09 September 2013

Currency Wars: Salinas-Price On the Changing Tempo and Tenor of the Growth of International Reserves


"The only resource against political disorders that had been known till then was the concentration of power. Solon undertook to effect the same object by the distribution of power. He gave to the common people as much influence as he thought them able to employ, that the State might be exempt from arbitrary government. It is the essence of Democracy, he said, to obey no master but the law. Solon recognised the principle that political forms are not final or inviolable, and must adapt themselves to facts; and he provided so well for the revision of his constitution, without breach of continuity or loss of stability..."

John Dalberg Lord Acton, History of Freedom in Antiquity

My long time friend Hugo Salinas-Price has shared some uniquely interesting observations on the growth of international paper reserves, which have been largely constituted of claims on debt, often pinned to the US dollar because of its international reach. And with all such fertile and insightful thinking it provokes more thought in others.

In this article he observes that the appetite for sovereign Treasury debt, and other forms of private debt such as mortgages and consumer credit, may not be keeping pace with the issuance of these forms of debt.

I think that with respect to price that this is a foregone conclusion in light of the Fed's QE III. The whole point of this exercise is to ensure that the current pricing is not sustainable without a non-market priced subsidy from the Fed, hopefully until some point that the markets reach some sort of self-sustaining equilibrium.

One of my key theses has long been that this equilibrium cannot occur without major systemic reforms.  The factors that created the problem were not incidental, but fundamental to changes that occurred during the 1990's in particular, with deeper roots back to 1980.  There was a decade long effort to overturn the New Deal Reforms that had allowed for the long stability that the financial world largely enjoyed in the post-WW II era.  These reforms were overturned by greed and corruption of power, and so here we are today.  We cannot go forward without returning to more transparent, honest markets that operate with a bias towards justice, and not bowing to right as defined and sanctified by might.

Modern monetary theorists would postulate that none of this is a problem, because the issuance of money based on debt is not necessary in the first place. All the debt can be repurchased through the direct issuance of money by a sovereign at any time. The proposal of the 'trillion dollar platinum coin' illustrates that principle in action.

But while technically true, there are two important facts that impinge on the wonders of such a brave new monetary world, besides the obvious problem of the ability of concentrated power to corrupt such Utopian arrangements, almost from their inception.  I keep asking, 'where is the flywheel' meaning where is the check and balance on the monetary issuance?  Quis custodes custodiet?

The first obstacle is that such money issuance system of almost unrestrained fiat works best where all the market participants are forced to operate according to the centralized rules. They will accept the money at stated value because they simply have no other choice, no other options.  Given Gresham's Law, if you think about this for a while, it becomes very apparent that this is the case. Fiat of this level of discretion must have the absolute force of law, without viable competition or substitute. 

Money is what we say it is, and is worth our stated official price.

I think we have enough historical examples of how well this works in practice. I saw it up close in both Russia and Czechoslovakia before and during the final collapse of the Soviet System.

In the world as it is, there is really no one world currency, issued by a centralized all-powerful entity, that essentially creates money from nothing, distributes it as it pleases, and dictates its value to all.  At least there is no such system yet, although it is certainly the objective of more groups than you might care to imagine.

In the case of a non-self-sufficient economy, there is the inescapable issue of trade and travel with other economies, that are not under the control of the central authority.

So the second great problem is that in the world as we have it today, oil and natural gas and certain essential commodities are significant factors when considering the international currency regime. In quite a literal sense, the US dollar is the petro-dollar, and control of the world's currency regime requires a strong influence over the world's oil and gas supply first and foremost.

If the US was truly energy self-sufficient, then the issue of trade and tariffs and money would be much simpler.  This would not be the case for some other entities without its geographic reach and the rich variety of its resources.

The other imported products are much more discretionary, and the domestic economy would most likely even prosper under a greater emphasis on self-sufficient production. Although the issue of reform would still remain because of the broken system of wealth distribution along lines of unequal power and undue influence over law to the detriment of justice.

It would have repercussions on international relations no doubt, but that is economic power by other means and would be dealt with through the usual alliances and cooperative ventures that could be denominated in other than a domestic currency.   This arrangement calls for the growth of large areas of common interest, or spheres of interest if you will,  that are able to achieve resource self-sufficiency.

The sophists will seek to dismiss what I am saying here as a paean to the gold standard. I wish to state again, categorically, that it is not. I am not proposing any solution at all, but merely attempting to draw up some outlines around the problem, what might be termed a systems analysis and requirements.

Gold does have some remarkable qualities that make it quite suitable for use as money. No one can create it, it is enduring, and relatively stable in terms of growth. As an external standard it is almost ideal. There is little wonder that diverse societies have gravitated towards gold and things like it down the long corridor of time.   And yet it does have one drawback: gold alone cannot enforce honesty on a corrupted system.  The recent growth on paper of the rehypothecated gold supply is one case in point.

There is no secret to creating a workable system.  I know I could do it, and many other people could so as well and perhaps much better.  The problem is that people of power do not wish to have a good system. 

There will be no good and sustainable monetary system easily reached for the same reasons that this generation of leaders can no longer create and put forward fair and workable laws for their own country.  They are overcome by ego and greed.  They wish for a system riddled with loopholes and personal advantage for them and their friends. So this is what is produced.   And until this changes, progress and change will be spattered with misery and blood, as it has so often been in the past. 

If there is any key point I wish you to take and hold in your minds and hearts it is that there is no such thing as a perfect, self-regulating monetary system. There could only be such an ideal model if men and women were angels, perfectly rational and reliably virtuous.

And like wealth the distribution of reason and virtue is very uneven, and so all systems must rely on a continuing effort and bias towards equal justice for all. And this has inescapable requirements for the design of the system.  Among these are transparency and the rule of law.   And the assumption that there will always be those who will be actively attempting to subvert the system, some bluntly, and some quite cleverly.

Money is power, and power corrupts.  So no system can succeed by its own design if its reins are held in the hands of mortal people, with all their weaknesses and failings.   So the system must account for this, and accommodate change and judgement as well as the balance of justice.

This was the great innovation of the US Constitution, the balance of power and its ability to change and evolve through law, with its commitment to justice and equality as an ideal, integrated into its construction, even though imperfectly by imperfect men of their time.  This is what made it such a bright star on the darkened horizon of human endeavour, a hymn to human freedom.  And look what they've done to our song.

It will be fascinating to see how this evolves. Will we see the creation of an SDR like monetary instrument based on a basket of items and currencies not under the control of a single power bloc? 

Will the world evolve into three or four powerful trading blocs, each with their own currency arrangements? Will the current dollar hegemony continue on until the collapses, and the what could have been an evolution will be a more sudden monetary revolution in which great wealth is destroyed, transferred and created anew?

We do live in interesting times.  And inescapably, these questions are now being addressed in the ongoing struggle for monetary power in what some have called the currency wars.

06 September 2013
Stalling growth of international reserves
Hugo Salinas Price

I have kept track of International Reserves (excluding gold) for many years, with data helpfully provided every week by Doug Noland, at prudentbear.com, who obtained the information from Bloomberg.

Here is the graph I have elaborated with data since 1948, when there was still a modicum of reason operating in the financial world.

Lately, I worked out a graph showing in more detail the growth of these reserves in the period from August 2005 to August 30, 2013.


I draw your attention to the slump in reserves which took place during the year 2008-2009. It was an ugly period, financially.

Then, notice the slowdown in growth of reserves during the past two years (24 months).
Finally, notice that growth in reserves has stalled in the last few months of this year. Growth appears to be topping-out. Since April 13, when reserves passed the $11 Trillion mark at $11.082 Trillion, in the four months to August 30, they have only increased by $86 billion – 0.78%

If the growth in reserves registered from August 2009 to August 2011, which averaged $1.5 Trillion yearly, had continued from August 2011 to August 2013, international reserves would now be over $13 Trillion; as it is, they are stalled at just over $11 Trillion. $2 Trillion are missing!
International reserves have two sources of growth:
  1. Accumulation of Bonds (mainly Euro and Dollar Bonds) in central banks of the exporting nations, which come about due to export surpluses with which the exporters purchase bonds issued by the importing countries.
  2. Accumulation of interest earned on the bonds, re-invested in bonds.

The international reserves are thus a measure of the credit which the exporters are willing and able to grant the purchasers of their exports.

If international reserves are not growing, but stalling out, this means that the exporting countries are not extending further credit, for whatever reasons, to the importing countries, mainly the US and the Euro Zone.

Born of the liberation of the world’s money from the shackles which tied it to gold under Bretton Woods, the world’s great credit-expanding machine is slowing down. $2 Trillion in international reserves have not been generated in the last 24 months. The cause must be a decline in international trade, through which enormous export surpluses of the East were sold to the West on credit, and the East received bonds for the extended credit. The market for government bonds of the West has been the eastern exporting countries, which have used their vast export surpluses to invest in western bonds.

If the exporting countries – the East – are slowing down on bond purchases, it most likely means they have less surplus left with which to purchase the bonds. Of course, they might have generated surpluses and used them to invest in the “Emerging Markets” – another name for what used to be called the Third World. Perhaps they are buying up the underdeveloped and chronically deficit-ridden Third World? That may be, but such a policy could hardly account for a $2 Trillion slow-down in growth of international reserves.

A $2 Trillion market for bonds has not materialized in the last two years; it is no wonder that the Fed has stepped in with QE to purchase the bonds which must be sold to keep the US Government in operation, not to mention to stave off utter collapse if the word were to spread that “There is no market for US and Euro Bonds at the volumes that the sellers require!”

The US and the Euro Zone are finding that they cannot float further credit in the exporting countries. This is a serious condition; the West depends on a market which will accommodate its expansion of credit – a market for its government bonds – for without that continual expansion the whole house of financial cards comes crashing down.

There appears to be no further market where the US and the Euro Zone can float their bonds. The only recourse is to monetize their government debt (QE) and that means monetary inflation.

The consequence of monetizing debt will have to be rising interest rates.

If the government debt were not monetized, US and Euro Zone bonds would have to be thrown on the world market, but – who would purchase them? Interest rates would skyrocket, even if there were possible buyers, which is doubtful.

As it is, the US can only continue to monetize government debt. Higher dollar interest rates are inevitable and will cause further government deficits; the debt overhang in both the US and Euro Zone is so great that a rise of a few points in interest rates will explode the deficits, and so on and so forth.

Bottom line: Stalling growth in International Reserves tells me that a world financial collapse is in the offing.

Please draw your own conclusions.

06 September 2013

COMEX Deliverable Gold Bullion Drops To Levels Not Seen Since 2003 - Claims Per Ounce Around 55


"Price discovery is not a sexy function of markets, but it is critical to the efficient allocation of scarce capital and resources, and to the preservation of the long term wealth of investors and the economy as a whole. If price discovery is compromised by manipulation, then we will all be gradually impoverished and the economy will be imbalanced and unstable."

London Banker, Lies, Damn Lies, and Libor


"Delivery takes on a note of finality, of a reckoning, when supply has become rehypothecated into little more than a state of mind.  The unanswered call for delivery is the final lifting of the veil."

Jesse


"And who then will be able to stand?"

Rev 6:17

Gold bullion available for delivery on the COMEX dropped a little more than 15,000 ounces on Thursday, with one large withdrawal from Scotia Mocatta and one small adjustment that added back a few hundred ounces at HSBC.  

There were no other ounces received. Total registered (deliverable) gold at the COMEX now stands at 686,434 ounces of actual bullion.

This number is, according to the COMEX' own language on the report, based on sources believed to be reliable.  But COMEX assumes no liability for errors or related counterparty risks.

We have not seen deliverable levels this low since 2003, which was in the earliest stage of the current gold bull market.

There are still over 7 million total ounces of gold bullion in COMEX warehouses.  It will probably take higher prices to motivate owners to move their stored bullion into the market.

The claims per deliverable ounce on the COMEX remains unusually elevated at 54.6.   If there is a rush to exercise those contracts, the gold on the exchange that is available for delivery will not go very far.   That means price would have to go much higher, in the manner of a short squeeze.  I tend to watch 'claims per ounce' in the same way you might watch 'days to cover' for the short interest on a stock.

The gold cartel is trying hard to keep the price from breaking out above 1420, which could precipitate some short covering with the leveraged traders, and prompt the ETFs to try and recover some of the bullion which they so graciously surrendered into the price decline earlier this year.

At some point there is always a reckoning, and claims that have been made on paper must be fulfilled or surrendered, one way or the other.  And in this case the supply and demand flows worldwide do not seem favorable for those who attempted to knock the price of gold down below a sustainable market value earlier this year. 

I marked when enough ounces had been made available from the ETFs to return Germany's gold to their people.  But the gold was not returned, and they did not stop their pricing operation there.   It is always the greed, and then the coverup.

The strong physical buying, especially out of Asia, seems to have turned a pricing operation into a stubborn trap.  Keeping the price lower only seems to prompt more buying, and more scarcity of legitimate supply.

But let's assume the price goes high enough so that all 7 million ounces of gold held in all the COMEX warehouses becomes available to the market.  That is a little less than 218 tonnes.  That would satisfy the current demand from China through Hong Kong alone for about two months at current rates. 

The last chart below shows how import levels into China exploded when the clever boys knocked the prices down well below the natural market rates given demand and costs of production.

If global supply should show signs of faltering at any point, with undue delays from another bullion bank or, worst case, the LBMA, the relatively thin inventories at the COMEX that are used as largely symbolic bollards for the world's precious metals price would evanesce,  almost overnight, with bids up limit and none offered.  Défaut, en fait accompli.  Quel dommage!

You may wish to fold your cards here, gentlemen, and let the price rise to a more defensible level, before the supply levels become untenable at any price.  Once confidence has become broken, it is often difficult to get it back.   And there are a lot of delivery days between now and the end of the year. 

Weighed, and found wanting.

Stand and deliver.






Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Holding the Line On a Breakout


Today was filled with cross currents, as the Non-Farm Payrolls report came in light, and looked even worse if you peered into the details of it.

The unemployment rate is less meaningful now because of the large number of people who have been long term unemployed and are falling off the unemployment benefits rolls. Labor Participation Rate and average workweek are therefore a bit more important.  And things are not looking good because the jobs that are being created tend to be low wage and often part time.

There is no real sustainable recovery, except for a few sectors that were ironically at the heart of the financial crisis five years ago: FIRE sector and the Beltway Elites. Except for some regional pockets of recovery, most everyone else is just getting by.

As you know the failure to reform a broken system is very high on the list of policy failures. Close behind are the Fed's trickle down stimulus approach, and the sequester and failure to act meaningfully on the fiscal side by the political class.

But the more jarring event today was Putin's strong stand on Syria. The case the US has been making is weak, and allies are few. It seems like the Obama Administration is listening to a few groups and advisers, and is tone deaf to what the mass of the public and the rest of the world is saying. This is not to say that Putin is right.

Rather, Putin is playing chess, and Washington is playing checkers, and also playing footsie under the table with the usual special interests, and ignoring the persuasion that must accompany any movement to military action. And the explanations and evidence that must accompany a grave decision were facing a high bar given the context of a war weary public that feels, with much justification, that their politicians are not listening to them, and are quite willing to say whatever it takes to get their way.

When a former US president, Jimmy Carter, says that the country no longer has a functioning democracy, it is hard to make a case that you just didn't know things were that bad. Well, they are, and they are getting worse with every week that passes and the political class continues to muddle through a credibility trap of their own making.

So in times of uncertainty and deception, when it is difficult to correctly price risk, people seek safety in certainty where they can obtain it, and that involves places a percentage of their wealth in things with less counterparty risk.

And so we saw a rally in gold and silver, although there is quite an effort behind the scenes to keep them from breaking out. They will break out, eventually, and the shorts are going to be hard pressed to deliver the bullion which has been rehypothecated many times. And when this does result in a market dislocation, the economists and the politicians and the regulators will stand open mouthed and say, 'who could have known?'

So let's see what happens.  Things are not all that bad from an historical perspective, unless you have a somewhat romantic view of the past.  My grandparents and parents faced things that were just as bad or worse,  and I myself grew up during the Cold War, the Cuban missile crisis, and Vietnam, and riots that tore cities apart.  

I remember as a young boy riding a public bus with an overhead advert of Khrushchev pounding a shoe on the table saying, "We will bury you."  Now we have the Tea Party and would be demagogues, and then we had the Dixiecrats and Joe McCarthy.  And three of our greatest lights for hope, John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, and Robert F. Kennedy, were all brutally killed by assassins bullets within a few years. 

If you were not a part of it, it is hard to imagine what it was like.  Some of my friends say that we are doomed, and things are much worse now than they ever were.  Well, they are like this for most generations, that face difficult, almost seemingly insurmountable obstacles.  And yet life goes on.

But certain times call for certain actions, and now is a good time to look to your portfolios, and to remain calm and discerning in your thoughts as you take whatever measures that you can to not become a part of the problem, and look to your families and friends.

Have a pleasant weekend.






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Push Pull


The market volatility picked up today, although it may be a bit deceptive to look at because the indices finished almost even on the day.

More on this in the metals commentary.

US Unemployment figures are now not working the usual manner because of the length of this recessionary period following the financial crisis.  John Williams from Shadowstats explains this phenomenon I have discussed quite well this evening:
"...headline unemployment reporting suffers seriously-flawed definitions, and the continuing declines in headline U.3 and U.6 are bad news for the U.S. economy.  In relatively shallow and short-duration recessions, a declining unemployment rate usually reflects the good economic news of unemployed people going back to work. 

In the current circumstance—with ongoing casualties of the deepest and longest economic contraction since the Great Depression—the declining U.3 and, increasingly, the U.6 employment rates reflect the unemployed giving up looking for work, because they cannot find gainful employment.  Consider, for example, that the number of U.3 unemployed declined by 198,000 in August, but there was no offsetting gain in employment, which would have been positive economic news.  Instead, the offsets to the unemployment drop were a 115,000 decline in headline employment, and a 312,000 decline in the headline labor force."

Have a pleasant weekend.