skip to main |
skip to sidebar
The G7 is meeting tonight to discuss potential market operations in the event that the situation in Japan and the Middle East worsen and the financial system begins to falter.
The strong yen does not create all that much of a problem yet for Japan, and it does have the benefit of easing their needs to purchase imported energy and supplies. The bigger problem might be for global financial institutions who are not properly hedged to the yen at these previously unthinkable highs.
I do think that more intervention in the markets in terms of buying support is likely, and the central bankers will play their usual games along with the primary banks' trading desks.
The situation in Japan with regard to the reactors is not yet resolved, and there are still follow on earthquakes which complicates the situation. There remains the possible for wider spread damage and loss of life.
Once that situation is resolved, the disruption to their infrastructure and supply chains will be their biggest challenges. Do not underestimate the severe damage that has been done to their electrical infrastructure generating capacity.
So, let's see what happens. The US indices stopped almost dead on their key support levels and tomorrow is options expiration. The capping in gold and silver has been almost continuous. It is interesting to see the pair trade of long bullion and short stocks working again. This tells us something of the nature of the market.
Stock futures are moving sharply lower after hours based on reports such as this: US Calls Radiation 'Extremely High' and Urges Deeper Caution.
The emphasis was clearly on the risk in Japan today. The Middle East situation continues to deteriorate.
The PPI and import prices are rising at a rate that suggests inflation, and continuing sluggish growth in GDP suggest stagflation is developing.
Stagflation, when not caused by an exogenous event such as occurred in the 1970s with the oil embargo, is the result of an obvious policy error in fiscal, public, and monetary decisions.
It takes an unusual set of circumstances to create stagflation. Before the 1970's economists used to say it was not possible.
Therefore it is a tribute to Obama's Wilsonian dithering, Bernanke's general spinelessness, and the Congress' rapacious venality that they will preside over stagflation's resurgence, without the scapegoat of an oil embargo to blame. They are presiding over the wholesale looting of a generation, and abetting the tranfer of that money and the future prosperity of the public to a wealthy few, their real constituency, in the manner of an oligarchy or crony capitalism.
"It was curious to think that the sky was the same for everybody, in Eurasia or Eastasia as well as here. And the people under the sky were also very much the same--everywhere, all over the world, hundreds or thousands of millions of people just like this, people ignorant of one another's existence, held apart by walls of hatred and lies, and yet almost exactly the same--people who had never learned to think but were storing up in their hearts and bellies and muscles the power that would one day overturn the world."
George Orwell