Showing posts with label currency crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label currency crisis. Show all posts

Monday, October 01, 2012

Currency Manipulation and the Politics of Neo-Mercantilism

At the local stock market forum, the Stock Market Pilipinas I had been asked to comment about the currency manipulation charges hurled against China.

For starters, as per Wikipedia’s definition of currency intervention, otherwise known as exchange rate intervention or foreign exchange market intervention, is the purchase or the sale of the currency on the exchange market by the fiscal authority or the monetary authority, in order to influence the value of the domestic currency. (bold emphasis mine)

In brief, the employment of currency/foreign exchange/exchange rate interventions implies that both monetary and fiscal authorities of ALL nations are currency manipulators.
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(chart from Bloomberg)

As evidence, considering that international reserves assets (excluding gold) are at record highs mainly through the expansion of central bank balance sheets (via unsterilized interventions) these means that all central banks have been manipulating their respective currencies.
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The growth of central bank balance sheets includes Asia and the Philippines. (Bank of International Settlements)
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Such concerted balance sheet expansions has also been reflected on the state of money supply growth. (chart from Mao Money, Mao Problems)

Fund manager David R. Kotok of Cumberland Advisors has a good narrative of why the growing concerns over dollar debasement are valid.

Mr. Kotok writes, (bold emphasis mine)
The dollar maintains its reserve currency status because it is the least worst of the major four currencies – the US dollar, the British pound, the Japanese yen, and the euro.  All four of these currencies are now suffering the effects of a stimulative, expansive, and QE-oriented monetary policy.

We must now add the Swiss franc as a major currency, since Switzerland and its central bank are embarked on a policy course of fixing the exchange rate between the franc and the euro at 1.2 to 1.  Hence the Swiss National Bank becomes an extension of the European Central Bank, and therefore its monetary policy is necessarily linked to that of the eurozone… 

When you add up these currencies and the others that are linked to them, you conclude that about 80% of the world’s capital markets are tied to one of them.  All of the major four are in QE of one sort or another.  All four are maintaining a shorter-term interest rate near zero, which explains the reduction of volatility in the shorter-term rate structure.  If all currencies yield about the same and are likely to continue doing so for a while, it becomes hard to distinguish a relative value among them; hence, volatility falls.

The other currencies of the world may have value-adding characteristics.  We see that in places like Canada, Sweden, and New Zealand.  But the capital-market size of those currencies, or even of a basket of them, is not sufficient to replace the dollar as the major reserve currency.  Thus the dollar wins as the least worst of the big guys.

Fear of dollar debasement is, however, well-founded.  The United States continues to run federal budget deficits at high percentages of GDP.  The US central bank has a policy of QE and has committed itself to an extension of the period during which it will preserve this expansive policy.  That timeframe is now estimated to be at least three years.  The central bank has specifically said it wants more inflation.  The real interest rates in US-dollar-denominated Treasury debt are negative.  This is a recipe for a weaker dollar.  The only reason that the dollar is not much weaker is that the other major central banks are engaged in similar policies.
Given the high concentration of exposure by the world’s banking system on these four major international reserves currencies (US dollar, British pound, Japanese Yen, and the euro), this means that policies of ancillary central banks has to adjust in accordance to the policies of these major international reserve currencies.

In short, policies by the US mostly dominate on the policies of global central banks. Alternatively this suggest that the US has been the world’s biggest 'currency manipulator'.

While it is also true that some peripheral currencies has differentiating factors as pointed above, the point is that these currencies don’t have enough market depth to replace the incumbent international reserve currencies.

As caveat, such premises remain conditional on the absence of a currency crisis. Abrupt changes to the current setting should be expected if or once a currency crisis should occur.

Yet the fundamental issue is to understand the role of role of central banks. As Mises Institute founder Llewellyn Rockwell Jr. recently wrote, (lewRockwell.com):
First, they serve as lenders of last resort, which in practice means bailouts for the big financial firms. Second, they coordinate the inflation of the money supply by establishing a uniform rate at which the banks inflate, thereby making the fractional-reserve banking system less unstable and more consistently profitable than it would be without a central bank (which, by the way, is why the banks themselves always clamor for a central bank). Finally, they allow governments, via inflation, to finance their operations far more cheaply and surreptitiously than they otherwise could.
The bottom line is that currency manipulation, through inflationism, is the essence of the paper money legal tender based central banking.

So what’s the hullabaloo over China as "currency manipulator"?

Well, “currency manipulation” has been no less than a popular sloganeering of “us against them” politics meant to attain political goals.

Such political goal has been subtly designed for the protection of the privileged business interests allied with the political class through trade restrictions or through the transformation “of the economy from roughly laissez-faire to centralized, coordinated statism” as the great dean of Austrian school of economics Murray N. Rothbard pointed out.

This is called neo-mercantilism.

In the 80s, rising Japan had been painted as a threat to American economic standings, such that hate and envy based politics echoed the call for neo-mercantilist protectionism, again from Professor Rothbard,
Protectionism, often refuted and seemingly abandoned, has returned, and with a vengeance. The Japanese, who bounced back from grievous losses in World War II to astound the world by producing innovative, high-quality products at low prices, are serving as the convenient butt of protectionist propaganda. Memories of wartime myths prove a heady brew, as protectionists warn about this new "Japanese imperialism," even "worse than Pearl Harbor." This "imperialism" turns out to consist of selling Americans wonderful TV sets, autos, microchips, etc., at prices more than competitive with American firms.

Is this "flood" of Japanese products really a menace, to be combated by the U.S. government? Or is the new Japan a godsend to American consumers? In taking our stand on this issue, we should recognize that all government action means coercion, so that calling upon the U.S. government to intervene means urging it to use force and violence to restrain peaceful trade. One trusts that the protectionists are not willing to pursue their logic of force to the ultimate in the form of another Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
With Japan suffering from a humongous bubble bust that has led to a lost decade, today such political bogeyman has shifted to China.

The mainstream (mostly representing captured interests) has used all sorts of highly flawed and deceptive technically based assumptions and theories as cheap labor theory, cheap currencies, global savings glut, global imbalances and others to divert or camouflage the public’s attention from the unintended consequences from serial interventionist domestic policies and bubble monetary policies by riling up or conjuring emotive nationalist or xenophobic sentiment.

Gullible public opinion are easily swayed due to either the dearth of economic understanding or because they are blinded from the obsession to politics.

As the great Ludwig von Mises pointed out (OMNIPOTENT GOVERNMENT p.183)
People favor discrimination and privileges because they do not realize that they themselves are consumers and as such must foot the bill. In the case of protectionism, for example, they believe that only the foreigners against whom the import duties discriminate are hurt. It is true the foreigners are hurt, but not they alone: the consumers who must pay higher prices suffer with them.
And part of that reality has not entirely been about achieving some dubious trading objectives but to expand credit, again for political goals.

Again the Professor von Mises, (Human Action)
While the size of the credit expansion that private banks and bankers are able to engineer on an unhampered market is strictly limited, the governments aim at the greatest possible amount of credit expansion. Credit expansion is the governments' foremost tool in their struggle against the market economy. In their hands it is the magic wand designed to conjure away the scarcity of capital goods, to lower the rate of interest or to abolish it altogether, to finance lavish government spending, to expropriate the capitalists, to contrive everlasting booms, and to make everybody prosperous.
The politics of neomercantilism exploits economic patsies and the politically blind in the name of nationalism for the benefit of political class, vested interest groups and or their cronies at the expense of society.

Monday, July 23, 2012

US Capital Controls: New York Fed Backs Withdrawal Limits for Money Market Funds

Step by step the US seems in a transition towards capital controls.

From Bloomberg,

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said money-market fund investors should be prohibited from withdrawing all their assets at once as a way to make the $2.5 trillion industry “safer and more fair.”

Money funds should set aside a portion of every investor’s balance as a “minimum balance at risk” that could only be withdrawn with a 30-day notice, the New York Fed’s staff said today in a report. The provision would reduce systemic risk and protect small investors who don’t pull out of a troubled fund quickly, according to the report.

“The delay would ensure that redeeming investors remain partially invested in the fund long enough to share in any imminent portfolio losses or costs arising from their redemptions,” the bank said today in a statement.

The idea, opposed by the funds industry, is already part of a proposal before the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that would force money funds to float their share value or build capital cushions and impose withdrawal restrictions, a person familiar with the plan said last month. The agency hasn’t made the proposal public and hasn’t scheduled a meeting for commissioners to vote on it.

Once again, policymakers are shown to be in desperation having to limit their visions towards attaining immediate goals, without vetting on the risks of potential unintended consequences from the reactions of the industry and of the public over the medium to long term.

The slippery slope towards capital controls eventually may imply deposit withdrawal limits ala Argentina during the 1999-2002 crisis

The biggest risks from all these would be…let me guess—capital flight and a US dollar crisis.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

China’s Oil Imports Slump, Gold Imports Soar

A slump in oil imports could also be an indicator of slowing economic growth and perhaps the end of China’s hoarding of strategic reserves.

Notes the Zero Hedge, (bold original)

Following months of ever higher Chinese imports, no doubt predicated by stockpiling and hoarding reserves, in June Chinese crude oil imports plunged from over 25 million metric tons to 21.72 MMTs, the lowest since December, or about 5.3 million barrels a day, down over 10% from the previous month's record import. While the number was still quite higher than the 19.7 million tons, the sudden drop is concerning, especially since the price of Brent slid materially in June, and if anything should have resulted in even more imports if indeed China was merely stockpiling crude for its new strategic reserve facilities. Which begs the question: was the demand actually driven by the economy, and just how bad is the economic slowdown over the past month if not even stockpiling at preferential prices can offset the drop in end demand?

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From Dow Jones:

China's refineries may process less crude in the third quarter due to weaker domestic demand for diesel, which has led to persistently high stockpiles and steady exports from the country's largest refiner, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, or Sinopec Corp.

The country's crude throughput declined in both April and May, falling 0.3% and 0.7%, respectively, compared with the corresponding months a year earlier.

Weaker demand for diesel, a primary driver of refinery output, has tracked China's economy, which has slowed for five consecutive quarters. Manufacturing activity in June grew at its slowest pace since November.

Meanwhile gold imports through Hong Kong has been soaring

Again from Zero Hedge (bold original)

There are those who say gold may go to $10,000 or to $0, or somewhere in between; in a different universe, they would be the people furiously staring at the trees. For a quick look at the forest, we suggest readers have a glance at the chart below. It shows that just in the first five months of 2012 alone, China has imported more gold, a total of 315 tons, than all the official gold holdings of the UK, at 310.3 according to the WGC/IMF (a country which infamously sold 400 tons of gold by Gordon Brown at ~$275/ounce).

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From Bloomberg:

In May, imports by China from Hong Kong jumped sixfold to 75,635.7 kilograms (75.6 metric tons) from a year earlier, Hong Kong government data showed. The nation “remains the most important player on the global gold market,” Commerzbank AG said in a report. The dollar fell from a five-week high against a basket of currencies, boosting the appeal of the metal as an alternative investment.

“Higher physical demand in China is good news for the market,” Sterling Smith, a commodity analyst at Citigroup Inc.’s institutional client group in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. “The mildly weak dollar is also positive.”

The World Gold Council has forecast that China will top India this year as the world’s largest consumer because rising incomes will bolster demand.

And those looking at the trees will still intone "but, but, gold is under $1,600" - yes it is. And count your lucky stars. Because while all of the above is happening, Iran and Turkey have quietly started unwinding the petrodollar hegemony. From the FT:

According to data released by the Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat), Turkey’s trade with Iran in May rose a whopping 513.2 per cent to hit $1.7bn. Of this, gold exports to its eastern neighbour accounted for the bulk of the increase. Nearly $1.4bn worth of gold was exported to Iran, accounting for 84 per cent of Turkey’s trade with the country.

So what’s going on?

In a nutshell – sanctions and oil.

With Tehran struggling to repatriate the hard currency it earns from crude oil exports – its main foreign currency earner and the economic lifeblood of the country - Iran has began accepting alternative means of payments – including gold, renminbi and rupees, for oil in an attempt to skirt international sanctions and pay for its soaring food costs.

“Iran is very keen to increase the share of gold in its total reserves,” says Gokhan Aksu, vice chairman of Istanbul Gold Refinery, one of Turkey’s biggest gold firms. “You can always transfer gold into cash without losing value.”

Turkey’s gold exports to Iran are part of the picture. As TurkStat itself noted, the gold exports were for “non-monetary purpose exportation”. Translation: they were sent in place of dollars for oil.

Iran furnishes about 40 percent of Turkey’s oil, making it the largest single supplier, according to Turkey’s energy ministry. While Turkey has sharply reduced its oil imports from Iran as a result of pressure from the US and the EU, it is unlikely to cut this to zero. The country pays about $6 a barrel less for Iranian oil than Brent crude, according to a recent Goldman Sachs report.

According to Ugur Gurses, an economic and financial columnist for the Turkish daily Radikal, Turkey exported 58 tonnes of gold to Iran between March and May this year alone.

None of these looks anywhere a good news.

Gold prices, at present, may partly have been driven by the Iran sanction dynamic but I think that China may have been insuring themselves from risks of a currency crisis through the stockpiles of gold and oil.

Nonetheless I am not sure if the slump in oil imports represents an anomaly or an indication of a deepening slump in the economy and or may have redirected some of that money to the stimulus directed towards state owned enterprises.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

China-Chile Plans to Double Trade in 3 years and Use the Yuan as Medium

China continues to promote her currency, the yuan, as an international currency reserve through a package of trade and investment bilateral deals.

China and Chile plans to double trade within 3 years through free trade. Wow.

From Xinhua,

China and Chile agreed Tuesday to upgrade their bilateral ties to a strategic partnership, and double trade in three years.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and Chilean President Sebastian Pinera announced Tuesday the establishment of China-Chile strategic partnership and the completion of negotiations on investment-related supplementary deals to a bilateral free trade agreement.

During their talks, Wen urged speedy signing and ratification of these supplementary deals and called for the finalization of the China-Chile free trade area…

Meanwhile, Wen suggested that the two sides launch currency swaps and expand settlement in China's renminbi.

Aside from Chile, as Zero Hedge points out, the list of China’s trading partners who now use the yuan as medium (including setting up of currency swaps) includes Japan, Russia, Iran, India and Brazil.

The world is in a gradualist path of bypassing the US dollar, which I believe, aside from the yuan as global forex reserve, could be partly motivated as insurance against a currency crisis

And as I have been saying, China’s supposed gunboat diplomacy and promotion of the yuan (or the seeming Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde relationship with Philippines) just doesn’t add up.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Emerging Markets Eye Insurance Against the US Dollar, Euro

Aside from the pledge to assist in the rescue of the EU, key emerging markets led by the BRICs and South Africa discussed insurance options that goes around the US dollar.

From the China Money Report,

The BRICS countries said on Monday that they’re considering setting up a foreign-exchange reserve pool and a currency-swap arrangement as financial problems threaten to spread across the global economy.Leaders of the five-member group —Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa— also said BRICS is “willing to make a contribution” to increase the International Monetary Fund’s ability to rescue troubled economies. President Hu Jintao joined his counterparts from other BRICS nations on Monday morning in the Mexican resort city Los Cabos ahead of the start of the G20 Summit.

According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, the leaders discussed the currency swap and foreign-exchange reserve pool ideas and tasked their finance ministers and central bank chiefs to implement them, according to China’s Foreign Ministry.

Swap arrangements, which allow nations’ central banks to lend to each other money to keep markets liquid, and the pooling of foreign-exchange reserves are contingency measures aimed at containing crises such as the one roiling the eurozone, analysts said.

Zhang Yuyan, director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the new mechanisms established by the emerging markets themselves, who “know their current conditions and demands
much better”.

Amid the global economic slowdown, the pooling of foreign-exchange reserves will help BRICS countries to fight the lack of market liquidity, beef up their immunity to financial crises and boost global confidence, Zhang said.

Contributions to this “virtual” bailout fund, as Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega put it, would be tied to the size of each BRICS member’s currency reserves, he said. The five leaders also discussed BRICS’ participation in replenishing the IMF’s lending capital. Hu said the G20 should encourage and support the eurozone countries’ adoption of fiscal controls and spending cuts as efforts to improve confidence in world markets. The leaders also urged the IMF to carry out promised reforms of its quota and governance systems. Mexico, which was hosting the G20 Summit on Monday and Tuesday, has said it will use the meeting to press the world’s largest economies to increase IMF resources and build the fund’s capacity to intervene in the European debt crisis.

While these may be constitute added signs that much of the world seem to be getting antsy with the unfolding events in the developed economies, swaps and foreign reserve pools won’t do much when the whole paper money system goes into flame.

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The reason for this is that much of the world’s banking and financial system remains anchored on fiat currencies of the western world, where the US dollar and the euro constitute 90% of global reserve currencies (see chart from Wikipedia.org).

Besides, the monetary system of emerging markets operates from the same fractional reserve system as their developed peers, which means that like their developed peers, EM politicians will be seduced to used inflationism to achieve political goals.

Instead, what these economies should do would be to ramp on gold acquisition, and possibly consider a quasi-gold standard possibly through a gold based currency board (as proposed by Professor Steve Hanke) or a return to the gold standard or allow for currency competition with the private sector (free banking, free currency competition as proposed by Ron Paul and Professor Lawrence White).

Since any of the proposed monetary reforms would entail restriction in political actions and simultaneously require massive liberalization of respective economies, these won’t likely be palatable with incumbent political agents, who under such circumstances, lose much of their current privileges (Europe’s deepening crisis are manifestations of these).

Thus, it would likely take a deeper crisis (most likely a currency crisis) to force real reforms in the system.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

China’s Middle Class Support Demand for Gold

From Mineweb.com

The rise of China's middle-class is helping support demand for gold in the country. China, the largest producer of gold, is set to become the biggest consumer of the metal in 2012, with a significant proportion of luxury purchases in China veering towards gold accessories, bought by middle-class aspirational consumers.

By 2020, 25% of China's population is expected to be middle-class, creating great consumption demand. Diamond studded luxury items and gold watches are seeing `blow-out like demand' from wealthy shoppers in China, who are snapping up these expensive accessories to make a fashion statement, give as business gifts or just collect.

What also augurs well this year is that middle-class wealth is expected to spread to 600 million people in third-tier Chinese cities, with a sizeable percentage investing in gold or buying gold jewellery.

For a country whose gold production in the first four months of 2012 reached 109.6 tonnes, up 6.13% from the same period last year, passion for the yellow metal has scaled new heights.

Total retail sales of gold, silver and jewellery in China amounted to $2.82 billion in May, up 18.2% compared to the same period last year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of China. Accumulative retail sales of the segment in the first five months of 2012 reached $14.6 billion, up 16.1% compared to the same period last year.

In May, the country's overall retail sales of consumer goods including gold, silver and jewellery totalled $262 billion, up 13.8% year-on-year at nominal growth rates. The real growth rate was 11%, data showed.

The jewellery sector in China has become a hot spot fuelled by surging investment demand for gold and precious stones. Jewellery retailers registered a 42% increase in sales last year, driven by consumers' taste for gold and gemstone-encrusted jewellery. Reports indicate that these jewellers are looking beyond traditional markets, eager to dig into the pockets of the newly rich middle-class in smaller cities.

For some time now, the country's growing middle-class has been pursuing a quality of lifestyle that includes appreciation for exquisite fine jewellery. And, retail jewellery chains are expanding to smaller cities and districts to keep up with demand.

Statists have always made the point that paper money has been the popular choice. But appeal to popularity premised on free lunch or Santa Claus politics cannot and will not supplant economic reality.

Today’s crisis have been manifestations of the unraveling of such unsustainable institutional arrangements.

Statists also say that people will have difficulty over adjusting or accepting to the return of gold as money. Maybe for the people of the West this may hold some substance. The intellectual elite may have successfully indoctrinated upon the public to accept the ideology that gold is a “barbaric metal” and where free lunch politics have promoted and embedded to their lifestyles the creed that “debt based spending is the path to prosperity” through government’s cartelized banking system.

But this certainly is far from reality for most of Asia such as China, India, Malaysia or Vietnam. The rate of growth of gold’s demand by China’s middle class looks like a testament to these.

In other words, should a global currency crisis emerge, then Asians are likely to reform their respective monetary system faster than that of the West. But that would be just a guess.

Yet it is unclear if prospective monetary reforms will include gold. But chances are increasing that gold may be part of it.

Global central banks have been accumulating gold at a faster rate led by Asia.

From Reuters.com

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) noted in its June 2012 Quarterly Review that "central bank balance sheets in emerging Asia expanded rapidly over the past decade because of the unprecedented rise in foreign reserve assets" Reserves rose from $1.1 trillion to $6.4 trillion in 2011.

This quote, which I earlier posted, attributed to Janos Feteke (who I think was the deputy governor of the National Bank of Hungary) looks apropos to the surging demand of gold from China’s middle class and to the micro versus macro debate on the return of the gold standard,

There are about three hundred economists in the world who are against gold, and they think that gold is a barbarous relic - and they might be right. Unfortunately, there are three billion inhabitants of the world who believe in gold.

What truly matters is to get monetary system out of government's hands or to depoliticize or denationalize (Hayek) money and allow for competition in banking (free banking), where gold standard may or may not be the accepted standard. Nevertheless sound money based on free markets.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

As Oil Prices Slump, China Imports Record Amount of Oil

China has not just been buying RECORD amounts of gold, it seems that China has also been gobbling up RECORD amounts of crude oil.

From Bloomberg,

China, the world’s second-biggest oil consumer, increased crude imports in May to a record high as refineries raised processing rates and oil prices declined.

The country bought a net 25.3 million metric tons, or 5.98 million barrels a day, more than it exported last month, according to data published today on the website of the Beijing- based General Administration of Customs. That compares with the previous high of 5.87 million barrels a day in February.

The jump in oil purchases helped spur a 12.7 percent gain for the nation’s imports last month, exceeding economists’ estimates. Refineries boosted processing rates last month as some facilities resumed operations after scheduled maintenance while Brent oil in London entered a so-called bear market on June 1 after sliding more than 20 percent from this year’s peak.

“International crude oil prices have been falling in the past two months, so more crude was probably shipped in to fill commercial and state emergency stockpiles” as prices could rise again, Gong Jinshuang, a Beijing-based senior engineer at China National Petroleum Corp., the nation’s biggest oil company, said by telephone.

Purchases cost an average $120 a barrel, compared with about $123 in April, Bloomberg calculations from the customs data showed. China’s imports of crude were 25.48 million tons in May, while exports were 180,000 tons

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A chart of soaring oil imports from Zero Hedge who rightly points out that this means China seemingly has not been hoarding the USD

Gold and oil functions as benchmark commodities or as lead commodities.

And as I recently pointed out

It could also be possible that China’s quickening pace of gold hoarding could be as insurance against a potential cataclysmic currency crisis that could be unleashed from political responses by major central banks to avert a global recession.

Add oil to the insurance factor or “flight to real value” on the increasing risk of a crack-up boom (currency crisis)

As the great Ludwig von Mises explained

with the progress of inflation more and more people become aware of the fall in purchasing power. For those not personally engaged in business and not familiar with the conditions of the stock market, the main vehicle of saving is the accumulation of savings deposits, the purchase of bonds and life insurance. All such savings are prejudiced by inflation. Thus saving is discouraged and extravagance seems to be indicated. The ultimate reaction of the public, the "flight into real values," is a desperate attempt to salvage some debris from the ruinous breakdown. It is, viewed from the angle of capital preservation, not a remedy, but merely a poor emergency measure. It can, at best, rescue a fraction of the saver's funds.

By the way, I have been reiterating the point that financial markets will be faced with sharp volatilities in both direction but with a downside bias.

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Yesterday oil spiked up on the news of Spain’s bailout, but got smashed at the end of the trading session.

Clearly boom bust dynamics at work.

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

China Amassing Gold at a Quickening Pace

China has reportedly been rapidly amassing staggering amounts of gold.

From the anonymous writer at the Zero Hedge… (bold emphasis original)

We have just gotten the April update, and, lo and behold, the country which is now the biggest buyer of gold, having surpassed India, just set a new record: "Gold imports by mainland China from Hong Kong climbed 65 percent to a record in April, advancing for a third straight month as investors sought a hedge against financial-market turmoil and an economic slowdown. Shipments totaled 103,644.5 kilograms (103.6 metric tons) in the month from 62,913 kilograms in March, according to export data from the Census and Statistics Department of the Hong Kong government today. In the first four months, imports were 239,174 kilograms from 27,114 kilograms a year earlier, according to Bloomberg calculations. China doesn’t publish such figures." In other words: in the first four months of 2012 Chinese purchases have increased by an unprecedented 782% over 2011.

And this is only from Hong Kong! Said otherwise: "Is the PBOC, which officially has just 1,054 tons of the yellow metal, quietly and relentlessly stockpiling gold?" Oh yes.

Expect a formal announcement from the Chinese central bank in the months ahead, indicating the country's gold hoard has increased by at least 100%. What happens then to the price of gold is rather self-explanatory.

So far, it appears that China’s thrust of calling the stimulus buff, along with recent actions of further liberalizing her markets, aside from “encouraging private investments”, seem to chime with her desire to convert the yuan into a foreign currency reserve that would compete with the US dollar.

As I previously wrote,

Yet while the PBoC may likely engage in policies similar to her Western central bankers peers where inflationism has signified as an enshrined creed, it is unclear up to what degree the PBoC will be willing get exposed. That’s because China has made public her plans to make her currency, the yuan, compete with the US dollar as the world’s foreign currency reserve, which is why she has been taking steps to liberalize her capital markets and China has also taken a direct bilateral financing trade route with Japan, which seems to have been designed as insurance against burgeoning currency risks and from the risks of trade dislocations from potential bank runs. It is important to point out that the US has some exposure on major European nations.

Further speculations and rumors have it that China covertly plans to even issue a Gold backed currency as part of her quest to attain a foreign currency reserve status.

It could also be possible that China’s quickening pace of gold hoarding could be as insurance against a potential cataclysmic currency crisis that could be unleashed from political responses by major central banks to avert a global recession.

Again, events have been soooo fluid that anything can just happen.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Gold: An Unreliable Inflation Hedge?

``Gold has two interesting properties. It is cherished and it is indestructible. It is never cast away and it never diminishes, except by outright loss. It can be melted down, but it never changes its chemistry or weight in the process. Its price has been remarkably similar for centuries at a time. Its purchasing power in the middle of the twentieth century was very nearly the same as in the midst of the seventeenth century." James Grant quotes Roy Jastram

Since Gold has recently racked up a new historical high in nominal terms, I’d like to dwell on some objections made by several experts.

Gold’s fantastic 4.6% surge over the week to close at a record $1,049.4 seems quite distant yet from its real (inflation adjusted) highs of $2,264 using BLS.gov data, when considering its 1980 high at around $850. In other words, the high of $2,264 reflects on the 1980 purchasing power of the US dollar.

To add, if we consider today’s price levels compared to that when the former US President Nixon shut the quasi Bretton Wood gold window standard in August 1971, current gold prices would only translate to $196.84 in 1971 terms. Extrapolating the previous record high of $850 in 1980 applied to 1971 price levels, we would arrive at $4,529.85.

In short, based on the US Bureau of Labor Statistic’s inflation calculator, current prices of gold would still be very much heavily discounted against current rate of US inflation (in monetary terms).

Importantly, this has yet to factor in the prospects from current policy actions which will eventually lead to more inflation over time.

This would also suggest that there could be immense room for growth in gold prices, if only to reflect on current and future inflation rates.

Predictable Trend: Paper Money Eventually Returns To Zero

The mainstream have been obsessed with their highly presumptive models-capacity utilization, unemployment, wages etc…, all of whom views money as neutral [or where they see money as constant with marginal additions of money as having no effect on prices] and sees inflation as merely expressed in rising prices of goods or services more than a political phenomenon of monetary expansion. Hence, they have all vastly underestimated the impact of inflationary policies.

And this dogmatic fanaticism, which serves as justification for more inflationary policy measures, will risks tilting of inflation towards the extremes.

Moreover, the reality is that the market is far larger than government’s repeated tomfoolery over their constituents, where over the long term, Gold has always maintained its purchasing power against the Fiat currencies which has been imposed on modern society as legal tender (see figure 1).


Figure 1: American Institute For Economic Research: Gold vis-à-vis Currencies of Developed Economies

According to the AIER, ``Apparently many people today believe that all of that is behind us now, that inflating has been curtailed, and that any “embezzlement” of savings currently taking place is something that America’s “forgotten citizens” can live with.

``Anyone inclined to believe this view could benefit from a short course in human history: it is an inescapable fact that throughout known history, there has never, we repeat never, been a fiat currency that over an extended period of time has retained its purchasing power. All irredeemable currencies have in time become worthless, and (except for collectors’ items or rarities) all paper currencies are today worth less than when they were first issued.” (bold emphasis mine)

In the chart above, paper money from developed countries calculated or plotted in terms of US purchasing power has been, over the long run, in a steep decline. François Marie Arouet (1694-1778) prominently known in his pen name as “Voltaire” rightly observed that ``Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value -- zero."

This erosion of purchasing power would even have a far worse track record for developing economies. For instance, Brazil already had 7 defunct currencies which makes today’s real the 8th over its history. This holds true for Argentina whose Peso is the 6th currency.

So if there is any market or economic trend that is “predictable” or “stable”, it is that paper currencies are all headed for zero, if not extinction. And like most of the modern currencies before today’s extant currencies, demonetized currencies had been mainly due to hyperinflation or war.

But no trend moves in a straight line. And this holds true even for modern fiat paper currencies. Again from the AIER, ``the upswings in some currencies’ U.S. purchasing power between 1985 and 1988 and since 2002 indicate a relative “weakening” of the U.S. dollar against those currencies during that time rather than actual increases in purchasing power in the countries of issue. Moreover, the occasional short-term upturns cannot disguise the longterm erosion of purchasing power of each currency. The historical record is that the world’s major paper currencies, in terms of what they will purchase, today are worth only from about 1/1000th to 1/4th of what they were worth in 1913. By contrast, and despite short-term fluctuations, the purchasing power of gold is above what it was in 1913.” (bold highlight mine)

So gold does track inflation over the long term, but where we depart from the view held by some experts is on the suggestion that gold underperforms other hard assets in an inflationary period because of taxes.

While it is true that volatility from market forces could bring gold to periodical price pendulum swings that may overshoot and or undershoot, due to myriad temporal factors (such as governments’ intervening in the markets), this could serve as windows of opportunity for outperformance.

In other words, if we can “time” gold’s secular bullmarket cycle then we can outperform other benchmarks.

Besides, if today’s prospective economic environment would somewhat shadow the stagflation era of the 70s, then gold and oil would likely be topnotch performers as before.


However from our perspective, in boxing vernacular, the 70s looks likely to be the undercard (prologue) to the main event.

Globalization And The Triffin Dilemma

Some analysts, mostly from the “deflationist” camp, have further downplayed the role of gold as hedge to inflation.

The gist of the argument: During the 80s to the new millennium, as money printing by the US Federal Reserve soared and where the purchasing power of the US dollar has continually eroded, gold hasn’t successfully served its traditional role of “inflation hedge” and has miserably lagged inflation. (see figure 2)


Figure 2: Economagic: Gold As Poor Inflation Hedge?

As you can see gold as signified by the CRB precious metal index (in red), has been in a bear market and has stagnated following its peak in 1980 and has only bottomed out in 1998.

Whereas monetary aggregate US M2 (in green) which has steadily been accelerating upwards, has been reflected in the declining purchasing power of the US dollar (in blue).

Where gold should have reflected on inflation, it hasn’t. Hence, to the deflation camp, the appearance of ‘poor’ correlation has been construed as basis to conclude that inflation and gold have a tenuous link. Although reasons for these haven’t been given.

We have one word answer to refute this claim: globalization.

To understand today’s globalization process we need to begin with the fundamentals of globalization’s fundamental link, the US dollar as the world’s global reserve currency.

The basic function of an international reserve currency is to play the role of providing the medium of exchange not only to the local economy but to the international economy.

This means that the US dollar will have to be issued by the US Federal Reserve in excess of local requirements in order to cater to the needs of international trade or exchange.

Thereby, the basic way to provide liquidity to global economies or to finance international trade is to buy more stuff (import) than sell abroad (export).

Hence, the concept of providing liquidity to fund global trade is the main function of the international currency reserve. Alternatively, this means that the US will have to continually incur deficits with its trading partners by having an overvalued or “strong dollar” policy for as long as the US dollar remains as the principal currency reserve.

And as international trade grows, the US will have to account for larger trade deficits in order to fund or finance these transactions. At the obverse side, trading partners of the US will accumulate US dollar as reserves.

If the imbalances from the said deficits begin to undermine the US dollar exchange value, then the trade deficits will shrink or stabilize to which may jeopardize the role of the international reserve. This is known as the Triffin Dilemma.

Practically all the specifications of the currency reserve conditions as provided for by Yale University Robert Triffin have lived up to his model.

This had been vividly manifested mostly in late 2008, when the US banking system seized up and consequently triggered a collapse in global trade and precipitated the sharp narrowing of the US current account.

The ferocity of the ensuing volatility rippled throughout the global markets- stocks, commodities, bonds, real estate and others virtually crashed. On the other hand, the US dollar spiked as the banking woes triggered a liquidity squeeze while US sovereign bonds rallied hard.

Yet, importantly, the 2008 meltdown likewise manifested a geopolitical response: shrill outcries to replace the US dollar as the reserve currency status by several key emerging market economies!

So as the US dollar liquidity was drained from the near collapse of the US banking system, markets violently responded, and in the aftermath, several political leaders brashly agitated for a new monetary order. This effectively vindicates the Triffin ‘foreign currency reserve dynamics’ Dilemma.

The point is that most of mainstream arguments superficially focus on the current account imbalances, which subsequently pins the blame on currency policies of ex-US trading partners while mostly weasel over the fundamental role of the US dollar as reserve currency and the attendant internal policies that brought upon the crisis.

To wit, one must be reminded that 14 nations have dollarized or have used or adapted the US dollar as their local currency and some 23 countries have been pegged to the US dollar, according to wikipedia.org.

The implication of the US dollar standard is that, in contrast to the fantasies of mainstream, there is no possible rebalancing of the global current account primarily because the current monetary platform does not accommodate for this, as the recent experience have shown.

For as long as foreign transactions are quoted, paid and settled in US dollars, then the nature of these imbalances will have to continue.

And the only way for a rebalancing to occur would be to replace the US dollar standard, not with another fiat money, with no automatic adjustment mechanism from which ultimately will meet the same destiny, such as much ballyhooed IMF’s SDR, but one with a commodity backed currency.

However, replacing the US dollar standard for the purpose of merely mounting a monetary coup d'état against the US won’t likely occur for political and military reasons.

From our perspective the only way for the US dollar to lose its monetary hegemon is via the same path of where most currencies meet their end; a massive inflation, or at worst, hyperinflation.

Globalization Soaked Up US Inflation

The other point pertinent to gold is that the inflationary measures undertaken by the US Federal Reserve during the 1980-2006 came amidst where Deng Xiao Peng declared his celebrated catchphrase “To Get Rich Is Glorious” and thus opened China to the global economy in 1979.

This was followed by the open door policies or economic liberation reforms of India in 1991 and the collapse of the Berlin Wall (1989-1990) which paved way for the deepening of globalization trends.

As global economies opened up, the supply of goods and services, labor and migration flows, financial intermediation and capital flows became more deeply integrated and thereby produced a far larger output (see figure 3) than the monetary policies engaged by the US central bank.


Figure 3: World Trade Organization: World Export and Global Trade

Global Exports sharply accelerated during the 1990s, which underpinned almost the same degree of expansion in Global GDP per capita.

So increased global trade meant more US dollar financing, as manifested by the burgeoning trade deficits, yet the increased output from the world resulted to higher productivity and thus generally growth deflation or “disinflation”. Ergo, lower gold and commodity prices.

According to the World Trade Organization (2008 World Trade Report),

``A key driver of globalization has been economic policy, which resulted in deregulation and the reduction or elimination of restrictions on international trade and financial transactions. Currencies became convertible and balance-of-payments restrictions were relaxed. In effect, for many years after the end of WWII it was currency and payments restrictions rather than tariffs that limited trade the most. The birth of the Eurodollar market was a major step towards increasing the availability of international liquidity and promoting cross-border transactions in western Europe. Beginning in the 1970s, many governments deregulated major service industries such as transport and telecommunications. Deregulation involved a range of actions, from removal, reduction and simplification of government restrictions, to privatization of state-owned enterprises and to liberalization of these industries so as to increase competition.

``In the case of trade, liberalization was pursued multilaterally through successive GATT negotiations. Increasingly, bilateral and regional trade agreements became an important aspect of (preferential) trade liberalization as well. But many countries undertook trade reforms unilaterally. In the case of developing countries, their early commercial policies had an inward-looking focus. Industrialization through import substitution was the favoured route to economic development. The subsequent shift away from import substitution may be owed partly to the success of a number of Asian newly-industrializing countries that adopted an export-led growth strategy, but also partly to the debt crisis in the early 1980s, which exposed the limitations of inward-looking policies.”

In other words, the deepening globalization trends allowed more citizens of the world to increase wealth generation.

As for the Americans, by financing global trade, they were graced with more selection of goods and services at far more affordable prices.

In addition, US dollar accumulations of emerging or developing nations were recycled back to finance US deficits because the US had deeper and more sophisticated markets, aside from domestic policies aimed at anchoring directly or indirectly to the US dollar by several key developing economies for market share purposes.

More proof of globalization’s absorption of the US dollar…


Figure 4: WTO: Financial Flows to Developing Countries

The explosive growth from Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) in developing countries had been manifested in the mid 90s but slowed during the dot.com bust. Nevertheless, FDI’s to developing nations in the early 90s served as a staging point for the spectacular surges.

To add, worker remittances also had a near parabolic ascent over the same period, operating under the globalization dynamics.

Overall, the early phase of globalization, where emerging economies with vast economies of scale integrated with developed economies, resulted to intensive increases in economic efficiencies.

This virtually accommodated the expansionary policies by the US Federal Reserve which resulted to lower gold and commodity prices.

Thus, gold prices had been muted then as “disinflation” from productivity generated growth dominated the global arena. But nevertheless in contrast to the allegation, gold hasn’t been stripped of its role as an inflation hedge.

Are Bond Yields Implying Deflation?

Many analysts from the deflation camp have also been harping on the brewing inconsistencies between the performances of US sovereign markets relative to global stock markets and commodity markets.

They say that since US sovereign instruments have been rallying along with global stocks and commodities, one of the two groups must be wrong.

For them rallying US bonds signified fear or flight to safety from the specter of deflation, whereas rallying stocks and commodities implied the opposite -economic growth, and thus, inflation.

Further they allege that such divergences favor bond investors more than stock market investors because the former is more “reliable” or “credible” or “sophisticated” or “intelligent”.

Because they mostly adhere to the model of Japan’s ‘lost’ decade or the Great Depression as an outcome for the economic environment, they emphasize on the impotency of global central banks or government actions on the predicament of intractable debt which burdens consumers and the banking system of the US and parts of Europe.

We have lengthily argued against these in Investment Is Now A Gamble On Politics. For us both Japan and the Great Depression are unworthy models of comparison.

Today’s landscape is far more globalized than during the early days and that globalization has somewhat coordinated global central bank actions which could lead to the possibility of more traction from largely synchronized policies.

Nonetheless recent actions in the bond markets appear to “validate” rather than contradict our inflation risks outlook.


Figure 5: stockchart.com: US Treasury Yields Spike!

Across the yield curve, US treasuries have dramatically spiked last week!

While almost every market today have been politicized, as the visible hands of government seems ubiquitous, there is no market as deeply and directly involved with US government as the US sovereign and agency bond markets.

The reason for this is that the balance sheets of the US banking system have been stuffed with sundry assets of different quality, most of them are rubbish. Hence government directly intervenes in these markets to avoid major bank failures by buttressing the banking sector, in order to generate systemic liquidity, to help banks recover profitably from trading on spreads, and hopefully to reanimate the largely impaired credit system.

Similarly, policymakers attempt to control real estate prices from seeking its natural levels or from going lower by acquiring mortgage assets.

As Assistant Professor Philipp Bagus recently wrote, ``The financial crisis was caused by solvency problems that led to a liquidity constraint. Central banks tried to fight this by increasing the availability of liquidity and buying or loaning against the same bad assets that caused the solvency problems. If central banks sell those assets again or stop accepting them as collateral, the same solvency problems will reemerge, along with the preexisting liquidity issues. Paradoxically, by buying and accepting bad assets, the central banks did not fix the solvency problem: they merely delayed the inevitable. The bad loans did not turn "good" by changing hands or being accepted as collateral by central banks. Hence, the problem remains and exit strategies can only be successful if the quality of these assets changes or their quality is acknowledged and banks are recapitalized accordingly.”

In short, by levitating markets the US Federal Reserve hopes that risk appetite would radically improve for the Fed’s position, so as it would be able to unload or dispense of the bad assets accrued within the system.

Unfortunately, the Fed seems stuck with monetizing government debts in the face of additional pressures in the economy.

As we earlier pointed out, the US Federal Reserve is supposed to end its Quantitative Easing (QE) program on its self imposed quota on purchases of $300 billion worth of US treasuries. However, it also declared to extend a significant part of the program in order to complete its purchases on $1.25 trillion worth US mortgages.


Figure 6: Federal Reserve of Cleveland: Federal Reserve Purchases

But data from the Federal Reserve of Cleveland shows otherwise (figure 6).

The blue arrow pointing to the red ellipse shows that the US Federal Reserve has been buying in excess of the $300 billion quota for third time. This means that these purchases were not accidental but deliberate. The Fed has acquired about $2.631 billion above its goals.

Meanwhile, the black arrow also shows of the purchases of mortgage securities by the Fed under the present QE program which is slated to end in early 2010.

In the Fed balance sheet watch, the Wall Street Journal sees the same developments,

``The Fed expanded its purchases of Treasurys and agency debt, though its holdings of mortgage-backed securities declined for the second straight week. The Fed started a program in March to ramp up such acquisitions in order to keep long-term interest rates low. The central bank announced in August that it will be buying more Treasurys through the end of October, and said last month that it will be buying MBS into 2010.”

Perhaps one of the reasons behind the recent spike across the yield curve in US sovereign securities could be imputed to the market interpretations of the FED as ending its support on US sovereign papers. This eclipses the a strong economic growth revival in its economy.

But a surge in sovereign yields could affect mortgage rates and could put renewed pressure on housing and commercial real estate (CME) prices. And a disorderly surge in treasury yields could also ripple to other markets.

One must be reminded that the inflationary policies acts like a pyramiding mechanism which requires more and more accelerated amount of inflation in order to support specifically targeted prices in an unsustainable system propped by artificial stilts.

As Credit Bubble Bulletin’s Doug Noland rightly observed, ``Our policymakers have much less flexibility in the new financial and economic landscape. Both fiscal and monetary measures have lost potency. Trillions of dollars of deficits, zero interest rates and a $2 Trillion Fed balance sheet today get less system response than hundreds of billions and a few percent would have achieved previously. This hurts the dollar.”

Hence, reading through the bond markets when they are directly manipulated by governments would represent as serious misdiagnosis. That’s because these markets have effectively been politically choked which doesn’t reflect on market prices. Eventually imbalances accruing from these will implode.

Moreover, we should expect the US Federal Reserves to continue with its QE programs, regardless of the self imposed quota, simply because the guiding economic ideology, the recent triumphalism, biases derived from research (e.g. anti-deflation tools: printing press, zero interest rates) and importantly, political pressures from the banking industry and/or the political leadership have all converged to incentivize the chief policymakers to take on the risks of an “inflation” route.

Lastly, fighting the FED looks myopic.

US Fed Chair Ben Bernanke looks dead set at taking on the “nuclear option” of jumpstarting the US economy by sparking inflation via devaluation.

This clearly is in his guidebook. As Mr. Bernanke pointed out in his 2001 ‘Helicopter’ speech, ``Although a policy of intervening to affect the exchange value of the dollar is nowhere on the horizon today, it's worth noting that there have been times when exchange rate policy has been an effective weapon against deflation.” (emphasis added)

Importantly all of the prescribed weapons from Mr. Bernanke’s diagnosis against a deflationary outcome, patterned after the Great Depression, seem in place:

1) avoiding mass failures of the banking system. This by taking equity stakes in key financial institutions, aside from exercising diverse roles as the lender, market maker, buyer and investor of last resort via different alphabet soup of programs,

2) adopt zero policy rates,

3) apply an extended period for zero policy rates,

4) run large fiscal deficits

5) seek to further consolidate and expand the powers of the Fed and lastly,

6) use the printing press through QE programs

All these seem potent enough to ensure for the US dollar to massively devalue.

However, the problem is that the US dollar in the 1930s had been anchored to gold.

Today, the US dollar has essentially replaced the function of gold as the world’s anchor currency.

And global governments may not tolerate the US to unilaterally devalue at their expense. And as we pointed in King Canute Effect: Lagging Peso A Consequence Of Central Bank Intervention, as Asian Central Banks including the Philippines have tacitly embarked on interventions in the currency markets to stem the rise of the national currencies.

Ultimately, all these collective policies to “reflate” the system risks, not deflation, but hyperinflation.

As J. Kyle Bass of Hayman Advisors LP fittingly wrote,

``Western democracies, communistic capitalists, and Japanese deflationists are concurrently engaging in what may be the largest, global financial experiment in history. Everywhere you turn, governments are running enormous fiscal deficits financed by printing money. The greatest risk of these policies is that the quantitative easing will persist until the value of the currency equals the actual cost of printing the currency (which is just slightly above zero). There have been 28 episodes of hyperinflation of national economies in the 20th century, with 20 occurring after 1980. Peter Bernholz (Professor Emeritus of Economics in the Center for Economics and Business (WWZ) at the University of Basel, Switzerland) has spent his career examining the intertwined worlds of politics and economics with special attention given to money. In his most recent book, Monetary Regimes and Inflation: History, Economic and Political Relationships, Bernholz analyzes the 12 largest episodes of hyperinflations - all of which were caused by financing huge public budget deficits through money creation. His conclusion: the tipping point for hyperinflation occurs when the government's deficit exceed 40% of its expenditures.” (bold highlights mine)

Hence, the thrust to devalue the US dollar enhances the risks of accelerated inflation which may eventually tip the financial and economic scale towards our critical-‘Mises moment’.

And this translates to massively higher gold prices not only on inflation concerns but at the risks of a global currency crisis.

I’ll end this quote with a repeat reminder from Mr. Ludwig von Mises on stoking perpetual booms, ``The boom can last only as long as the credit expansion progresses at an ever-accelerated pace. The boom comes to an end as soon as additional quantities of fiduciary media are no longer thrown upon the loan market. But it could not last forever even if inflation and credit expansion were to go on endlessly. It would then encounter the barriers which prevent the boundless expansion of circulation credit. It would lead to the crack-up boom and the breakdown of the whole monetary system