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US losing confidence vote as investors flee
The Telegraph ^ | 3/17/2008 | Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

Posted on 03/16/2008 8:58:36 PM PDT by bruinbirdman

As feared, foreign bond holders have begun to exercise a collective vote of no confidence in the devaluation policies of the US government. The Federal Reserve faces a potential veto of its rescue measures.

Asian, Mid East and European investors stood aside at last week's auction of 10-year US Treasury notes. "It was a disaster," said Ray Attrill from 4castweb. "We may be close to the point where the uglier consequences of benign neglect towards the currency are revealed."

The share of foreign buyers ("indirect bidders") plummeted to 5.8pc, from an average 25pc over the last eight weeks. On the Richter Scale of unfolding dramas, this matches the death of Bear Stearns.

Rightly or wrongly, a view has taken hold that Washington is cynically debasing the coinage, hoping to export its day of reckoning through beggar-thy-neighbour policies.

It is not my view. I believe the forces of debt deflation now engulfing America - and soon half the world - are so powerful that nobody will be worrying about inflation a year hence.

Yes, the Fed caused this mess by setting the price of credit too low for too long, feeding the cancer of debt dependency. But we are in the eye of the storm now. This is not a time for priggery.

The Fed's emergency actions are imperative. Last week's collapse of confidence in the creditworthiness of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was life-threatening. These agencies underpin 60pc of the $11,000bn market for US home loans.

With the "financial accelerator" kicking into top gear - downwards - we may need everything that Ben Bernanke can offer.

"The situation is getting worse, and the risks are that it could get very bad," said Martin Feldstein, head of the National Bureau of Economic Research. "There's no doubt that this year and next year are going to be very difficult."

Even monetary policy à l'outrance may not be enough to halt the spiral. Former US Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers says the Fed's shower of liquidity cannot cure a bankruptcy crisis caused by a tidal wave of property defaults.

"It is like fighting a virus with antibiotics," he said.

We can no longer exclude a partial nationalisation of the American banking system, modelled on the Nordic rescue in the early 1990s.

But even if you think the Fed has no choice other than to take dramatic action, the critics are also right in warning that this comes at a serious cost and it may backfire.

The imminent risk is that global flight from US Treasury and agency debt drives up long-term rates, the key funding instrument for mortgages and corporations. The effect could outweigh Fed easing.

Overall credit conditions could tighten into a slump (like 1930). It's the stuff of bad dreams.

Is this the moment when America finally discovers the meaning of the Faustian pact it signed so blithely with Asian creditors?

As the Wall Street Journal wrote this weekend, the entire country is facing a "margin call". The US has come to depend on $800bn inflows of cheap foreign capital each year to cover shopping bills. They may have to pay a much stiffer rent.

As of June 2007, foreigners owned $6,007bn of long-term US debt. (Equal to 66pc of the entire US federal debt). The biggest holdings by country are, in billions: Japan (901), China (870), UK (475), Luxembourg (424), Cayman Islands (422), Belgium (369), Ireland (176), Germany (155), Switzerland (140), Bermuda (133), Netherlands (123), Korea (118), Russia (109), Taiwan (107), Canada (106), Brazil (103). Who is jumping ship?

The Chinese have quickened the pace of yuan appreciation to choke off 8.7pc inflation, slowing US bond purchases. Petrodollar funds, working through UK off-shore accounts, are clearly dumping dollars amid rumours that Gulf states - overheating wildly - are about to break their dollar pegs. But mostly likely, the twin crash in the dollar and US agency debt reflects a broad exodus by global wealth managers, afraid that America is spinning out of control. Sauve qui peut.

The bond debacle last week tallies with the crash in the dollar index to an all-time low of 71.58, down 14.6pc in a year. The greenback is nearing parity with the Swiss franc - shocking for those who remember when it was 4.375 francs in 1970. Against the euro it has hit $1.57, from $0.82 in 2000. Against the yen it has smashed through Y100. Spare a thought for Toyota. It loses $350m in revenues for every one yen move. That is an $8.75bn hit since June. Tokyo's Nikkei index is crumbling. Less understood, it is also causing a self-reinforcing spiral of credit shrinkage throughout the global system.

Japanese investors and foreign funds are having to close their yen "carry trade" positions. A chunk of the $1,400bn trade built up over six years has been viciously unwound in weeks. The harder the dollar falls, the further this must go.

It is unsettling to watch the world's reserve currency disintegrate. Commodities from gold to oil and wheat are taking on the role of safe-haven "currencies". The monetary order is becoming unhinged.

I doubt the dollar can fall much further. What is it to fall against? The spreading credit contagion will cause large parts of the globe to downgrade in hot pursuit - starting with Europe.

Few noticed last week that the Italian treasury auction was also a flop. The bids collapsed. For the first time since the launch of EMU, Italy failed to sell a full batch of state bonds.

The euro blasted higher anyway, driven by hot money flows. The funds are beguiled by Germany's "Exportwunder", for now. It cannot last. The demented level of $1.57 will not be tolerated by French, Italian and Spanish politicians. The Latin property bubbles are deflating fast.

The race to the bottom must soon begin. Half the world will be slashing rates this year to stave off credit contraction. The dollar will have a lot of company. Small comfort.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bernanke; economy; endofthedollar; fed; stpatricksmassacre; subprime
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To: Toddsterpatriot; groanup
An ounce of gold has always been enough to buy a new suit and a nice pair of shoes.

The median-priced US home will sell for 1000 ounces of silver before this run is over.
141 posted on 03/19/2008 9:35:27 PM PDT by dollarbull
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To: dollarbull

What is the equivalen amount of wheat contracts?


142 posted on 03/20/2008 10:27:54 AM PDT by groanup (War is not the answer. Victory is.)
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To: groanup
What is the equivalent amount of wheat contracts?

Don't take this answer the wrong way, but who cares? Silver is going to have a much larger % rise from here to the top than wheat will.
143 posted on 03/20/2008 11:07:59 AM PDT by dollarbull
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To: dollarbull
Don't take this answer the wrong way, but who cares? Silver is going to have a much larger % rise from here to the top than wheat will.

I care. I can't eat silver.

A friend of mine was interviewing for a sales job at Kidder Peabody about 1983. He was telling the boss that he had some terrific technical work. The Boss asked him where bonds were going. My friend answered: "up". The boss got on the phone and, very loudly, gave an order to buy 10 bond futures contracts for his personal account.

He hung up the phone and told my friend: "They'd better. I'll call you in two weeks about the job."

144 posted on 03/20/2008 12:39:09 PM PDT by groanup (War is not the answer. Victory is.)
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To: groanup
I care. I can't eat silver.

If silver is going higher than wheat, you sell your silver for wheat....what's the issue?

A friend of mine was interviewing for a sales job at Kidder Peabody about 1983. He was telling the boss that he had some terrific technical work. The Boss asked him where bonds were going. My friend answered: "up". The boss got on the phone and, very loudly, gave an order to buy 10 bond futures contracts for his personal account. He hung up the phone and told my friend: "They'd better. I'll call you in two weeks about the job."

That's interesting, but the price of a bond trade 2 weeks later is a coin flip. I'm talking about the top of a secular commodities trend a few years from now
145 posted on 03/20/2008 1:11:46 PM PDT by dollarbull
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To: dollarbull
the price of a bond trade 2 weeks later is a coin flip.

Exactly.

I'm talking about the top of a secular commodities trend a few years from now

Another flip.

146 posted on 03/20/2008 1:45:51 PM PDT by groanup (War is not the answer. Victory is.)
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To: groanup
Did he get the job?
147 posted on 03/20/2008 2:18:07 PM PDT by Toddsterpatriot (NAFTA opponents are an odd coalition of the no-deodorant Left and the toothless-and-tinfoil right.)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

Yup. Then his “technical genius” got fouled up, he lost a bunch of money for an institutional client, and he got fired and sued. LOL.


148 posted on 03/20/2008 2:23:28 PM PDT by groanup (War is not the answer. Victory is.)
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To: crghill

How do you believe they will end? We will all submit our ahthority to a one world government when 1/2 the globe doesn’t believe in freedom and helping his neighbor? Great and good change always comes from pain. While I would love to think we can solve our own problems without pain, history shows us otherwise. We are not that bright of a species but feel we’re masters of the universe. How long did it take modern man to invent the wheel? 80,000 years?!?!


149 posted on 03/23/2008 6:41:50 PM PDT by iThinkBig
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To: Lazamataz

Their is a quite a gun you can buy for $2,800 on the market, right now. It kills tanks. Why, you going to be the new Bob Dole coming in to keep us down? LOL. Yes, it is going to be a bitch. The ‘Greatest Generation’ went from a bunch of drunk binge partyers of the Roaring Twenties, to the best leadership on earth man has ever seen by the end of WWII. I prefer to learn from the lessons of history but unfortunately, I am a minority.


150 posted on 03/23/2008 6:45:30 PM PDT by iThinkBig
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To: dollarbull

It ain’t over until it’s over. Probably another 3 years to go for this prediction to hit. I’ll be buying quite a few houses after I sell my silver.


151 posted on 11/08/2009 3:47:56 PM PST by dollarbull
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