Thanks to Paul Kedrosky at Infectious Greed for putting this together from the DTCC Report.
05 November 2008
04 November 2008
Never Fear, BIS is Here...
The Irish gnome checks in from Heidi-land:
…and these are the guys supposedly supervising the whole Global Casino!
Monetary and financial stability implications of capital flows in Latin America and the Caribbean
BIS Papers No 43
November 2008
Central Bank participants at the BIS 2008 Open Economies Meeting in Punta del Este, Uruguay, discussed trends in capital flows since 2003 and their monetary and financial stability implications.
Capital flows appear to be more benign today than in the past, partly because of a greater share of foreign direct investment and reduced reliance on foreign financing that has contributed to improvements in international investment positions (IIPs).
Participants held the view that the economies in the region had become more resilient. For instance, although currency and maturity mismatches are still a concern in some countries, they appear to be less relevant today than in the past.
The recent shift in the global financial environment and its regional implications were also discussed. Notwithstanding continuing concerns about risks, the impact of the financial turmoil at the time of the meeting was still limited. Indeed, there was more concern with the risks of a global slowdown than with direct financial contagion.
What would it take to shake these bureaucrats up? A direct meteor impact on their refreshments table? Or a downgrade to economy class?
How Important Is the Yen Carry Trade?
Fairly significant, at least for US equity markets.
We show the relationship of the SP 500 in our Yen chart every night.This does not imply cause and effect per se. As equities decline, the trade goes off, and as equities rally the trade is on.
But we like this format from our friends at The ContraryInvestor.com
who are true masters of the pictorial display.
Is this use of international currency exchange rates arbitrage the types of thing that one had in mind when discussing competitive advantage and global trade?
Did Michael Porter fail to consider the sheer amount of gambling that can overtake markets?
Are the currency market relationships reflecting international trade balances, soundness of national economics, and relative returns based on ... Forex Roulette?
As you may recall in the short term markets given over to speculation may have little or no relationship to fundamentals, which assert themselves in the long term trends.
In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run it is a weighing machine.This is how equity markets can shake themselves apart. We had always looked to the bond and currency markets as better and more stable indicators of values. Certainly with large short term moves, but always showing more sense when the equity market punters were frothing.
Those trying to conduct productive business with 'real things' in this environment must feel like they are trying to play a game of chess on a roller coaster.
We appear to be in times of general speculation, with wide reversions to the means creating resonances that might shake the world. These are the types of markets that give rise to new powers and great fortunes, test the fabric of relationships, and bring down old institutions.
Is the tail wagging the dog? Again? It appears to be.
03 November 2008
The Next Bubble: Treasury Borrowing for Quarter to be $408 Billion More Than Expected
A tsunami of reserve currency debt issuance, coming soon to an economy near you.
MarketWatch
Treasury expects to borrow record $550 billion
By Rex Nutting
3:00 p.m. EST Nov. 3, 2008
WASHINGTON -- The U.S. government is expected to borrow a record $550 billion in the current quarter, including $260 billion in special funding for the Federal Reserve's extraordinary liquidity programs, the Treasury Department said Monday.
The borrowing estimate is $408 billion more than estimated three months ago. For the first three months of 2009, the government is expected to borrow $368 billion, the government said.
In the three months ending September, the government borrowed $530 billion. The Treasury will announce on Wednesday the sizes and terms of its quarterly refunding auction.
AP
$900 billion in gov't borrowing seen through March
Goverment, raising cash for rescue, projects borrowing of more than $900 billion through March
November 03, 2008: 6:23 PM EST
NEW YORK (Associated Press) - The government, raising cash to pay for the array of financial rescue packages, said Monday it plans to borrow $550 billion in the last three months of this year --- and that's just a down payment.
Treasury Department officials also projected the government would need to borrow $368 billion more in the first three months of 2009, meaning the next president will confront an ocean of red ink.
The nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Budget estimates all the government economic and rescue initiatives, starting with the $168 billion in stimulus checks issued earlier this year, total even more -- an eye-popping $2.6 trillion.
One day before voters set out to elect the 44th president, new economic reports brought more bad news...
In addition to the borrowing numbers, Treasury released estimates by major Wall Street bond firms projecting that total borrowing for this budget year, which began Oct. 1, will total $1.4 trillion, nearly double the previous record.
Major Wall Street firms were equally pessimistic about the size of the federal deficit this year. They projected it will hit $988 billion for the current budget year, more than twice the record. In July, the administration projected a deficit for this year of $482 billion, but that was before the financial crisis erupted in September.
Supporters of the government rescue packages argue that the ultimate cost to taxpayers should end up being a lot smaller, partly because the Federal Reserve is extending loans to banks that should be paid back.
And in the case of the $700 billion rescue package, the government is buying assets - either bank stock or distressed mortgage-backed assets _ that it hopes will rebound in value once the crisis has passed.
But the government still needs to borrow massive amounts to buy the assets, an effort that has driven up borrowing costs to levels never before contemplated....