Categories: Foreign Exchange Markets

Economic Growth Slows on Gas Prices, Spending

Editor’s Note: The Fed has printed trillions of dollars driving up the cost of everything and our government has put us trillions more into red ink to ‘stimulate’ the economy and this is what we end up with. Keynesian was a bald-faced lie to begin with and is now completely discredited.

April 28 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. economy grew at a slower pace than forecast in the first quarter as government spending declined by the most since 1983.

Gross domestic product rose at a 1.8 percent annual rate from January through March after a 3.1 percent pace in the last three months of 2010, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Economists projected 2 percent growth, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

To keep spurring the expansion, Federal Reserve policy makers said yesterday they’ll complete their $600 billion round of stimulus through June. While slower than the previous three months, a reflection of higher gasoline prices, consumer spending climbed more than projected in the first quarter.

“We’ve sputtered a bit here, especially coming off a relatively strong fourth quarter,” said Sam Bullard, a senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina, who accurately forecast first-quarter growth. Even with the higher costs for fuel and food, “consumers are going to continue to spend. Growth should pick up toward the 3 percent level” later this year, he said.

GDP estimates from 80 economists surveyed by Bloomberg ranged from 0.5 percent to 3.5 percent. The first-quarter pace was the slowest since April through June of last year. For all of 2010, the world’s largest economy expanded 2.9 percent, the most in five years, after shrinking 2.6 percent in 2009.

New applications for jobless benefits unexpectedly rose last week to the highest level in three months. Unemployment insurance claims jumped by 25,000 to 429,000, the Labor Department said. The government anticipates a drop in unadjusted claims during the week leading up to the Easter holiday, something that didn’t happen this year, a Labor Department spokesman said.

Stock-Index Futures

Stock-index futures dropped after the reports and Treasury securities rose. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.2 percent to 1,348.6 at 8:53 a.m. in New York. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves inversely to prices, fell to 3.32 percent from 3.36 percent late yesterday.

Slower first-quarter growth explains why the Fed trimmed its 2011 forecast to 3.1 percent to 3.3 percent, according to its latest so-called central tendency, released yesterday. In January, the central bankers projected 3.4 percent to 3.9 percent expansion.

“I would say roughly most of the slowdown in the first quarter is viewed by most on the committee as transitory,” Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said at a news conference in Washington following the central bank’s policy meeting yesterday.

Consumer Spending

Household purchases, which account for about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 2.7 percent pace last quarter after a 4 percent gain in the final three months of 2010.

The gain in consumer spending from January through March compared with a 2 percent median forecast in the Bloomberg survey. Purchases added 1.91 percentage points to growth. (Higher gas and food prices account for ALL of this increase). This is not ‘good’ as the spinmeisters would have you believe.

Government purchases fell at a 5.2 percent annual rate, the biggest drop since 1983, after a 1.7 percent decrease in the fourth quarter. National defense spending dropped at an 11.7 percent pace, the most since 2005. Federal government spending fell the most in 11 years.

Residential construction fell at a 4.1 percent rate, while the trade deficit subtracted 0.1 percentage point from GDP, today’s report showed.

Manufacturing Gains

Manufacturing industries, which account for 11 percent of the economy, are likely to remain at the forefront of the recovery on growing demand from abroad and the need to replenish inventories. This is another lie; the sector is shedding jobs – again.

Inventories last quarter were stocked at a $43.8 billion pace, compared with a $16.2 billion rate in the fourth quarter. Excluding inventories, the economy climbed at a 0.8 percent annual rate from January through March, the slowest since the third quarter 2009.

Spending on equipment and software climbed at an 11.6 percent annual last quarter, up from 7.7 percent the previous three months.

“After a period of widely fluctuating demand in late 2008 through last year, we anticipate that 2011 will be the beginning of a period of sustained growth in our truck engine markets in the U.S.,” Thomas Linebarger, chief operating officer of Cummins Inc., said on an April 26 teleconference.

The Columbus, Indiana-based maker of diesel engines projects 2011 sales to be up 30 percent from last year, compared with a previous forecast for a 20 percent gain.

UPS Shipments

United Parcel Service Inc., the world’s biggest package- delivery company, this week bolstered its full-year forecast after revenue per package climbed in all its sectors during the first quarter.

The gains reflect “some of the increased velocity in the core economy with manufacturing and finished goods,” Kurt Kuehn, chief financial officer of the Atlanta-based firm, said in an April 26 telephone interview.

UPS and FedEx Corp. handle goods ranging from financial documents to pharmaceuticals and industrial parts, making them economic bellwethers.

The Fed’s preferred price gauge, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, climbed to a 1.5 percent annual pace. The Fed’s longer term projection for inflation is a range of 1.7 percent to 2 percent. Rising oil and food costs may push up the prices of other goods and services.

Fed on Inflation

“Increases in the prices of energy and other commodities have pushed up inflation in recent months,” the Federal Open Market Committee said yesterday in its statement after a two-day meeting in Washington. Still, “longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable and measures of underlying inflation are still subdued,” the Fed said.

Bernanke has signaled that the Fed will maintain record stimulus until job growth accelerates and the recovery is robust enough to withstand tighter credit.

Andy Sutton to Appear on ‘Liberty Talk Radio’

This Wednesday at 8PM EDT, I will have the honor and privilege of appearing on ‘Liberty Talk Radio’ with host Joe Cristiano. While callers often drive the direction of the topics, we are planning on covering the state of the general economy, the labor market, commodity prices, prospects for more inflation from the Fed (QE3, 4, etc), and as many other topics as time will permit. The show lasts one hour.

Joe said to pass along his toll-free call-in number for anyone interested in asking a question or getting into the discussion – (888) 773-4496. The show can be heard on the Internet by visiting blogtalkradio.com

I’ve been appearing on this show monthly for quite a while, but Joe and I both feel that this month’s discussion is going to be key given everything going on, hence the dispatch to everyone. The show will also be posted on our website this Thursday morning for anyone who missed the original broadcast.

April’s Centsible Investor is Available!

April 2011′s Edition of The Centsible Investor is Now Available!

A quick status update on the Original Model Portfolio: Currently, the dividend-producing segment has a total return of 15.74% including dividends. This while the major indexes are off around 15% during the same time period. The precious metals section is leading all segments, up 33% as some of the early silver purchases are now up well over 150%. Our spec REE picks are up 104% and 51% since we added them just a few months ago.

This month’s keynote addresses some key preparation issues that everyone should be considering. The economic picture is pretty much unchanged in terms of direction and velocity since March, so it was a good time to talk at a deep level about why we are where we are and more importantly, the little things you can do that can make a BIG difference moving forward.

The Energy report focuses on gas prices, subsidies for the provisioning system, demand destruction and the importance of the fact that we’re seeing demand destruction much sooner than we did the last time prices spiked in 2008. It is another very clear window into the true state of the US economy.

Precious metals is dedicated this month to currencies, an update on several fronts regarding currencies, the situation with silver backwardation, the prospects for the same in gold and some practical holding tips you can put to use in your own life. Our ‘other’ precious metals focus, REOs, have gotten a nice boost recently from news that the US Government is considering its own stockpile of these critical metals. We explore the prospects for this taking place.

Our interest rate model is close to issuing another short-term signal. We’ve selected the past 80 weeks of the model and put them in their own chart to better illustrate the accuracy of this powerful weapon in terms of predicting rate moves. The last short-term signal, issued several weeks ago, nailed a bottom in rates and the subsequent move has been significant.

We also analyze the correlation between the DJIA and crude oil; something many subscribers have been asking about since they’re hearing it on TV. We found some interesting potential trends over the past decade and discuss them as well.

Click Here for more information or to subscribe.

Proposed Budget to ‘Pay Off’ National Debt?

Editor’s Note: Now this would make a good April Fool’s joke. $4 Trillion in cuts over 10 years.. $400 Billion a year – that doesn’t even cover the interest paid on the national debt each year. These guys have got to be kidding. Not to mention the structural defects in Social Security and Medicare. They think that by changing the source of funding it all goes away. This type of economic gymnastics is why we’re in this mess in the first place.

The Republican budget proposal will eliminate the national debt while still preserving costly entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security, Rep. Paul Ryan told CNBC.

US Capitol Building with cash

Speaking just hours before the spending plan gets its formal introduction before Congress, Ryan, head of the House Budget Committee, said the debt will peak at 74.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2014 and then drop from there.

“We’ve got to show the country that we can get this situation under control and grow the economy, and that’s what we’re doing,” he said. “So whether (Democratic Senate Majority Leader) Harry Reid is willing to pass this bill or Barack Obama is ready to sign it, I don’t know the answer to that question.

“What I do know is I can’t look my kids and my constituents in the eyes with my conscience being clear and not know that I didn’t do everything I could to try and fix this problem before it got out of control.”

Among the key tenets in a budget resolution to be presented are fundamental changes to the way Medicare and Medicaid are financed. The resolution forestalls action on Social Security, though Ryan said he expects a bipartisan agreement on that issue later this year.

More broadly, the plan contains provisions that Ryan has said will slash $4 trillion from federal spending over the next decade.

 

The resolution is necessary as a potential shutdown looms over Washington and Congress must approve raising the national debt limit.

Ryan acknowledged the political obstacles he will face both from Democrats and some members of this own party who may bristle at the aggressive spending cuts involved.

“The problem in Washington is, they take any honest and sincere attempt to fix this problem and use it as a political weapon against you in the next election,” he said. “We can’t let that deter us.”

US Government Spent 8X Revenue in March

Editor’s Note: Yes, I guess we must call it madness; and it has nothing to do with silly basketball games.

The U.S. Treasury has released a final statement for the month of March that demonstrates that financial madness has gripped the federal government.

During the month, according to the Treasury, the federal government grossed $194 billion in tax revenue and paid out $65.898 billion in tax refunds (including $62.011 to individuals and $3.887 to businesses) thus netting $128.179 billion in tax revenue for March.

At the same, the Treasury paid out a total of $1.1187 trillion. When the $65.898 billion in tax refunds is deducted from that, the Treasury paid a net of $1.0528 trillion in federal expenses for March.

US on Road to Insolvency – Fisher

The United States is on a fiscal path towards insolvency and policymakers are at a “tipping point,” a Federal Reserve official said on Tuesday.

The President of the Federal Bank of Dallas, Richard W. Fisher

“If we continue down on the path on which the fiscal authorities put us, we will become insolvent, the question is when,” Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Richard Fisher said in a question and answer session after delivering a speech at the University of Frankfurt. “The short-term negotiations are very important, I look at this as a tipping point.”

But he added he was confident in the Americans’ ability to take the right decisions and said the country would avoid insolvency. Based on what?

“I think we are at the beginning of the process and it’s going to be very painful,” he added.

Fisher earlier said the US economic recovery is gathering momentum, adding that he personally was extremely vigilant on inflation pressures.

“We are all mindful of this phenomenon. Speaking personally, I am concerned and I am going to be extremely vigilant on that front,” Fisher said in an interview with CNBC.

Fisher added that the U.S. Federal Reserve had ways to tighten its monetary policy other than interest rates, including by selling Treasurys, changing reserves levels and using time deposits.

He added that he does not support the Fed embarking on an additional round of quantitative easing. (This time he’s playing ‘good cop’)

“Barring some extraordinary circumstance I cannot forsee…I would vote against a QE3,” Fisher told CNBC. “I don’t think it’s necessary. Again, we have a self-sustaining recovery.” Self-sustaining? This guy is obviously completely disconnected from reality and should be discredited as such. This ‘Good Cop / Bad Cop’ routine the Fed governors play is really wearing thin. Outside the lapdog media, none of these people have any credibility whatsoever.

Greece Slams Ratings Agencies After Moody’s Downgrade

LONDON (AP) — Greece launched a tirade against credit ratings agencies Monday after Moody’s downgraded its debt grade further below junk status, warning the bailed-out euro country might have to default on its massive borrowings.

The agency slashed its rating by three notches to B1 from Ba1 and warned it may cut again if the government’s commitment to austerity wanes or international creditors become less willing to support it – Greece was saved from bankruptcy last May after accepting a euro110 billion ($154 billion) bailout from the EU and the International Monetary Fund.

The Greek government’s response was quick and critical. It said Moody’s downgrade was “completely unjustified” and “does not reflect an objective and balanced assessment” of Greece’s actual economic prospects.

“Ultimately, Moody’s downgrading of Greece’s debt reveals more about the misaligned incentives and the lack of accountability of credit rating agencies than the genuine state or prospects of the Greek economy,” the finance ministry said.

It said the agencies – rivals Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings have also downgraded struggling countries like Greece heavily in past months – were trying to make up for failing to predict the financial crisis.

“Having completely missed the build-up of risk that led to the global financial crisis in 2008, the rating agencies are now competing with each other to be the first to identify risks that will lead to the next crisis,” the ministry said.

In explaining its downgrade, Moody’s warned the Greek government’s economic program may not yield the intended drop in debt and return to growth, and noted its considerable difficulties in raising revenues. It also highlighted the risk of tougher debt conditions when the bailout package ends in 2013.

“The risk of a post-2013 restructuring might lead the Greek authorities and investors to participate in a voluntary distressed exchange before that time,” Moody’s Investor Services said.

The Greek finance ministry queried the timing and the size of the downgrade, describing them as “incomprehensible” in the wake of the government’s success in cutting its budget deficit by 6 percentage points in 2010 to around 9 percent of the country’s national income. It has pledged to bring the deficit to the EU limit of 3 percent by 2014.

Despite the progress, Greek national debt is still expected to exceed 150 percent of GDP this year, while the economy is forecast to contract 3 percent.

The finance ministry said the reduction in the budget deficit was the “strongest evidence that relative to last year the risk of sovereign default has not increased but rather decreased as Greece is on a bold path towards fiscal consolidation.”

It said Moody’s failed to properly take into account the positive impact from the austerity measures and structural reforms.

“At a time when the global economy is fragile and market sentiment is sensitive, unbalanced and unjustified rating decisions such as Moody’s today can initiate damaging self-fulfilling prophecies and certainly strengthen the arguments for tighter regulation of the rating agencies themselves,” it added.

Credit ratings agencies have been blamed for failing to properly identify risks in the global economy ahead of the financial crisis, which led to the deepest recession since World War II and a crisis of confidence in bloated government finances, particularly in Europe.

Some experts argue the agencies have now gone too far the other way – playing it safe by being excessively pessimistic – and market regulators are planning reforms to better supervise them.

The EU has been one of the agencies’ most vocal critics and is looking at ways of reducing market reliance on their ratings, including greater competition among agencies and alternative ways to fund ratings.

On Monday, it played down the downgrade and insisted it would have no impact on its own view of Greece’s public finances, which are made regularly to verify the implementation of the international bailout deal.

“We have our own assessments of what is going on,” said Amelia Torres, spokeswoman of the EU Commission. “This is the assessment, as far as we are concerned, that you should look at and we don’t react to rating agency announcements.”

Standard & Poor’s and Fitch rate Greece slightly higher at BB+ though S&P has recently warned that it may lower its view soon.

Whether Greece ends up restructuring its debts – effectively reducing the amount it pays to creditors – could hinge on whether it can get the support of investors in bond markets.

Thanks to its bailout it doesn’t have to raise any substantial sums soon. However, Greece is trying to keep a presence in the markets and is due to auction euro1.25 billion worth of 26-week treasury bills Tuesday.

At the moment, it’s effectively blocked from issuing longer-term debt because of the exorbitantly high costs involved. The interest rates markets are charging Greece to lend money for ten years is over 12 percent, nearly 9 percentage points more than what Germany has to pay even though they share a currency.

Though it’s a national holiday in Greece, bonds were trading in international markets – the benchmark 10-year bond yield spiked 0.07 of a percentage point to 12.32 percent.

Traders Short Dollar as Crises Fail to Generate Appeal

Hedge funds and forex dealers are betting record amounts against the dollar, reflecting a growing belief that the US currency has lost its haven appeal and that eurozone interest rates will soon rise.

As the crisis in the Middle East has worsened, the latest exchange data show that traders are selling “short” the currency. The big US fiscal deficit and concerns about the effect of rising oil prices have been blamed by some for the dollar’s slide.

Figures from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, which are often used as a proxy for hedge fund activity, showed that short dollar positions surged from 200,564 contracts in the week ending February 22 to 281,088 on March 1.

This meant that the value of bets against the dollar on the CME rose $11.5bn in the week to March 1 to $39bn, $3bn more than the previous record of $36bn in 2007.

In contrast, speculators have added to their euro holdings amid expectations that the European Central Bank will soon raise interest rates to head off rising inflation.

Jean-Claude Trichet, ECB president, said last week that “strong vigilance” was warranted, a phrase used throughout the bank’s 2005-08 rate-tightening cycle to pave the way for a rate increase at the next governing council meeting. That strengthened the market view in financial markets that the ECB could raise rates at its April meeting and the euro last week rose to a four-month high of $1.3997 against the dollar, taking its gains from a 16-week low of $1.2871 in January to nearly 9 per cent.

“Dollar bears have become a marauding horde,” said David Watt, analyst at RBC Capital Markets. Given the continued losses for the dollar this month, he said it was likely that investors had since added to their bets against the US currency, short of an “absolutely stunning” reversal in sentiment.

“We may be seeing a turn in the longer-term outlook for the dollar – for the worse,” said Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Société Générale. He said the US Federal Reserve was likely to react more dovishly to a supply-side inflationary shock caused by rising oil prices than other central banks.

The figures showed that speculators on the CME had raised the value of their bets that the euro would rise against the dollar to $8.8bn, the largest since January 2008, in the week to March 1.

The data confirm the sharp turnround in sentiment towards the single currency from speculative investors, who as recently as January were betting on losses for the single currency on worries over the eurozone sovereign debt crisis.

Analysts said the prospect of ECB monetary tightening was outweighing investors’ concerns over the eurozone’s fiscal problems.

Indeed, since March 1, it is likely that speculators added to their long euro positions. Beat Siegenthaler, forex strategist at UBS, said further gains for the euro against the dollar were likely given that other investors, such as pension funds and asset managers, had not yet joined short-term, leveraged investors such as hedge funds in adjusting their bets against the single currency.

“Clearly some asset managers, presumably the more speculative in orientation, joined hedge funds in putting on long euro exposure, but on a longer view, asset managers remain significantly short and private clients have not even started to turn round their bearish euro positioning,” Mr Siegenthaler said.

He said an April interest rate rise from the ECB could therefore boost the single currency as these investors turned their positions round.

“For real money investors, the ECB decision could mean more euro buying over the medium term,” he said. “Longer-term positioning still looks short the euro.”

China Leads List of America’s Creditors

Published on: 01/10/2011
Comments: 2 Comments

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama will host Chinese President Hu Jintao for a state visit on January 19, and the leaders of the two economic powerhouses are expected to discuss thorny issues such as China’s trade surplus and its currency policies.

The United States will tread carefully as Beijing is the country’s largest creditor, holding more than $900 billion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds.

Below are the top 10 largest holders of U.S. debt as of the end of October.

– China, mainland: $906.8 billion

Japan: $877.4 billion

– United Kingdom: $477.6 billion*

– Oil exporters, which include Ecuador, Venezuela, Indonesia, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Gabon, Libya, and Nigeria: $213.9 billion.

– Brazil: $177.6 billion

– Hong Kong: $139.2 billion

– Caribbean banking centers, which include Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Netherlands Antilles and Panama: $133.7 billion

Russia: $131.6 billion

– Taiwan: $131.2 billion

– Canada: $125.2 billion

* UK figure may include government debt bought by other countries through London intermediaries

Source: Treasury Department

A Not-So-Subtle Difference

Over the past few weeks and this week in particular, the rhetoric on assisting banks has changed dramatically. While the semantics are subtle, the implications are anything but. In the months after the blowup of Bear Stearns and other marquee Wall Street firms, loans were used to provide funds to investment and commercial banks. These loans were made by the US taxpayers to these institutions at interest and needed to be paid back.

Recently, there has been more than idle talk about converting most of these loans to equity stakes, which do NOT need to be paid back. Furthermore, future disbursements would like be made by buying equity stakes in the firms rather than making loans. Sound the same? Not quite. Here are some reasons why:

1) In the event of bankruptcy, creditors are paid off before shareholders from any proceeds of liquidation. Given the vaporization of BSC and LEH, this is definitely worth mentioning. Historically, shareholders are left holding the bag in a true bankruptcy and subsequent liquidation.

2) Even if the firms remain solvent, there is significantly more risk in holding equity than debt. The taxpayer’s investment would be subject to all the risks generally associated with holding stocks. Taking a look at the performance of banking stocks during 2008 gives a pretty good idea of what I am talking about here.

3) Current shareholders are negatively impacted by dilution if more shares are created out of thin air for the government to purchase. And even if the shares are bought in the open market, the mere size of the stake could have a rather deleterious affect on existing shareholders should that stake need to be sold en masse.

4) By taking an equity interest, the government is consummating an incestuous relationship with the banking industry. Nationalization is the term typical used in this type of situation, but the term has become taboo in the mainstream media in recent weeks.

5) Also, bear in mind that the banks don’t really need this money at all. They have been printing their own currency for years now via unregulated, non-transparent OTC derivatives. Now that some of their bets have gone bad, the taxpayers have been forced to ‘legitimize’ this activity by the infusion of trillions of less-funny-money (dollars).

Sea changes can be either dramatic or subtle. The recent direction in terms of supporting the financial system sounds subtle enough, but with dramatic results.

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