Friday, February 8, 2008

The Mother of All Bubbles




By Peter Schiff


In contrast to the dismal forecasting record of mainstream economists over the last few years, the forecasts that I have made regarding the dollar, oil, commodities, precious metals, global stock markets, inflation, and the U.S. economy have all come to pass. In addition, unlike the top economic oracles on Wall Street and in Washington, I can also point to similar accuracy in predicting the bursting of growing bubbles, first with technology in the late 1990’s, and more recently with real estate. However, my long-standing prediction about the fate of the bond market has fared much worse. I still do believe this prediction was not wrong, but simply premature.

For years I have predicted that the falling dollar, persistent trade deficit, and the lack of domestic savings would combine to send long-term interest rates sharply higher. The effects of these fundamental drivers would undermine the Fed’s efforts to lower short-term rates and compound the problems for the housing market and the U.S. economy. Yet as of today, the yield on the thirty-year Treasury bond still stands below 4.5%, within 40 basis points of a generational low. Either this is the one piece of the puzzle that I somehow got wrong, or other factors are working to temporarily confound fundamental economics and prop up the bond market. As you might imagine, I am confident that it is the latter and consider the U.S. Treasury market to be the mother of all bubbles.

I have often said that the only thing worse than holding U.S. dollars is holding promises to be paid U.S. dollars at some distant point in the future. However, this is precisely what U.S. Treasuries represent. Given all of the inflation that already exists, and all of the additional inflation likely to be created over that time period, why would anyone pay par value for the right to receive $1,000 in thirty years in exchange for a mere 4.5% coupon? Although it looks like the sucker bet of the century, the fools have been lining up to buy. Alan Greeenspan called this a "conundrum." I simply call it mass delusion of the same variety that brought us pets.com, and $800,000 tract homes in the middle of the California desert.

Just like dot coms or real estate, today’s bond prices reflect a fantasy world. In this "Bizarro" reality, the dollar will remain strong, inflation will stay low, economic strength will persist uninterrupted, and Fed policy will be predominantly hawkish for the foreseeable future. But when the fog finally lifts, and investors come to grips with a sagging dollar, recession, gaping budget and current account deficits, and the most accommodative Fed imaginable, bond prices will collapse, sending long-term interest rates skyrocketing higher. Unfortunately, for investors who hitched their wagons to benign government CPI statistics and ignored real world evidence of inflation [rapid money supply growth, surging gold, oil and other commodity prices (wheat and soy beans prices catapulted to record highs this week), the sinking dollar, and actual increases in consumer prices,] the losses will be excruciatingly real.

It is important to remember that for every borrower there has to be a lender. For example, if a homeowner wants to refinance his mortgage, there must be someone willing to loan him the money. Practically everyone on Wall Street is hailing the Fed’s recent rate cuts because they believe it will allow strapped ARM holders to refinance into more affordable mortgages. However, while low rates are great for borrowers, they are lousy for lenders. Why would anyone want to offer a thirty-year mortgage at an artificially depressed interest rate? As soon as the Fed raises rates again, as it clearly intends to do once the crisis ends, all that low yielding mortgage paper will collapse in value. Lenders can surely figure this out and will therefore refuse to volunteer to be the patsy in this plan.

Eventually, the world’s lenders will reach similar conclusions with respect to U.S. Treasuries. No matter how low the Fed funds or discount rates get, private savers around the world will simply refuse to lend given the inherent risks and paltry returns. At some point the sheer absurdity of holding long-term, low-yielding receipts for future payments of depreciating U.S. dollars will be apparent to all. After all, it was not too long ago that investors thought holding subprime mortgages from financially strapped borrowers who could not possibly repay them was also a great idea -- so great in fact that many leveraged themselves to the hilt to buy them. Judging from the extremely poor demand at this week’s $9 billion auction of thirty-year Treasury bonds, the day of reckoning may not be too far off.

For now there are a host of factors temporarily propping up the Treasury bond market, such as unrealistically sanguine inflation expectations, foreign central bank and hedge fund buying, short covering, credit spreads, problems in the mortgage market, recession fears, and flight to what is falsely perceived to represent the ultimately in safety and quality. When these props give way, look out below! As we have learned from previous bubbles they can inflate for a long time before they burst. As this one has been inflating longer then most it has amassed quite a bit of air. When it ultimately finds its pin the popping sound will be deafening.

For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book “Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.”




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Mr. Schiff began his investment career as a financial consultant with Shearson Lehman Brothers, after having earned a degree in finance and accounting from U.C. Berkeley in 1987. A financial professional for over twenty years he joined Euro Pacific in 1996 and has served as its President since January 2000. An expert on money, economic theory, and international investing, Peter is a highly recommended broker by many leading financial newsletters and investment advisory services. He is also a contributing commentator for Newsweek International and served as an economic advisor to the 2008 Ron Paul presidential campaign.

>> Click here for Mr. Schiff's video interviews.



Ron Paul Speaks at Liberty University

Intro


Part 1


Part 2


Part 3


Part 4

Passing the Buck back to the Future

The BIG Kahunas are getting plans in place to postpone the inevitable market collapse to an unknown future date. It will be interesting to see what plans these fools come up with. It's either "Inflation or Death!"
******

TOKYO (Reuters) - Financial leaders from the world's richest nations stood ready to discuss a global policy response to the credit crisis, which has unleashed economic downdrafts and market turbulence that knows no borders.

Aggressive action by the United States to cut interest rates and taxes to ward off recession has tested the limits of cooperation in the Group of Seven.

A question of how far other major economies should follow has provided a tense backdrop for finance ministers and central bankers as they gather in Tokyo to seek ways to repair damage to their economies and financial markets wrought by the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis.

But officials arriving on Friday for G7 meetings this weekend showed a readiness to begin tackling problems together.


Read the rest

The Economic Incompetence of Socialism

Gordon Brown's reputation for economic competence has been dealt a severe blow as £100 billion of taxpayers' money used to shore up Northern Rock was added to the national debt.

The Treasury has broken one of its jealously guarded borrowing rules after the National Statistician ordered Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, to put the stricken bank's liabilities on the Government's books.

The ONS said it was classifying Northern Rock as a public corporation

The total amount of public money involved in rescuing Northern Rock is the equivalent of saddling every family in Britain with £3,000 of debt.

It means the national debt will rise as high as 45 per cent of gross domestic product, well above the limit set by Mr Brown in his sustainable investment rule when he was Chancellor.

The Conservatives said Labour's claim to economic competence had been "blown to pieces".

George Osborne, the shadow chancellor, said: "Gordon Brown has staked his reputation for competence on meeting his own fiscal rules. Those rules have been blown to pieces as a result of his economic incompetence. Gordon Brown has effectively saddled every taxpayer with a second mortgage as a result of his mishandling of the Northern Rock crisis."

Read the rest

FMM Comment: The following comment is also made in the article:

"However, when historians look back at the Northern Rock saga the broader question of how the Government allowed this to happen will be more important than whether one borrowing rule was broken."


How the British Government allowed this to happen is an easy answer. Any country with a Central Bank allows this to happen. It's called fractional reserve banking or the money-multiplier effect.

If you have never heard of these terms, read part 1 and 2 of how this system works.


The following is an excerpt from an article, written in MARCH 1991, by the late Murray Rothbard.

"A fascinating phenomenon appeared in these modern as well as the older bank runs: when one unsound" bank was subjected to a fatal run, this had a domino effect on all the other banks in the area, so that they were brought low and annihilated by bank runs. As a befuddled Paul Samuelson, Mr. Establisment Economics, admitted to the Wall Street Journal after this recent bout, "I didn't think I'd live to see again the day when there are actually bank runs. And when good banks have runs on them because some unlucky and bad banks fail . . . . we're back in a time warp."

A time warp indeed: just as the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe has put us back to 1945 or even 1914, banks are once again at risk.

What is the reason for this crisis? We all know that the real estate collapse is bringing down the value of bank assets. But there is no "run" on real estate. Values simply fall, which is hardly the same thing as everyone failing and going insolvent. Even if bank loans are faulty and asset values come down, there is no need on that ground for all banks in a region to fail.

Put more pointedly, why does this domino process affect only banks, and not real estate, publishing, oil, or any other industry that may get into trouble? Why are what Samuelson and other economists call "good" banks so all-fired vulnerable, and then in what sense are they really "good"?

The answer is that the "bad" banks are vulnerable to the familiar charges: they made reckless loans, or they overinvested in Brazilian bonds, or their managers were crooks. In any case, their poor loans put their assets into shaky shape or made them actually insolvent. The "good" banks committed none of these sins; their loans were sensible. And yet, they too, can fall to a run almost as readily as the bad banks. Clearly, the "good" banks are in reality only slightly less unsound than the bad ones.

There therefore must be something about all banks--commercial, savings, S&L, and credit union--which make them inherently unsound. And that something is very simple although almost never mentioned: fractional-reserve banking. All these forms of banks issue deposits that are contractually redeemable at par upon the demand of the depositor. Only if all the deposits were backed 100% by cash at all times (or, what is the equivalent nowadays, by a demand deposit of the bank at the Fed which is redeemable in cash on demand) can the banks fulfill these contractual obligations.

Instead of this sound, noninflationary policy of 100% reserves, all of these banks are both allowed and encouraged by government policy to keep reserves that are only a fraction of their deposits, ranging from 10% for commercial banks to only a couple of percent for the other banking forms. This means that commercial banks inflate the money supply tenfold over their reserves a policy that results in our system of permanent inflation, periodic boom-bust cycles, and bank runs when the public begins to realize the inherent insolvency of the entire banking system.

That is why, unlike any other industry, the continued existence of the banking system rests so heavily on "public confidence," and why the Establishment feels it has to issue statements that it would have to admit privately were bald lies. It is also why economists and financial writers from all parts of the ideological spectrum rushed to say that the FDIC "had to" bail out all the depositors of the Bank of New England, not just those who were "insured" up to $100,000 per deposit account. The FDIC had to perform this bailout, everyone said, because "otherwise the financial system would collapse." That is, everyone would find out that the entire fractional-reserve system is held together by lies and smoke and mirrors, that is, by an Establishment con."



You can read the full article here

Rejoining of the Unholy Matrimony

ECB may follow Fed and BoE in rate cut
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

The European Central Bank has ditched its bias towards interest rate rises, preparing to join the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England in easing monetary policy to head off a sharp downturn.

Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB's president, acknowledged that risks are now largely on the "downside" after January's precipitous fall in Italy and Spain's services index.

"It is a total capitulation," said Jacques Cailloux, eurozone economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland.

"The ECB was wrong in thinking that Europe could decouple from the US and has misjudged the loss of momentum. We think they will start cutting rates in April," he said.

Ken Wattret, an economist at BNP Paribas, said cuts could come as soon as March, warning of a "vicious spiral" as the credit squeeze and sliding confidence feed on each other.

The euro plummeted to $1.4450 against the dollar as Mr Trichet's comments flashed across traders' screens. Funds have taken massive 'short' positions, betting that the euro's six-year march to record highs is over.

Read the rest

Looking Into a Gifted Horse's Mouth

Gift Card Sales Backfire

The whole idea of gift cards seems kind of silly. Why give someone a $50 gift card when it can only be used at one spot, while $50 in cash can be used anywhere? And if a person gives you a gift card back what's the point of it all?

Why not trade $50 bills and be done with it? Heck, why not save the effort and not exchange anything at all? I guess attitudes have not sufficiently evolved for that yet.

For whatever reason gift cards have become increasingly big business. People like them. Perhaps it's because they can buy whatever they want instead of having to go through the hassle of returning something too big, too small, too red, too blue, or too pink.

And Businesses like them too! Or at least they did.

Read the rest

Moral Obligations Of Walking Away

Walking away is certainly a hot topic. I brought up the issue of walking away on October 2nd 2007 in Mortgage Forgiveness Act - The Seen and Unseen.

The winner in the debt forgiveness provision (if there is a winner) is the struggling homeowner. The unseen loser is the mortgage holder, the NAR and the NAHB. Prior to this legislation a homeowner had to worry about tax liabilities of just handing over the keys and walking away. If debt was forgiven prior to bankruptcy, there was also a tax liability. Such considerations have been removed. At the margin, more people will be tempted than before to hand over the keys and walk away.


Read the rest

FX Insights Trade Team Update 07/02/2008



By FX Insights Moderator

Did you enjoy today's 200 pip drop as much as you enjoyed it on Tuesday? I hope so... we surely did, these are the kinds of days we live for as traders!

So what drove the euro down today? Very simple -- his name is Jean-Claude Trichet, and right now, I'd love to shake his hand!

As expected, the ECB held interest rates at 4.00%, but it was what Mr. Trichet had to say at his press conference that caused the euro to get beat up in today's trading... lets re-cap:

Back in November we started giving warnings that European growth would slow in 2008 and that the ECB would eventually be forced to cut interest rates, hopefully those of you who were around back then and read the updates will remember... in fact, I've probably devoted a dozen or more updates over the past few weeks talking about this and now we're finally starting to see the market respond to Europe's weakening fundamentals and the market's speculations of ECB rate cuts.

At this morning's press conference, Trichet was the most dovish about European growth as I've ever seen him... in addition, he basically said that current interest rates would be just enough to stabilize European inflation... plus, he indicated European inflation would subside while downside risks to growth would grow! He almost seemed relieved to get all this off of his chest, it was very odd to watch and observe his body language, but that's an important thing we do because it can signal how the market will decide to react, which was clearly to bring the euro down...

In nutshell, Trichet told the markets the following:

*Rates are on hold and will not need to be raised = EUR-
*M3 growth is slowing = EUR-
*Inflation pressures will subside this year = EUR-
*Growth facing serious risks to the downside = EUR-
*Risks to GDP are on the downside = EUR-
*ECB will not surprise markets = EUR-

Basically, Trichet gave the market six major, mega, no-brainer reasons to short the living crap out of the EUR/USD and to likely keep shorting it in the near-term...

With Trichet giving the market the greenlight to unload euros today, his comments triggered a chain reaction of profit taking, loss taking, and shorting of the EUR/USD, which took us down another 200 pips from yesterday's topside resistence at 1.4638... and as far as today's down move goes, the EUR/USD held to its very reliable pattern of not making a move (up or down) of more than 200-220 pips during a trade day. It moved exactly 201 pips from the top of the range at 1.4638.

As we indicated, sustained break of 1.4550 would open the doors to the downside and we certainly saw this play out in today's market action...

So now we have the EUR/USD making two 200-pip moves down so far this week... if patterns hold true, we'll likely see a retracement back up as the market is slightly overextended and exaggered itself this week... that being said, we have seen EUR/USD patterns where it'll move 500 points in a week, but this is very rare and I'm not expecting this to play out before we see a bit of retracement...

EUR/USD trading...

As we indicated, the break below 4740 took away the market's momentum to push the euro up any higher and now the break below 4550 has opened the doors to test lows we haven't seen for weeks and months.

For most of last year the market punished the dollar for its weak fundamentals and then for the Fed rate cuts... the dollar has recieved the worst of its punishment in the near-term...

The market has yet to fully begin punishing the euro for it's weakening fundamentals because the Eurozone's fundamentals have just barely started to show signs of decline and weakness, which means we have a potentially long road ahead of us... then, the market will need to punish the euro for the ECB rate cuts that are likely coming this spring or sometime early in the second half of this year...

By that time, we'll be in a full-blown U.S. recession, and the global markets as a whole will be crumbling all around us... we've already talked about what a recession will do to gold and the dollar, so I'm not going to take time to get into that now, you can read those posts...

As far as trading goes, I'll be shorting the rises, as indicated in yesterday's update and in the chat today... the only time I'll likely take a euro long is when we trigger a signal... on an intraday trade basis, I will likely be short when I trade within a range...

I would love to tell you where the market will decide to find a bottom or find the next top, but please understand that the landscape is in the beginning stages of shifting...

The dollar's been beaten up left and right, up and down all last year... the market already knows the fundamentals are crap, that interest rates are abysmal, that the jobs market is fickle, and that growth is slowing to recessionary paces -- there are no more big secrets to reveal about the sad state of affairs with the U.S. economy...

For Europe, on the other hand, the secrets are just now coming out and the market has just begun licking its chops to do to the euro what it did to the dollar... at least this is how I see things playing out... I could be dead-wrong, but I'm going to stick with this same forecasting we've had since last November and I'll have to trade it accordingly and consistently...

Lets look at some key levels to keep an eye on:

Downside:

4429
4401
4384
4364

Upside:

4495
4512
4538
4554

For me, the plan is simple, short the rises unless price action dictates otherwise...

Early this morning Yeno gave those in our chat a killer EUR/USD short on a live trade call:

Click on Image

And I just have to give a big congrats to one of our community members who goes by the screename CK33 -- this smart and patient trader took the live trade call, shorted at 4636 and held his short all the way to 4445, picking a perfect bottom to close out and bank 191 pips... we love hearing those success stories!

Fundamentally tomorrow, we only have one noticeable piece of data which is German Industrial Production, which very likely could disappoint this go around...

As far as the market goes, I don't expect another 200 pip move tomorrow, but I'm ready for continued volatility should the market decide to stay active...

Currently, we are in a signal which will close out at 1.4513 should we stay above our last buy level of 1.4420... so far, we've held above this level... I feel confident this signal will payout just as all the others have... if this signal is making you squirm, find me in the chat so we can discuss it

I think that's all for now... see ya in the chat...

-FX Insights

Ron Paul speech at CPAC 2/7/8

Intro

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3