Categories: Foreign Exchange Markets

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.

Death Sentence for the Dollar

Today the US Treasury announced its funding requirements for the last three months of 2008. As anyone could imagine, the need for additional borrowing is astronomical. That target is $550 Billion. The borrowing in the third quarter was $530 Billion. The national debt is ballooning.

Tragically, the Federal Reserve has been the source of much of the funding so far, and is expected to be a major source of funds moving forward. There is one problem with this. The Fed is broke. Busted. Bankrupt. It is lending money to the banking system at a rate of over half a trillion dollars a week now. Its resources have long been exhausted, and it is now resorting to unchecked monetary creation to fund any and all future packages, bailouts, and/or stimulus packages.

This is a death sentence for the Dollar. This Dollar rally has been caused not by fundamentals, but by a squeeze due to the liquidation of global assets. There are no fundamentals for the Dollar. It will soon be created in Weimar fashion to keep up with the evaporation of wealth in the US and abroad. Our 5 point strategy from 2006 has been, is, and will continue to be a sound way to protect your wealth from the hyperinflation that now lies dead ahead.

See our 5 point strategy here

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More jawboning and bottom-calling

Published on: 08/26/2008
Comments: 4 Comments

The minutes from the last FOMC meeting indicated the Fed’s next move in interest rates will be higher. I can see it now: the dirty dozen sitting at their big table, with all their fingers and toes crossed as they made perhaps the most ridiculous utterance of all time. There is no way the Fed is going higher on rates anytime soon. If anything, they are likely to be forced to go even LOWER than the 2.0% current Fed funds rate. Reasons include an economy that is now almost entirely dependent on cheap money, an ongoing financial crisis, and the biggest reason of all – the housing market. The statement on raising rates was made entirely as an excuse to keep the staged rally in the Dollar going a bit longer. Remember, the mainstream press announced the upcoming rally back in April. We’re just following their playbook here.

In other news, housing bulls are excited that new home sales picked up just a tad this past month. This news came as prices fell at a record pace. Makes sense guys. However, mortgage rates really aren’t cooperating at this point, with 30 year money going in the mid 6% range for prime borrowers. This ties directly into the Fed’s course of action. They must keep the spread between borrowing costs and lending costs as high as possible in order to try to save banks. However, if mortgage rates are too high, then defaults and foreclosures will get worse. If the PPT buys the long end of the yield curve to bring down mortgage (bond) rates, they kill the banks by cutting the interest rate spreads – UNLESS they go lower on the short-term rates to try to maintain the spread. No my Dear Watson, the Fed is not raising rates anytime soon.

Dollar benefits from bad news

Dollar bulls beware; the buck is benefitting from bad news around the globe much more than it is returning to prominence. Take a minute and return to fundamentals. The economy is in recession. Unemployment is rising. Consumer prices are up sharply. Foreclosures continue to mount. Home values are falling. Banks are failing. The only thing that has remained the same is the Fed is allowing the money supply to continue to grow at a double-digit rate. The Dollar is being devalued before our eyes, yet we hear an almost endless line of commentary about our ‘strong Dollar’ policy.

In other news, oil continued to exhibit weakness which has fueled world equity markets to pare 2008′s losses slightly. Consumers may benefit from lower gasoline prices for a while during this correction, but don’t count on too much. Lower prices will increase demand as people, eager to return to life as usual ,take to the roads for late summer trips. Regardless of what happens in America, Asia continues to grow. Absent a significant decrease in growth in the Orient, demand will continue to exceed supply.  Another possible nasty side effect is that lower prices might discourage further investment, just at the time we need it most.

Financials-led rally running out of steam?

Published on: 07/21/2008
Comments: 3 Comments

More is not always a good thing. The law of marginal utility played out in an odd way on Wall Street as the 4th day of bank earnings that weren’t as bad as expected failed to put any punch into the markets. We’ve seen diminishing returns ever since reports began last week. Huge losses are bad, no matter how you look at it, and the logic that things could have been worse only goes so far.

In the meantime, the energy markets mounted the first serious attempt at a rally today with oil leading the way, up a modest $2.16/bbl at $131 and change. Natural gas was flat as it searches for a bottom to the recent correction.  Drivers for today’s action were Iran and a potential for hurricane formation in the Gulf of Mexico.

In other markets, US Treasuries were essentially flat, as was the US Dollar as traders appear to be waiting for the other shoe to drop. Questions that remain unanswered as of today include:

1) How much money will be required to bail out Fannie/Freddie? Secy Paulson wouldn’t say, opting to ask for a blank check. His new book “How to inspire confidence” is due out any day now.

2) Where will aforementioned money come from?  This has huge implications for TIC, interest rates, and the Dollar moving forward. Secy Paulson had no specific comments when asked about this minor detail.

All in all, nothing has changed; listen to our Internet radio show from last night where we discussed this in greater detail. A link to the show is below:

Get it Here

Also, we have redesigned our charts page at the My Two Cents website and now feature 24hgold.com Flash charts for energy, precious metals and currencies – check them out today!

A quiet ending to a wild week

Published on: 07/19/2008
Comments: 4 Comments

For a wild week, Friday certainly ended with a whimper. US equity markets were flat until the very end of the session when they steered North. Oil was up most of the day before succumbing to late session selling. The US Dollar was essentially flat and bonds drifted down a few ticks.

The media trumpeted today’s failures as successes. A $9 Billion loss is good if we say we were expecting a $10 Billion one. Like August 2007 and March of this year, the media is unabashedly calling the bottom of the banking mess. Stocks will be higher etc etc. I beg to differ simply because nothing has changed. Think about it. The government pledged your children’s future to back Fannie and Freddie and the SEC decided to finally enforce one of its rules. That’s it. Fundamentally, nothing has changed. The bad debts are still there. Trillions of dollars of specific performance contracts (OTC derivatives) are still in place. The balance sheets of entities from the average household to Uncle Sam are in a shambles. The economy is still sinking. In other words, the fuel that has powered this fire so far is still there.

Nothing has changed.

Complacency rules on banking crisis

Published on: 07/14/2008
Comments: 1 Comment

This is no longer just a credit crisis. This is now a full-blown financial crisis with the second largest banking failure in US history occurring over the weekend. There is a good deal of concern from regulators and market watchers alike about a cascade of banking failures. Yet, listening to many stories on television and other media outlets, consumer are being told not to worry. Keep spending; your money is safe. Is it though?

I would say to inquiring minds that the actual dollars are safe. They can be created from nothing at almost no cost. Thanks to the advent of electronic banking, they can be created by a few keystrokes on a computer terminal. What isn’t safe though is the value of those Dollars. In fact, the value of your Dollars was under attack well before the first adjustable rate mortgage was even written. Remember that every bailout and bank rescue just necessitates the creation of more Dollars; without corresponding economic growth. This is a recipe for inflation. The sins of 2006 are just now being felt by consumers. What about when we get to 2007 and 2008? If you intend to protect your wealth, you’d better stay tuned, read the commentaries on our site that discussed preservation of wealth and ACT. Some of these strategies were published two years ago and you can see the results of the strategies so far. It is not too late.

Crude off to the races

Once again, main stream commentators have been burned by calling a premature end to the commodity (particularly oil) bull market. Crude bounced off of the trendline we have repeatedly pointed to in our premium newsletter and is now heading upward. Fueling this rise to some degree has been program trading as it is nearly certain that other technical analysts have identified the same trendline we have. Another siginficant factor has been increasing tensions over Iran and turmoil in Nigeria.

In FOREX markets, the Dollar is down against the Euro as the pair is very close to breaking $1.60; a critical resistance level. The Japanese Yen is attempting a breakout as well at 105 and is right at the 50-day moving average.

Equity markets around the globe are in a rout today as selling pressures have emerged due to the continued troubles at Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac, slow economic growth, and runaway import prices. This last item gets almost no attention even though it is a fairly accurate indicator in terms of consumer health since so much of what we buy is imported. We discussed recent trends in import prices in our 5/16/2008 issue of My Two Cents which may be read here:

Do you believe in Fairytales?

The technical rally that we have been looking for has been a no-show to this point with the major US indexes continuing to probe newer lows. In fact, as I write, the DJIA is threatening to break below 11,000, currently at 11,024.16.

Oil Correction and weakness across the board

Last week I commented about the fact that the Canadian Energy Royalty Trusts were almost inexplicably dropping in concert. We attributed much of this phenomenon to the fact that profitable investments were being sold to cover losses elsewhere. With a correction in commodities now underway after this past weekend’s G8 meeting, it now appears that at least some of the action was in anticipation of  the thesis that an effort to prop the Dollar and talk down oil prices was going to intensify.

My position? Talk is cheap. Action counts. Another verbal campaign will do absolutely nothing to fix any of the problems that have caused the high oil prices and disintegrating value of the Dollar. We have seen the selling reach fever pitch in the highest quality energy trusts pushing yields to incredible levels. I believe this is a unique opportunity and as such will analyze a number of the energy Trusts in this month’s Centsible Investor which will be out by July 15th. For more information, please visit:

http://www.suttonfinance.net/newsletter.php

Divergence continues

Published on: 07/03/2008
Comments: 3 Comments

The divergence between energy prices and the underlying stocks continued today as energy issues, particularly the Canadian energy trusts were routed. After review of the short positions, press releases and fundamentals on a number of the issues we watch, we conclude that the price action is likely indicative of selling to cover the losses of other positions as opposed to a fundamental shift. 

In other news, the Dollar saw a counterintuitive rally as the ECB raised interest rates. Hmmm, ok. This reeks of currency intervention on a day when many traders in the US got an early start to the holiday weekend. The press sold this as a Dollar rally based on the fact that ECB President Trichet gave ‘no bias’ on further rate moves in the Eurozone. Again, the reality is that today the Euro-Dollar spread grew by 25 basis points in favor of the Euro. Rates here are going nowhere soon. Ben Bernanke would rather swim the English Channel than raise rates right now.

In other news, Andy Sutton’s recent interview with Contrary Investor’s Cafe is available - Listen Here

I extend best wishes to all for a somber reflection on our many blessings this Fourth of July.

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