Showing posts with label competitive devaluation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label competitive devaluation. Show all posts

04 April 2013

Bank of Japan to Pursue Qualitative and Quantitative Easing - Double Their Monetary Base


Along with most monetary enthusiasts I was anticipating a significant announcement from the BOJ two day policy meeting this week, and this seems to be it.  They are going with an aggressive set of both qualitative and quantitative easing with the express intention of weakening the Yen and creating monetary inflation.

Japan will be firing up their industrial policy using the weaker yen to create more foreign demand for their goods to make up for the slack domestic demand based on their declining demographics.

As you may recall, Japan has been unable to stimulate their economy despite spending rather significant sums on infrastructure and other stimulus projects.  The lack of reform in their fairly well entrenched and pervasive crony capitalist keiretsu structure, which one might say is about a half step removed from outright feudalism, has resisted all their best attempts at livening things up.

And the declining demographics of an island nation that discourages immigration is certainly no help either.  But I would not discount the tax that corruption and inefficiency plays in dampening GDP growth, post bubble.  Corruption creates inefficiency, fraud, and malinvestment, always and everywhere.  Just ask China.

This major policy shift to inflation may help to explain the relentless hammering of the precious metals, which are the only rival currencies that cannot be doubled by the stroke of a bureaucrat's keyboard.

Look for more competitive devaluations from other countries, both explicit and implicit.  This is the more conventional aspect of the currency war, and is a perennial favorite of the political class.

The more secular aspect is the seismic shift of the US dollar reserve currency regime which has been in place since the end of WW II.  That bit of monetary exotica will make this currency war one to remember.

DailyFX
Yen Weakens as BoJ Introduces Qualitative and Quantitative Easing
By Christopher Almeida
04 April 2013 05:10 GMT

THE TAKEAWAY: The Yen weakened as the Bank of Japan introduced Qualitative and Quantitative Monetary Easing including an increase of JGB purchases.

At the end of the two day meeting, the Bank of Japan announced that they were introducing a ‘Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing’ program with an aim to achieve the price stability target of 2 per cent in two years. The Bank announced that it will now use ‘monetary base control’ in pursuing quantitative monetary easing which involves carrying out market operations that will expand the monetary base by 60-70 trillion Yen per year.

The Bank will also increase Japanese Government Bond purchases as well as increasing the average remaining maturity of about 3 years to 7 years. As a result of these, the Japanese Central Bank has decided to terminate the Asset Purchase Program with the outstanding purchases being absorbed into the JGB program. 

In their statement, the policy makers stated that Japan’s economy was showing signs of a pickup with overseas economies seen to be growing at moderate paces. Despite the year on year rate of change of the CPI for Japan being negative recently, the Bank sees that indicators are suggesting a rise in inflation expectations...

Rest of the article with Yen Chart here.
 
Financial Times
Bank of Japan to double monetary base
By Ben McLannahan in Japan
April 4, 2013 6:05 am

Haruhiko Kuroda has announced his arrival as governor of the Bank of Japan by introducing a “new phase of monetary easing”, doubling Japan’s monetary base through aggressive purchases of long-term government bonds and risk assets.

Read the entire article here.

09 January 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - The ¥100 Trillion Pair of Chopsticks


Intraday commentary on The Platinum Coin Debate here.

Here is a decent summary of the Platinum Coin chronicles from The Atlantic.


I think that the fact that this nonsense is being discussed by Very Serious People demonstrates how far off the cliff of reason our financial and political systems have already gone. Let's hope China et al. are willing to view America's antics with the same jolly forbearance.

I got a kick out of this late breaking article over at ZH, and about the ¥100 Trillion Pair of Chopsticks.

It is not enough to be willing to print money, and give it to your wealthy friends for their personal enjoyment. That looks like foreign aid being given to some hard luck third world country where the money flows primarily to their warlords, and little reaches the people. You have to find the guts and the honesty to take on the hard job of reforming the corruption, imbalanced economic structures, and cronyism between the oligarchs and the government that got to where you are in the first place. And that is where the credibility trap comes in.

What concerns me a bit is not that so many otherwise intelligent people do not understand the nature of money, because so few really do. What really concerns me is that those that do understand what is going on seem to be toying with this whacko monetization scheme, which shows a certain desperation and lack of a Plan B that should make those who are holding their paper very uncomfortable.

If anything could bring a couple million people with torches and pitchforks to Washington in protest, the Platinum Coin pretension might just do the trick.

Editorial comment on the state of modern economics in the video clip below.

The twilight of ancien régimes and dying empires may embrace extravagant fashions in thought and produce eccentric, démodé behaviour, but sometimes they are set to catchy tunes.

As for the rest of the world:
“The burning question that I always have, I’m amazed at their ongoing willingness to continue to accumulate, and hold, such large amounts of US denominated bonds. It’s been my view that they are basically playing a Ponzi scheme.

I’ve had that confirmed when I’ve had long discussions with different sovereign wealth funds and different government agencies around the world. They’ve been willing to play this game, but more and more now, as their domestic economies have grown and the US portion of their exports becomes smaller, and with the amount of T-Bills that they have (already) accumulated, I believe they’ve reached the boiling point where they are really going to be unwilling to grow their reserves (of US Treasuries).

Just the process of not growing their reserves is going to be very disruptive. If they are not willing to accumulate more T-Bills, this is going to force the trade deficit closed. I think that is really going to rock the financial world at some point in the near future..."

Sprott President Kevin Bambrough in today's KWN Interview





05 July 2012

Synchronized Easy Money: Central Banks Cutting Key Rates - Denmark Goes Negative



"Decency, security and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example.

Crime is contagious. If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy."

Louis D. Brandeis, US Supreme Court Justice, Olmstead v. United States, 1928

Gentleman, start your presses, and rig the markets to both enhance the effect in some and to hide it in others.  And this produces a mindset towards manipulation in all the key market participants.

Bob Diamond is a sociopathic child of a monied culture of privilege and deceit, a collegiality of crime.

They may try to bury the stench of corruption in the banking system by further diluting the value of money, but this will not restore vitality to the real economy.  It will only continue the malicious trends and increase the misery of the people.  And this energizes the feedback loop of repression.

Eventually the monied interests must accept reform, but because of the credibility trap this will be something that is more likely forced upon them when they go too far.

US Non-Farm Payrolls Report for June on Friday. It may appear a little better than expected, or it may not.

The monthly figures, as are several key market indicators and prices, all a part of the show, masking the real trends at times like these. This was shown clearly in the manipulation of LIBOR by the Bank of England, in addition to the extracurricular privateering of the banks for their own accounts.

USAToday
Central banks worldwide cut key interest rates
By David McHugh, Associated Press
5 July 2012

FRANKFURT, Germany – The European Central Bank has cut its key interest rate by a quarter percentage point to a record low of 0.75% to boost a eurozone economy weighed down by the continent's crisis over too much government debt.

The move followed a rate cut by China's central bank and new stimulus measures by the Bank of England as global financial authorities seek to shore up a slowing global economy.

Stock markets rose briefly on the news, mainly because China's rate cut was unexpected. But the gains did not last long as investors seemed worried about the extent of the slowdown in the global economy. Germany's DAX was up 0.4% while the Dow futures were flat...


 

Reuters
Denmark cuts rates, one to negative for first time
By John Acher and Ole Mikkelsen
5 July 2012

* Central bank cuts main policy rate by 25 bps to 0.20 pct
* Cuts CD rate by 25 bps to negative 0.20 pct
* Keeps current account rate unchanged at 0.0 pct
* Lifts current account limits

COPENHAGEN, July 5 (Reuters) - Denmark's central bank cut interest rates by a quarter point on Thursday, shadowing the European Central Bank's action earlier in the day, in a historic move that put one of its secondary rates below zero for the first time.

"The interest rate reduction is a consequence of the reduction by the European Central Bank of its monetary policy rates by 0.25 percentage point," the Nationalbank said in a statement.  (a spiral of competitive devaluations of fiat currency - Jesse)

The Nationalbank cut its lending rate to 0.20 percent from 0.45 percent and lowered its certificates of deposit (CD) rate to negative 0.20 percent from 0.05 percent to match the ECB's move and to curb strength in the Danish currency... 

15 April 2011

A Run On the Central Bank of Belarus as Devaluation Fear Forces Halt to All Gold Sales


"Destroyers seize gold and leave to its owners a counterfeit pile of paper. This kills all objective standards and delivers men into the arbitrary power of an arbitrary setter of values. Gold was an objective value, an equivalent of wealth produced. Paper is a mortgage on wealth that does not exist, backed by a gun aimed at those who are expected to produce it. Paper is a check drawn by legal looters upon an account which is not theirs: upon the virtue of the victims. Watch for the day when it bounces, marked, ‘Account overdrawn.’

Ayn Rand

I was a little surprised the people fled to gold and tried to drain the central bank, desperately trying to get out of their fiat currency ahead of a suspected devaluation.

This is how it happens, on a smaller scale.

I was in Moscow in the 1990's when they were starting to flee the Russian rouble for gold, diamonds, US dollars, and vodka. It is hard to imagine what it feels like to watch your life savings simply and relentlessly evaporate away. It was a 'quiet panic' that left a very deep impression on me.

Apparently the US dollar is no longer so much a safe haven in that part of the world. At least that is what I hear.

Belarus is small. When a bigger ship starts to founder, the lifeboats may be very crowded.

It cannot happen.  The authorities will not allow it.  This is what they always say.

In some ways it is already happening.

The Feds are already rationing and throttling gold and silver sales by throwing paper and propaganda at the demand.

I wonder how much of it has been secretly siphoned away by insiders already. The time to buy income producing fixed assets is when there is 'blood flowing in the streets,' but the time to get safe and independently liquid is before that blood starts to flow.

Big things are happening, little brother.

Reuters
Belarus Central Bank Halts Sales of Gold for Roubles

MINSK, April 15 (Reuters) - Belarus' central bank has stopped selling gold to local retail customers for Belarussian roubles it said on Friday, after demand for precious metals soared due to expectations of a currency devaluation.

The bank did not explain its decision.

Belarus is in talks with Russia on a $3 billion bailout package that Minsk hopes will help it avoid a painful devaluation of the rouble and offset the large current account deficit.

Belarussians bought 470 kilograms of gold from the central bank last month, up from 209 kilograms in January and February together, as they sought to protect their savings.

Analysts say that Belarus will have to eventually devalue the rouble by about 20-30 percent even if it receives aid from Moscow. However, the central bank has said it would not make any such moves until late April.

28 September 2010

Is the Gold Rally Strictly a US Dollar Phenomenon?



One sometimes hears that 'gold is only rallying in US dollars.'

One can always point out that since the US dollar is still the world's reserve currency, it affects everything and everyone that hold it in their reserves or their assets on deposit. A good part of the recent crisis in Europe was caused by the severe deterioration in dollar denominated financial assets held on deposit in commercial banks by private customers, who started to demand their money, in dollars. This precipitated a dollar squeeze and a liquidity crisis.

There is clearly a safe haven trade in gold denominated in US dollars.


But the US dollar is not alone, not the only fiat currency in a bit of a crisis. Since one picture is worth a thousand words, here is the price of gold over the last five years in six of the world's major currencies of the developed nations. Granted, the price of gold may be different in select currencies. One has to make their own investment decisions to suit their own particular circumstances.

But there is an obvious message in these charts for those who care to listen.


The twenty year charts are more impressive, because they almost uniformly show the long bear market coming to an end, with a remarkable bull market in gold bullion underway. Something has clearly changed, something obviously has occurred that is the mark of a sea-change in the structure of the major global currencies, starting slowly at first and then gaining momentum with the most recent financial crisis.


Charts Courtesy of Galmarley via my friend Nick at Sharelynx.

13 September 2010

The Marriage of Mercantilism and Corporatism: When Free Trade Is Not 'Free'


"The consequences of this policy are also stark and simple: in effect, China is taxing imports while subsidizing exports, feeding a huge trade surplus. You may see claims that China’s trade surplus has nothing to do with its currency policy; if so, that would be a first in world economic history. An undervalued currency always promotes trade surpluses, and China is no different." Paul Krugman

And he is exactly right. As regular readers know this matter of Chinese mercantilism and its toleration and acceptance by the West has been a key observation and objection here since 2000. Any economist who does not understand that devaluing and then maintaining an artificially low currency peg with a trading partner distorts the nature of that trade should review their knowledge of algebra.

Sophisticated oligarchs do not need to send real tanks against their people. They can accomplish the same objectives using fraud, debt, and corruption. Control the supply of money and care not who makes the laws. But it helps to have the lawmakers and regulators on the payroll.

It was in 1994 during the Clinton Administration that China was permitted to obtain full trading partner "Most Favored Nation" status, while vaguely promising to float their recently devalued currency some day, and address the human rights issues that were endogenous to their non-democratic, totalitarian government.

"From 1981 to 1993 there were six major devaluations in China. Their amounts ranged from 9.6 percent to 44.9 percent, and the official exchange rate went from 2.8 yuan per U.S. dollar to 5.32 yuan per U.S. dollar. On January 1, 1994, China unified the two-tier exchange rates by devaluing the official rate to the prevailing swap rate of 8.7 yuan per U.S. dollar." Sonia Wong, China's Export Growth

This served Mr. Clinton's constituents in Bentonville quite well, and has some interesting implications for the Chinese campaign contributions scandals. It supported the Rubin doctrine of a 'strong dollar' while facilitating the financialization of the US economy and the continuing decline of the middle class wage earners, under pressure to surrender a standard of living achieved at great cost. "How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Currency Collapse." and China's Mercantilism: Selling Them the Rope

Not to limit this, George W. ratified the arrangement when he took office, and so it has gone on for almost fifteen years now, with China 'taxing imports while subsidizing exports' to the disadvantage of its western trading partners.

I expect certain economists who are serving their Chinese clients to make their case to muddy the waters, since this is what they are paid to do. But the silence of the many in this matter was so striking as to be incredible, almost mind boggling. But given the acquiescence of the many in the face of equally absurd theories such as the impossibility of a national housing bubble or pervasive market fraud in naturally efficient markets, we should not be surprised.

Even now someone as knowledgeable as Mr. Krugman can distinguish the inappropriateness of the Chinese unfair trade practice "in current environment" through currency manipulation with prior periods, as if it was all right back then, but somehow is no longer acceptable because of the current economic slump. How can one argue with a straight face that a currency peg that continues for years is not inherently unfair, and a contributing factor to economic imbalances, given the assumption that it imposes a de facto subsidy for exports and penalty for imports?

This is not a trivial distinction but tied to a generational assault on the US middle class. Class Warfare and the Decline of the West.

Perhaps it is a good time to reconsider the principle of the 'neutrality of money' with respect to exchange rates controls and global trade in a purely fiat reserve currency regime as was done with the 'efficient markets hypothesis.' Currency Manipulation and World Trade: A Caution. China is certainly standing western capitalism on its ear and giving it a spin. But this is not without historical precedent, and was predicted by V.I. Lenin himself. I would enjoy this spectacle perhaps if I were observing it from a distance in time.

In a global trade environment tied to external standards such as gold or silver, such egregious imbalances could not grow so large because the metals would impose a certain market discipline requiring a reconciliation and adjustment before monetary excesses became a potentially systemic catastrophe as pointed out so skillfully by Hugo Salinas-Price in Gold Standard: Protector and Generator of Jobs.

The policy errors of the Greenspan and Bernanke Fed, and the outrageously unrealistic if not romantic and utopian theories promulgated by economists about self-correcting markets make me, to borrow a phrase, want to 'bang my head against a wall.'

NYT
China, Japan, America
By Paul Krugman
September 12, 2010

Last week Japan’s minister of finance declared that he and his colleagues wanted a discussion with China about the latter’s purchases of Japanese bonds, to “examine its intention” — diplomat-speak for “Stop it right now.” The news made me want to bang my head against the wall in frustration.

You see, senior American policy figures have repeatedly balked at doing anything about Chinese currency manipulation, at least in part out of fear that the Chinese would stop buying our bonds. Yet in the current environment, Chinese purchases of our bonds don’t help us — they hurt us. The Japanese understand that. Why don’t we?

Some background: If discussion of Chinese currency policy seems confusing, it’s only because many people don’t want to face up to the stark, simple reality — namely, that China is deliberately keeping its currency artificially weak.

The consequences of this policy are also stark and simple: in effect, China is taxing imports while subsidizing exports, feeding a huge trade surplus. You may see claims that China’s trade surplus has nothing to do with its currency policy; if so, that would be a first in world economic history. An undervalued currency always promotes trade surpluses, and China is no different.

And in a depressed world economy, any country running an artificial trade surplus is depriving other nations of much-needed sales and jobs. Again, anyone who asserts otherwise is claiming that China is somehow exempt from the economic logic that has always applied to everyone else.

So what should we be doing? U.S. officials have tried to reason with their Chinese counterparts, arguing that a stronger currency would be in China’s own interest. They’re right about that: an undervalued currency promotes inflation, erodes the real wages of Chinese workers and squanders Chinese resources. But while currency manipulation is bad for China as a whole, it’s good for politically influential Chinese companies — many of them state-owned. And so the currency manipulation goes on.

Time and again, U.S. officials have announced progress on the currency issue; each time, it turns out that they’ve been had. Back in June, Timothy Geithner, the Treasury secretary, praised China’s announcement that it would move to a more flexible exchange rate. Since then, the renminbi has risen a grand total of 1, that’s right, 1 percent against the dollar — with much of the rise taking place in just the past few days, ahead of planned Congressional hearings on the currency issue. And since the dollar has fallen against other major currencies, China’s artificial cost advantage has actually increased.

Clearly, nothing will happen until or unless the United States shows that it’s willing to do what it normally does when another country subsidizes its exports: impose a temporary tariff that offsets the subsidy. So why has such action never been on the table?

One answer, as I’ve already suggested, is fear of what would happen if the Chinese stopped buying American bonds. But this fear is completely misplaced: in a world awash with excess savings, we don’t need China’s money — especially because the Federal Reserve could and should buy up any bonds the Chinese sell.

It’s true that the dollar would fall if China decided to dump some American holdings. But this would actually help the U.S. economy, making our exports more competitive. Ask the Japanese, who want China to stop buying their bonds because those purchases are driving up the yen. (Cui bono, Mr. Krugman, cui bono? - Jesse)

Aside from unjustified financial fears, there’s a more sinister cause of U.S. passivity: business fear of Chinese retaliation.

Consider a related issue: the clearly illegal subsidies China provides to its clean-energy industry. These subsidies should have led to a formal complaint from American businesses; in fact, the only organization willing to file a complaint was the steelworkers union. Why? As The Times reported, “multinational companies and trade associations in the clean energy business, as in many other industries, have been wary of filing trade cases, fearing Chinese officials’ reputation for retaliating against joint ventures in their country and potentially denying market access to any company that takes sides against China.”

Similar intimidation has surely helped discourage action on the currency front. So this is a good time to remember that what’s good for multinational companies is often bad for America, especially its workers.

So here’s the question: Will U.S. policy makers let themselves be spooked by financial phantoms and bullied by business intimidation? Will they continue to do nothing in the face of policies that benefit Chinese special interests at the expense of both Chinese and American workers? Or will they finally, finally act? Stay tuned