MZM is the Fed's broadest measure of liquidity. Although gold is not as 'immediate' as cash due to the need to convert it to currency, nevertheless it is a liquid store of wealth in that there are no time constraints on it such as on Certificates of Deposit or other time constrained instruments.
Stocks are also a liquid store of wealth, but with a larger beta or 'riskier valuation' with respect to their expected growth and earnings. As an aside, some day we hope to see a return to the notion of a risk premium for equities versus debt.
As we have shown before, the correlation between the growth of MZM and the price of gold in dollars is remarkable. There are a few other factors in the regression we are tracking which are not shown here, such as fear-driven volatility as measured by VIX.
Note that in the chart below in the same time period M2, a broad money supply measure, but less liquid than MZM, has shown a sharp spike higher along with its associate, Total Bank Credit.
We think this is a clear indication that we are in a liquidity crunch, but not a deflationary contraction in the the broader money supply.
In other words, funds and individuals are raising 'cash' by selling liquid assets to meet margin calls and support investment assets and short term obligations.
On a cautionary note, the growth in a dollar of Bank Credit is showing less ability to produce a dollar of M2. Again, this is not deflation but the transfer of wealth from one asset class to another, with lags and amongst individuals, and the inefficiency of the ability of an economic system based on wealth transfers and specultation to produce incremental productive savings.
This is not to say that a true deflation is not possible. Quite to the contrary. Deflation is a policy decision, normally caused by an adherence to some non-synchronized external standard, such as gold or the US dollar, ignoring the short term needs of the domestic marketplace.
Does this mean that there is no manipulation in the gold market? No, the price manipulation there is obvious, and we will take the central banks at their word that they wish to discourage gold as an alternative store of liquid wealth, because it is beyond their control and a competitor to their desired fiat regimes. Statists dislike anything that provides competition to their power.
What we do wish to show is that the banks are not fighting the gold trend as much as some might think because of the short term liquidity contraction. When this changes, the move in gold will obtain explosive momentum from which a major rally leg will occur as the banks lose control.
We also believe the same set of conditions applies to Crude Oil based on our current data which we will not include here for the sake of brevity. The price declines in crude oil are not wholly related to a diminished demand or 'speculation' as some would contend. Rather, oil has been serving as a global store of liquid wealth against a declining dollar and increasing dollar inflation. Oil has many of the aspects of 'money' for global trade. Demand and supply for crude oil will prove to be much less elastic than many assume.
We do not hold the same view for all commodities because we have not looked closely at them, but not all have the same "monetary component" as gold and oil.
Interestingly enough, the eurodollar spread (TED) is artificially wide because of the eurodollar assets and liabilities as we have shown before. We wonder what this will do to the euro and its associated currencies in the longer term, since the artificial short squeeze in the dollar is causing some havoc short term with European money supply policy despite the central banks attempts to sterilize the effects.
We expect a sharp rally in gold, oil and the euro once the short term liquidity constraints are overcome with a corresponding sharp decline in the US dollar.
The Fed will likely have to raise interest rates, and perhaps sharply, to counteract this, unless they can rely on foreign central banks once again to 'bail them out.'
15 October 2008
Gold, Oil, MZM, Credit and the Short Term Liquidity Contraction
13 October 2008
A Credit Bubble of Historic Proportions
"What is crooked cannot be made straight, and what is lacking cannot be counted." Ecclesiastes
Hmmm, let's see. How about injecting billions of capital in the banks crippled by reckless speculation and fraudulent lending, and obscenely high pay and bonuses to the people who ran them.
And then we can beg the banks to start making loans to us with our money to get the credit expansion back on the upswing.
That should fix the problem, right?
This is a Ponzi scheme reaching parabolic heights. It has to retrace at least fifty percent, and the US economy must get back into some sort of sustainable structure, period.
The alternative is for the majority of Americans and British to accept debt peonage or "go into service," and most of the world's economies to adopt the dollar and sign their people up for a neo-colonial, centrally-managed political structure.
Welcome to the new Anglo-American Empire, founded not on supremacy of the seas, but of the financial markets.
The most probable outcome is that the looting of the Treasury will continue until the current crew in Washington leaves town, and they dump the problem hard into 2009 which will be the year from hell. Then they will wind up their spin machine about low taxes and trickle down economics and blame it all on the new Administration.
Off Balance Sheet Lending Factors - Cumberland Advisors pdf
Fed Releases a Flood of Dollars Part Deux
Here is the latest version of the Bloomberg story about the Fed and its 'flood of dollars.' It has its own link now here.
Interesting twist, on the Bloomberg News headline page here, the subject title has become "Fed Lets Europe Central Banks Offer Unlimited Dollars, Removes Swap Limits"
Don't mind us, we're just getting a chuckle out of the Bloomberg's editorial changes trying to strike a politically correct description of what the Fed is doing.
We think its the right thing to do by the way, since it will relieve the highly artificial short squeeze in dollar over in Europe because of their regulatory failures.
We will be much more impressed if, after they relieve the short term credit squeeze, they actually do something about it besides setting more useless standards that remain unenforced. The failure of the European Union banking regime is breathtakingly ironic given the hubris they had been proudly wearing as late as three or four weeks ago.
And listen up, cats and kittens, no matter what Paulson and his global crew of merry pranksters do in the short term, the US economy is in an absolute mess. A stronger dollar is going to strangle exports, but continue to strengthen the financial sector. That is not a prescription for change, but rather more of the same malinvestment and destructive wealth transfers with less stability.
Whoever become the President next year will get to start with a $2 Trillion deficit, largely wasted on consumption, profitless war, and golden parachutes for Wall Street.
Fed Releases Flood of Dollars, Market Rates Fall (update 3)
By John Fraher and Simon Kennedy
Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve led an unprecedented push by central banks to flood the financial system with as many dollars as banks want, backing up government efforts to revive confidence and helping to reduce money-market rates.
The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank will offer European banks unlimited dollar funds with maturities of seven, 28 and 84 days at fixed interest rates against ``appropriate collateral,'' the Washington-based Fed said today. The Fed had capped at $380 billion the currency it would swap with the three central banks.
Global economic leaders have redoubled efforts to unfreeze credit markets and avert the worst worldwide recession in thirty years after last week's 20 percent slide in the MSCI World Index. Policy makers from the Group of Seven nations are committed to taking ``all necessary steps'' to stem a market panic, and European and U.S. governments today outlined plans to avoid banks failing.
``Like high waves that have gathered tremendous pace, global policy initiatives are coming to crash on the markets' shores,'' said Alex Patelis, chief international economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in London. ``A turning point could be reached.'' (What is going to crash on our shores are a wave of dollars and Treasuries as the world realizes that there is a penalty in carrying an excess of our currency. But that step is yet to come, when the Treasuries plunge as we have said before. - Jesse)
The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months today fell to 4.75 percent from 4.82 percent, the highest this year. The rate for euros over the same timeframe declined to 5.32 percent from 5.38 percent...
The First Victim in an Economic Crisis is Truth
Yves Smith over at Naked Capitalism first picked up on this story from Bloomberg and blogged it here.
The reason for the short term need for US dollar overseas is explained here.
Bloomberg seems to have subsequently pulled this story and replaced it with an optimistic statement from George W. Bush here.
We do appreciate the little touch of irony but the frontpage of Bloomberg still carries the old headline over this new news story. Shoddy work at the Ministry to say the least.
To the experienced eye, there are other unmistakable efforts this morning to calm the markets with a false enthusiasm and the somewhat heavy handed management of key market signals.
When the going gets weird, the weird become ..... weirder.
Fed Leads Unprecedented Push by Central Banks to Flood Market With Dollars
Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve led an unprecedented push by central banks to flood the financial system with dollars, backing up government efforts to restore confidence and helping to drive down money-market rates.
The ECB, the Bank of England and the Swiss central bank will auction unlimited dollar funds with maturities of seven days, 28 days and 84 days at a fixed interest rate, the Washington-based Fed said today. All of the previous dollar swap arrangements between the Fed and other central banks were capped.
``By providing unlimited dollar funds they are acting on the back of the G-7 plan to ensure the system is fully liquidized,'' said Lena Komileva, an economist at Tullett Prebon Plc in London. ``We're going to see even more liquidity provided and more aggressive rate cuts are coming.''
Leaders of the world economy have redoubled efforts to unfreeze credit markets and avert the worst global recession in thirty years after last week's 20 percent slide in the MSCI World Index. Policy makers from the Group of Seven nations pledged at the weekend to take ``all necessary steps'' to stem a market panic and European governments are today announcing plans to avert a banking collapse across the region.
The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months today fell to 4.75 percent from 4.82 percent, the highest this year. The rate for euros over the same timeframe declined to 5.32 percent from 5.38 percent.....
``Taken together, the latest moves increase the chances that we will begin to see some relaxation of the intense funding stresses,'' Dominic Wilson and other economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. wrote in a note today. ``This is because bank solvency risk should decline as the government offers protection.''
As well as slashing interest rates in concert last week, global central banks are expanding their toolkits to push down money-market rates. The Fed on Oct. 7 said it will create a special fund to buy U.S. commercial paper and the ECB last week said it would offer financial firms unlimited euro funds. The Bank of England is scheduled to revamp its own money-market operations later this week.