Posted by Ray on June 6, 2011 under Main |
I suppose it was back in the late fall and reiterated again in mid-winter that I believed the market would simply go up for no real reason until QE2 ended and then it would begin to decline as liquidity ended. It looks as though I was somewhat accurate in that prediction although you did not have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out unless you were a permabull with your blinders on and absolute faith in the government and the Fed in which case please move along.
The Fed knew the same thing I and many others did and that is why at the last meeting they emphasized that they would continue to reinvest maturing paper and interest from the existing portfolio, kind of a QE infinity if you will, but on a small scale. I do believe they will let QE2 go and not announce anything new until the fall when they see the economy really weaken. I think a couple months of sub 100K jobs reports, with a healthy BLS birth/death adjustment, along with softening other indicators such as the PMI and so forth the Fed will get the point and step in with $1T in QE since $600B did not work.
That is how it works as one QE is ineffective the next one gets bigger. The really unfortunate part is that Japan has done the same thing and it did not work but there is a big difference between the US and Japan, we are the reserve currency and they aren’t. In other words, Japan could print all they wanted because their citizens bought their own debt and the world settled trades in dollars. However, the US is limited in what they can really do in QE because as the value of the dollar sinks, and we really had a nice scare a week or so ago, the world will pick a new reserve currency on its own. You know how that story ends.
Ben knows this and he knows that his QE options are limited and he can probably only get away with 1 more so it will be big, it has to be. If that one does not work and spur growth, well, the Fed is done and completely out of bullets in a traditional sense. We would see some new things coming to the table like in 2008 with all the new facilities and such, but I have no idea what they will be or what they will look like since we do not know how things will play out.
What I do know is that we should get a nice bounce in the dollar here sending commodities lower for a bit. This will give Ben and Washington a little relief and you an opportunity to buy, buy, buy every commodity you like. I love silver, still, wheat, gold, palladium, soybeans and corn (unless the subsidy is pulled). If those go on sale buy them either directly or via the growers or agricultural ETF’s.
In the mean time enjoy watching Ben sweat it out as he will not have answers for the weakness in the economy or the weakness is ‘transitory’ which is the longest transitory period I have ever seen. Kind of like this recovery it is the longest start of a recovery ever as it gains steam and loses steam every other week. Good luck.

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Tags: ben, BLS, commodities, Economy, gold, inflation, Japan, liquidity, Markets, pmi, qe, reserve currency, silver, the dollar, the fed, wheat
Posted by Ray on March 16, 2011 under Main |
I rarely wear my beliefs on my sleeve and I do not mean to start doing so now, but I have been doing a lot of thinking and praying for the people in Japan. The images we are seeing and the reports we are bombarded with are horrifying to say the least. It also proves that we are all interconnected and what happens abroad does indeed impact us here in the US, even earthquakes and tsunamis. I hope that all who read this will take a minute to at least think a few kind thoughts of well being for the people if not outright say a prayer, donations to the Red Cross would not hurt either.
With all that said it is shameful for many of the pundits to hop in the TV and talk about how good this tragedy is for the Japanese economy. It is not a good thing and it will not bring prosperity to anyone let alone to the US. First and foremost, Japan likes to keep its business local so I can assure you Caterpillar will not win out on contracts versus its local competitors. Over and above that this horrible event will create a huge drag on global GDP as the number 3 player is out of the game and who knows how the nuclear situation will turn out. That means Apple should have saved its $200 on its press release announcing its plans on postponing the launch of the iPad 2 in Japan since everyone knew that already and, frankly, who really cares about the iPad launch in Japan when the locals are being exposed to radiation.
With the number 3 player out of the game the economy in the US, China and the world will slow, I am sure of this. It also means QE 3 is a given and the next one will be a fairly sizable easing program. I am so sure about more QE because the Japanese will have to sell treasuries at some point to cover the rebuilding effort. Their central bank have added an astounding 55 trillion Yen, $700B USD, of extra liquidity, but not even the Japanese can print their way out of this thing. They will have to sell and there is no one to pick up the slack for US treasuries right now, to the level of selling that will come. On top of that I believe Japan selling may be the trigger for China to unload some holdings as well, we will see about that. The Fed is the only one around to pick up the slack and give the US Treasury interest free loans, since earnings must be repaid to the treasury department.
Even before this tragedy I was perplexed about the Fed’s QE 2 program. It was not needed, in my opinion, as rates were low already and capital was flowing again. The only reason I could see QE 2 being needed for was to prop up the stock market and by Bernanke’s own admission that is what it did since bond yields have only gone north since the start of the program, the opposite of what Ben wanted to happen. Besides the markets needing a boost the only other reason I could think of for this type of easing program was that the end of the line was here. What I mean is that the Fed may have known that the market was going to want higher interest rates from the US since we have piled on the debt in the last few years.
Basic mathematics tells you that the US cannot handle higher debt servicing costs which is why the treasury rolled out over 50% of our debt to mature in less than 7 years. On top of that every 1% increase in debt servicing costs adds about $120B a year to the budget which is also known as the debt death spiral. However, with QE 2 the Fed can jump in and buy up this higher yielding paper and kick back 95% of the interest back to the treasury department, almost an interest free loan, which explains why the Fed is monetizing, sorry, buying just issued higher yielding paper. This signals to me that the US government may have reached a breaking point in its debt load.
I am not saying the US cannot issue more debt, not at all, what I am saying is people will want higher rates to hold the paper. No one believes that there is no inflation out there and the only time we see any interest is when things really hit the fan like right now. Think back a couple of weeks ago when the Middle East was revolting treasuries sis nothing and the dollar sank. Compare that to now treasuries are going up but only on the short end of the curve and the dollar, what you really should be watching, is not doing well at all. It is very odd because as treasuries rally the dollar should be seeing some decent strength and here we are sitting below 77 on the DXY still.
This all signals trouble to me as we have seen many revolutions combined with a major economy stopped due to a tragedy and the only thing going up is the short end of the treasury curve. The dollar is not the safe haven it once was and I am not sure what is anymore. I believe gold and silver offer a better alternative than the dollar at this point, but there is volatility there as well. At the end of the day though, precious metals are still the place I would rather be as I see no end in sight for easing and I see higher inflation. I believe this is the end of the line and the Fed has no choice but to monetize more debt. The sad thing about all this is that rates will continue to climb anyhow because it is just too risky to loan money to the US government at this stage of the game.

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Tags: earthquakes, federal reserve, global gdp, horrible event, ipad, Japan, Japanese economy, liquidity, nuclear situation, pundits, qe, rebuilding effort, red cross, the fed, treasuries, Yen
Posted by Ray on November 3, 2010 under Main |
The long awaited decision was announced today by the Fed, $600B in fresh money printing followed by continued reinvestment of proceeds from its first round of easing. This equals about $900B in total QE by our monetary masters. Speculation is rampant in the media about its success or how it will be an epic failure. The funny thing is, no one really knows what will actually happen. Personally, I am still perplexed as to why they are doing it at all, it is stupid.
The Fed is also completely out of ammo which many have stated, myself included, and all they have is the printing press. I want to stress something here and you should pay attention, this whole QE thing is experimental and no country that has ever tried has succeeded. Therefore, I have a predetermined outcome, but at the end of the day you or I have zero idea if it will work. I will lay out a case for its failure based on what I know. I am sure many will disagree and that is fine, but in time one of us will be right.
The economy has a demand problem, not a liquidity problem. Over 2 years ago we had a massive liquidity problem which is why Lehman failed, but now the Fed has dumped trillions into the system along with the federal government. All of that money dumping ended the liquidity crisis and now banks, supposedly, have excess reserves just sitting at the Fed waiting to be loaned out to that sucker who wants to pay 15% interest on money the bank got for free in order to buy that new LED flat screen TV that is just calling his or her name. The problem is the sucker doesn’t want to buy that TV because he doesn’t know if he will have a job next week or is worried about retirement, etc.
We have a demand problem, not a money shortage. I say that with a grain of salt because money velocity is dropping which technically means there are dollar shortages. However, I contend that that dollar shortage is because people are paying off debt to simply saving their money somewhere 9under the mattress??). Regardless of the reason no one wants to buy big ticket items and I do not blame them. After all we got here because of excess debt and no one wants to leverage up to buy senseless items. No amount of QE will change this, sorry, but it won’t. Job security and rising wages will create demand, but that is not happening either. Demand is stuck where it is, weak.
The Fed knows this and they know QE will not change this so why did they do it? I really do not know. Sure, everyone has their own reasons for it, but at the end of the day it is all speculation. I know what they are trying to do, create wage inflation and inflation in general, which they will do eventually, but by their chosen path, QE, they are creating the worst possible outcome, inflation without wage inflation. Stop laughing, it can happen. How you may ask, simple dollar devaluation is inflation, but dollar devaluation does not guarantee wage growth. The only way to get wage growth is through demand with inflation, what the Fed did will not do this. Frankly, everyone should be terrified of Mr. Bernanke and he should be punished for lying to Congress when he said he would not monetize the debt, he is.
I can rattle off all sorts of conspiracy theories as to why the Fed is doing QE, but they are too laughable to mention. I do think one thing makes sense, it is a back door bailout of the banking system, again. There is a little issue I am sure you are familiar with, the foreclosure crisis, and this crisis is a huge, enormous, problem. If you are a bondholder it is one thing to have a borrower default on the debt, the cash flow ends and you get to take the collateral, a home in this case, to recover your capital. However, this whole chain of custody issue, there is no legal remedy for it and all those pundits who claim that this is no big deal are either stupid or scared to admit the truth, means that there is no collateral to collect now. Essentially the borrower can keep the house and screw the lender if the paperwork is messed up, how would you like to own a MBS now? Your bonds are worthless… or are they?
If there was fraud in the loan, as we are now seeing, the bondholder can put back the bond and be repaid their original capital. This is the problem that is starting to rear its ugly head, the put back, and it could be huge. Think about all the paper the banks would have to buy back and now think of all the synthetic derivatives that were written against that bond. What a mess. A big costly web of a mess. I do not know how big the problem can be, but I think part of the QE might help these banks by either allowing the bank to front run the bonds the Fed is buying or by infusing the bank with capital.
It doesn’t matter really, but I think that was one of the reasons for QE2. We have been told for over a year now how great things are now and we are in a recovery so why do QE at all? We have inflation, it is not sky high, but it is there in the PPI and the CPI is still positive. If the CPI were negative I would say we have deflation, but it isn’t and at best we had disinflation which does not justify such a crazy move as monetizing almost a trillion dollars in paper. The Fed sees that no real recovery has happened and maybe that is the reason for the latest round of easing. Regardless, the banks are going to benefit from this, remember the Fed asked them how much they should buy from them.
I stated about a year ago that we can have inflation without wage inflation. We are about to see if that once crazy theory of mine is right. The Fed has now monetized trillion’s in debt and I can say, with history on my side, this has never ended well for any country who has ventured down this path. America is a special place because of our freedoms, but we are not so special that math and history doesn’t pertain to us. All of the people warning about the Fed’s insane moves might be right and the sky very well might be falling. Heck, if things were as great as we have been told over the past few months by the talking heads and our politicians, who no one believes, why are we even having this conversation? Things are not well and I fear we may be in the calm before a very bad storm like we have never seen before.

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Tags: bernanke, liquidity crisis, liquidity problem, money printing, money velocity, printing press, qe, speculation, sucker, the dollar, the fed, trillions, USD
Posted by Ray on October 20, 2010 under Main |
John Carney at CNBC just put up a piece http://www.cnbc.com/id/39754650 which states: “This is a serious threat to financial stability. There’s no way Tim and Ben let this play out,” a senior banker told me, referring to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke.
In short, Wall Street is betting that the bureaucrats will bail them out again.
I said this yesterday and these executives are right, banks will get bailed out again probably through QE. It is wrong and these banks have earned the right to fail, but the problem is that politicians do not have the will to help them this time. However, the Fed, which is proving itself so independent nowadays, will bail them out. As Zero Hedge reported PIMCO levered up on MBS and they know something, like $500B in QE coming directly to the MBS market, rumor has it. Again, QE will do nothing and while $500B is in the cards for MBS there is no word yet what the Fed will do with long dated treasuries… but they will buy them.

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Tags: banks, ben bernanke, bureaucrats, cnbc, federal reserve, financial stability, john carney, MBS, qe, tim geithner, treasuries, treasury secretary, wall street
Posted by Ray on October 18, 2010 under Main |
I admit I have been delinquent on checking out the Euribor rates lately since the Federal Reserve has me scared to death about QE2, more on that later, but I do not think it will be what you believe it will be in November. However, the Euribor went ballistic thanks to the ‘perfectly safe’ Irish banks began to show that the ‘stress test’ were pure bull. How can a bank pass a stress test a couple of months ago and then do insolvent, basically? That doesn’t happen in a normal world and it proves that the ECB totally flubbed the stress test.
The fraud that the stress tests were showing up in the inter banking lending rates which went from benign to cancerous in a heartbeat. While the Euribor first continued to climb after the stress tests it did level out later in the summer, but now it went vertical and it probably is not looking back. Considering that European banks are still holding only God knows how much US MBS’s, which our current foreclosure fraud situation may render those MBS’s worthless over time, along with how much Greek, Portugal, Italian and Spanish debt and you got serious problems. The media is not going to touch this, but the bank lending markets talks about it only if you look at them.
The 3 month Euribor rate was below .90% until a week ago when it jumped to about 1%, .993% as I write this, which isn’t much until you consider we are in a zero interest rate policy (ZIRP). Actually, we are in a negative interest rate policy right now if you count all the QE going on. When you factor that in it kind of brings to light that something is wrong in Europe, still. US treasuries for 3 months are yielding about .14% so clearly European banks are pricing in a risk premium. The question is, what is the risk premium for? Clearly default is part of it and I think you will see more issues with banks very soon.
It is impossible to have bank holdings that consist of sovereign debt that is in trouble plus MBS holdings and not have any problems. There certainly will be more insolvency issues, but even if a bank is not insolvent their balance sheets will be impaired further. It is a mess and the real problem is that it is just not European banks, but US banks as well. While US banks do not hold a lot of sovereign debt, they do own tons of MBS holdings, unless the Fed buys them from the banks, which foreclosuregate, I hate these names we have now, will make many of these securities worthless or at the very least impair them well below par.
I do not know what is going to happen, but I am convinced that the serious problems that many thought were behind us never really went away. All we ended up having done was the government and the Fed paper over the problems. This went on all over the world with the ECB following suit as well. The Eurubor is telling us something, are many listening? Nope. Stocks are moving higher on some idiotic belief that inflating our way out of this mess will work, it might in nominal terms, but not in real terms. Phony stress tests clearly are not the answer as the fraud gets uncovered when banks that passed suddenly need a bailout. How central banks and governments have any credibility is simply beyond me. When a fraud is uncovered people usually talk about it, but the news on some financial channels is mute on the issue. When lending costs climb rapidly it usually makes news, did you hear about it? Nope. It is all just one big farce out there. I personally believe that the only safe haven seems to be commodities and I believe stocks are not as safe as people believe.

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Tags: ecb, euribor rate, euribor rates, European banks, federal reserve, foreclosure, fraud, irish banks, qe, sovereign debt, stress tests, treasuries