer of cheer is that Ron Paul is still in keeping up the good work.

V Hedge I Win, Fails You Lose – Bonner & Rajiva on the Screwy Math of Hedge Funds – 9/22/2006 (reprinted)

HEDGE, I WIN…FAILS, YOU LOSE
by Bill Bonner and Lila Rajiva

Amaranth:

1. Also called pigweed.
2. An imaginary flower that never fades.

Last week investors found to their chagrin that the Greenwich, Connecticut genus of the pigweed, is not only far from imaginary, it can fade out at lightning speed. Hedge fund Amaranth Advisors managed to lose $4.6 billion – about half its entire value – in a matter of just a few days through a sensational miscalculation of the price of natural gas futures in the spring of 2007. Today’s news tells us the figure has now grown to $6 billion.

Star trader Brian Hunter bet the farm on the idea that the gap between the March 2007 natural gas price and the April 2007 would increase. Instead, it fell from about $2.60 per 1,000 cubic feet to about 80 cents, wiping out Amaranths’ 20 plus percent yearly returns, in one fell swoop, to a 35% loss.

Hunter, a Canadian, had made millions for the firm after natural gas prices exploded in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. He was thought to be so savvy about gas futures that his bosses at Amaranth let him work out of his home in Calgary, where he drove a Ferrari in the summer and a Bentley in the winter. The jazzy wheels matched the snazzy wheeling…and the honeyed dealing at the American energy fund, where 1.4% of net assets went for “bonus compensation to designated traders” and another 2.3% was doled out for “operating expenses.” When an account made a net profit, the manager took care to cut himself up to 1.5% of the account balance per year in addition to a 20% cut of its net profits – less the traders’ bonuses and operating expenses. But when the account lost money, the managers suffered no penalty, though the investors still remained on the hook for the operating expenses and possibly for trader bonuses as well.

What kind of a gig is that? Where investors have to pay to play and then pay to lose, as well? What can investors be thinking when they see their accounts shrivel like anorexics on a fat farm while their managers grow sleek and prosperous in their Greenwich pads?

The hedge fund world is famously populated by math whizzes, each one claiming to have solved Poincare’s Conjecture. But the important math of hedge funds is very simple: it’s heads I win, tails you lose.

The typical fund charges 2% of capital, plus 20% of the gains above a benchmark, often the risk-free rate of return – say around 5% today. So, a fund with a 10% return charges its clients 2% of capital…plus, another 2% (20% of 10%) for the performance. Even a fund that is able to do twice as well as the benchmark – a difficult feat – only leaves the investor with a 6% return, net.

A common pattern is that for four years in a row, the fund gets twice the return as the risk-free rate and every fifth year it suffers a 10% loss. When this happens, the fund managers do not send out a letter offering to share 20% of the loss. No, they are happy to take a percentage of the profits, but not the losses. So, in the four fat years, the fund builds up…with the managers taking their cut. But in the fifth year, investors take all of the loss, effectively magnifying it, making a dollar of loss equal to $1.25 of gain.

The essential math is not only easy…it is perverse. As demonstrated by Amaranth, fund managers have every incentive to take wild gambles. If the gamble pays off, they become rich and famous. If it does not, they are still the same math prodigies they were before. It is like playing strip poker with a beautiful woman. When you lose a hand, you take off your shirt. But when she loses, she puts on a leather coat.

Why do investors think they can get anywhere in such a game? The quick answer is that investors are not thinking.

In the late stages of empire, thinking becomes a vestigial function – about as useful as an appendix…and as liable to be cut out in a crisis.

Instead, investors rationalize…and theorize…to justify the excesses and extravagances of the imperial economy. Why buy a hedge fund? Better returns, they say – though hedge fund returns have been so abysmally low that their money would have slept sounder tucked up in a cozy money market account. Different market, they argue – claiming that the new conditions demand provocative trading rather than stodgy buying-and-holding.

Don’t marry your stocks, they warn. Just shack up for a few months and unload them when the next hottie comes along; that’s what the celebrity hedgies do. But filling your portfolios with fast moving floozies is no way to make money; they’ve all been on the street too long already…they’re overpriced and overworked. And when the market goes down, they’ll go down faster and further than more. The hedge funds have smarter managers, claim investors. And here, finally, they might have a point. Who but a real sharpie could have come up with such a clever scheme? Hedge fund clients might be dripping in red the past few years, but the fund managers themselves are in clover.

If vanity were gravity, Greenwich, Connecticut would be a black hole. The puffed-up twits who manage most hedge funds contribute to more unwarranted bluster per square foot there than in any place outside North Korea. Greenwich sucks in money from all over the financial world and turns it into…nothing.

In this respect, Amaranth is only following the hedge fund playbook. Deals for hedge bosses are so sweet that Warren Buffet claims the funds aren’t really investment vehicles at all but compensation strategies – ways to keep star managers in their multimillion dollar digs while the funds themselves turn in lower and lower returns…sub-10% on average, and in some cases, pushing below 5%, according to the Hedge Fund Index. In fact, in 2005, some 848 hedges closed down their business, says one consultancy firm, Hedge Fund Research Inc.

Is it just a case of too much of a good thing diluting the returns? Could be.

When Alfred Winslow Jones coined the term in 1949, hedge funds operated on the margins of the investment world. “Hedge fund” then simply meant a portfolio of stocks with long and short positions, the shorts acting as a hedge against losses in the longs.

Today, the term better describes the legal structure of the groups – private, and limited to a specific number of investors, with a minimum of $1 million in assets – and the actual strategies employed vary dramatically – from commodity trading to distressed investing.

And today, hedge funds have spread like a tropical parasite so that there are now 8000 or so of them, infesting even institutional investors and pension funds, and sucking in total assets of about $1.2 trillion. Meanwhile, hedge funds specifically engaged in energy trading – like Amaranth – have proliferated – soaring from about $5 billion to a stratospheric $100 billion.

You’d think this would give at least the pros in the business some pause. Yet, Morgan Stanley, for example, pumped five percent of its $2.3 billion fund of hedge funds into Amaranth. And, Goldman Sachs’ fund of hedge funds also admitted that an anonymous energy-related investment – guess who? – had wiped off a chunky three percent off its monthly return.

Hubris and excessive risk run through the entire sorry episode. Hunter himself was borrowing $8 for every $1 of Amaranth’s own funds, while taking positions ten times larger than veteran energy trader, Goldman, and twice the size of the next biggest trader. Hunter also expanded Amaranth’s natural gas holdings so that they became half the firm’s entire exposure, where they had once been only 7%.

Like LTCM – the energy firm that blew up in 1998 – Amaranth held such large positions in the market that it could not unravel its positions. Like LTCM, Amaranth seemed certain it would never fail and boasted of its “fearlessness” on its website. Like LTCM, Amaranth was hazy about what it was doing and how…

But unlike LTCM, the financial community is reacting with odd indifference to Amaranth’s fiasco. Peter Fusaro, co-founder of the Energy Hedge Fund Center, which tracks 520 energy hedge funds, shrugs that Amaranth is “a hiccup.” Amaranth’s blow-up doesn’t affect as many institutional investors and banks and other financial VIPs, as LTCMs did. Only its rich clients have to endure the pangs of portfolios sliced neatly in half.

Maybe so.

Maybe not.

We think of the typical hedge fund manager. Not yet 30, no experience of a real bear market, let alone a credit contraction…the man thinks only of the new house he will build in Greenwich, Connecticut, if his bets pay off. He imagines that he will take his place alongside George Soros and the Quantum Fund.

More likely, he will join Nicholas Maounis in the pigweed.

Bill Bonner and Lila Rajiva

From The Daily Reckoning.

The Unbearable Lightness of the Buck – Bonner & Rajiva on the Declining Dollar on 7/20/2007 (reprinted)

THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF THE BUCK
by Bill Bonner and Lila Rajiva

It was the Chinese who invented paper “money” around the beginning of the ninth century A.D. Because it was so light it would blow out of their hands, they called it “flying money.”

The ancient Chinese were right about the lack of substance of paper currency. The greenback seems to have less substance every day. But we do not wonder why the greenback seems to be dying. We wonder why it isn’t dead already.

In search of an answer, we look back, to a case brought by the First National Bank of Montgomery, Minnesota, against one Jerome Daly in 1969.

The bank had lent Mr. Daly $14,000 in a mortgage loan. Then it tried to get its money back by foreclosing on Daly’s house. Daly took to the courts with a defense so ingenious even a Chinese banker might wish to emulate it.

You can’t enforce a mortgage contract, said he, when there was no contractual obligation. And there was no valid obligation because no “consideration” had been given by the bank. Having gotten nothing from the bank, he had nothing give back.

In support of his testimony, Mr. Daly, a lawyer, called the bank president to the stand and demanded to know if the bank had actually handed him a wad of $20 bills.

“Isn’t it true,” he began, or words to that effect, “that the bank did not actually give me a stack of $20 bills? In fact, the bank didn’t give me any bills of any sort, right?”

“Well, yes…but…” the bank president must have replied.

“Nor did the bank convey any property to me…or give me gold coins…or any other valuable, tangible thing…right?”

“Well, yes…but…” came the next reply, also cut off by Mr. Daly’s next question.

“And isn’t it true that the bank did not go out and borrow extra money so it could lend it to me…nor did it draw down its depositors’ accounts in order to give me money?”

“Yes, that is correct.”

“In fact, the so-called mortgage loan was, from your point of view, just a bookkeeping entry. Is that not right? And is it not true that the ‘money’ never existed at all…at least not in the sense that most people think of money…and that this ‘money’ was actually ‘created out of thin air’ as the economist John Maynard Keynes once described it?”

“Well, yes…but…”

By this time, both judge and jury were nodding their heads, sure that they had a combination of Charles Ponzi, John Law and Kenneth Lay on the witness stand.

“Fraud!” concluded Justice Mahoney and went on to rule that the bank had given Daly no lawful consideration, had created $14,000 out of nothing, and had done so without the backing of any U.S. law or statute.

Therefore, it followed, the bank was obliged to let Mr. Daly keep his house. And, thus it was that Mr. Daly kept his house.

Whether the reasoning behind this case was right or wrong is not at issue here. Our questions are more numerous but much simpler.

We want to know why there are not more Dalys demanding to keep their houses today. And why there are not more Mahoneys around to let them.

Why did one small court adopt this argument while it left no mark otherwise on American jurisprudence? Despite Justice Mahoney, U.S. courts have rejected every other attempt to argue that the U.S. dollar is not the lawful, valuable money everyone thinks it is. But just how valuable the U.S. dollar is, is a question not for the courts, but for the markets.

The euro, the pound, the Canadian dollar, oil and gold have been pronouncing a judgment of their own this week – all soared against the dollar. And yet not a whimper is to be heard from the great American masses. The dollar may be in trouble abroad, but at home its reputation is still spotless. Gas may cost more, heating bills may be higher, but so far milk, eggs, and beer have not soared beyond the budget of the masses. The people may have mortgaged their futures for the roof over their heads and sold their souls for a mess of credit, but with home prices still holding up and stocks pushing at all time highs, the devil has not come around for repayment yet.

Helping to postpone the day he does, the government also quietly stopped reporting M3 money in March 2006. M3 is the broadest measure of the “money supply” in the U.S. economy. As the supply of money increases, typically, consumer prices go up. Independent analysts who keep an eye on these things tell us that the green stuff is being pumped in at one of the highest rates ever – 12% per year, or four times the rate of GDP growth.

“Then why has it not gone to swell the prices of groceries yet?” you might ask.

The answer is that the people with the most money are spreading it around in places far distant from the local Superfresh. The ersatz money is circulating these days in art houses and auctions, in exotic vacation houses and rental properties, in retirement funds and pensions. Securitized and derivatized, packaged and repackaged, it is lent from one end of the globe to the other, forcing central bankers all over the world to work their own printing presses night and day to keep up with it. The resulting global “liquidity” is the bilge upon which asset prices float and make this boom so great for asset owners.

But this liquidity is no different from the non-existent “consideration” that Mr. Daly received from the First National Bank of Montgomery. It was this shaky credit that was packaged into new debt instruments like CDOs that are so intricate that teams of mathematicians cannot fathom all the ramifications and complications thereof. In a miracle rivaling any by the Galilean, these same oily pretzels of debt were twisted into Triple A rated bonds and sold to pension funds and institutional investors. Now the buyers are finding that the grease has turned rancid: Last week, the three leading rating agencies downgraded debt linked to the shakiest part of the housing market – the subprime loans. And following swiftly, one hedge fund at Bear Stearns took ill and passed away altogether while a third gave up 91% of its returns.

Ben Bernanke would like to boost rates to support the dollar and help American tourists, but faced with a liquidity crisis in the $500 trillion derivatives market, he’ll have to think thrice before doing so. But rates are going up with or without him. Lenders are finally growing wary.

Afraid of the poisonous debt packages, buyers are passing up another helping. “All but one of the 15 ABX indexes fell to a record low,” says Bloomberg news. Offers for CDOs are said to be going “no bid.” And several major debt offerings had to be withdrawn or rescheduled as promoters were afraid that they, too, would go “no bid.”

We don’t know if the First National Bank of Montgomery still exists. But if it does, we wouldn’t be surprised to learn that it is growing more cautious about lending. And dollar holders all over the world are tightening their grip, fearing that their flying money might fly away.

Bill Bonner and Lila Rajiva

From The Daily Reckoning

Part I The Daily Reckoning Won’t Cry for Evita – Bustling Buenos Draws Outsource Workers….

Here’s the first of a short series of notes I did at the Daily Reckoning that got used – one way or other – in “Mobs, Messiahs and Markets.” This one from May 12 2006 showshow outsourcing might attract global info tech workers to Buenos Ayres. I’ve moved the note to the front of the newsletter from its original place to make it easier to read.
Fri, May 12, 2006 07:04:06 PM

From: The Daily Reckoning

Today’s Daily Reckoning

Don’t Cry For Evita

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Friday, May 12, 2006

———————

*** We hate to brag – but we saw this bull market coming from a mile
away…people are losing faith in paper…

*** Unreliable contrarians…debt has a mind of her own…

*** Prices are becoming a barrier to homebuyers…laying low in things
settle down in the United States…and more!

———————
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for a free subscription on Tuesday, December 27, 2005.
Should you wish to *** please follow the
instructions at the bottom of this email.
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More views from Bill Bonner…*** Ameriquest, one of the nation’s leading mortgage lenders closed 229
branches and laid off 3800 employees. Households are paying more in
mortgage interest than they have for the last quarter century – 15.8%. It
appears that they have reached a limit. Mortgage applications are
declining. Unsold inventories of houses are increasing. The bubble in
America’s property market is over. At last, it looks as if prices are
becoming a barrier to buyers.

But what will those who need a roof over their heads do now?

Where they will go?

*** Colleague Lila Rajiva, down south, offers a possibility:

“Buenos Aires is bustling. Not just with tourists or casual visitors
either. It seems a lot of foreigners are here to take advantage of the
relatively cheap price of real estate. The real bargains, of course, were
snapped up during the slump a few years ago, but there are still good
deals to be had – especially for refugees from the inflated prices of the
American and British housing market.

“It seems that housing is only one reason people are coming down here. On
the subte (underground rail) downtown, I ran into two visitors who must be
a sign of things to come. The weather is summery right now, though it’s
the beginning of fall in the Southern hemisphere, and both of them were in
the usual get-up of the European at large – khakhi shorts, tennis shoes,
and baggy tee-shirts. So, at first I thought they were students
backpacking for a semester, but Ross, the younger one, was an English
teacher who had taken off a year or two to “lie low” until things settled
down in the United States.

“‘What things?’ I asked.

“‘The economy, politics…everything,’ he shrugged.

“‘Things’ were too turbulent in the United States just now for his taste.
When they settled down, he’d have a better idea whether he even wanted to
return or not, he claimed. Meanwhile, South America was inexpensive and
warm. He’d spent a week lying on the sand in Uruguay and was now on his
way north to the Iguazu falls. When he got back, he’d look for a job. He’d
heard that a lot of businesses were looking for native speakers to teach
English as a foreign language in Buenos Aires.

“‘Just like all those Dell call-centers in Bangalore,’ he pointed out.

“Neil, the older man, was English and a trifle paunchy. He had been in and
out of Argentina for six months. As he chatted, he balanced a laptop on
his knees into which he was busy punching figures.

“‘Checking my portfolio,’ he explained.

“It was a healthy one, from the looks of it.

“‘Telecoms are good investments still,’ he confided. ‘I bought some shares
in a company at home a while back and doubled my money in just two months.
You should try them. Of course, I was working for a telecom at the time
and got them pretty cheap.’

“I wanted to know how he got to take off six months from his job.

“‘Actually, I don’t have one,’ he admitted. Though he was not yet forty,
he was retired. How come?

“‘Sold my house in Nottingham, that’s how,’ he chuckled. ‘The price had
gone through the roof and I knew it was time to get out. I invested the
money and now I travel. I still do a bit of software consulting, but only
over the net. The main thing is to go where it’s warm and cheap to live.’
He looked over at me hopefully.

“‘I was actually thinking of India…’ Continue reading

Part II Riding the Gold Bull at the Daily Reckoning – or How She Missed Conquering the Rock 5/17/2006 (reprinted)

Here’s me in Buenos Ayres rushing around checking out house prices in 2006 while trying to jump on and off the gold bull (scroll down for the note):

Wed, May 17, 2006 12:41:28 PM

From:

The Daily Reckoning

Subject:

Today’s Daily Reckoning

The Conquest of the Rock

The Daily Reckoning

St. Michael’s, Maryland

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

———————

*** Having the courage to grab the bull by the horns…how do you know
when it’s time to get in, and time to jump off?

*** GM lays off thousands of Americans – and hires in India…an economic
“Code Red”…

*** The perfect ingredients for a plunging dollar…it’s all about
timing…and more!

———————

The only thing more frustrating than a long bear market is a long bull
market. Riding a great bull market is like riding a real bull. You are
always in danger of getting thrown off. And once on the ground, it is hard
to get back on.

(See colleague Lila Rajiva’s attempts to get into gold, below…)
*** Lila Rajiva, trying to climb onto the bull’s back:

“Bill: As a faithful believer in the doomsday scenario for the dollar and
the final revenge of gold, I admit I am not having an easy ride. In fact,
I think I have had a bit of a mauling. With some nervous selling across
the board in the metals, and options expiration at the end of the week,
the ride gets stormier.

“Of course, I’m still a dollar bear. What’s not to hate?

“Massive trade deficits, staggering debt at all levels, a tumescent real
estate market hissing into an inevitable slump, saber rattling in the
Middle East, a war of words with China, oil bubbling steadily around $70,
and inflation simmering under the cooked-up numbers the government spews
as it sees fit…it’s all a recipe for a plunging dollar.

“And way back in 2004, it seemed the dollar was taking that ride in a
straight line down as it fell nine percent against the Euro. Some of us
opened Everbank accounts and got ourselves a basket of mixed foreign
currencies or other exotic goodies. Buffet was betting against the damn
thing – how could we be wrong?

“But in 2005, Buffet and the rest of us sinners, had to dine on crow. The
dollar strengthened, if it did not actually flex its pecs, erasing half
its losses against the backdrop of continuing tight money policy and
higher interest rates in the United States versus the euro area and Japan.
The dumping of the European Union’s Constitutional Treaty in France and
the Netherlands, also stiffened a few rickety vertebrae in the greenback’s
spine. Of course, it was merely a touching coincidence that corporations
got to repatriate earnings in stronger dollars, courtesy of a convenient
window created by Congress.

“Even the trusty little GLD ETF, which was supposed to cushion my dive
into the big bad speculative world of metals, stayed down the whole year.

“Naturally, as a newbie I’d bought it just when it came out in November
2004. And naturally, after being heralded like the Second Coming, it sank
almost immediately. On sundry Web sites, reports surfaced hinting darkly
at dire manipulations, the lack of verification of its holdings, and all
manner of sinister machinations calculated to strike terror in the heart
of someone’s whose last encounter with the metal was buying an ankle
bracelet at a souk in Dubai. Equity bulls of our acquaintance cast a
derisive eye at us. Gold? Had we forgotten that stash of 850 buck ingots
from the eighties still moldering in our basement? I was ready to cave in
and sell for what I’d bought it.

“But then as the year ended, the metals minuet ended and the action on the
floor became hot and fast.

“Sleeping Beauty leapt out of her coffin and darted ahead almost 25% in a
matter of weeks. Too much too fast? It seemed that way to me. I wasn’t
going to wait around to see that thing fall back just as fast as it had
shot up. A profit is only paper, until you book it, right? I booked it.

“Yeah! Wait for the correction and ride it right back up again like a
Ferris wheel. But market timing is never as easy as it sounds, which is
why some gold bulls, like Doug Casey, of the International Speculator,
will tell you that this isn’t a market you can trade – the moves have been
too fast. You drop out when it drops and you’re liable to be left
standing. You miss the big profits.

“And that’s how it’s been. The first correction came in February as
expected, but the next leg up was so fast and furious that by April we
were hitting multi-decade highs with hardly a pause along the way

“Too bad I wasn’t on board. I was still figuring out the right moment to
buy… and clearing the dust out of my eyes.”
Continue reading

Part III A Scoop at the Daily Reckoning – the IMF Gold Fix 6/8/2006 (reprinted)

And here’s a note I did for the Daily Reckoning on gold price manipulation at the IMF (scroll down for the note)

Thu, June 08, 2006 01:29:50 PM

From:

The Daily Reckoning

Subject:

Today’s Daily Reckoning
Black Sheep in the Marketplace

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Thursday, June 08, 2006

———————

*** The worldwide sell-off…Bernanke talks the talk, but he’ll never walk
Volcker’s walk – not even with lifts…

*** GATA is looking saner everyday…being a central bank means never
having to say you’re short…

*** Always helps to have friends in high places…unwinding in Japan…and
more!

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———————

And more thoughts:

*** Daily Reckoning correspondent, Lila Rajiva, finds a scoop…in India:

“After years of being called crackpots in tin – or gold – foil hats, GATA
(the U.S.-based Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee) seems to look saner by
the day, next to the thorough-going loopiness of the financial
establishment. The latest evidence is an IMF report that shows how IMF
rules wink – if they do not actually blow kisses – at central banks that
double-count the gold reserves they’ve lent out for sale in the open
market. Apparently, being a central bank means never having to say you’re
short.

“Aha, says GATA, which has charged all along that the IMF along with the
U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks have tried to hold down gold
prices. The shady rules suggest that when they lent gold out for cash, the
banks actually got to double their reserves by counting the leased gold as
an asset on their books, as well as the cash. That was pretty sweet both
for the lenders – the central banks, who got a small return for their gold
– and for the borrowers, the bullion banks who got to sell and reinvest
the proceeds for a higher return in what’s called a ‘carry trade.’

“Even the IMF report admits, delicately, that IMF rules have encouraged
‘overstating reserve assets because both the funds received from the gold
swap and the gold are included in reserve assets.’ But except for a lone
article yesterday in The Financial Express in India, (Sangita Shah, Double
counting of gold may have aided the price suppression, June 7, 2006), the
mainstream media has ignored the story.”
Continue reading