Author Topic: Money/inflation, the Fed, Banking, Monetary Policy, Dollar, BTC, crypto, Gold  (Read 522986 times)

G M

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The ATMs acted stupidly
« Reply #250 on: June 15, 2011, 02:29:47 PM »

G M

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Greece is the word
« Reply #251 on: June 19, 2011, 03:08:06 PM »

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/06/17/3246239.htm

Greece on brink of economic abyss
By European correspondent Rachael Brown

Updated Fri Jun 17, 2011 10:37am AEST

 
Historic moment: George Papandreou says Europe faces a huge challenge. (AFP: Louisa Gouliamaki, file photo)

Related Story: CBA says Greek crisis won't affect rates Related Story: Aussie market's big slide on Greece fears Related Story: Greek PM offers to quit after mass protests Related Story: Raging Greeks stage biggest anti-austerity protest Greek prime minister George Papandreou has spent his 59th birthday trying to stop his government and the country's economy from slipping into an abyss.

Greece stands on the brink of default and needs to push through a new $38 billion austerity program to secure the next slice of its international bailout.

Mr Papandreou has deferred a parliamentary reshuffle - which was aimed at shoring up support for the austerity cuts - until later on Friday (local time).

European leaders are worried the political instability will rattle nervous investors and the Greek economy will go belly up.

In a dramatic address, Mr Papandreou told his party Greece faced a historic moment.

"The challenge before us, the moment we are facing, is historic. Either Europe will make history or history will wipe out the European Union," he said.

"The changes have been painful but the sooner we make them, the sooner we can get out of the crisis and concentrate on our strengths.

"We don't have the luxury of desertion. This is the time for battle."

Mr Papandreou's government is locked in tough negotiations with its European peers for a new bailout.

At this stage the country cannot even afford to pay its bills for this month.

After the recent violent scenes on the streets of Athens, every European market opened lower, with London, Paris and Frankfurt initially down more than 1 per cent before recovering.

G M

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-06-16/europe-s-lehman-moment-looms-as-greek-debt-unravels-markets-euro-credit.html

Europe’s ‘Lehman Moment’ Looms as Greek Debt Unravels Markets: Euro Credit

 By Mark Gilbert and Liz Capo McCormick - Jun 16, 2011 3:29 AM MT


A protester walks through tear gas outside the Greek Parliament in central Athens, during a rally against plans for new austerity measures, on Wednesday, June 15, 2011. Photographer: Lefteris Pitarakis/AP



 

Play Video

 June 16 (Bloomberg) -- Dean Curnutt, founder and chief executive officer of Macro Risk Advisors, talks about the European sovereign debt crisis. Curnutt speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)



 

Play Video

 June 16 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Linzie Janis and Nicole Itano report on Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou's efforts to reassert his authority after a day of protests in central Athens and media reports he was in talks to step down in favor of a unity government. (Source: Bloomberg)



 

Play Video

 June 15 (Bloomberg) -- Jim Conklin, head of investment research at FX Concepts LLC, talks about the European debt crisis and the impact on the euro. He also discusses the outlook for the dollar and emerging market currencies. Conklin speaks with Bloomberg’s Paul Dobson at a conference in London. (Source: Bloomberg)



 

Play Video

 June 16 (Bloomberg) -- Scott Minerd, chief investment officer at Guggenheim Partners LLC, talks about Greece's debt problems. Minerd also discusses the outlook for global financial markets and the U.S. economy. He speaks from Los Angeles with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)



 

Play Video

 June 16 (Bloomberg) -- Andrew Freris, a senior investment strategist for Asia at BNP Paribas Wealth Management, talks about Greece's debt problems. The European Central Bank said yesterday the threat of the Greek debt crisis spilling over into the banking sector is the biggest risk to the region’s financial stability. Freris speaks in Hong Kong with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)




Markets were roiled yesterday as Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said he would name a new government and call a vote of confidence in Parliament. Photographer: Hannelore Foerster/Bloomberg




Protesters raise a Greek flag decorated with 'For sale' stickers outside the parliament building during a strike in Athens. Photographer: Kostas Tsironis/Bloomberg
.
The European Union’s failure to contain the Greek debt crisis is sending fresh shockwaves through currencies, money markets, equities and derivatives.

The euro lost more than 2 percent against the dollar in the past two days and the cost of protecting corporate bonds soared to the highest level since January, with credit-default swaps anticipating about a 78 percent chance that Greece won’t pay its debts. Equities declined around the world, while a measure of fear in fixed-income markets jumped the most since November.

Market moves suggest heightened concern that authorities won’t be able to keep Greece’s debt troubles from spreading after Moody’s Investors Service said it may downgrade BNP Paribas SA and two other big French banks because of their investments in the southern European nation. The collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008 caused credit markets worldwide to freeze as investors fled all but the safest government debt.

“The probability of a eurozone Lehman moment is increasing,” said Neil Mackinnon, an economist at VTB Capital in London and a former U.K. Treasury official. “The markets have moved from simply pricing in a high probability of a Greek debt default to looking at a scenario of it becoming disorderly and of contagion spreading to other economies like Portugal, like Ireland, and maybe Spain, Italy and Belgium.”

New Government

Lehman’s collapse contributed to $2 trillion in writedowns and losses at the world’s biggest financial institutions, data compiled by Bloomberg show, and central banks cut interest rates to record lows as economies slipped into recession.

Markets were roiled yesterday as Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said he would name a new government and call a vote of confidence in Parliament as he seeks to pressure rebel lawmakers to back an austerity plan that would secure a new bailout. The MSCI World (MXWO) Index fell a further 1.1 percent today, while the Swiss franc rose to a record against the euro.

Papandreou needs to clinch a parliamentary vote on a 78 billion-euro ($110 billion) five-year package of budget cuts and asset sales by July to ensure the country receives a new EU aid package to avoid the euro-area’s first default.

“Our duty is to the nation, not to political parties,” Papandreou said in comments televised live on state-run NET TV. “I will form a new government and immediately afterwards seek a vote of confidence in Parliament. It is a time for responsibility.”

‘Armageddon Scenarios’

Papandreou’s options narrowed as his bid to garner support from the biggest opposition bloc failed, party allies turned against him and police deployed tear gas to break up anti- government protests in central Athens.

“This is by no means the end of the story, but based on current majority, such a motion should pass,” Charles Diebel, head of market strategy at Lloyds Bank Corporate Markets in London, wrote in a note to clients yesterday. “If not, then Armageddon scenarios come into play, which include default and potentially the whole contagion scenario plays out.”

Earlier this week, Standard & Poor’s slashed Greece to CCC from B, handing the nation the world’s lowest credit rating and noting it’s “increasingly likely” to face a debt restructuring.

Greece’s unemployment rate jumped to 15.9 percent in the first quarter from 14.2 percent in the last three months of 2010, the Hellenic Statistical Authority in Athens said today. The jobless rate, at a record 16.2 percent in March, has climbed faster than projected under last year’s 110 billion-euro bailout.

Crafty_Dog

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Gingrich: Audit the Fed
« Reply #253 on: June 22, 2011, 08:07:27 AM »
In a speech this morning in Atlanta, I called for the repeal of the Dodd-Frank legislation and dramatic reforms in the operation of the Federal Reserve, starting with a full-scale audit of its activities.  

During the 2008 financial crisis, the Federal Reserve made thousands of loans to banks and other large institutions for reasons that aren’t entirely clear. These loans totaled at least three trillion dollars and exposed the American taxpayer to potentially enormous financial liability for losses.

Because such decisions of the Federal Reserve affect the value and stability of the dollar, and therefore the life and livelihood of every American, we have every right to ask - who got the money?

If you agree, please take a moment to watch our video laying out our "Who Got the Money?" proposal
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4861wQcacSk&feature=player_embedded
and sign our petition in support of a full-scale audit of the Federal Reserve.


« Last Edit: June 22, 2011, 08:10:35 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Fed QE2 to end as planned
« Reply #254 on: June 22, 2011, 10:32:02 AM »


Fed to End Stimulus Measures as Planned

The nation’s central bank said Wednesday that it would complete the planned purchase of $600 billion in Treasury securities  next week as scheduled, and then suspend its three-year-old economic rescue campaign, leaving in place the aid it already is providing but doing nothing more, for now, to boost growth.

“The economic recovery is continuing at a moderate pace, though somewhat more slowly than the committee had expected,” the Fed said in a statement. “The committee expects the pace of recovery to pick up over coming quarters and the unemployment rate to resume its gradual decline.”

The Fed’s policy board, the Federal Open Market Committee, voted unanimously to maintain its two-year-old commitment to hold a benchmark interest rate near zero “for an extended period.”

Read More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/23/business/economy/23fed.html?emc=na

DougMacG

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The Fed, Monetary Policy, QE2 to end
« Reply #255 on: June 22, 2011, 10:58:17 PM »
The end of QE2 means interest rates go up.(?)  The piece implies they won't, because the Fed will keep the overnight rate they charge banks at near zero.  But that is not the rate that you and I and businesses or government will pay.

Rough numbers, let's say the Fed now needs to sell a trillion (a year) more of government debt to willing buyers than it was selling before.  The US savings rate is zero and China doesn't want any more.  We sell the notes by raising the (interest rate) yield until they sell.  QE was the mechanism for tampering with that. When they end the intervention, rates go to market rate, which could be very high.

"The Fed’s policy board, the Federal Open Market Committee, voted unanimously to maintain its two-year-old commitment to hold a benchmark interest rate near zero for an extended period.”

Maybe so.  Others would say that the Fed does not set interest rates, markets do.  Only by massive monetary infusion was the Fed able to hold rates down - temporarily.

They can change their mind about no more quantitative expansion, or they will see rates go up.  Is there some other outcome I am missing?

If interest rates go up... some get hurt, some are helped. Maybe savings in this country can begin again.  But our current ruling crowd wants an economy built on consumption, not savings and investment.

Higher interest cost is one more burden on business investment.  They already have high energy costs, high regulatory compliance costs, high healthcare costs, high litigation costs, high property taxes, now they get a higher cost of carrying debt.

I favor right-sizing everything, including interest rates.  Higher interest rates could strengthen the dollar.  We've had that conversation - a stronger dollar is good and bad.  Problem is that fixing a flat tire when the engine is blown still leaves us unable to drive the car, (as our President might say).

Recall the mistakes made implementing the Reagan plan.  Tight money preceded the delayed and phased in tax rate cuts.  The result was very harmful on production and employment - a truly painful (and avoidable) recession.  When those tax rate cuts finally kicked in, we grew like gangbusters.

The difference here is that we don't even have a plan for balancing out a stable money policy with pro-growth policies. We don't have delayed or phased in growth policies, even on the horizon.  Maybe the Ryan plan, but its buried in the House with no chance in the Senate or executive branch.  Maybe  the Pawlenty plan with support of one economist and 4% of Republicans.  We are still years away from any real turn to pro-growth policies.  We aren't even committed to having that option on the ballot. If it was and if it won, we are still talking Jan 2013 to start debating the details and then muddyling it down to get 60 votes in the Senate.  Probably need to build a hospital in Connecticut and give a break to Nebraska.

The law of the land right now is actually the opposite - higher taxes in 2 years and choking off even more investment and recovery.  Absent any simultaneous shift to pro-growth policies, a shift to tighter money alone is just applying another set of the brakes to an already decelerating economy.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #256 on: June 22, 2011, 11:51:11 PM »
Worth noting at this moment is the situation with Greece and the Euro, leading to a flight to safety.  This may (temporarily?) offset the points you make , , ,

DougMacG

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #257 on: June 23, 2011, 08:30:33 AM »
True.  Still it would be resources flowing into to the U.S. to cover excess public spending instead of productive investment, solving no underlying problems.  It is looking more and more like we don't have until 2013 to fix things.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #258 on: June 23, 2011, 02:45:33 PM »
Agreed.  My only intended point is to not be fooled if the the predicted consequences of ending QE2 do not appear immediatly.
 

Crafty_Dog

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Global bankruptcy
« Reply #259 on: June 24, 2011, 03:51:52 AM »
A former Reagan administration official who worked on trade policy is warning that unless Congress can agree to a significant reduction in spending that the world may run out of money in 6-18 months. When that happens the economy could enter “a death spiral.”

“Based upon world liquidity, the amount of money available to fund sovereign debt in 2011 is between $6-9 trillion,” Marc Nuttle told Townhall Finance. Nuttle runs the site DebtWall.org. “The world’s government projections for deficit financing in 2011 is $8-10 trillion. We are bumping into the ceiling of the world’s ability to fund ongoing sovereign deficits and debt on an annual basis.”

The $2-6 trillion shortfall will have to come from other parts of the economy like small business loans, the stock market, commercial bonds and consumer spending.   

Unless something is done to reign in spending, Nuttle, an attorney from Oklahoma who served on Reagan’s Industrial Policy Advisory Committee, predicts that the financing of government debt will eat into the world’s ability to invest in public and private projects.

Money that would normally be available to capital markets would have to be switched just to finance interest rate increases. 

“Interest rates may well hit double digits,” he said, “forcing businesses to operate without adequate float for inventory, materials, facilities and production. Businesses will fail, jobs will be lost, salaries and wages will be reduced.” 

The Republican in charge of deficit negotiations reported this week that there has been no substantial progress with Democrats on cutting the spending of the federal government and has shutdown talks in frustration.

“Deficit-reduction talks led by Vice President Joe Biden have reached an ‘impasse,’ House of Representatives Majority Leader Eric Cantor said on Thursday,” according to Reuters, “adding that he will not participate in the meeting of the bipartisan group that had been scheduled for later in the day.”

An unnamed Senate Democrat aide said that both sides need to continue talking, but Reuters says “an aide to Senator Jon Kyl, a Republican member of the Biden group, declined to comment on whether the senator would attend Thursday's scheduled meeting.”

Nuttle says that in order to avert a short-term crisis the U.S. has to take the lead by cutting $500 billion in spending immediately.

“This will not completely solve the problem but it is an adequate step in the right direction,” Nuttle said. “This is the necessary amount that will alleviate pressure on the funding of 2012 world sovereign debt projections. It is still possible to develop a four-year plan to avert hitting the debt wall, but the plan requires immediate cuts in the deficit.”

A recent Rasmussen poll shows that Americans are concerned about the government’s ability to pay its debts. The survey released June 1st, “finds that 66% of American Adults are at least somewhat worried that the U.S. government will run out of money,” while “separate surveying has found that 50% of Likely U.S. Voters think it’s more likely that the government will go bankrupt and be unable to pay its debt before the federal budget is balanced.”

With the end of the Fed’s policy of quantitative easing, financing U.S. government debt is going to present a challenge almost immediately says Peter Schiff, president of Euro Pacific Capital.

“There’s no real private demand for Treasuries,” says Schiff, pointing out that central banks have been the main buyers. “No one buys them to hold them. They flip them, just like condos in Vegas.”

As a consequence either rates will have to go up to attract real buyers or the governments around the world will have to continue to subsidize U.S. debt, which will lead to a world “awash in inflation.”

Nuttle points out that under current artificially low rates, the interest on the U.S. debt is $187 billion. If interest rates were to go back to the historic norm of 4 percent, interest on the debt would come in at $600 billion. 

In fact, Schiff says the low interest rates are holding back the recovery.

“Rates are going to have to go up, if you want to put people back to work. You can make rates as low as you want, but it does no good. Because if banks can get compensated for the risk,” through higher rates, “they aren’t going to loan money.”

Rates will have to go up or the economy is going to have to change, Schiff says.

“Money will have to come from someplace to finance government debt. Consumer spending, stock market, someplace.”

Nuttle predicts that when that happens, “The economy will enter a death spiral of increasing business failures, fewer jobs, higher prices, higher taxes and stagnant growth. Liberals in government will use the ensuing economic crisis as a pretext for increasing the size and scope of government.”

If that’s what’s going to happen, it sounds kind of like we’re out of money already.

Because, really, we are.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

G M

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Re: Global bankruptcy
« Reply #260 on: June 24, 2011, 04:59:04 AM »
Invest in metals: Guns, ammo and canned food.

ccp

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #261 on: June 24, 2011, 08:42:03 AM »
We are headed for a crash.  There are just too many things that can go wrong.  It is just a matter of time before it catches up and the fed, the imf the euro, etc cannot bs out of it.

Don't worry be happy like Tom Hanks who will vote for Bamster again.




DougMacG

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #262 on: June 24, 2011, 10:52:24 AM »
"Invest in metals: Guns, ammo and canned food."
"We are headed for a crash."

Yes, but...

We make all the incentives to invest in everything that continues stagnation,  employs  no one and produces no product.  There isn't some speech from an incumbent or minor new policy or program capable of changing things.  We need a national mind change.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #263 on: June 24, 2011, 11:07:06 AM »
Forgive me, but that sounds like the logic of Carter's malaise speech.

We need to undo the massive wave of new regulations known and unknown, we need to eliminate the massive spending by the Feds, we need to end monetizing the debt and to protect the value of the currency, we need to throw out the tax code and replace it with something simple and fair e.g. the FAIR tax, etc etc etc.

DougMacG

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Monetary Policy: Kudlow - Did IEA Just Deliver QE3? More 'Faux stimulus'
« Reply #264 on: June 25, 2011, 12:09:52 PM »
"We need to undo the massive wave of new regulations known and unknown, we need to eliminate the massive spending by the Feds, we need to end monetizing the debt and to protect the value of the currency, we need to throw out the tax code and replace it with something simple and fair e.g. the FAIR tax, etc etc etc."

Except for the FAIR tax part, I am with you on all of that.

Kudlow makes the point I think that oil is money and we just announced the release of more and more.
-------------------
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2011/06/24/did_the_iea_just_deliver_a_qe3_quick_fix_to_save_obamas_skin_110346.html

June 24, 2011
Did the IEA Just Deliver a QE3 Quick Fix?
By Larry Kudlow

Did the International Energy Agency (IEA) just deliver the oil equivalent of Quantitative Easing 3?

The decision to release 2 million barrels per day of emergency oil reserves -- with the U.S. covering half from its strategic petroleum reserve -- is surely aimed at the sputtering economies of the U.S. and Europe following an onslaught of bad economic statistics and forecasts. This includes a gloomy Fed forecast that Ben Bernanke unveiled less than 24 hours before the energy news hit the tape.

I wonder if all this was coordinated.

The Bernanke Fed significantly downgraded its economic projections, blaming this forecast on rising energy (and food) prices as well as Japanese-disaster-related supply shocks. Of course, the Fed head takes no blame for his cheap-dollar QE2 pump-priming, which was an important source of the prior jump in energy and commodity prices. That commodity-price shock inflicted a tax on the whole economy, and it looks to be responsible for the 2 percent first-half growth rate and the near 4.5 percent inflation rate.

Bernanke acknowledged the inflation problem, but he didn't take ownership of that, either. Reading between the lines, however, the Fed's inflation worries undoubtedly kept it from applying more faux stimulus to the sagging economy with a third round of quantitative easing.

Somehow, the new Fed forecast suggests that the second-half economy will grow at 3.5 percent while it miraculously presses inflation down to 1.4 percent. But the plausibility of this forecast is low. It's almost "Alice in Wonderland"-like.

So, low and behold, the IEA and the U.S. Department of Energy come to the rescue.

Acting on the surprising news of a 60 million barrel-per-day crude-oil release from strategic reserves scheduled for July, traders slammed down prices by $5 to $6 for both West Texas crude and European Brent crude. That's about a 20 percent drop from the April highs, which followed the breakout of civil war in Libya in March. In fact, both the IEA and the U.S. DOE cited Libyan oil disruption as a reason for injecting reserves.

Of course, most folks thought Saudi Arabia would be adding a million barrels a day to cover the Libyan shortfall. The evidence strongly suggests it has. So the curious timing of the oil-reserve release -- coming in late June rather than last March or April -- strongly suggests that governments are manipulating the oil price with a temporary supply add to boost the economy.

In theory, these reserves are supposed to be held for true national emergencies. But the real U.S. national emergency seems to be a political one -- that is, President Obama's increasingly perilous re-election bid amidst high unemployment and the second-worst post-recession economic recovery since 1950.

Tall joblessness, big gasoline prices, low growth, a poor housing sector, growing mortgage foreclosures and sinking polls are probably the real reason for the strategic-petroleum-reserve shock. European Central Bank head Jean-Claude Trichet warns of a "Code Red" emergency due to Greek and other peripheral default risk. China has registered its lowest manufacturing read in 11 months. U.S. jobless claims increased again. And the U.S. debt-ceiling talks have broken down. It's almost a perfect storm for economic and stock market jitters.

So, will the government-sponsored oil-price-drop work? Will it fix the economy, by lowering inflation and speeding up growth? Well, it might, provided that the Bernanke Fed doesn't bungle the dollar.

If Bernanke keeps his balance sheet stable, applying what former Fed Governor Wayne Angell calls quantitative neutrality, it's quite possible that the greenback will rise and oil and commodity prices will slip. In fact, ever since Bernanke's first press conference in late April, when he basically said "no QE3," the dollar had been stabilizing, with oil prices slipping lower.

Bernanke is right to hold off on QE3 -- we could all be surprised with a stronger dollar. Then we could lower tax, spending, regulatory, trade and immigration barriers to growth. If we did that, we wouldn't need another short-run, so-called government fix, this time from the strategic petroleum reserve.

Lord save us from short-run government fixes. Haven't we had enough of them?

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #265 on: June 25, 2011, 06:13:26 PM »
Kudlow is a good economist and I think his point about QE3 has merit.

"If Bernanke keeps his balance sheet stable, applying what former Fed Governor Wayne Angell calls quantitative neutrality, it's quite possible that the greenback will rise and oil and commodity prices will slip."

Here I do not understand the point about keeping the balance sheet stable (worth noting is that Scott Grannis is far more sanguine than most of us here for just this sort of thing) but IMHO Kudlow misses the point about the boost to the dollar at present coming from the flight to stability due to the Greek/Euro situation/crisis.  In that the price of oil in dollars is to a great extent a function of the state of the dollars purchasing parity viz other currencies, of course this makes sense.  So I suppose it is possible the Baraq-Bernanke may get a bit lucky here and get away with a bit of stimulus without us seeming to pay a price for it.   Also to be remembered in taking meaning from the numbers is the low margin requirement/high market price volatility dynamic.

DougMacG

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #266 on: June 25, 2011, 08:12:03 PM »
Good points Crafty.  I would add to this "In that the price of oil in dollars is to a great extent a function of the state of the dollars purchasing parity viz other currencies" that I think the Saudis and OPEC might be the last people on earth still trying to value their product on the gold standard, independent from any of the flawed currencies:

Oil and Gold 1970 through 2009

G M

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Dollar seen losing global reserve status
« Reply #267 on: June 28, 2011, 07:08:03 AM »
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/23183a78-a0c6-11e0-b14e-00144feabdc0.html

 


Dollar seen losing global reserve status
 
By Jack Farchy in London
 





The US dollar will lose its status as the global reserve currency over the next 25 years, according to a survey of central bank reserve managers who collectively control more than $8,000bn.
 
More than half the managers, who were polled by UBS, predicted that the dollar would be replaced by a portfolio of currencies within the next 25 years.
 

That marks a departure from previous years, when the central bank reserve managers have said the dollar would retain its status as the sole reserve currency.
 
UBS surveyed more than 80 central bank reserve managers, sovereign wealth funds and multilateral institutions with more than $8,000bn in assets at its annual seminar for sovereign institutions last week. The results were not weighted for assets under management.
 
The results are the latest sign of dissatisfaction with the dollar as a reserve currency, amid concerns over the US government’s inability to rein in spending and the Federal Reserve’s huge expansion of its balance sheet.

“Right now there is great concern out there around the financial trajectory that the US is on,” said Larry Hatheway, chief economist at UBS.
 
The US currency has slid 5 per cent so far this year, and is trading close to its lowest ever level against a basket of the world’s major currencies.
 
Holders of large reserves, most notably China, have been diversifying away from the dollar. In the first four months of this year, three quarters of the $200bn expansion in China’s foreign exchange reserves was invested in non-US dollar assets, Standard Chartered estimates.

Crafty_Dog

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Harder to own gold starting July 15?
« Reply #268 on: June 28, 2011, 08:28:27 AM »
Not sure of the reliability of this source/advertisement, and not really understanding of what is going on here , , , but it smells of the government trying to make gold ownership more difficult.

=============

http://www.goldworth.com/townhall.html

DougMacG

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #269 on: June 28, 2011, 08:56:39 AM »
Sounds like a Supreme Court case in the making.  As the piece points out, they are not regulating gold bullion, they are banning it - taking away an unenumerated right! (?)

"The Ban on Physical/Tangible Bullion trading is set forth by the Dodd-Frank Reform and Consumer Protection Act"

This is a different law than the one contained in ObamaCare also aimed at destroying gold ownership.  That one 'raises revenue' by tracking individual purchases and ownership of gold in order to tax what by definition isn't really a gain.

In a very real sense, the government joins your ownership your gold purchase, if it is even allowed.  You cannot have any part of your investment back without first settling with them.  The government owns the 'gain' portion of your gold and you only own what they determine to be left after it is run through multiple levels of unknown future taxation and surcharges.

In gold, you bought an ounce, you held an ounce, and you sell an ounce.  How can that be a gain?  People who held a dollar or dollar-based asset over that time period took a loss.   All the gold owner did was perhaps avoid that loss on that portion of a portfolio.  Same goes for real estate.

I wander here, but it shows some of the big government bias toward perpetual inflation, in addition to the compounding devaluation of our debt.


DougMacG

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The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation: Washington Post - QE2, Did it work?
« Reply #270 on: July 02, 2011, 09:25:29 PM »
I should know by now that an opinions titled with a question don't have the answers.  They are saying that the purpose was to buy time to heal, not to cause the economic healing.  No mention really of the damage done to our currency or credibility by such a policy.  I think they are just marking in time the news that QE2 is ending and soon we will know happens next.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/did-the-feds-qe2-work/2011/06/30/AGmW8lsH_story.html

Did the Fed’s QE2 work?

By Editorial, Published: June 30

WITH A FEW last multibillion-dollar mouse clicks,the Federal Reserve’s bond traders have finished the $600 billion program of Treasury-bond purchases known as “QE2.” This second round of “quantitative easing” — the economist’s term for money creation by direct central bank balance-sheet expansion — began last fall and followed a previous $1 trillion round at the height of the Great Recession in 2009. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke announced QE2 in late August 2010 to prevent a spate of unexpected economic weakness from spiraling into a double-dip recession or outright deflation. QE2 has been controversial from the moment Mr. Bernanke announced it. But was it a success?

Let’s start with the positive side of the ledger. A year ago, inflation was running below the Federal Reserve’s rough target of 2 percent per year, a sign, to Mr. Bernanke, of deflation risk. That’s not a problem anymore. Deutsche Bank, to cite a typical blue-chip private-sector forecast, sees 2011 inflation running at 2.1 percent. QE2 also propped up the economy by bidding up the price, and thus lowering the yield, of Treasuries and other safe debt instruments. This encouraged investors to put their money into higher-yielding investments such as stocks, which reduced the cost of capital for businesses. And the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index is indeed up 25 percent since last August. A cheaper dollar was an unstated, but obvious, consequence of QE2, and that too has occurred, arguably boosting U.S. exports.

But the negative consequences of QE2 — all of them also foreseeable — have canceled out some of the positives. Perhaps the most important of these was a commodity price boom, caused by the fact that many investors used the Fed’s freshly printed money to speculate on grain or oil. The winnings accrued to a wealthy few, while the U.S. middle class coped with higher prices for groceries and gasoline. And for all that, it is not even clear that the Fed achieved its primary goal of depressing the interest rate on long-term U.S. debt: The 10-year bond paid 2.5 percent when Mr. Bernanke announced QE2 but pays about half a percentage more than that today.

Economic growth has hardly taken off during QE2. Unemployment still lingers above 9 percent, and the Fed has lowered its 2011 growth forecasts from just over 3 percent to a bit less than 3 percent. Yes, the deflationary wolf has been chased from the door — but avoiding future inflation will be more difficult now that the Fed has a $2.7 trillion balance sheet to unwind.

To be sure, the picture might look very different if not for the disruptions wrought in the U.S. and global economies by the tsunami in Japan. And, like all other judgments about economic policy, any evaluation of QE2 must consider that things could have been even worse without it. Growth might have gone even lower and bond rates even higher if the Fed had not bought up the U.S. government's rapidly growing debt.

Still, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that this was, in the end, a holding action. QE2 was not so much an asset-buying program as a time-buying program — time for America’s households, firms and governments to deleverage and heal as best they could. QE2 is over and unlikely to be repeated; Mr. Bernanke was not kidding last August when he said, “Central bankers alone cannot solve the world’s problems.” Meanwhile, the prospects of much more fiscal stimulus seem doubtful. For better or worse, the U.S. economy may be on its own.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #271 on: July 03, 2011, 07:00:13 AM »
I would also submit that the 2.1% inflation number is complete and utter bull excrement.

DougMacG

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Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, Inflation, US Dollar, & Gold/Silver
« Reply #272 on: July 03, 2011, 09:19:55 AM »
"I would also submit that the 2.1% inflation number is complete and utter bull excrement."

Discussing 'real growth' with friends yesterday I was just making that same point.  'Real growth' is 'inflation adjusted' but the adjuster is a phony multiplier.  I can't remember the latest formula but when they subtract out the things that are going up worst like energy and food, the result is necessarily false. 

The context was Romney not being able to back up a line he stole from Peggy Noonan that Obama made things worse.  Breakeven growth is roughly 3.1% 'real growth' in the false way we measure it.  Anything below that (all of Obama's record) is negative growth - in other words, things are getting worse and monetary tricks don't address in any way what is systemically wrong.

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Gold strikes new high after Fed comments
« Reply #273 on: July 13, 2011, 04:06:33 AM »
http://money.cnn.com/2011/07/12/markets/gold/

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Gold jumped to a record high Tuesday after the minutes from the Federal Reserve's June policy meeting indicated the central bank might be open to more monetary stimulus.

Gold futures for August delivery climbed $13.10, or 0.9%, to a record high of $1,562.30 an ounce. In after-market electronic trading, gold rose as high as $1,574.30 an ounce.

The late-afternoon surge came after the minutes from the Federal Reserve's June meeting said "a few members" of the bank's Federal Open Market Committee said the bank "might have to consider providing additional monetary policy stimulus, especially if economic growth remained too slow to meaningfully reduce the unemployment rate in the medium run."

G M

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Return of the Gold Standard as world order unravels
« Reply #275 on: July 14, 2011, 07:39:38 PM »
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/8638644/Return-of-the-Gold-Standard-as-world-order-unravels.html


Return of the Gold Standard as world order unravels

 As the twin pillars of international monetary system threaten to come tumbling down in unison, gold has reclaimed its ancient status as the anchor of stability. The spot price surged to an all-time high of $1,594 an ounce in London, lifting silver to $39 in its train.

Crafty_Dog

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Wesbury on June CPI
« Reply #276 on: July 15, 2011, 07:58:44 AM »
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The Consumer Price Index (CPI) fell 0.2% in June To view this article, Click Here
Brian S. Wesbury - Chief Economist
Robert Stein, CFA - Senior Economist
Date: 7/15/2011


The Consumer Price Index (CPI) fell 0.2% in June versus a consensus expected decline of 0.1%. The CPI is up 3.6% versus a year ago.

“Cash” inflation (which excludes the government’s estimate of what homeowners would charge themselves for rent) was down 0.3% in June but is up 4.2% in the past year.

The fall in the CPI was all due to a 4.4% drop in energy prices. Food prices were up 0.2%. Excluding food and energy, the “core” CPI increased 0.3% versus a consensus expected gain of 0.2%. Core prices are up 1.6% versus last year.

Real average hourly earnings – the cash earnings of all employees, adjusted for inflation – rose 0.2% in June but are down 1.5% in the past year. Real weekly earnings are down 0.9% in the past year.

Implications:  The Federal Reserve is losing its main excuse for keeping short-term rates near zero. Although the headline inflation number fell 0.2% in June, it was all due to what now appears to have been a temporary drop in energy prices. Higher energy prices in July mean the headline CPI will start moving up again in next month’s report. Today’s news is not a reason for the Fed or investors to become complacent about inflation. Despite the drop in June, consumer prices are up 3.6% in the past year and up 4.2% if we focus on “cash” inflation, which excludes the government’s estimate of what homeowners would pay themselves in rent. Moreover, monetary policymakers have been using low “core” inflation (which excludes food and energy) to justify keeping short-term interest rates near zero. But core inflation is accelerating. Although core prices are still up only 1.6% in the past year, they increased 0.3% in June following another 0.3% increase in May. In the past two months ‘core” prices are up at a 3.3% annual rate, the fastest two-month pace since 2006. The sharp increase in auto prices in June is related to supply-chain disruptions from Japan. Vehicle prices increased 1% in June and are up at an 11.2% annual rate in the past four months, the fastest pace on record (dating back to 1993). Inflation has been evident at the producer level for some time. Now, producers are passing some of those costs on to consumers. Rising inflation is a concern now, but we fully expect the Fed to maintain short-term interest rates near zero until at least mid-2012.


Crafty_Dog

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The Euro
« Reply #277 on: July 16, 2011, 03:06:11 PM »
Portfolio: The Question of the Eurozone's Future
July 14, 2011 | 1336 GMT
Click on image below to watch video:



Vice President of Analysis Peter Zeihan explains the existential difficulties that lie ahead for the eurozone.


Editor’s Note: Transcripts are generated using speech-recognition technology. Therefore, STRATFOR cannot guarantee their complete accuracy.

It’s hard to be bullish on much in Europe these days. The government bonds of Ireland, Portugal and Greece have all been downgraded to junk, the Europeans been sent back to the drawing board by the markets on their new bailout regimen and now the markets are talking about Italy being the next country to suffer a default. It’s easy to see why: next to Greece, Italy has the highest debt in Europe at about 120 percent of GDP. Its government is, shall we say, eccentric, and it has the highest debt relative to GDP of any country in the world with the exception of course of Greece and Japan. The sheer size of that debt, some 2 trillion euro, is larger than the combined government debts of the three states that are currently in receivership combined. In fact, it’s more than double the total envisioned amount of the bailout fund in its grandest incarnation.

Italy certainly deserves to be under the microscope, but STRATFOR does not see it as ripe for a bailout. Unlike Ireland or Portugal or Greece, Italy has a strong and large banking system, or at least healthy as compared to say, Ireland. So while Italy’s debt load is 120 percent of GDP, only 50 percent of GDP needs to be handled by outside investors, the banks handle everything else. But let’s keep such optimism in context. It’s now been 16 months since the first bailout of Greece back in March of last year and it’s becoming ever more apparent that the fear isn’t so much that the contagion from the weak states will infect the strong ones, but there are just a lot more weak states out there than anybody gave the Europeans credit for when this all started. So long as there is no federal entity with the political and fiscal capacity of dealing with the crisis, this is just going to get worse and it’s only a matter of months before what we think of as real states such as Belgium, Austria and Spain, are to be starting to flirt with conservatorship themselves.

Ad hoc crisis management can deal, has dealt, with the small peripheral economies, but it’s not capable of dealing with the problem that is now looming: potential financial instability and multi-trillion euro economies. With the illusions of stability that have sustained the euro to this point being peeled away one by one with every revelation of new debt improprieties, it’s only a matter of time before the euro collapses. This is of course unless one of three things happens. Option one is for the stronger nations to just directly subsidize the weaker nations, basically having the North transfer wealth in large amounts to the South year after year after year. Conservatively, that’s one trillion euros a year, and it is difficult to see how that would be politically palatable in a place like Germany.

Option two is to create something called Eurobonds. Right now the markets are scared of anything that has the word Portugal or Greece attached, and Greek debt is currently selling for about 16 percent versus the 3 percent of Germany. Eurobonds would allow European states to issue debt as a collective, so the full faith and credit of the European Union would back up any debt, which means that this 13 percent premium on Greek debt would largely disappear overnight. Of course that would mean that the European whole would be ultimately responsible for those debts at the end of the day, which means after a few years we’d be back in the same situation we are right now, with the debt ultimately landing on Germany’s doorstep once again. In STRATFOR’s view, the only difference between direct subsidization in the Eurobond plan would be when the Germans pay, now or later.

The third and final option is to simply print currency to buy up the government debt directly, either via the ECB or with the ECB granting a loan to the bailout fund to purchase the debt itself. This is an option that the Europeans are sliding toward because it puts off the hard decisions on political and economic power to another day. However it comes at a cost: inflation. Printing currency is a seriously inflationary business and for Europe this would put them in a double bind. Europe already has to import most of its energy, it already has a rapidly aging labor force and it already has very little free land upon which to build. Combined, this already makes the European Union the most inflationary of the world’s major developed economies, and that’s before you figure in printing currency.


Crafty_Dog

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Prudent Bear: Sovereign Debt Crisis Learning Curve
« Reply #278 on: July 17, 2011, 11:57:31 AM »
Mehtinks this one deserves extra attention , , ,

http://www.prudentbear.com/index.php/creditbubblebulletinview?art_id=10554
The Sovereign Debt Crisis Learning Curve:
During the second-half of his reign, Alan Greenspan became fond of trumpeting the U.S. economy’s newfound resiliency.  This was a theme peppered throughout his “Age of Turbulence” memoir, published in the pre-crisis year 2007.  Greenspan cited computer and telecommunications technologies; monumental productivity advancements; a flexible workforce; the financial system’s superior capacity to effectively invest limited savings; and, of course, enlightened policymaking. 

Back when I wrote more colorfully, I was fond of saying, “Financial crisis is like Christmas.”  In hindsight, it would have been more accurate to write “private-sector financial crisis is…”  Whether it was banking system debt problems from the early-90s; the series of “emerging” market Credit collapses; the unwinding of LTCM leverage; the bursting of the tech Bubble; the 2002 corporate debt crisis; or the spectacular collapse of the mortgage/Wall Street finance Bubble - the Fed would reliably respond to each and every crisis with the “gift” of reflationary policymaking. 

And, no doubt about it, “inflationism” was the market gift that kept on giving.  Crisis, in the Age of Activist Central Banking, created momentous opportunities to harvest speculative returns.  Those that best understood and exploited these dynamics (our era’s “titans of industry”) accumulated incredible fortunes – and vast AUM (assets under management).

It’s becoming increasingly apparent these days that public (government) debt problems are a whole different kettle of fish.  Rather than a “gift”, they instead present extraordinary challenges for both policy making and the markets.  European policymakers are today at a complete loss.  In Washington, politicians are making a sad mockery out of responsible debt management – and the markets have yet to even lower the boom.

From my analytical vantage point, the U.S. economy’s “resilience” was always more about New Age Finance than it was some New Paradigm economy coupled with sagacious economic management.  The Fed’s pegging of short-term interest rates, along with timely market interventions, created powerful incentives for private-sector Credit expansion - in the real economy and throughout the financial sphere.  System Credit, resilient as never before, was at the heart of it all.  Over years evolved a most powerful dynamic encompassing a historic private-sector Credit boom and speculative financial Bubble - both backstopped by the GSEs and aggressive fiscal and monetary management. 

Wall Street finance provided the nucleus of the private sector Credit boom:  asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, “repos,” derivatives, CDOs, CLOs, etc.  New Age risk intermediation - “Wall Street alchemy” – created seemingly endless “safe” higher-yielding and liquid securities, the perfect fodder for the mushrooming “leveraged speculating community.”  The structures both of the financial architecture and policymaking incentivized aggressive leveraging by the hedge funds and proprietary trading desks.  And when the markets occasionally caught the leveraged players overextended and vulnerable, Washington was quick with market bailouts.  These dynamics nurtured history’s greatest expansions of “private” sector debt and system leverage.

Of course, Fed rate cuts played a pivotal role in prolonging the Credit Bubble.  Greenspan’s asymmetrical approach – transparent little “baby-step” tightening moves and aggressive rate-slashing in the event of mounting systemic stress – was a godsend for leveraged speculation.  The critical role played by the GSEs has never received the Credit it deserves.  Beginning with the faltering bond Bubble in 1994, the GSE’s became aggressive (non-price sensitive) buyers of MBS, mortgages and miscellaneous debt instruments anytime market liquidity became an issue (when the speculators needed to deleverage).  GSE assets expanded $151bn (24%) in 1994, $305bn in 1998, $317bn in 1999, $242bn in 2000, $344bn in 2001, $240bn in 2002, and another $245bn in 2003.  With effectively parallel “activist” central banks backstopping the markets – the Federal Reserve and the GSEs down the road - the mortgage finance Bubble inflated to historic proportions.  This dynamic will not be repeated in our lifetimes. 

Sovereign debt crises are altogether different in nature to those “private” affairs that we’ve become rather comfortable with over the years.  Keep in mind that crises of confidence in private debt securities are quite amenable to rate cuts, the public sector’s explicit or implicit assumption/guarantee of private obligations, and system Credit reflation through public debt issuance and central bank monetization.  If sufficiently determined to do so, policymakers have the capacity to resolve about any private debt issue.  And, of course, the short-term benefits can be irresistible:  i.e. buoyant asset markets, reduced unemployment, bolstered confidence, economic expansion, inflating tax receipts and reelection (or, in the case of central bank chairmen, hero status). 

The great longer-term costs – which can remain “long-term” as long as policymakers perpetuate Credit Bubble excess – include mispriced finance, dysfunctional markets, the misallocation of resources, increasingly fragile financial and economic structures, social disquiet, geopolitical risks, and an unmanageable accumulation of public-sector debt and obligations.  Importantly, the mechanisms that work all too well in dealing with private debt crisis are not readily available come that fateful day when the markets question the creditworthiness of the government’s debt load. 

There is more attention paid these days to sovereign debt ratios and such.  At about 150% of GDP, Greece finances were (belatedly) recognized as an unmitigated disaster.  At 120%, Italy is too vulnerable.  Here at home, the National Debt Clock shows federal debt surpassing $14.3 TN.  Federal borrowings have expanded at a double-digit to GDP rate for the past three years, with total debt increasing more than $5.0 TN in short order.  There is today no realistic prospect for meaningful fiscal reform.

And while Europe is briskly moving up The Sovereign Debt Crisis Learning Curve, complacency still abounds here at home.  And the more hideous things appear in Europe and Washington, the more confident our markets become that policymakers will soon come to their senses and resolve the ugliness.  Such wishful thinking is a holdover from the good old private debt crisis days.

Avoid thinking in terms of sovereign debt in isolation.  The massive accumulation of public-sector debt is almost without exception symptomatic of deep systemic problems.  Whether we’re discussing Greece, Spain, Italy, the U.S. or Japan, enormous deficits and public debt loads are reflective of a post-private-sector Credit Bubble environment.  This is a critical issue.  Not only are governments running up huge debts, the underlying economic structure has already been heavily impaired from years of Credit abuse.  And as much as policymakers hope and intend for their borrowing, spending and monetizing programs to promote sound economic and financial recoveries, the reality is that expansionary policies exacerbate deleterious Credit Bubble effects.  It’s a case of aggressive monetary stimulus thrown at systems already way out of kilter. 

The empirical work of Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff demonstrates conclusively that heavy debt loads negatively impact growth dynamics (they have found 90% of GDP an important threshold).  This is no earth-shaking revelation, especially if one comes from the analytical perspective that huge accumulations of public debt are generally associated with an extended period of private and public sector Credit excess.  And years of Credit-related excesses will almost certainly foment acute financial fragilities and economic impairment. 

It’s no coincidence that the greatest expansion of public debt comes late in the cycle when the economy’s response to additional layers of debt becomes both muted and uneven.  Indeed, a precarious dynamic evolves where enormous amounts of (non-productive) government debt are required just to stabilize increasingly fragile economic structures.  In the meantime, late-cycle stimulus will most certainly distort and dangerously inflate highly speculative securities markets – especially when higher market prices are the direct aim of policy.

There was a Financial Times column today that posited that Italy’s problem was that it was stuck with the ECB rather than the Federal Reserve!  If only the Fed were purchasing Italian sovereign debt as it does Treasurys, Italian debt service costs and deficits would be much lower.  Crisis resolved.  Well, monetary policy certainly does play a critical role in sovereign debt Bubbles and crises.   

Back in the autumn of 2009, Greece could finance its massive deficit spending program for two-years at less than 2%.  Portuguese yields were about 125 bps and Ireland 175 bps.  Spanish and Italian 2-year yields were around 1.5%.  The Fed’s, ECB’s and global central bankers’ moves to slash interest rates to near zero were instrumental in the marketplace’s accommodation of unprecedented government debt issuance at artificially  low yields.  The European “periphery” markets were part of the expansive Global Government Finance Bubble.  And the market perception that monetary policy would ensure ongoing low sovereign debt service costs was instrumental in the market disregarding – and mispricing - Credit risk throughout the eurozone.  Even last spring, after the Greek crisis’ initial eruption, markets held to the assumption that policymakers would sustain low sovereign borrowing costs and insulate bondholders from significant losses.

Not only has monetary policy fostered the rapid expansion of government debt at artificially low rates, it has also set the stage for a very destabilizing change in market perceptions.  Particularly after many years of interventionist policymaking (throughout the protracted private Credit boom), the markets naturally turn complacent when it comes debt crisis risks.  Yet as Europe is confronting these days, there are limited available options when crisis finally arrives at sovereign debt’s doorstep.  At some point, fiscal and monetary stimulus comes to the inevitable end of the road.  At some point, markets say “no mas.” 

Piling on additional government debt is then no longer a solution, inaugurating the debilitating and depressing “austerity” cycle.  And, as we continue to witness here at home, having the central bank monetize federal debt only worsens market distortions and delays desperately-needed fiscal (and economic) reform.  As much as there was an element of certainty in the marketplace with regard to the mechanics of private-sector debt crisis resolution, sovereign debt Bubbles and crises just seem to foment uncertainty.  Policymakers are destined to look incompetent, while markets will appear fickle and unstable.  Meanwhile, fragile recoveries will turn increasingly vulnerable.  And throughout, there will be a growing disconnect between what the markets have come to expect from policymakers and what they can now realistically deliver.

As witnessed in Greece, Ireland, and Portugal, there comes a point where the market recognizes debt trap dynamics and begins to price in sovereign risk.  And it is not long into this process of risk re-pricing that the marketplace comes to view huge debt loads as unmanageable albatrosses.  This destabilizing process has now commenced with Spain and Italy.  Once unleashed, sovereign debt crisis momentum can prove difficult to contain. 

To be sure, the debt situation in these economies remains manageable only as long as the markets are content to finance sovereign borrowings at monetary policy-induced low rates.  Or, stated differently, Italy’s (and others’) debt load is viable only if the marketplace disregards risk.  Well, the market is today rather keen to risk and debt dynamics - and has been determined to push borrowing costs significantly higher.  This not only imperils the government debt and Credit default swap (CDS) markets, but casts an immediate pall on the Italian and European banking sector with their huge exposures to increasingly problematic sovereign debt.  As an analyst quoted in the Financial Times put it, “A banking sector is only as strong as its sovereign.”

European Credit and inter-bank lending markets are faltering.  The resulting de-leveraging and de-risking – and tightened general finance - will likely further pressure markets, overall confidence and economic activity – adding further pressure to the unfolding debt crisis.  And as China and Asian central bankers witness the spectacle of an unraveling Italy, they must view the unfolding U.S. debt debacle with heightened trepidation.  Perhaps this was on ECB President Trichet’s mind this past weekend when he referred to “the global debt crisis.”

G M

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Re: Prudent Bear: Sovereign Debt Crisis Learning Curve
« Reply #279 on: July 17, 2011, 12:07:27 PM »
Mehtinks this one deserves extra attention , , ,

http://www.prudentbear.com/index.php/creditbubblebulletinview?art_id=10554
The Sovereign Debt Crisis Learning Curve:


Hey! Let's tax those private jets!

Problem solved. Right?

G M

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Things are worse than I said
« Reply #280 on: July 19, 2011, 06:27:58 AM »

Things are worse than I said


By:Michael Barone | Senior Political Analyst Follow Him @MichaelBarone | 07/18/11 2:53 PM.
 

In my Sunday Examiner column I noted that the national debt currently amounts to 62 percent of gross domestic product and I cited Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart’s book This Time Is Different for the proposition that economic growth is impaired when debt reaches 90 percent of gross domestic product. However, it has been pointed out to me (see this paper by Senate Budget Committee Republicans) that these two measures of debt are incommensurate: the 62 percent figure refers to public debt outstanding while Rogoff and Reinhart’s 90 percent refers to total debt. This underlines rather than undermines my point, for total debt now amounts to 95 percent of gross domestic product. We may already be at the danger point, rather than heading there fast.


Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/blogs/beltway-confidential/2011/07/things-are-worse-i-said

DougMacG

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In the US we suffer from a continuing devaluation of our weakened currency.  Elsewhere they are suffering from currencies that are too strong.  Both scenarios cause other economic problems, as does the volatility and uncertainty.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/currency/8680740/Japan-follows-Switzerland-by-weakening-currency.html

Japan follows Switzerland by weakening currency
Japan has intervened to halt the rise of its currency aganist the dollar, to protect its own economy as investors piled into the yen as a safe haven on heightened fears about growth in the US and Europe.

Crafty_Dog

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Switzerland, Japan, and Germany (i.e. pre-Euro) had this problem in the late 70s due to the Carter-Blumenthal economic policies.

G M

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I blame Glenn Beck!
« Reply #283 on: August 08, 2011, 05:27:11 AM »
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/08/us-markets-precious-idUSTRE7592IU20110808

Reuters) - Gold vaulted above $1,700 an ounce for the first time on Monday, after the respective pledges by the G7 and the European Central Bank to quell the turbulence in the financial markets did nothing to put investors at ease.

Traders said the ECB had made good on its promise to solve the euro zone debt crisis by widening its bond-buying program to include paper from Spain and Italy, but the move was not enough to allay deep rooted concerns about Europe's spreading debt crisis.

Friday's downgrade to the quality of U.S. sovereign debt by ratings agency Standard & Poor's was widely anticipated, but its longer-term impact on anything from mortgage rates to the economy is unclear.

Spot gold was set for a second consecutive trading rally, up 2.5 percent from Friday at $1,704.19 an ounce by 7:35 a.m. EDT, having hit a record $1,715.01 earlier and having traded at all-time highs in sterling and euros.

G M

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So did Zimbabwe.....
« Reply #284 on: August 08, 2011, 06:18:41 AM »
http://www.cnbc.com/id/44051683

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan on Sunday ruled out the chance of a US default following S&P's decision to downgrade America's credit rating.

 
"The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print money to do that. So there is zero probability of default" said Greenspan on NBC's Meet the Press

Crafty_Dog

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I've heard several grey beards pontificating this incredibly stupid line.  Just how reassuring is it to say to lenders "We are going to print money and throw it out of helicopters"?  :roll:

DougMacG

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Re: Greenspan, we can always print money
« Reply #286 on: August 08, 2011, 10:59:05 AM »
Is he far enough out of power now that it is safe to say this...

Alan Greenspan is a buffoon.  Intelligent on some level I'm sure but loaded with confusion, inconsistency and hypocrisy.

He was Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Ford, a distinction I would leave off my resume if I were him.  He was chosen Fed Chair by President Reagan in June 1987 (first sign of Alzheimer's?) for credibility in the markets because he was a (so-called) Republican opponent of Reaganomics and therefore an intentional check and balance on our tax and fiscal policies.  He was considered to be from the root canal wing of the Republican party, cut spending growth but don't do anything radical to grow the economy.  Had he wrote Reagan's policies, we would still be in the Carter years.  His speeches were open jokes on the market, inventing his own language so no one would know what he was saying.

We had expansionary policies following the crashes starting in March 2000 and following the financial and economic crises following 9/11/2001.  Why did we still have expansionary monetary policies as we were approaching 50 consecutive months of job growth /economic growth?  Obviously the excesses of his time led to the 'irrational exuberance' of housing, the fall of which is still haunting us.

In his memoirs he criticizes Bush and Cheney for the excesses in spending.  That makes sense.  Why wasn't he screaming bloody murder about it THEN, while it was happening, when he had his own bully pulpit?

G M

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Where is the investigation?
« Reply #287 on: August 08, 2011, 12:19:46 PM »
http://jammiewearingfool.blogspot.com/2011/08/president-downgrade-braces-for-meltdown.html

Gold is above $1,700 per ounce for the first time because investors are looking for something safe.
Gold is over $1,700 an ounce? Makes you wonder how Anthony Weiner's investigation into Glenn Beck's "unholy alliance" with Goldline is coming along.

Oh, wait...


G M

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Re: Where is the investigation?
« Reply #288 on: August 10, 2011, 11:09:29 AM »
http://jammiewearingfool.blogspot.com/2011/08/president-downgrade-braces-for-meltdown.html

Gold is above $1,700 per ounce for the first time because investors are looking for something safe.
Gold is over $1,700 an ounce? Makes you wonder how Anthony Weiner's investigation into Glenn Beck's "unholy alliance" with Goldline is coming along.

Oh, wait...



Gold now above 1800!

Hmmmmmm. I tried looking up Anthony Weiner's twitter account to see if there was any progress on the investigation of Glenn Beck and Goldline and it seems to not be working for some reason. You got any leads on this, JDN?

Crafty_Dog

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Baaad Dog GM :lol:  Rubbing a dog's nose in his mess is considered poor methodolgy :lol:

G M

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Baaad Dog GM :lol:  Rubbing a dog's nose in his mess is considered poor methodolgy :lol:

What? Just asking some harmless questions....

Who doesn't want to see some justice for all those poor people who bought gold when it was at 800? Darn that Glenn Beck!

JDN

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Gold now above 1800!

Hmmmmmm. I tried looking up Anthony Weiner's twitter account to see if there was any progress on the investigation of Glenn Beck and Goldline and it seems to not be working for some reason. You got any leads on this, JDN?

Nope, no leads on Weiner, but I like gold, I just regret selling my gold stocks too early a while ago.  But if I was buying gold, I'ld buy it almost anywhere but Goldline.

Speaking of a pile of smelly dog's mess, the Consumer Protection Unit of Santa Monica is investigating Goldline.  Be careful bfore you trip and fall and rub your nose in this mess, I'ld avoid it... like well... smelly dog pooh.   :-D  The LA County DA is investigating as well. 

http://www.smgov.net/departments/cpu/coincomplaint.aspx
http://motherjones.com/mojo/2010/07/goldline-finally-under-investigation
http://www.coinlawfirm.com/library/fools-gold-inside-the-glenn-beck-goldline-scheme-the-voss-law-firm-coin-fraud-lawyer.cfm

G M

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Gold now above 1800!

Hmmmmmm. I tried looking up Anthony Weiner's twitter account to see if there was any progress on the investigation of Glenn Beck and Goldline and it seems to not be working for some reason. You got any leads on this, JDN?

Nope, no leads on Weiner, but I like gold, I just regret selling my gold stocks too early a while ago.  But if I was buying gold, I'ld buy it almost anywhere but Goldline.

Speaking of a pile of smelly dog's mess, the Consumer Protection Unit of Santa Monica is investigating Goldline.  Be careful bfore you trip and fall and rub your nose in this mess, I'ld avoid it... like well... smelly dog pooh.   :-D  The LA County DA is investigating as well. 

http://www.smgov.net/departments/cpu/coincomplaint.aspx
http://motherjones.com/mojo/2010/07/goldline-finally-under-investigation
http://www.coinlawfirm.com/library/fools-gold-inside-the-glenn-beck-goldline-scheme-the-voss-law-firm-coin-fraud-lawyer.cfm

Uh-huh. Where are the indictments? Arrests?

It seems that neither Santa Monica or the LA DA found anything, did they JDN?

JDN

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These things take time; but you know that .

"Still Under Investigation" by the District Attorneys in Santa Monica AND Los Angeles.

I'ld call that the kiss of death.

Whether they finally indict or arrest or not, do you want to do business with Goldline?

I don't.  When I smell a pile of dog mess, I try not to step in it and fall getting my nose covered. 

But up to you.   :-)

G M

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"Still Under Investigation" by the District Attorneys in Santa Monica AND Los Angeles.

Really? Where did you get that? Please cite your source.

Why does Goldline have an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau?

JDN

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I previously referenced the Santa Monica site; they are collecting complaints.  If you call over there, they say "it's still under investigation" and won't (typical) give any more information.  I guess they won't come out and say it's a big pile of dog pooh!     :-D

Any guy saying he's my dog groomer (I don't have a dog) could get a A+ rating from the BBB.  This town is littered with fraudulent companies that were rated A+ by BBB.  That's almost like saying he's in the yellow pages therefore he's legit. 

Think about it.  When the DA takes the trouble, like in this instance, to set up a special complaint webpage, I run.  Fast.  That's my advice.

But don't let me stop you.  We both agree gold is a good investment.  Therefore I presume you are buying all your gold and recommending to all your friends
that they buy their gold at Goldline right?

 :evil:

G M

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I previously referenced the Santa Monica site; they are collecting complaints.  If you call over there, they say "it's still under investigation" and won't (typical) give any more information.  I guess they won't come out and say it's a big pile of dog pooh!

How many more years are they going to take complaints? The investigation is simple, either they have a case or they don't. They obviously don't. Just typical People's Republic of Kalifornia politicking for guillible lefties. It's obviously as lacking in substance as every argument you try to push forward.
« Last Edit: August 10, 2011, 05:03:17 PM by G M »

G M

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Any guy saying he's my dog groomer (I don't have a dog) could get a A+ rating from the BBB.  This town is littered with fraudulent companies that were rated A+ by BBB.  That's almost like saying he's in the yellow pages therefore he's legit.  

Really? That'll comes as a shock to the BBB. Of course you have to make up an imaginary dog groomer as you are lacking anything we like to call evidence.

G M

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Therefore I presume you are buying all your gold and recommending to all your friends
that they buy their gold at Goldline right?


I invest my spare cash into tangible goods like guns, ammo, freeze dried food and medical supplies.

If selling things at a mark-up is a crime in the PRK, I'm going to call the LA DA's Office tomorrow and tip them off about Rodeo Drive. Imagine the websites and investigations they'll have to launch then.

Crafty_Dog

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OK, I think we have mined this particular vein enough for right now  :lol: