Answered Prayers
By Adrian Ash
August 29, 2007
Investors should be careful
what they wish for, most especially for Dollar interest
rates...
"There are more tears shed over answered prayers than
over unanswered prayers..."
- Teresa of Αvila, patron saint of headache sufferers
BE CAREFUL what you wish for. The entire US
Treasury market is betting the Fed will cut rates in
September. Goldman Sachs expects rates to finish the year at
4.5%, fully 75-points lower from here.
The head of Ford just demanded a cut in interest
rates too, and now Bill Gross of Pimco, head of the world's
biggest bond fund, says Washington should step in to save US
home-buyers "write some checks, bail 'em out"
before their teaser mortgage deals run out, pushing up to
two million families into foreclosure.
But what's the hurry? The US Dollar is already
more worthless than at any time in its history according to
the international currency market.

The trade-weighted US Dollar closed July 2007 at its lowest
monthly value ever against the world's other major currencies.
It took a 12% drop in world stock markets to force enough
short-covering to cause a bounce in the greenback.
Flooding Wall Street and Main with freshly
printed bills whether through sharply lower interest
rates...or through direct intervention by the
"Reconstruction Mortgage Corporation" that Bill
Gross is calling for will only remind the world why it was
so bearish on the Dollar before the start of this month.
Come Sept. 2007, the only difference will be that
we can add the chasm of negative US real-estate equity to the
yawning Twin Deficits. And with America's troublesome triplets
choking its throat, the only hope for the Dollar would be a
swift death.
Long-term support on the Dollar's Trade-Weighted Index had sat
around 80 since the mid-90s low. But not any more.

"Someone would certainly be blamed for
the ultimate collapse when it came," as J.K.Galbraith
wrote in The Great Crash, 1929. "There was no
question whatever as to who would be blamed should the boom be
deliberately deflated. For nearly a decade the Federal Reserve
authorities had been denying their responsibility for the
deflation of 1920-1."
It took re-arming for World War II to finally kill the
Depression, but Milton Friedman still blamed the Fed for
causing the slump nearly thirty years later. Ben Bernanke has
gone on to build his entire career on saying "sorry"
for the interest-rate hikes that apparently caused the modern
world's worst-ever recession.
Indeed, the long shadow of the Great
Depression today blocks out most recollections of just how bad
things became during the inflationary bust of the 1970s.
Investors fleeing into the safe, welcoming arms of US Treasury
debt would do well to remember what happened when gains in the
Consumer Price Index overtook bond yields between 1973 and
1980. (They might want to recall what happened to Spot Gold
Prices when the same thing happened between 2003 and 2005,
too.)
But the current Fed chairman has played no
small part in ensuring that flared pants and double-digit
inflation have been replaced by the 1930s deflation as the big
ghoul from history most feared by policymakers, central bank
wonks and investors worldwide.
"During the major contraction phase of
the Depression, between 1929 and 1933," as Bernanke said
in a speech of 2004, "real output in the United States
fell nearly 30%. During the same period, according to
retrospective studies, the unemployment rate rose from about
3% to nearly 25%, and many of those lucky enough to have a job
were able to work only part-time."
By comparison, the 1973-75 recession
"perhaps the most severe US recession of the World War II
era," according to Dr.Ben real output fell 3.4% and
the unemployment rate merely doubled from 4% to 9%.
"Other features of the 1929-33 decline
included a sharp deflation," he went on. "Prices
fell at a rate of nearly 10% per year during the early 1930s
as well as a plummeting stock market, widespread bank
failures, and a rash of defaults and bankruptcies by
businesses and households."
Fast forward to late summer 2007, and Bill
Gross has bought into the Bernanke Fed's worst-case scenario,
adding the full weight of his $692 billion in bonds under
management for good measure.
"Market forecasters currently project
over two million [housing] defaults before this current cycle
is complete," says Gross in his latest comments.
"The resultant impact on housing prices is likely to be
close to minus 10%, an asset deflation in the US never seen
since the Great Depression.
"The ultimate solution, it seems to
me, must not emanate from the bowels of Fed headquarters on
Constitution Avenue, but from the West Wing of 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue. Fiscal, not monetary policy should be the
preferred remedy, one scaling Rooseveltian
proportions..."
In short, the very crisis for which Ben
Bernanke has been waiting to prevent all these years is beyond
his meager talents. Bill Gross reckons that even a 200-300
basis-point cut in the Fed Funds rate would still leave the
vast bulk of re-setting homebuyers facing monthly mortgage
repayments they simply can't bear.
"Write some checks, bail 'em out,
prevent a destructive housing deflation that Ben Bernanke is
unable to do," he advises George W.Bush, claiming that
Depression-era fiscal meddling will somehow avoid weakening
the Dollar. That will only happen, however, for as long as the
rest of the world keeps debasing its money at the same rate as
Washington. And that, in turn, will only protect US investors
for as long as fixed-income fund managers can pretend that
bond-interest coupons aren't being eaten alive by inflation.
The Bank of England summoned up £314
million from nowhere on Monday, making a short-term loan to
cover a gap in Barclay's cashflow. Four of Wall Street's
finest borrowed $500 million each from the Federal Reserve on
Wednesday. The European Central Bank injected 40 billion in
three-month loans on Thursday (around $54.2 billion). The
offer was snapped up by German and Italian banks unable to get
short-term funds in the market.
On the other side of the trade, meantime,
the cost of natural resources continues to push higher, even
as Treasury bonds surge. Wheat futures just hit a new record
high, after India the world's second-biggest consumer of
the grain invited bids to help it buy an
"unspecified" quantity of wheat to help expand
government stockpiles. Global inventories, says the US Dept.
of Agriculture, will fall to a quarter-century low by next
June.
Soybean prices are also rising, as China's
domestic output is likely to fall after a prolonged drought
potentially losing 17% from last year and causing imports
of 31.4 million tons in the 12 months beginning Oct. Copper
imports into China, meanwhile, doubled in the year to July,
said the Beijing customs office last Wednesday.
The only US data report that showed a
double that day was the number of foreclosure notices sent out
in July to late-paying US homeowners. Investors fearing a
sharp cut in US interest rates, even as the cost of living
continues to rise sharply, may want to consider an allocation
to Physical
Gold Bullion.
During the negative real interest rates of the
late 1970s, Investment
Gold more than quadrupled to its all-time high of $850 per
ounce. Its greatest gains during the current bull market so
far came when US interest rates again dipped below the rate of
inflation between 2003 and 2005.
To Buy
Gold Online Today as near to live "spot"
market prices as private investors can get be sure to
visit BullionVault
now...


