24 June 2009
A Bank Holiday on Deck?
We've been hearing the same rumours about embassies buying foreign currencies for their own use as cited here, but have not been able to obtain enough confidence to comment on it before this public disclosure in a major news source.
Harry Schulz apparently thinks a bank holiday is in the offing.
We think that if something decisive like this happens it is more likely related to a de facto devaluation of the dollar, a market break, that would be very brief. The Banks would close in order to allow the markets to stabilize. The occasion is therefore likely to be a major failure of a household name in banking, or perhaps even the failure of the State of California. California is the size of a large national economy.
We struggle with the notion of a dollar devaluation. Against what? A continued weakness seems to be in the cards, with some major event precipitating a break in market confidence.
It is obvious that there is a campaign to undermine Ben Bernanke as the Fed Chairman, coming out of the Obama Administration. Bernanke is not willing to monetize debt as aggressively as Geithner and Summers would prefer.
A 'big event' appears to be more a long shot that a bet, but we'll keep an eye on it. It does explain some of the more obnoxious moves by insiders to grant themselves huge bonuses and sell their personal stock holdings now.
A number of people have asked us to comment on this, in addition to the Japanese bond smuggling story out of Switzerland which we suspected was just related to a private fraud of some sort.
A gradual and orderly devaluation of the Dollar is most probable but some exogenous event could trigger a loss of confidence and a slide which could provoke a bank holiday. A decline of 20 to 25% in the dollar index from here is what technical analysis seems to indicate, but the Dollar Index is hopelessly out of touch with the modern realities of global currency exchange.
We have taken some steps in our personal life to guard against this, but think it is unlikely given what we know today.
MarketWatch
Latest Schultz Shock: a 'bank holiday'
by Peter Brimelow
Jun 24, 2009, 1:35 a.m. EST
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The top-performing letter that predicted the Crash of 2008 now predicts a confiscatory Franklin D. Roosevelt-style "bank holiday." But it's surprisingly sanguine about stocks -- in the (very) short term...
In its current issue, HSL reports rumors that "Some U.S. embassies worldwide are being advised to purchase massive amounts of local currencies; enough to last them a year. Some embassies are being sent enormous amounts of U.S. cash to purchase currencies from those governments, quietly. But not pound sterling. Inside the State Dept., there is a sense of sadness and foreboding that 'something' is about to happen ... within 180 days, but could be 120-150 days."
Yes, yes, it's paranoid. But paranoids have enemies -- and the Crash of 2008 really did happen.
HSL's suspicion: "Another FDR-style 'bank holiday' of indefinite length, perhaps soon, to let the insiders sort out the bank mess, which (despite their rosy propaganda campaign) is getting more out of their control every day. Insiders want to impose new bank rules. Widespread nationalization could result, already underway. It could also lead to a formal U.S. dollar devaluation, as FDR did by revaluing gold (and then confiscating it)."
HSL is still sticking with its 20-year "V" formation forecast, but emphasizes that within the current 10-year downtrend phase there will be rallies that will "last 1-2 years." It attributes its current success to "successfully trading almost daily, especially in commodity stocks (coal/potash/energy/ fertilizer/gold). Take profits constantly and rebuy on mini pullbacks. Prefer non-U.S. dollar companies; many such companies are listed in U.S. & Canada or Australia."
HSL says: "The world is staggering today between stagflation and net deflation right now; it varies widely around globe. Net deflation is a maybe 35% risk, due to toxics and/or deepening depression. Bit more likely, we'll slowly creep up to a dangerous 4.5% inflation on average, medium-term. But the wild card is the currency risk, which has a 50% (?) chance of boiling over and causing literally overnight (i.e. 24 hours) mega inflation in the asset markets."
Nevertheless, in the very short term, HSL's charting leads it to say: "we MAY not get a new bear market decline that many bears are predicting. Likewise, DJIA & S&P500 may build a Head-and Shoulders right shoulder."
HSL's currently recommended allocation:
• 35%-45% Government notes, bills and bonds. (Not U.S.)
• 8%-10% Stocks (non-golds).
• 10%-30% Commodities, via futures, commodity stocks and/or physical assets.
• 35%-45% Gold stocks and bullion.
• 0-5% Bear stock protection via inverse ETFs like ProShares UltraShort QQQ ; ProShares UltraShort Dow30 ("Use to trade/hedge market downturns only.")
The Erosion of the Dollar and the Rise of the East
The outcome of the push for globalization is a severe decline in the median standard of living in the US and an erosion of those individual liberties and freedoms which has made the US somewhat unique on the vast historical sweep of world history.
Few understand this. One cannot be completely sovereign when the push for 'competitiveness' is used to consistently erode the commitment to individual freedom.
David Rockefeller, and Sam Walton, and Bill Gates, looked at the social and economic structure of the People's Republic of China and saw the new American paradigm. Not in the evolution of China to democracy and freedom, but in the subjugation of the United States to huddled masses docilely wearing the yoke of debt subservience to the ruling elite.
Too much speculation in this? The pattern of behaviour of those who promote this canard of globalism is too obvious to ignore.
The banks must be restrained and balance must be restored before a sustained economic recovery can be achieved.
The Korea Herald
'Dollar faces challenge as reserve currency'
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
A leading economist said in Seoul yesterday that the U.S. dollar's supremacy as the world's reserve currency is facing profound challenges as the balance of economic and financial power shifts East amid the current economic crisis.
"There is a slow-burning fuse underneath the dollar," Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered Bank, said in the World Economic Forum.
Underscoring the strengthening role of Asia, Lyons said that the depth of the global downturn drove key emerging economies, such as China and Russia, to cite the possibility of a new global reserve currency.
The forum drew a group of leading figures from business, government and academic circles to discuss Asia's role in helping to overcome the current crisis and shaping a future paradigm for the global system.
"This is not just an economic crisis but also a social crisis," Rajat Nag, managing director-general of the Asian Development Bank in Manila, told participants of the convention, referring to the worsened social conditions stemming from a rise in unemployment. "Asia has to start on a different paradigm," the executive stressed.
He noted that the Asian economy, which enjoyed 9.5 percent growth in 2007, saw the rate fall to 6.3 percent in 2008, while this year it has spiraled further to 3.4 percent. Citing projections of 6 percent growth in 2010 for Asia, excluding Japan, Nag underlined the challenging times ahead.
About 400 of Asia's leading decision-makers from over 35 countries representing various public and private sectors from over 35 countries have gathered for this regional meeting themed "Implications of the Global Economic Crisis for East Asia."
The WEF said the event is designed to facilitate steps toward greater international and regional cooperation. They hope the discussions would inspire a clear direction for building a common agenda for reviving the global economy through new models of growth, technology and corporate practice.
According to the WEF, Asia's share of global GDP and its growing stake in international institutions point to the region's importance in restoring economic growth.
Reflecting the region's importance in rebalancing the international economic dynamics, participants stressed the greater leadership role of Asia's G20 members, as the United States focuses on strengthening trans-Pacific alliances.
Noting that the unprecedented economic crisis offers invaluable lessons, Peter Sands, chairman of the WEF on East Asia and group CEO of Standard Chartered Bank in the United Kingdom, cited the "huge need for coordination in regulation."
"I think it's very important for Asian countries to play a strong role in financial regulation architecture," Sands said, however, noting that proposals for global financial regulations still looked far-fetched.
The executive cited difficulties in striking a balance in tempering excesses of the market and continuing to use markets as a price-setting mechanism. But he also cautioned against too much regulation, stressing that more regulations was not necessary better.
23 June 2009
A Postscript on the Question of Inflation and Deflation
First, thanks to the many readers who mailed in a link to the book by Adam Fergusson at the Mises Institute. It is a good read, and free is much more attractive a price than $1,000 which is the price for a hard copy in good condition on Amazon. I purchased my own copy some years ago at a bookstall in Brighton. The online version is available here.
As to the discussion on inflation and deflation, I feel the need to make it clear that that inflation / deflation is a "policy decision" in a fiat currency regime with nothing preordained. In other words, either outcome is possible within a wide range of gradation. Most outcomes in the real world follow a similar pattern, not black and white but many shades of gray.
But not all things are equally possible. "Life is a school of probability."
If the Fed came out tomorrow and raised short term rates to 22% we would see a stronger dollar and the beginnings of a monetary deflation.
This arbitrariness of a fiat currency is intellectually difficult for most people because their domestic money has a natural patina of 'confidence' and objective value to it.
It is an assumption, one of those shorthand beliefs that help us through day to day life without having to intellectualize and analyze every aspect of every decision. It comes from using that currency as a store of wealth and medium of exchange, almost every day of our life (presumably even an American can take a day off shopping occasionally) and assuming that it will hold its value in the short term.
So we tend to invent 'rules' for the creation of money that preclude 'arbitrariness' and help us maintain our assumption set against 'black swan' thinking. When an assumption begins to conflict with the underlying reality it can become a 'prejudice.'
It is this very arbitrariness that is the goal of the central bank and statists whose preference is aggressive financial engineering. The limitation on the Treasury/Fed in a fiat regime is ultimately the value of the dollar and the sovereign debt. While people accept it, they can print it. This is a soft limitation with much more latitude than a hard external standard.
Having added the important caveat of possibility, given that the US is an enormous net debtor, it would be suicidal for the monetary authority to choose deflation as the Japanese did for their own particular reasons. We may experience a brief period of deflation as did the US in the early 1930's in which the money supply actually contracts, but this is much less likely now because the Fed has no external standards with which to contend.
There is a technically possible, rather conspiratorial line of thought that suggests that the wealthy elite who control the central government would opt for deflation in order to enhance their personal cash assets, driving the rest of the US into a form of debt serfdom. The probable response from the public would be in the tradition of the storming of the Bastille or the Winter Palace.
Almost all money issuing entities will choose inflation if they have the option. Sometimes they lose control of the process, the confidence game, and fall into a more serious and pernicious inflation and even hyperinflation. But this is not 'the norm.'
Our own Fed is rather arrogant these days, fully confident they know how to stop inflation given the Volcker experience. This may cause them to fall into a serious policy error on the inflationary side. In many ways our fate is no longer in their hands, but in those of our creditors, such as the Chinese and the Saudis.
Paul Volcker gave the odds of inflation in the current crisis as 99% for, allowing only for a serious policy blunder against it.
I wanted to highlight the Weimar experience to debunk the 'output gap' and the 'bank lending' restraints on the inflationary outcome. Much of what we hear on the financial channels smacks of propaganda, the 'confidence game.'
Yes the Fed faces the headwinds of slack demand and a very low velocity of money, which the Austrians will assert doesn't DO anything, but is rather of the nature of a economic speedometer. Speedometers don't' DO anything either, but their output is certain to be of some interest to the driver and their passengers.
This is less of an issue than one might think, keeping in mind that monetary inflation is the creation of money supply in EXCESS OF DEMAND. As the velocity decreases, so does demand for money, similarly the expansion of credit. So any monetization of existing debt, or government obligations by the Fed, becomes more potent so to speak.
As for the need to create more debt, let us just say that the Fed and Treasury would have yeoman's work to monetize the debt obligations the US already has, which recent estimates put at north of 40 trillions. Even with inflation at their backs, the government will be pressing the default button, selectively but surely, in the coming years.
The most probable outcome is stagflation, perhaps quite serious IF the economy and financial system is not reformed. This could have the vestiges of a monetary deflation were we not a net importer and net debtor.
This is an important distinction between the US experience and that of Japan whose industrial policy is well known to be in the bureaucratic clutches of MITI and the various kereitsu.
Japan sought to stimulate the economy and avoid deflation while aggressively exporting the fruits of their domestic productivity and consumption to support their long standing industrial policy. One cannot have their natto and eat it too. These were conflicting objectives and resulted in a decades long stagnation. This was a policy blunder of the first order.
So, deflation is possible, but not probable. If people understand that, I will feel that I have done a good job in raising the level of understanding about monetary economics.
But isn't all this debate and too often name-calling amongst the bloggers a distraction from the real problem facing the average person, in the same sense as Paris Hilton, Survivor, big time wrestling, the McLaughlin Group and American Idol?
The banks must be restrained, and the economy brought back into balance, before there can be any sustained recovery.

