Shanghai-based China Business News quoted Yu Yongding, a member of the central bank’s advisory monetary policy committee, as “revealing” that the rate of increase of holdings of US government bonds had fallen and total holdings were currently around $180bn.
The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate hut at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups—Henry Hazlitt
Friday, November 26, 2004
Financial Times: Dollar recovers on denial of Chinese sell-off
Shanghai-based China Business News quoted Yu Yongding, a member of the central bank’s advisory monetary policy committee, as “revealing” that the rate of increase of holdings of US government bonds had fallen and total holdings were currently around $180bn.
Reuters: Gold Eyes New Highs
Traders were also watching for possible intervention by the Bank of Japan, which is worried about dollar-yen levels.
Thursday, November 25, 2004
Buttonwood of the Economist: The dollar’s demise
Nov 23rd 2004
From The Economist Global Agenda
Tuesday, November 23, 2004
Financial Times: China tells US to put its house in order
Stephen King: Dollar's weakness is a concern for us all
Do trade deficits matter? There are those who argue they don't. Many American policy makers have, in the past, taken the view that America's trade deficit is a sign of strength, not of weakness. For them, the trade deficit is an inevitable consequence of America's attractions as a home for international capital. The more that foreigners wish to accumulate US assets, the more that imports into the US will rise. If, for example, a Japanese car company decides to build a factory in the US, the required machines and equipment could be imported into the States from all over the world. US imports would rise, but only because everyone wants to invest there rather than elsewhere. That's good for American jobs, good for American incomes, and good for America in total.
stephen.king@hsbcib.com
Philippine Star: $3.2B in mining investments seen in next 5 years
By Marianne V. Go
According to Purisima, these mining projects would result in employment for 6,000 workers and create 36,000 indirect jobs.
Saturday, November 20, 2004
Japan Times: Japan, Philippines clear steel hurdle, reach FTA accord
Japan, Philippines clear steel hurdle, reach FTA accord
Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Shoichi Nakagawa and Philippine Secretary of Trade and Industry Cesar Purisima reached the agreement on the sidelines of a two-day ministerial meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in
The deal with the
The agreement with the
Nakagawa said the two nations reached a compromise on the
Nakagawa said tariffs on Philippine-bound Japanese steel exports definitely will be lowered with the agreement, and the two countries will fine-tune the details at working-level negotiations.
"With a basic agreement reached, negotiations at the political level are over," he said.
The agreement was reached after Purisima consulted President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on the matter, according to Nakagawa.
The pact will probably be endorsed at a meeting between Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and Arroyo on the sidelines of the summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations plus three --
The issue of accepting foreign workers in
On agricultural products,
The
Blommberg: Greenspan Says Foreigners May Curb Financing Deficit
Greenspan Says Foreigners May Curb Financing Deficit
Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said foreign investors may tire of financing the
The federal deficit was a record $412 billion in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30. President George W. Bush today signed an $800 billion boost in the federal debt limit to $8.18 trillion.
Against the yen, the dollar fell to 103.10 at
Treasury Notes Fall
Treasuries fell after Greenspan said rates are poised to rise. ``Rising interest rates have been advertised for so long and in so many places that anyone who has not appropriately hedged this position by now obviously is desirous of losing money,'' he said, drawing laughs in a one-sentence response to a question about whether emerging markets are prepared.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell 11/16 point, pushing the yield up 9 basis points to 4.20 percent at
``He's telling people rates are going to keep going higher and the dollar is going to keep going lower,'' said Scott Gewirtz, co-head of U.S. Treasury trading at Deutsche Bank Securities in New York. The firm is one of 22 primary dealers of government securities that trades with the Fed's
Markets probably will make adjustments ``without crises,'' Greenspan said, adding ``we cannot become complacent.'' He spoke on a panel that included European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet and Bank of
Avoiding a Crisis
Financial markets are so large that the impact on interest rates and currency values by central bank actions has only been ``moderate,'' and derivatives and hedge funds also have helped reduce risks, Greenspan said.
``The market economies are usually pretty good at handling these adjustments,'' said Minneapolis Fed President Gary Stern today at a separate event. ``I don't think we ought to jump to the view that something very disruptive or chaotic has to happen.''
Greenspan and U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow are participating in meetings of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bankers over the weekend. The dollar's slide against the euro is likely to dominate discussions, analysts said.
``The current account deficit is a chronic problem and the Fed is right to address it,'' said Mark Spindel, who manages $13 billion in debt securities as chief investment officer at International Finance Corp., an arm of the World Bank in Washington. ``The currency depreciation represents an additional risk on the inflation side.''
Taxes
Greenspan, 78 and in his fifth term as Fed chairman, endorsed the idea of tax cuts in 2001, when the
Senator Richard Shelby, the Alabama Republican and chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said in an interview that cutting the deficit ``would be the right signal.''
``What we need to do in the Congress is put some spending caps and walls and separate some things that are essential and nonessential,''
Greenspan said today that ``reducing the federal budget deficit (or preferably moving it to surplus) appears to be the most effective action that could be taken to augment domestic saving.'' Personal savings in the
``Significantly increasing private saving in the United States -- more particularly, finding policies that would elevate the personal saving rate from its current extraordinary low level -- of course would be helpful,'' he said.
Balanced Budget
At a hearing before the Congressional Budget Committee on Sept. 8, the Fed chairman shunned tax increases as a method of raising revenue. ``I personally would much prefer to have lower taxes and lower spending, but of necessity, a balanced budget,'' he said at the time.
Fed officials stimulated consumption by cutting the overnight lending rate to a 45-year low in June 2003 of 1 percent and leaving it there for a year. Because short-term deposit rates were negative after an adjustment for inflation, the
Snow signaled two days ago the Bush administration won't participate in attempts to stop the dollar's slide. ``The history of efforts to impose non-market valuations on currencies is at best unrewarding and checkered,'' Snow said in
The
As Asian economies ``move toward price stability, that implies a move toward more flexible currencies will occur,''
`Worrisome'
Fed officials received a special presentation from the staff on the
Dollars accounted for 63.8 percent of all assets in the vaults of foreign central banks and national treasuries at the end of 2003, the International Monetary Fund said, down from 66.6 percent in 2000. Foreign official holdings of euros rose to 19.7 percent in 2003, up from 16.3 percent in 2000.
The
Friday, November 19, 2004
New York Times: Senate Backs Higher Debt
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 - Faced with the prospect of a government unable to pay its bills, the Senate voted on Wednesday to raise the federal debt limit by $800 billion.
Though an increase in the debt ceiling was never in doubt, Republican leaders in both houses of Congress postponed action on it last month, until after the elections, to deprive Democrats of a chance to accuse them of fiscal irresponsibility.
The bill, if approved by the House in a vote expected on Thursday, would authorize the third big increase in the federal borrowing since President Bush took office in 2001. Federal debt has ballooned by $1.4 trillion over the past four years, to $7.4 trillion, and the new ceiling would allow borrowing to reach $8.2 trillion.
With no end in sight to the huge annual budget deficits, which hit a record of $412 billion this year, lawmakers predicted on Wednesday that the new ceiling would probably have to be raised again in about a year.
Democrats, still stinging from their election defeats, voted against the measure and argued that it should be accompanied by rules that would force Congress to pay for new tax cuts with spending cuts or tax increases elsewhere.
"I don't remember anyone during the elections making a promise to raise the federal debt to $8.1 trillion," Senator Kent Conrad, Democrat of North Dakota, said. "What we're doing here is just writing another blank check and saying to this administration, 'Go ahead, continue to run record budget deficits.' "
Administration officials have been pleading for an increase in the debt limit since last August, and the Treasury Department has been tapping into Civil Service retirement accounts since Oct. 14 to avoid breaching the limit.
On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow warned that the administration had "exhausted" all the previously used financial maneuvers. The government can probably keep paying bills until early next month, but the Treasury Department would have to postpone an auction of new Treasury securities scheduled for Monday.
Raising the legal borrowing limit has long been more political theater than substantive decision making, because lawmakers ultimately have no choice in the matter if the government is to stay in operation.
The 52-to-44 vote was almost purely along party lines, with one Republican, Senator John Ensign of Nevada, voting against a higher ceiling.
Two Democrats, Senators John B. Breaux of Louisiana and Zell Miller of Georgia, voted in favor of the measure.
Some Republican lawmakers had hoped to bury the measure in a broader spending bill that would attract less attention and that many Democrats would feel compelled to support. But Senate leaders decided to vote on a stand-alone bill in exchange for a commitment from Democrats to limit the debate.
"We've come to a general agreement to move ahead today," Senator Bill Frist, the majority leader, said. "The House literally is waiting for us to act."
In a muted floor debate, Democrats did almost all the talking - all aimed at castigating the administration and its Congressional allies for indulging in "borrow and spend" policies - while Republicans grimly waited for the debate to end and the vote to begin.
Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, in his first appearance on the floor since losing the presidential election, said the growing debt threatened economic security.
"To pay our bills, America now goes cup in hand to nations like China, Korea, Taiwan and Caribbean banking centers," Mr. Kerry said. "Those issues didn't go away on Nov. 3, no matter what the results."
Administration officials contend that the annual deficits are undesirable but necessary to help stimulate an economic recovery and fight a global war on terrorism.
Mr. Bush has promised to reduce the deficit by half over five years, though the administration is fighting to make its tax cuts permanent and may need more than $70 billion in extra money next year to support military operations in Iraq.
House Republicans said they would schedule a vote on the bill for Thursday evening.
"We'll get it done," John Feehry, a spokesman for House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, said. "We have an obligation to keep the government in operation."
Thursday, November 18, 2004
Philippine Stock Market Daily Review November 18: Foreign Buying Buoys the Phisix
Foreign Buying Buoys the Phisix
As the US dollar plumbed to its record levels, Philippine equity assets appears to be one of the beneficiaries of global portfolio diversification AWAY from the US-dollar denominated assets. The Phisix climbed an impressive 23.28 points or 1.3% on broad based heavy foreign buying to the tune of P 159.586 million ($2.835 million). Foreign capital participation represented almost half or 48.56% of today’s aggregate output.
Last week, despite the stream of foreign money flows to the Phisix on select sectors, the Philippine benchmark index succumbed to sharp sell-offs. The steep correction led by the telecom sector seemed to have placed the Phisix at the fringe of a seeming ‘inflection point’. However, robust foreign money flows managed to allay the local investors concerns and provided the structural support which apparently averted the market from further declines. As foreign money flows continue to shore up local equity assets fickle local investors appears to have rekindled their interests on the markets, hence the marked improvement in sentiments and the indices.
Significant money inflows were seen in Bank of the Philippine Islands (unchanged), PLDT (+3.8%), which denotes a reversal from the previous streak of foreign selling activities, SM Primeholdings (+4.28%), Jollibee Foods (unchanged), Ayala Corp (+1.53%), JG Summit (+11.1%), Meralco B (+1.02%), Petron Corp (+1.56%) and ABS-Preferred (unchanged). Advancing issues beat declining issues by 38 to 27, while all sectors reported advances with the Mining sector as the laggard, even as GOLD has steadily carved out a series of record breaking (16-year highs) price growth.
The easing of the sell-offs in the telecom sector and the continued foreign money inflows mostly to the banking sector and now spreading to the broader market has been providing the Phisix the necessary support to most probably carry over its ‘year end rally’ due to seasonal strengths, historical patterns and cyclical shifts while the marked decline of the US dollar has provided global investors the fundamentals for diversifying their portfolios to non-US dollar denominated assets as the Philippines.
Bloomberg: Gold Rises to 16-Year High; Dollar Falls to Record Against Euro
Gold Rises to 16-Year High; Dollar Falls to Record Against Euro
Nov. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Gold prices in
U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow signaled he won't back any agreement to stem the dollar's slide. Gold, sold in the
``At the moment, all the fundamentals for gold are positive,'' said Bernard Hunter, director of precious-metals marketing for the Bank of Nova Scotia's ScotiaMocatta unit. ``The world is looking for a weaker dollar'' and gold may rise to $450 an ounce by the end of the year, he said.
Gold futures for December delivery rose $4.60, or 1 percent, to $445.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices earlier reached $445.40, the highest for a most-active contract since August 1988. A futures contract is an obligation to buy or sell a commodity at a set price for delivery by a specific date.
The streetTRACKS Gold Trust, offered by the World Gold Council, won regulatory approval yesterday to sell as many as 120 million shares on the New York Stock Exchange. The trust first filed documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the sale in May 2003.
The trust plans to sell 2.3 million shares, backed by 230,000 ounces of bullion, through underwriter UBS Securities LLC. The shares, each backed by a 10th of an ounce of gold, will allow investors to avoid incurring costs of storing and transporting physical bullion.
The London-based World Gold Council is backed by some of the world's biggest producers.
`More Liquidity'
``Any product that makes the metal more freely available to the investment or the retail community has got to be good for the market,'' ScotiaMocatta's Hunter said. ``It provides more liquidity and a greater depth.''
``Sensitive indicators of excess monetary liquidity like gold and the dollar suggest that the Federal Reserve remains in a hyper-accommodative monetary posture,'' Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners LLC in Greenwich, Connecticut, said in a report today.
``Price pressures are increasingly likely to be passed on, which could push year-to-year core inflation rates to 3.5 percent or higher during the next several quarters,'' Darda said.
Choy Leng Yeong in Seattle at clyeong@bloomberg.net
UPI: Global coal demand up, mining surging
Global coal demand up, mining surging
NEW YORK, Nov 16, 2004 (United Press International via COMTEX) Strong demand for coal from
Last year world coal consumption rose 6.9 percent, compared with 2.1 percent for oil, according to BP, the British petroleum company.
To fill that need, in the
Coal is booming because power plants are located close to the mines, reducing the plants' cost of operation, and there are still huge untapped coal reserves that can be developed at a low cost, unlike oil.
Also, the cost of producing enough coal to generate a specific level of energy is less than half the cost of producing enough oil to do the same.
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
TimesOnline: Funds set to plunge £76bn cash into world markets
Funds set to plunge £76bn cash into world markets
By Patrick Hosking, Investment Editor
MORE than $140 billion (£76 billion) is expected to be pumped into equities over the next few months if the world’s fund managers dip into their hefty cash piles to reduce them to neutral levels.
Fund managers currently hold an average of 4.6 per cent of their assets in cash, a full percentage point higher than what is seen as the neutral level of 3.6 per cent, according to Merrill Lynch, the investment bank.
With fund managers gaining confidence in the wake of the
In its monthly fund manager survey, published yesterday, the banks said fund managers were under increased pressure from customers to put their cash piles to work.
Cash levels in November grew to their third highest this year. Although by historic standards they remain low, there is far more pressure today for fund managers to invest the money in productive assets because interest rates are so low. American fund managers leaving assets in cash — typically ultra-safe money market instruments — earn interest of just 1.5 per cent, meaning the principal shrinks after adjusting for inflation.
Of the $14 trillion invested worldwide by mutual funds alone, a 1 per cent shift from cash to equities would mean a $140 billion boost to world share markets. Including pension funds, the impact would be greater still.
The survey covered 302 fund managers with assets of $931 billion of assets.
David Bowers, chief investment strategist, said: “With bonds widely perceived to be overvalued, investors may turn to equities in the short term.”
The survey — the first since the US election — found that fund managers were now looking to take more risk in the short term, although there was still great uncertainty for next year.
A net 8 per cent of fund managers were now reporting a lower than normal appetite for risk, compared with 16 per cent in October. They were also more confident about company profits.
Bonds were being widely shunned, Merrill said, with 66 per cent of fund managers believing they were overvalued, compared with just 3 per cent who thought they were undervalued.
By contrast, just 14 per cent thought equities were over-valued, compared with 24 per cent who said they were undervalued.
Telecoms, as well as energy, were most in demand by equity investors, while autos, retail and media were most disliked.
The survey painted a mixed picture for
Merrill identified a marked change in
The move away from cash already appears under way in
In the
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
Currencies: A Reversal of the Asian Currency Crisis by Stephen Jen of Morgan Stanley
A Reversal of the Asian Currency Crisis
Stephen Jen (
Similarities with the 1997-98 experience
I find striking parallels between current market conditions and sentiment regarding USD/Asia and the experience during the Asian Currency Crisis in 1997-98. Specifically, the market and some
My general view on the USD
In my view, the USD index measured against the major currencies is now undervalued. This undervaluation of the USD is particularly stark against the European and commodity currencies. However, against the Asian currencies, the USD is still meaningfully overvalued. This should not be surprising, given the modest movement in the Asian currencies against a falling USD over the past three years.
However, in light of the widening US C/A deficit, particularly the imbalances run against the Asian economies, protectionist pressures will likely build in the
What has happened since 1997-98?
The market is increasingly looking for a correction in USD/Asia, for reasons including large and burgeoning external surpluses and high and rising official reserves. These are precisely the opposite traits of many Asian countries back in late-1996, early-1997. In many ways,
The maxi-devaluation of the Asian currencies, coupled with the emergence of
RMB float could be the trigger for a sell-off in USD/Asia
The prospective dismantlement of the de facto dollar peg could potentially be the trigger for a broad-based move lower in USD/Asia, at least this is likely to be the knee-jerk reaction. Country-specific idiosyncratic factors may not matter much, at least in the period immediately after the RMB de facto peg is dismantled.
What happened during the Asian Crisis is also illustrative of what could happen when the RMB peg is dismantled. Before the onset of the Asian Crisis in 1997, only
Valuation matters
However, over the medium term, valuation should matter as well: those currencies that are more misaligned should come under greater pressures.
First, all six Asian currencies (KRW, TWD, SGD, THB, PHP, and MYR) are undervalued against the USD. Second, compared to the median forecasts, KRW, TWD, SGD and THB are about 5% mis-priced, but PHP and MYR are 20-25% undervalued. Thus, from a valuation perspective, a depreciation in the USD against the Asian currencies makes sense, unlike in the cases of EUR, GBP, and AUD.
Fair values and C/A surpluses
Rather than thinking about the fair values per se, i.e., values of USD/Asia that are consistent with a set of fundamental variables, investors may be asking how low USD/Asia will need to trade in order to help narrow the US C/A deficit. If investors remain fixated on this question, most Asian currencies will likely be pushed deep into overvalued positions before investors stop selling USDs. In other words, if the dynamics of EUR/USD are of any guide, the Asian currencies are likely to be pushed beyond their fair values.
Competitors versus partners: status matters
Over the medium term, it should also make a difference whether the country in question is an economic competitor to
Bottom line
The significant pressure on USD/Asia can be traced back to the Asian Crisis, which I believe was the key reason why