noworldsystem.com


The dollar’s decline accelerates


Ready for a rout? : The dollar’s decline accelerates – Economist

Economist
November 8, 2007

YOU know that nerves are taut when a couple of stray comments set off a flurry of selling. The dollar fell sharply on Wednesday November 7th after mid-ranking Chinese officials, not actually responsible for foreign-exchange policy, made remarks that were seized upon by already jittery markets. A Chinese parliamentarian called for his country to diversify its reserves out of “weak” currencies like the dollar and another official suggested that the dollar’s status as a reserve currency was “shaky”. The greenback reached $2.10 against the pound and a new record of $1.47 against the euro, before recovering slightly. A widely traded index, which tracks the dollar’s value against six major currencies, also fell to a new low.

The sliding dollar, along with record losses from General Motors, the threat of $100-a-barrel oil and more bad news from the mortgage industry, spooked Wall Street. On November 7th the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 2.6% and the S&P 500 index by almost 3%. To add to the worries, Nicolas Sarkozy, France’s president, ramped up the political rhetoric on a visit to Washington.

Alarmed that the weak dollar boosts America’s competitiveness relative to Europe’s, he told Congress that George Bush’s administration needed to do something about the dollar or risk an “economic war”. Wall Street seers wondered whether official intervention to prop up the dollar was on the cards.

A true dollar crisis has long been one of the more frightening possibilities for the world economy. If foreign investors suddenly abandon America’s currency and the dollar collapses, financial markets could crash while the plunging currency constrains the Federal Reserve’s ability to cut interest rates. That fear is exacerbated by rising concerns about higher crude oil and food prices.

For now, the dollar nightmare is still unlikely. The currency’s decline is neither surprising nor, at least until this week, alarmingly rapid. The gaping current-account deficit and interest-rate differentials between America and other big economies point to a weaker currency. The Fed has cut short-term interest rates by 0.75 percentage points in the past two months. Given the scale of the credit mess and rising fears of recession, expectations are growing that the central bank will cut rates once again when its rate-setting committee next meets on December 11th.

Elsewhere, central bankers have stood pat or tightened. The Reserve Bank of Australia raised short-term rates to 6.75% on November 6th, citing inflationary pressure. The European Central Bank and the Bank of England, meeting on November 8th, are both expected to keep short-term rates on hold, at 4% and 5.75% respectively.

If cyclical considerations point to a weaker dollar, the most recent nervousness seems to be driven more by structural worries. Judging by the dollar’s slump in the wake of the Chinese officials’ comments, investors are fretting that central banks in emerging economies will abandon the ailing greenback. In the short term at least, that fear is easily exaggerated. The share of global foreign-exchange reserves held in dollars has fallen in recent years, but only gradually.

Central banks are unlikely to accelerate a dollar rout by making dramatic changes in their reserve portfolios. That said, many long-standing dollar bulwarks are looking weaker. Many countries that link their currencies to the dollar, from Arab oil exporters to China, face inflationary pressure. As the greenback slumps, these countries have ever-stronger domestic reasons to allow their currencies to rise.

So far, the dollar’s decline has caused little alarm among American policymakers. There is scant sign that the depreciation has aggravated price pressures. And inflation expectations, though up slightly, have not soared. Instead, the weaker currency, along with strong growth abroad, has boosted exports, helping to support output growth and unwind external imbalances faster than many thought possible.

America’s current-account deficit fell to 5.5% of GDP in the second quarter, from a peak of 7% at the end of 2005. For all the official talk of a “strong dollar”, most American policymakers have lost little sleep over the sliding greenback. A dramatic fall in the dollar, however, would be a different story. If this week’s ructions are a sign of things to come, the weak dollar could become a big headache.

Related News:

Metals – Gold close to record as dollar plunges to new depths
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Credit Suisse warns of quantum rise in gold price
http://www.metalmarkets…of-quantum-rise-in-gold-price/

The American empire is falling with the dollar
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Asian Stocks Slump as Dollar Tumbles, Subprime Losses Widen
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Dow Drops 360 Points
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Six in 10 U.S. consumers see recession – survey
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Dollar hits 26-year low against pound
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2007/nov/07/usnews.foreigncurrency

One Of The Costs Of Rate Cuts – Collapsing Dollar
http://commonsenseforecaster.blogspot.c…lapsing.html

7 Countries Considering Abandoning the US Dollar
http://www.currencytrading.net/2007/7-co…at-it-means/

Wall Street firms see recession nearing
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSN0554066820071106

Homes brace for heating oil highs
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RBS: Banks Face $100 Billion in Level 3 Writedowns
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Credit Card Debt a $915 Billion Disaster-in-Waiting for Banks
http://www.newsmax.com/headlines/credit…1/06/47264.html

NYSE says trading curbs rule is history
http://today.reuters.com/news/ArticleI…-CURBS.XML

Gold hits fresh peaks near $850, Oil hits $98 a barrel
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Fox News – Dollar inflation is good
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U.S. Economic Collapse News Archive

 



Hard-Money Advisor Peter Schiff Endorses Ron Paul

All Hard-Money Advisors Get Behind Ron Paul – Ask Maxium Client Donations?

FMNN
November 8, 2007

FMNN recently reported on hard-money advisor Peter Schiff asking everyone on his 60,000-plus e-mail list to donate $2300 to the campaign of GOP presidential candidate Ron Paul (R-Tex) – and now an FMNN feedbacker “Jhe” has written to advise other “hard-money” advisors to do the same.

Jhe writes: “Thank You Peter! I see you doing battle on TOUT-TV all the time. To borrow a phrase from Tucker (I think); it’s like an episode of the twilight zone and he is the only sane person left in the world. Tucker was talking about Ron BTW. Your writings are spot on and I’m proud of you for laying it out there for the future of the Republic. All the commentators in the hard asset camp really need to follow your lead and get 100% LONG RON PAUL!”

Interesting point, Jhe. Ron Paul rightly believes that gold and silver are “honest money” – and have acted as such for millenia. The “fiat money” experiment in America and worldwide is likely some 40 years old at best. In fact, an argument can be made that the world remains on at least a gold standard as central banks continue to hold gold, as do the world’s wealthiest citizens. Thus, some remain on the “gold standard” while others, who hold paper “bills” do not. Too bad for them. Gold has doubled in the 21st century while the American dollar has greatly eroded in value.

As gold and silver have gained greatly in relative value against the American global foundational currency, hard-money advisors have made a come-back in the mainstream financial world. There are likely thousands, even tens of thousands of financial advisors recommending that at least a portion of one’s assets ought to be in gold and silver.

Ron Paul believes in gold and silver as an “honest” store in value. He would like to see a return to honest money, believing it is fairer to all, whereas the current system, which makes the circulation of honest money difficult, benefits only the very wealthy and those closest to the central bank “spigot.”

Those in favor of honest money, including advisors, have reason to back Ron Paul. Maybe, as Schiff has thought to do, and as Jhe has suggested, they want provide funds to a campaign that supports their convictions – and their businesses.

UPDATE: FMNN received this update from Feedbacker James Kuo: “Also, last night Richard Russell of Dow Theory fame wrote to his 10,000 paid subscribers that he will vote for Ron Paul. The smart money is definitely on Ron Paul in 2008!” (FMNN has not confirmed.)

Schiff/Ron Paul ‘Money Bomb’ – Wants $2300 Apiece From 60,000 Database
http://www.fmnn.com/WorldNews.asp?nid=51133

 



Fed Pumps $41B Into US Financial System

Fed Pumps $41B Into US Financial System

AP
November 1, 2007

Fed Injects $41 Billion Into US Financial System to Help Ease Credit Problems

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve pumped $41 billion into the U.S. financial system Thursday, the largest cash infusion since September 2001, to help companies get through a credit crunch.

The action came one day after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and all but one of his central bank colleagues voted to slice a key interest rate. It was the second time in six weeks that policymakers acted to protect the economy from the effects of the housing downturn and credit troubles.

Wall Street took a nosedive with the Dow Jones industrials losing 362.14 points to close at 13,567.87.

The Fed on Wednesday ordered its key rate, called the federal funds rate, to be lowered by one-quarter of a percentage point to 4.5 percent. That followed up on a half-percentage point cut in September. Those two rate reductions might be sufficient to help the economy make its way safely through trouble spots, Fed policymakers indicated.

The funds rate affects many other interest rates charged to millions of individuals and businesses and is the Fed’s most potent tool for influencing economic activity.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which carries out the central bank’s open market operations, moved Thursday to inject $41 billion in temporary reserves into the financial system.

A New York Fed spokesman said it was the largest single day of operations since $50.35 billion was pumped into the system on Sept. 19, 2001, following the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. He declined further comment.

Fed policymakers at their meeting on Wednesday noted that the “strains from financial markets have eased somewhat on balance.” In the past week, many Fed officials have described the state of financial markets as fragile.

Bernanke and other Fed officials have said it will take time for the markets to fully recover from the credit crisis.

Since August, the Fed has been pumping cash into the financial system to help ease strains from the credit crunch. It also has cut its lending rate to banks — a third such cut came on Wednesday.

 

US Mint considering cheaper coins

BBC
October 27, 2007

The rising price of copper has prompted the US government to consider making coins with cheaper metals.

The price of copper has risen to just under $8,000 a tonne, driven by demand from countries like China and India.

The US Mint says it is now costing as much as 1.7 cents to produce a “penny” (1 cent) and 10 cents to produce a “nickel” (5 cents).

Reducing the amount of metal used making these coins could save the US government around $100 million a year.

If this was extended to higher denomination coins, the savings are estimated at $400 million.

At the moment, only the US Congress has the power to change the metal composition of US coins.

The proposal by members of the US Senate and House of Representatives would give these powers to the US Treasury.

Change due

Greg Hernandez, Deputy Director of Public Affairs for the US Mint says change is on the cards:

“If the world demand continues to be high for copper, nickel and zinc, then if this legislation is approved, the metal content for the penny and the nickel will be quite different from what it is today.”

In April, the US government finally passed a law to make it illegal to melt down US coins, or export them in any quantity abroad.

Anyone doing so now faces a fine of up to $10 000, in conjunction with five years in prison.

Greg Hernandez says action was taken after the US Mint started receiving enquiries from the public as to whether it was illegal to melt down US coins.

“It was to safeguard against a potential shortage of these coins in circulation, because any wide-spread withdrawal of pennies and nickels could cause coin shortages, and that would be extremely costly to replenish, given the prevailing metal prices and production costs”

Global warning

In India, the government has had to take action after rupee coins were illegally melted down in order to make razor blades.

The Australian Royal Mint has warned its citizens it is illegal to melt down Australian dollars.

The British Royal Mint changed the composition of its one and two pence coins in 1992 from bronze (97% copper) to copper-coated steel.

It has confirmed that the value of the copper in pre-1992 one penny and two penny coins is now greater than the face value.

Royal Mint figures suggest there could be more than eight billion pre-1992 one and two pence coins still in circulation.

However, anyone trying to melt them down could face a fine or two years in prison.

Related News:

Gold Will Reach $1050 an Ounce by 2012
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Gulf move quells dollar-peg talk
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“America is probably getting cheaper. And Americans are probably getting poorer”
http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/us-gdp/2007/10/31/

Stock Prices Plunge; Dow Drops 370
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8SL35K00&show_article=1

UK at risk of ‘severe economic downturn’ warns top economist
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pag…_article_id=491006&in_page_id=1770

Iran Bank Chief Warns On Money Supply
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php..ow_article=1

Chrysler To Cut 12K Jobs
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21566956/

Wall Street drilling for Middle East riches
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20071031/wall-street-middle-east.htm

Foreclosures jump 30 percent in 3rd quarter
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21551909/

World currency system at breaking point
http://news.independent.co.uk/busi…2866.ece%CA

Western Banks Suffer Big Losses
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d0b545bc-88b1-11dc-84c9-0000779fd2ac.html

Sterling dips against recovering dollar
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/ar….G-OPEN.XML

Oil Above $96 on Drop in US Supplies
http://www.washingtonpost….1/01/AR2007110100228.html

Gold Tops $800 for 1st Time Since 1980
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8SKE12O0&show_article=1

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UN: Inflation May Prompt Food Price Controls
Oil strikes record near $94
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The mystery of the missing $2.9 trillion
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Strong loonie may lead Canadian economy to collapse
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Welcome To The “$1,000 Gold” Fan Club
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‘Mr. Yen’ warns that dollar could plunge in 2008
Buffet Comments on Housing and the Value of the Dollar
Orders for big-ticket manufactured goods fall unexpectedly
Dollar Falls as Orders for U.S. Manufactured Goods Decline
Australian Treasurer Warns Of Global Financial “Tsunami”
Oil Hits $92 A Barrel
U.S. consumer confidence falls more than expected
How Bad Will the Next Recession Be?
Forex – US dollar hovers near all-time low vs euro on chances of Fed rate cut
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Roots of credit crisis laid at Fed’s door
Subprime-Mortgage Defaults Rose Last Month, ABX Data Suggests
Merrill Lynch reports billions in losses amidst growing signs of US recession

U.S. Economic Collapse News Archive

 



Oil Above $96 on Drop in US Supplies

Oil Above $96 on Drop in US Supplies

AP
November 1, 2007

SINGAPORE — The price of oil rose to a new record above $96 a barrel Thursday after a surprise drop in U.S. crude stockpiles raised concerns about supplies for coming winter demand. Other energy futures also gained.

It was the second week in a row the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported a sharp and unexpected drop in oil inventories.

“The decline in U.S. crude oil inventories has been a key driver of oil prices,” said David Moore, commodity strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney.

Light, sweet crude for December delivery rose as high as $96.24 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by midafternoon in Singapore before dropping back to $95.59 a barrel.

Crude prices have reached inflation-adjusted highs set in early 1980. Depending on the how the adjustment is calculated, $38 a barrel then would be worth $96 to $101 or more today.

“We are stepping into an unknown area. Nobody wants to sell (given the fear of a) further rise,” broker Ken Hasegawa of Fimat Japan told Dow Jones Newswires.

The December Nymex crude contract rose $4.15 Wednesday to $94.53 a barrel _ the highest-ever settlement.

December Brent crude futures also surged to a new trading record of $91.63 a barrel Thursday on the ICE futures exchange in London, up $1 from the previous session, before retreating to $91.37.

In its weekly inventory report, the U.S. Energy Department’s Energy Information Administration said oil supplies fell by 3.9 million barrels last week. Analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, on average, had expected an increase of 100,000 barrels.

“The report acted to solidify concerns about the possibility of tightening market conditions ahead of the northern winter,” Moore said.

Much of that decline was due to a big drop in crude supplies at a closely watched oil terminal in Cushing, Oklahoma.

Cushing supplies have been under pressure in recent months due to differences in the price between front-month oil contracts and those for delivery in future months. This price difference, or spread, has given storage tank owners a financial incentive to sell their oil, rather than hold it in inventory. Analysts have also blamed falling Cushing supplies, in part, for the rally in which oil prices have jumped 35 percent since August.

The EIA also reported that refinery activity fell by 0.9 percentage point last week to 86.2 percent of capacity. Analysts had expected an increase of 0.5 percentage point.

Supplies of gasoline rose last week by 1.3 million barrels. Analysts expected a 400,000-barrel decrease.

And inventories of distillates, which include heating oil and diesel fuel, rose by 800,000 barrels. Analysts had expected a 1 million barrel decrease.

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s move to cut interest rates by a quarter point also supported prices.

Interest rate cuts generally support oil prices because they tend to send the U.S. dollar downward; the dollar is already at multiple-decade lows against major currencies.

Oil futures have been driven to record levels in recent months partly because they offer a hedge against a weak dollar.

Other energy futures followed oil’s lead. Nymex December heating oil rose 1.59 cents to $2.5452 a gallon while December gasoline futures added 1.87 cents to $2.3557 a gallon.

Natural gas futures advanced 7.6 cents to $8.406 per 1,000 cubic feet.

 



Welcome To The $1,000 Gold Club

Welcome To The “$1,000 Gold” Fan Club

Kevin A. DeMeritt
Ezine Articles

October 23, 2007

The $1,000 gold fan club? Absolutely. And, as far as fan clubs go, this one’s membership is swelling daily. There’s no question that the number of financial analysts who see gold topping the $1,000 mark have suddenly become as common as Tom Brady touchdown passes. But whether these folks are newcomers to the gold bandwagon or have been riding confidently along for years, it is remarkable just how many analysts now see nothing but good for gold.

Here, for example, is what a few $1,000 gold prognosticators have to say…

• The Falling Dow/Gold Ratio. The Dow/Gold Ratio – the number of gold ounces it takes to buy one share of the Dow Jones Index – has fallen from 42 in 2000 to nearly 19 in 2007. “What is interesting,” said analyst Dr. Marc Farber, “is that despite the stock market’s rebound since October 2002, the Dow/Gold Ratio has continued to decline. Simply put for the holder of gold – the world’s only honest currency, since it cannot be printed by some dishonest central banker – the Dow, although it increased in value in dollar terms, has continued to decline in gold terms with the result that, today, it ‘only’ takes 20 ounces of gold to buy one Dow Jones Industrial Average.

“Simply put, since 2000, gold has risen at a much faster clip than the Dow Jones and I would expect this out-performance to continue for the next few years until ‘gold currency’ holders will be able to buy one Dow Jones with just one ounce of gold.

“Now, you may think that I have become insane (but) I am convinced that the US Fed’s monetary policies will lead to exponentially widening wealth inequity and impoverish the majority of US households, which will then lead to social strife, protectionism, war, and the breakdown of the capitalistic system.

“However, if one considers that in 1932 and in 1980 one could indeed buy one Dow Jones Industrial Average with just one ounce of gold, then maybe my views are rather conservative. Possibly one will be able to buy, sometime in future, one Dow Jones with just half an ounce of gold!”

With that in mind, Farber believes we could be in store for a lot more than just $1,000 gold.

• In 1980 Dollars, Gold is Just Half-Price. John Hathaway, managing director of Tocqueville Asset Management, believes $1,000 gold isn’t far off. “I don’t think it will take much. Let’s not forget, in 1980 dollars, gold is less than half of its nominal price today.

“The disparity between the amount of paper that has been created since 1980 and the amount of gold that has been produced since then is just enormous. The ratio of financial assets to physical gold is at the low end of a historical range. If you were to mark all the gold to market that has ever been mined, which is a very conservative approach, and then take the valuation of all the global stock markets and all the global bond markets, gold represents about 3%, compared with a figure in the mid-20% range in 1980, which was the top of the bull market in gold and the beginning of the bull market in financial assets.

“Gold is a good value, certainly, at these prices, just based on the considerations we’ve discussed. Even if you don’t think worst-case outcomes are in the cards, gold is still rare and hard to find, and believe me, these companies are having the toughest times trying to maintain production, much less build it.”

• Central Banks Abandon Control of Gold. Two Citigroup metals analysts wrote that central banks faced a choice between a global recession and their continuing “control” of gold.

They chose to focus on staving off global recession.

“We believe that the policy resolution to the credit crunch will take the form of a massive, extended ‘reflationary rescue’ in a new cycle of global credit creation and competitive currency devaluation which could take gold to $1,000/oz or higher.”

• Slashing Interest Rates Will Only Add Fuel to the Fire

Analyst John Ing believes $1,000 gold is just on the horizon. His reasoning? Bankers are out of bullets when it comes to settling U.S. debt battles. “Ironically, while there is a crisis of confidence in the credit markets, the world is awash in liquidity due the gargantuan current account surpluses of China and other Asian countries as well as the Middle-East,” Ing wrote. “The problem however, is not the supply of surpluses, but the imbalance between the short term and long term obligations of the world’s biggest debtor and the United States.”

“As long as there is a lack of confidence in the short term, central banks are faced with the dilemma as to how to supply liquidity. Today, central banks continue to boost money supply but the monetary aggregates were already growing at double-digit levels and they had little room to maneuver. What is likely then is a dramatic reduction in interest rates, which will serve as a short term palliative. But this will not correct the imbalances. Central banks have tried to stabilize the global financial system by pumping large amounts of liquidity into the markets. To date, they have only addressed the symptoms of the underlying crisis. The situation will become even worse.”

• “Gold Is the Purist Play Against the Dollar”

When the former head of technical research at Citigroup predicts gold is heading not to $1,000, but to $3,000, it makes great sense to listen.

“Gold is the purest play against the dollar,” Louise Yamada, managing director of Yamada Technical Research Advisors said. She predicted gold would surpass $730 on its way to $3,000 inside of a decade.

• “Still Cheap Relative to Oil or Base Metals”

Australia’s Fat Prophets newsletter is another prominent member of the $1,000 gold fan club.

“We think the price could reach $850 an ounce by the end of the year, based on issues in the US housing market,” senior equities analyst Greg Canavan says. “US housing was an accident waiting to happen. We have also been forecasting an eventual price of $1000, and we would expect that in the first half of 2008.

“In the US, we expect further interest rate cuts. In Europe, the euro is getting stronger, with implications for exports. It could lead to a slowdown there,” he went on to say. “Also in Europe, the Bank of England had said it would not be bailing out lenders. But now it has been told that it must do so. So investors are seeing that gold is a fundamental store of wealth.”

Canavan added, “You should have 10 per cent of your portfolio in bullion or gold stocks. Also, it is considerably undervalued right now so it is more than just insurance. Despite being at more than 20-year highs it is still cheap relative to oil or base metals.”

• World Currencies “Becoming Increasingly Doubted

James Turk in his Freemarket Gold & Money Report believes $1,500 gold is possible.

“A blow-off leg in gold is looking increasingly likely once it clears $1,000. Think about this a moment. The US dollar is now trading at record lows, with no bottom in sight. Commodity prices are soaring, with wheat at over $9 per bushel and crude oil looking increasingly well supported over $80 per barrel. Gold is rising against all the world’s currencies, indicating that fiat national currencies backed by nothing but promises from over-indebted governments are becoming increasingly doubted. Britain just experienced the world’s biggest bank run since the 1930s. … We should be mentally prepared for the possibility that gold exceeds $1,000 within the next few months, and then just keeps climbing to a blow-off high.

“How high? A doubling of the gold price has happened before in blow-offs like the one I am describing, so $1,500 or more is not out of the question.”

So…where are you with your investments? Are you overly reliant on those worrisome “paper” investments at a time when more and more people want to hold something of authentic value in their hands? If that’s the case – and even if you’ve never joined a fan club your entire life – today may be the perfect time to become a member of the $1,000 gold fan club.

Whisperings of a gold conspiracy
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20071025/cleisure/cleisure3.html

 



New credit crunch looms

New credit crunch looms

Telegraph
October 24, 2007

Fresh turmoil in the global debt markets has set off sharp falls in commodity prices and high-risk assets as investors scrambled for safety.

Blog: Is there really a sea of limitless liquidity?
German team damn UK economic ‘miracle’ as a sham

The dollar soared as US investors liquidated foreign holdings, ending at $1.4129 against the euro and £2.0276 against the pound, in one of the most dramatic currency moves this year.

Libor spreads in Europe’s interbank market jumped to 64 basis points, roughly the level that set off the credit crisis last summer and prompted a liquidity rescue by the European Central Bank. The iTraxx Crossover index that measures spreads on corporate bonds has jumped 100 basis since last week to 364 yesterday.

“It’s the summer that won’t end,” said Peter Berezin, a strategist at Goldman Sachs.

He said investors were shaken by last week’s drop in US home-builder sentiment to an all-time low and by fresh falls in the ABX index for sub-prime debt. “We continue to learn that it pays to respect the sell-offs in ABX and housing-related credit. This has elements of the February and August sell-offs, where credit markets signalled problems,” he said.

The lowest tier of ABX debt has fallen to a record low of 20.72 – from par of 100 – pointing to huge losses that have yet to surface.

Wall Street yesterday avoided a repeat of Black Monday, eking out a recovery after the Dow’s 368-point dive on Friday. The fall-out triggered tumbles in Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey. Lead, copper, zinc, and nickel all fell hard on growing fears of a global economic slowdown, while gold dropped $13 to $754 an ounce. Brent crude fell 61 cents to $83.18.

There are concerns that a $75bn (£37bn) rescue operation put together by US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to stabilise the sub-prime market is intended to mask the scale of the crisis.

“This rescue has back-fired,” said Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas. “The central banks don’t want anything to do with it. There is a fear that the big four US banks are trying to hide their debts,” he said.

The US market for asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) contracted a further $11bn last week as lenders refused to roll over short-term debt. This form of paper has shrunk by 25pc since August, cutting off almost $300bn of funding.

Dr Suki Man, an analyst at Société Générale, said “shutters” had gone up across the debt markets. “Has it just got ugly again? The jury’s out, but it’s enough to make one feel the chill. All this is offset by a US economy still expected to grow by more than 2pc, and China and India still growing at breakneck speed,” he said.

Mr Redeker said yesterday’s dollar spike was caused by US investors pulling money out of Turkey, South Africa, Hungary and other emerging markets. They had invested $300bn in bonds and stocks over the last year.

“This is just profit-taking on risky assets. The dollar is going to fall further because long-term funding for US assets has collapsed since the sub-prime crisis,” he said.

Outgoing IMF chief Rodrigo Rato warned yesterday that the adjustment may be brutal. “An abrupt fall in the dollar could either be triggered by, or itself trigger, a loss of confidence in dollar assets,” he said.

 

Existing U.S. homes sales plunge in largest decline since 1999
Sales of Existing Homes Fall by Largest Amount on Record in September

AP
October 24, 2007

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sales of existing homes plunged by a record amount in September as turmoil in mortgage markets added more problems to a housing industry in its worst slump in 16 years.

The National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that sales of existing homes fell 8 percent in September, the largest decline to show up in records dating to 1999. The seasonally adjusted annual sales rate of 5.04 million existing homes was also the slowest pace on record.

The weakness in sales translated into further pressure on prices. The median price — the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less — fell to $211,700 in September, down by 4.2 percent from the sales price a year ago. It marked the 13th time out of the past 14 months that the year-over-year sales price has decreased.

The 8 percent decline in sales was bigger than the 4.5 percent decline that had been expected.

Analysts blamed the bigger-than-expected slump on the turmoil that hit credit markets and mortgage markets in August as worries increased over rising mortgage foreclosures.

Those worries resulted in a drying up of the availability of so-called jumbo mortgages, loans over $417,000, which are particularly important in high-cost areas such as California.

“Mortgage problems were peaking back in August when many of the September closings were being negotiated and that slowed sales notably in higher priced areas that rely more on jumbo loans,” said Lawrence Yun, senior economist for the Realtors.

By region of the country sales were down 10 percent in the Northeast, 9.9 percent in the West, 7 percent in the Midwest and 6 percent in the South.

The slowdown in sales meant that the inventory of unsold homes rose to 4.4 million units in September. At the September sales pace, it would 10.5 months to eliminate the overhang of unsold homes, a record length of time.

Economists are worried that the huge levels of unsold existing and new homes will put further downward pressure on prices.

Yun said that the price declines should be put into perspective in that they are occurring after a five-year housing boom which pushed prices up to record levels.

He forecast that prices will decline by about 1.5 percent this year. That would be the first annual price decline on Realtors’ records going back four decades.

The troubles in housing have been a drag on overall economic growth, increasing worries that the housing slump and related credit market troubles could become so severe that they will push the country into a recession.

However, many private economists believe that the Federal Reserve, which cut a key interest rate for the first time in four years last month, will continue cutting rates in a campaign to make sure that the weakening economy does not tumble into a full-blown recession.

Analysts said the price declines will worsen in coming months until inventories are reduced to more sustainable levels. Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, predicted that the housing troubles will prompt the Fed to cut rates by a quarter-point at its meeting next week.

“The housing crunch is accelerating. The Fed can’t stand by and watch,” Shepherdson said.

 



Gloom & Doom Economist Says Worst Is Yet to Come

Gloom & Doom Economist Says Worst Is Yet to Come

CNBC
October 22, 2007

Marc Faber, editor and publisher of The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, thinks the worst is yet to come for the global economy.

Appearing on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” the economist and managing director of Marc Faber Ltd., explained his bearish outlook — and offered advice for how to play a glum market.

Faber perceives a “battlefield” between the Federal Reserve and other central banks, which had infused billions of dollars into the worldwide system to boost liquidity, and the counter-pressure of illiquidity brought about by market forces such as declining home prices.

Watch It:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isD2aj3wh20

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmORG10k71c

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VXsZu9oXCcg

But the economist fears that the Fed’s “throwing money at the system” will not help improve the fundamentals of the real economy. Instead, he believes, excessive monetary growth has merely driven excessive consumption in the U.S., with consumers living beyond their means and speculators “piling one bubble, housing, on top of the Nasdaq [tech] bubble” that popped in 2001-2001.

“The easy money, the easy credit — you can’t solve your problems with what caused them in the first place,” Faber declares.

He posits that a fully-realized recession at the turn of the millenium might have been for the best, restabilizing the world credit markets. “The longer you postpone the hour of truth, the worse it will be,” he augurs. “We will reach ‘zero hour,’ when more debt doesn’t help.”

How should one prepare for the full-fledged global bust Faber predicts?

Precious metals. He points to the traditional safe harbor, gold — but cautions that the precious metal is “a bit over-bought.” Construction-oriented commodities in general will continue to be driven by Chinese demand, he says, making mining companies a good bet. And he the one absolute essential: Food. “We all have to eat.”

Markets. As to national markets, Faber says that Japan and Thailand are “very reasonable.”

Currencies. He foresees the U.S. dollar remaining low against other currencies — but notes that “Euroland” is very expensive compared to the greenback.

Real estate. Faber’s outlook for real estate goes against the grain: Manhattan is the great exception to U.S. trends, continuing to rise in price even when strong U.S. regions show signs of decline. But Faber says that in the bigger perspective, New York property is as vulnerable to a credit bust as any major metropolitan areas, such as “Hong Kong, Zurich and Frankfurt.”

His real-estate advice: “Buy a farm and learn to drive a tractor.”

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Merrill Lynch Reports Loss on $7.9 Billion Writedown
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Dow Loses 367 Points
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Global inflation: Policymakers fear return of a banished beast
Inflation 7982% In Zimbabwe
Oil Surge To $89 May Provoke OPEC Meeting
Oil Reverses Course, Hits New Record
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Southern CA Home Sales Plunge 30%
German bank hit by subprime crisis slashes results, directors leave
The IMF States The US Dollar Still Has Some Downside
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Oil Futures Hit New Record Above $86
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Treasury claims power to seize gold and silver — and everything else
Income inequality worst since 1920s, according to IRS data
Man who correctly predicted Black Tuesday makes another prediction in NY Times: ‘Country is facing… a depression’
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U.S. Economic Collapse News Archive

 



Oil Jumps Over $90 a Barrel

Oil jumps over $90 a barrel, dollar sinks to new low against the euro

FT
October 19, 2007

Crude oil prices on Friday rose to a fresh all-time high above $90 a barrel as the US dollar sunk to a new low against the euro.

Persistent worries about tight supplies ahead of the winter peak season and fresh geopolitical tensions also helped to push prices higher.

Nymex November West Texas Intermediate hit $90.02 a barrel in overnight trading. It later was 10 cents higher at $89.57 a barrel, extending Thursday’s $2.07 price jump. It is the sixth straight trading day that oil set a record high.

Edward Morse, chief energy economist at Lehman Brothers in New York, said that financial flows betting on further US dollar weakness ahead of the Group of Seven meeting and the US Federal Reserve meeting were propping up the oil price.

The dollar traded on Friday to $1.4303 against the euro, after touching earlier a record low of $1.4311 per euro. Investors are betting on a further interest rate cut when the Federal Reserve meets on October 31.

A lower dollar cuts the purchasing power of the barrel, suggesting that producing countries, such as Saudi Arabia, would try to keep the oil price higher to compensate for it. The strength of the euro, the sterling pound and other currencies also mean that some countries, particularly in Europe, are partially insulated from the oil price rally.

David Moore, a commodity strategist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in Sydney, said: “The dollar fell to new lows overnight. That fact has been a boost to all commodity prices.”

The Nymex December West Texas Intermediate contract which will become the oil market benchmark early next week traded at $88.01 a barrel, after hitting $88.49 a barrel.

Nauman Barakat, senior vice president at Macquaire Futures in New York, warned that traders have built massive December options calls -rights to buy oil at a certain price- at $90 and $100 a barrel, providing the backdrop for “additional upward impetus.”

Kevin Norrish of Barclays Capital said that the issue no longer seems to be whether oil will reach $100 a barrel, but when.

“Until there is a clear prospect of the [supply-demand] gap being filled, then the course is set for the market to take out $90, $100 and $110 in fairly quick succession,” Mr Norrish said.

Low inventories crude oil inventories ahead of the winter season are also supporting prices, traders said.

OECD crude oil and products stocks have fallen below their 5-year average, after the inventories suffered a counter-seasonal drop in the third quarter.

The IEA estimates that between July and September inventories fell at a rate of 360,000 barrels a day, sharply diverging from a 10-year average of increases in that period of about 260,000 b/d.

Inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for the New York Mercantile Exchange crude oil contract are running 19 per cent below last year.

The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which controls 40 per cent of the world’s crude oil output, denies that the market is tight, instead blaming speculation, the weakening of the dollar and Middle East tensions for the 13 per cent jump in prices in the past week.

The price jump could force Opec to call for an emergency meeting ahead of its head of state summit in Riyahd, Saudi Arabia, in late November, and its ministerial meeting in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, in early December.

Saudi Arabia, the cartel’s leader, has remained silent on whether to increase production further, but at the last Opec meeting it pushed for a production boost in spite of strong opposition from other countries, suggesting the kingdom is concerned about the impact of high oil prices on the global economy.

Opec officials said the cartel’s ministers were just returning from holidays after the end of the Ramadan, implying it may take extra time for the group to discuss a new production increse.

 

Dollar dives as US slump spreads

Telegraph
October 20, 2007

The dollar has plummeted to all-time lows against both the euro and a basket of global currencies amid growing fears of a disorderly rout as the US property slump spreads to the broader economy.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Is there really a sea of limitless liquidity?

The greenback dived after the US ‘Philly’ business index dropped 10.9 to 6.8 in October, with a shock fall in new orders and inventory, raising the chances of further rate cuts by the Federal Reserve this month.

The dollar crossed the barrier of $1.43 against the euro; the broader dollar index fell to 77.478, the lowest since the series began in 1973.

The plunge follows data released this week by the US Treasury showing a record $163bn (£80bn) exodus from all forms of US assets, led by unprecedented levels of US bonds sales by Japan, China and Taiwan.

Bundesbank chief Axel Weber gave the euro an extra lift by hinting strongly at more rate rises in Europe to head off inflation, expected to reach 2.6pc in Germany.

The growing belief the European Central Bank may keep tightening despite the credit crunch has caused traders to shift gear, renewing bets on the euro. But the surging currency has hit confidence in Europe, where industries in France, Italy and some German firms are warning of serious knock-on effects.

Airbus says each one cent move costs the group $100m in profits.

Ernest-Antoine Seilliere, head of the EU-wide lobby BusinessEurope, called for “political intervention” by the G7 club of economic powers at today’s meeting in Washington.

Rodrigo Rato, head of the International Monetary Fund, offered little hope of relief. “Our view regarding the euro is that the euro stays in line with medium-term fundamentals on a multilateral basis. It is true the euro is close to historic highs in real terms, but it is also true the euro-area current account is in broad balance,” he said.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy has called for EU action to force a shift in exchange rate policy, if necessary by strong-arming the ECB to halt its campaign of rate rises.

Germany has a huge trade surplus, but France faces the biggest deficits in its history. Spain’s current account deficit is 9pc of GDP.

The US has adopted a policy of benign neglect towards the dollar slide, seeing it as a way to correct a huge current account deficit, but there are now concerns the process may be getting out of hand.

The Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI said in its quarterly outlook the soft dollar was complicating life for America’s key trading partners and risked triggering a global slowdown. “Global sentiment against the dollar is gaining traction, generating daunting challenges for the short-term economic outlooks of major US trading partners.”

Mitul Kotecha, an economist with Calyon, said: “The United States will do no more than repeat that markets determine exchange rates and will oppose any sort of intervention. There is every chance the aftermath of the G7 meeting will see the dollar resume its weakness.”

Paul Robinson, an analyst at Barclays Capital, said the prospect of Fed rate cuts had knocked away a key prop for the dollar, warning it could slide to $1.50 against the euro.

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Dollar Falls To New Low Against Euro
A Weak Dollar Is Bad For America
Dangers Of The Diving Dollar
Global inflation: Policymakers fear return of a banished beast
Inflation 7982% In Zimbabwe
Oil Surge To $89 May Provoke OPEC Meeting
Oil Reverses Course, Hits New Record
Gold price hits highest level since 1980
Friction over weak dollar expected at G-7 meeting
Japan and China lead flight from the dollar
2011 – The U.S. Dollar: R.I.P.
Paulson warns of damage to come
Greenspan would not be surprised to see a double-digit fall in US house prices nationally from their peak
Wall’s Street’s Rescue Plan: Be Very Afraid
GMAC Expected to Cut 25 Percent of Mortgage Workforce
Southern CA Home Sales Plunge 30%
German bank hit by subprime crisis slashes results, directors leave
The IMF States The US Dollar Still Has Some Downside
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It’s Time For The Banks To Face The Hangman
US home foreclosures double
U.S. home starts fall to 14-year low
Experts Fear Repeat Of 1929 Economic Crash
Oil surges near $88 a barrel
Oil Futures Hit New Record Above $86
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Treasury Sales May Rise 50% as Deficit Suddenly Grows
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U.S. Foreclosure Filings Nearly Double in September Over Same Month a Year Ago
Strong silence from U.S. on dollar’s weakness
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Credit card debt is ready to blow
Americans charge it as Bank of Subprime closes
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U.S. Economic Collapse News Archive

 



New data show housing market ’in freefall’

New data show housing market ‘in freefall’

Bloomberg News
October 3, 2007

WASHINGTON — The number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes dropped to the lowest level on record in August as the housing recession deepened.

“The existing homes market is now in freefall,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics Ltd., in Valhalla, N.Y. “The downside from here is still substantial.”

The National Association of Realtors’ index of signed purchase agreements fell 6.5 per cent from the previous month, the group said yesterday. The decline was more than economists anticipated and pushed the measure to the lowest level since the organization began tracking purchases in 2001. The gauge plunged 11 per cent in July.

Higher credit costs and lending restrictions after the collapse in subprime mortgages may push the industry downturn well into 2008. Market futures contracts show the Federal Reserve will probably cut rates later this month to avert spillover from the credit squeeze and keep the broader economy expanding.

Compared with a year earlier, pending home sales were down 22 per cent. Purchases declined in all four regions of the country, led by a slide of 9.5 per cent in the South. The smallest drop was in the West, which notched a fall of 2.7 per cent.

So far, the Fed’s half-point rate cut on Sept. 18 has failed to lower mortgage rates and boost demand. Buyers have been further constrained by the tighter lending standards and the shutdown of mortgage lenders such as American Home Mortgage Investment Corp. in early August that closed off access to credit.

“Fewer contracts were being written because of mortgage-availability issues,” said Lawrence Yun, a senior economist at the real estate agents group. “More than 10 per cent of sales contracts fell through at the last moment in August, primarily the result of cancelled loan commitments” from lenders.

“There is still no bottom in sight,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at Maria Fiorini Ramirez Inc., a New York forecasting firm. “Sales will continue to fall until there is a greater price capitulation by sellers. It still appears that we have not reached market-clearing prices to reduce the inventories of unsold existing homes.”

Other housing market indicators have pointed to a second leg down after concerns over subprime mortgage defaults caused credit markets to seize up in mid-August. Sales of previously owned homes fell in August to the lowest level in five years, the Realtors group reported Sept. 25. Two days later, the Commerce Department said new-home sales declined to a seven-year low and median prices dropped the most since 1970.

The stock of unsold homes rose to a record of 5.1 million in August, forcing builders to further scale back projects. Housing will continue to hinder the expansion after already reducing growth for the last six quarters, economists say.

As stockpiles climbed and sales fell, home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas dropped 3.9 per cent in the 12 months through July, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index. The decline was the biggest since record keeping began in 2001. Lower home values threaten to hurt consumer spending by preventing owners from tapping equity for extra cash.

Mounting foreclosures are adding to the problem. The number of Americans who may lose their homes more than doubled in August from a year earlier, according to a Sept. 18 report by Irvine, Calif.-based RealtyTrac Inc.

 

Is the credit crisis over? Not so fast

Reuters
October 2, 2007

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The audacious rise in the Dow industrials to a record will do little to prevent the millions of new “For Sale” signs likely to dot U.S. lawns soon.

Fears of mounting foreclosures and predictions of a lackluster holiday season remain even in the face of Dow 14,000, which has removed some, but not all, uncertainty about the faltering U.S. housing market.

At the root of investors’ anxiety are so-called subprime loans made to borrowers with shaky credit. Delinquencies are rising on subprime mortgages and defaults are piling up at record rates as home prices sink, pressuring consumers’ desire to spend.

The ripple effect from the slump in housing doesn’t stop there. Strains still exist in the U.S. credit markets even though there are signs of easing in the global liquidity squeeze, which was triggered by a lack of confidence in financial markets as subprime mortgage defaults soared.

Already, the housing slowdown has subtracted about 1 percentage point from growth in inflation-adjusted gross domestic product so far this year.

“I don’t think the worst is over,” said Robert Arnott, chairman of Research Affiliates LLC, a Pasadena, California-based investment management firm.

“We are coming off the greatest lending bubble — not housing bubble! — in U.S. history. We will feel its impact for a very long time.” For more investor comments see (ID:nN02411723: Quote, Profile, Research)

Falling home prices are leaving subprime borrowers who took out adjustable-rate mortgages with a major dilemma. Millions with subprime mortgages, which go to borrowers with checkered credit histories, are faced with negative equity in their homes that could make it increasingly unlikely they will qualify for new mortgages in an environment of tighter lending standards.

At current home prices, about $693 billion in ARMs are “already under water,” according to Stephanie Pomboy, financial economist at MacroMavens in New York.

TWIST OF THE ARMs

That’s frightening news for banks that already have absorbed losses on their balance sheets due to delinquent subprime borrowers. The losses so far amount to about 10 percent of the forecast of $100 billion in losses.

“The disturbing number here isn’t 10 percent … but the $100 billion,” Pomboy said.

With nearly $700 billion in ARMs in negative equity facing interest-rate resets, “depending on how much lenders can ultimately recover, this implies (bank) losses will be more like $210 billion to $346 billion,” she said.

“And that’s assuming the situation doesn’t get worse.”

In July, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had estimated the losses at $100 billion at the most.

But it appears Bernanke had underestimated those figures and their effects on the consumer.

In September, the Fed took the benchmark federal funds rate, which governs overnight loans between banks, down an aggressive half-percentage point to 4.75 percent, its lowest since May of last year. The Fed also cut the discount rate it charges for direct loans to banks by a half-percentage point to 5.25 percent.

“With the reset wave about to gather intensity and ‘For Sale’ signs dotting the lawns of 5.1 million homes across the country, the credit hit parade has only just begun,” Pomboy added.

Aside from the resetting of interest rates on home mortgages and falling home prices, both leading to a slowdown in consumer spending, Arnott of Research Affiliates is concerned about slumping home construction.

That, he said, was 5-plus percent of Gross Domestic Product at the latest housing peak. He puts the odds of recession around 60 percent.

TIGHT CREDIT HANGOVER

Indeed, September was a record month for investment-grade issuance of about $100 billion, but that came as conditions in the commercial paper market remained tight.

Since August, U.S. commercial paper outstanding shrank by $370 billion, with commercial and industrial loans also helping to pick up some of the slack. Now, those loans are growing at the fastest rate in more than 20 years, Goldman Sachs’ chief U.S. economist Jan Hatzius wrote in a research report published late on Monday.

All told, the stock market is underpinned by powerful factors. U.S. equities appear cheap relative to many asset classes, especially since Wall Street has been a laggard in the global equity rally over the last several years. And now that many oil-exporting countries are flush with cash, they’ve been putting that surplus money to work in higher-yield securities in the United States.

“Investors with new money to put into the marketplace probably will be less interested in certain other real asset classes, like houses, because the luster has come off the sector,” said Keith Wirtz, president and chief investment officer at Fifth Third Asset Management in Cincinnati.

Ironically, equity markets have created the least amount of “grief” for investors in this cycle, he added.

 



Greenspan Warns Good Times Are Over

Greenspan Warns Good Times Are Over

Short News
October 2, 2007

Alan Greenspan has announced the end of the good times for the world economy and that the economic future is a gloomy one, due to many factors including a slow down in the US economy which will have repercussions across the globe.

Greenspan predicted the boom of the 90’s following a “new economy”,a high-tec boost to productivity whose effects have been prolonged by the economic rise of China although he now claims that these have only given a temporary respite to the economy

He warns that government intervention to counteract the economic slowdown often do more harm than good citing the Bank of England intervention to help Northern Rock, a move that triggered the run on the bank.

Source: news.bbc.co.uk

 

Dollar Crunch Puts Gold Centre Stage

Telegraph
October 2, 2007

The dominoes are toppling. What began as a credit crunch has turned into a dollar crunch. We are witnessing a run on the world’s paramount reserve currency, an event that occurs twice a century or so, and never with a benign outcome.

The US dollar has fallen through parity against the Canadian dollar and plummeted to all-time lows against a basket of currencies. This is dangerous. None of the mature economic blocs seems able to take the strain, let alone step in to restore order.

Ultimately, Europe and Japan are in worse shape than the US. A mood of sauve qui peut is taking hold.

Is this what gold is sniffing as it breaks out against all currencies, smashing through €500 an ounce against the euro, and vaulting to a 28-year high of $743 against the dollar?

“Central banks have been forced to choose between global recession or sacrificing control of gold, and have chosen the perceived lesser of two evils,” said Citigroup in a fresh report.

“We believe that the policy resolution to the credit crunch will take the form of a massive, extended ‘Reflationary Rescue’, in a new cycle of global credit creation and competititive currency devaluations. This could take gold to $1,000 an ounce, or higher.”

The report’s authors, John Hill and Graham Wark, say the avalanche of central bank bullion sales earlier this year was “clearly timed to cap the gold price”.

They do not explain this explosive allegation, long promoted by the gold group GATA. But it would not surprise me if the European Central Bank’s motive for selling 37 tonnes in April and May was to hold the euro price of gold below €500.

Citigroup said the game was up once the Federal Reserve slashed rates a half point and opened the liquidity floodgates.

Talk of “competitive devaluations” is a new twist, although Bernard Connolly from Banque AIG has been warning for a long time that this would be the denouement. Gold bugs often prattle about the dollar’s demise – condign punishment for a country that has amassed $3 trillion of net liabilities abroad, slashed its savings rate below zero and spent itself into a debtor’s gaol – but they rarely ask what currency it is supposed to collapse against.

China is a leveraged play on US shopping malls. Japan is already buckling. Its economy contracted 0.3pc in Q2. Wages have fallen for eight months in a row. The Abe government has fallen – the first sub-prime victim, but not the last.

Until now, the euro has served as the “anti-dollar”, the default choice for Asians and petrodollar powers wary of US assets. This cannot last.

A rate of $1.43 (it was 83 cents in 2000) will combine, after a one-year lag, with deflating property bubbles in the Club Med bloc to cause a crisis in 2008. It will then become clear that the needs of the Germanic and Latin zones are incompatible and that a coin with no treasury, debt union, or polity to back it up cannot displace the dollar – if it survives at all.

Airbus is already underwater, unable to meet its dollar contracts unless it shifts plant from Europe. Every 10-cent rise in the euro costs €1bn.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy is in guerrilla warfare against the ECB, threatening to invoke Maastricht Article 109, which gives EU politicians power to set a fixed exchange rate (by unanimity) or a “dirty float” (by majority).

The mood is moving his way. Eurogroup chair, Jean-Claude Juncker, has stopped pretending that all is well. “We have begun to have great concern about the exchange rate of the euro,” he said.

Europe will not let America export its day of reckoning to the rest of the world. It will counter with its own devaluation.

No doubt Ben Bernanke will use all means to avert disaster, including the “printing press” he invoked in November 2002. By this he meant that the Fed could inject unlimited stimulus by purchasing as many bonds and assets as it wants. He believes the Fed could have avoided the Depression if it had been more creative in 1931.

Even so, I am not sure that the Bernanke Fed will move fast enough, given fears of moral hazard, or, indeed, whether the rate cuts on offer are enough to head off an insolvency crisis. The chart of S&P 500 looks eerily similar to October 1987, the last time a tumbling US dollar set off a crash.

A Bundesbank rate rise was the trigger then. If the ECB’s hawks are pig-headed enough to ram through one last rise on October 4, we might see a replay.

Large parts of the global credit system are still shut. The $2.2 trillion market for commercial paper has shrunk by $368bn over the past seven weeks as lenders refuse to roll over loans. The $2.5 trillion market for “structured finance” remains frozen.

US sales of new houses are down 21pc in a year. Median prices have fallen 14pc since March to $225,700. Builders are having to slash tariffs to move stock at all.

We wait to see what happens as “teaser rates” on some $1.5 trillion of mortgages jump with a venomous kick in coming months. The Fed should have thought about this three years ago when rates were 1pc. It is too late now.

How do you play gold rally? Citigroup says the mining shares are poised to surge after lagging badly, offering a “Gold beta” leverage of 2.36. “The market is likely to be shocked at how much cash the major Golds generate at $700 an ounce,” it said.

It certainly looks as if gold has at last “decoupled” from the stock markets, regaining its role as the ultimate store of value. Whether the mining equities have decoupled is another matter.

If Wall Street takes a beating this autumn, the safest play is pure metal.

Related News:

Euro Bursts To Fresh Dollar High
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7021479.stm

Dow surges to record high
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL2779753320071001

The Worst Recession in 25 years?
http://www.mises.org/story/2728

Largest U.S. Bank: Profit Down 60%
http://www.bloomberg.com/ap….&refer=home&sid=axRdVDp1bdZk

U.S. $10 trillion in the red
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation/story/256336.html

Fears over cracks in Britain’s gold stock
http://www.telegra….9/30/ngold130.xml

Gold hits 28-year peak, platinum near all-time high
http://www.reuters.com/article/hotStocksNews/idUST9797320071001

Gold rises as dollar sinks like a rock
http://www.gcnlive.com/AGLDoffer.htm

How Economy Could Survive $100 Oil
http://online.wsj.co….31.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Bush Disappointed Spending Bills Not Passed
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-09-29-voa26.cfm

Private Student Loan Bubble Could Burst
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8RVU0J82.htm

Greenspan on market upheaval
http://www.reuters.com/news/video?videoId=67579&videoChannel=1

ING Direct steps in as US bank collapses
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21036518/

35K state workers get layoff notices
As Prices Soar, U.S. Food Aid Buys Less
Freddie Mac chief warns of recession
Oil Prices Rise As Dollar Falls
FDIC Shuts Down NetBank Due to Defaults
Gold Hits 28 Year High
EU’s Almunia Worried By Dollar’s Fall
New-Home Sales Tumble to 7-Year Low
U.S. Government About to be Broke

 



Fed Projects a Four Year Long Recession

Fed Projects a Four Year Long Recession

Mike Swanson
Wall Street Window
September 24, 2007

Aside from the dollar and long-term bonds all markets went up last week as the Fed demonstrated that it is more fearful of a slowing economy and banking woes than inflation. In fact, it is willing to sacrifice the dollar to save the banks. Just last month, the Fed was saying that the threat of inflation is just as great as the threat of a slowdown in the economy. Now it is cutting rates in a huge way as the DOW is near its all-time high, gold is making new highs, and the price of oil is exploding.

The Fed is obviously terrified. I have noted in the last podcast that Bernanke built his career on a doctoral thesis that claimed that the Fed didn’t cut rates fast enough during the 1929 stock market crash. But if you look at a chart of the Depression bear market with an overlay chart of interest rates you’ll see that the Fed cut interest rates as the market topped. A few years later when the market finally bottomed you’ll see that they had been lowering rates all of the way down.

What Bernanke believes is that the Fed should have cut rates all at once during the start of the bear market instead of gradually over two years. He seems to be putting this belief to work right now. It means that he is gravely concerned about the state of real estate and banking in the United States.

As the NYT reports:

Those wanting to understand the Fed’s reversal can profit from reading two papers by Fed officials which were released this summer as the credit squeeze was worsening.

Taken together they constitute an admission that the Fed was surprised by the housing and borrowing boom on the upside, and now it fears it will be surprised on the downside.

One paper, by Karen E. Dynan, a Fed economist, and Donald L. Kohn, the Fed’s vice chairman, asked why a strong economy had left Americans deeper in debt than ever before.

“The most important factors behind the rise in debt and the associated decline in saving out of current income have probably been the combination of increasing house prices and financial innovation,” they concluded. In other words, Wall Street and rising home prices made it easier to borrow more money, and consumers did so.

That led to more consumption than would have been expected. Now, the authors say, “an unexpected leveling out or decline” in home values could have the opposite effect.

And, Frederic S. Mishkin, a Fed governor, said in the other paper that this leveling or decline could, in turn, have a bigger effect on the economy than the Fed anticipated.

“Although I generally do not place the housing and mortgage markets close to the epicenter of previous cases of financial instability,” he wrote, “I would note that the current situation in the U.S. could prove to be different.”

Mr. Mishkin said he had modified one Fed economic model, concluding that a 20 percent fall in home prices could cause consumer spending to fall by 2 percent within two years, about twice what the old model forecast.

But that was not the point Mr. Mishkin wanted to emphasize. Instead, his model showed that much of that damage could be averted if the Fed acted rapidly to cut rates — as it is now doing.

When Alan Greenspan was at the Fed he often had Fed governors write papers to rationalize and justify changes in Federal Reserve policy. One should read the Mishkin paper mentioned above to understand what the Fed is doing now. If the credit markets don’t revitalize in the next few weeks you can expect to see the Fed lower rates again by another 50 points at their October FOMC meeting no matter where the Dollar, Gold, or the DOW are. They have signaled that they don’t give a damn about the Dollar. All they care about is Wall Street.

One could look at this another way though. One could say that they don’t care about inflation because they see a total bust in housing that will create deflationary pressures in the economy. Mishkin’s paper projects negative GDP growth for the next five years, a Federal Funds rate falling two full points lower, consumer spending shrinking for five years, and the CPI going down and staying negative if housing prices decline by 20%. These negative trends are expected to begin now and accelerate for two and a half years.

He sees such a housing price decline as very likely as house prices fell by 16% from late 1979 through late 1982. Contrary to people who believe that real estate is the best investment you can buy because it never drops, it has dropped in the past. And with bubbles leading to busts it is happening right now. The question remains, when will it stop? When the Nasdaq topped in March of 2000 it didn’t bottom for two full years. Real estate topped out a year ago.

Mishkin isn’t just a normal Fed governor. He is one of Ben Bernanke’s closest friends. The two served at Columbia university together and in 1997 they wrote a book together calling on central banks to make public targets for inflation. Mishkin’s views dovetail with Bernanke’s.

According to Mark Zandi, co-founder of Moody’s Economy.com, housing prices will decline by at least 11% in the next 3 1/2 years. Zandi sees prices in New York city falling from between 1 percent and 7 percent for each of the next five quarters so there is a lot of leeway in his projections. Hey, if we only get an 11% decline and you cut the Fed model projections in half we’re still facing a horrible recession.

Mishkin argues that “the task for a central bank confronting a bubble is not to stop it but rather to respond quickly after it has burst.” Instead of lower ratings as economic conditions deteriorate as his models do, and show practically a depression coming as a result, he advocates cutting rates all at once just as Bernanke’s doctoral thesis about the 1929 stock market crash argues.

What I have to wonder though is what happens if the Fed lowers rates by one percent or more in the next three months and real estate doesn’t rebound? These theories have never been tried before by a Central bank. We don’t know if cutting rates all at once will prevent the damage caused by a bursting bubble. It has never been tested. Even when the tech bubble burst in 2000, Alan Greenspan didn’t lower rates until almost a year later and after the Nasdaq fell to almost half its value.

The problem is real estate is still overvalued just as tech stocks became overvalued in 2000. One would think that real estate will have to drop and return to a normal valuation before it can bottom out, so simply lowering interest rates may not have the wonderful effects that Mishkin and Bernanke hope they will.

What I do know for sure, which is all you need to know to make money, is that they are setting up an inflationary trend. As the Fed prints more money it has to go somewhere. Of course this is bullish for gold and commodities which are now leading the stock market. But it is possible that the DOW and broad market could also continue to go up too.

Related News:

US economy kills American middle class
http://english.pravda.ru/busines….rican_middle_class%20-0

Ron Paul: The Money Has To Come From Somewhere
http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2007/tst092307.htm

IMF: Global Financial Crisis To Be Long Lasting
http://news.independent.co.uk/business/news/article2996170.ece

U.S. Severe poverty rate at highest in three decades
http://thescribblersweb.com/us_severe_poverty_rate_at_highest.htm

Fall-out at the top reveals French finances in freefall
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2996110.ece

Home sales, prices continue to fall
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20970287/

Borrowers told to lie about wages
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/file_on_4/7010415.stm

Northern Rock still lending ‘recklessly’
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business…cle2512384.ece

Dollar at lifetime low vs euro
http://www.reuters.com/article/hotStocksNews/idUST19472920070924?sp=true

Dollar Falls to Record Low Against Euro as U.S. Growth Falters
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pi…Yk&refer=japan

Taking Cues From Fed, Speculators Bid Up Oil
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/articl….usiness

Premier Says France Bankrupt
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/09/21/ap4144493.html

Israel asks U.S. foreign aid be paid in EUROS
Northern Rock gets 2.9 bln stg
Greenspan Confronted By Activists, Flees From Angry Mob
Greenspan Admits Fed Is Above The Law
Ron Paul Slams Bernanke For Dollar Meltdown
Kissinger Admits Iran Attack Is About Oil
Bernanke panics by ‘launching a nuclear missile into the financial system’
Canadian Dollar at Parity with USD, Bernanke and Saudis Abuse US Dollar
$200 Dollar a Barrel Oil Is Bilderberg Plan To Destroy Middle Class
Oil hits high over $84
Abu Dhabi takes ownership stake in Carlyle Group
Gold hits 28-yr high as dollar touches record lows
Home Price Falls Hit 26% Of U.S. Homeowners
Greenspan: House Prices To Drop Much Lower
Jon Stewart to Alan Greenspan: Why Do We Need the Fed?
Recession Too Mild a Word
Canadian Dollar Trading At Parity With USD
Borse Dubai Gets Stake In Nasdaq
Federal Workers Owe Billions in Unpaid Taxes
UN Global Taxes Before U.S. Senate
Saudi Currency De-Peg To Dollar Inevitable
Inflation fears end rally, sending stocks down
Analyst: Mystery Trades Were Profit Scam For Fearmongers
Dollar hits new low against euro
US expert warns of fresh shocks
Northern Rock: ‘One in 10 chance of property crash’
Congress Asked To Lift Debt Ceiling
Zimbabwe Close To Economic Collapse
Home foreclosures triple in Hawaii
Bank of England doubles emergency loans available to British banks
Fears of dollar collapse as Saudis take fright
China’s Ultimatum: Let Us Invade Taiwan Or We’ll Dump The Dollar
Rogers: Fed Rate Cut Will Trigger Recession
Greenspan Working To Destroy US Economy
Alan Greenspan Defends Himself
Greenspan says euro could replace U.S. dollar as reserve currency of choice
EU Warns China Of Trade Imbalance
Oil hits new high over $82 after Fed rate cut
U.S. gold futures hit 28-year peak
Failed Lender Makes Grab for Employee Funds
Greenspan predicts falling house prices, rising inflation
Greenspan Says China Will Determine World Economic Fate in 2030
Alan Greenspan warns of UK house prices drop
Greenspan alert on US house prices
Credit turmoil set to benefit big banks
Northern Rock: ‘One in 10 chance of property crash’
Hopes of UK interest rate cut ‘before Christmas’ after FTSE rises follow Fed’s swoop to cut rates
Relief as Northern Rock shares up
Treasurys Fall Ahead of Fed Decision
Fed Announces Big Rate Cut
Subprime Fallout: More Companies Slammed
Prepare for prolonged turmoil, says US Treasury Secretary
Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
Mystery Trader To Collect On Financial Meltdown?
Ron Paul Sees Crisis Ahead For Country
Bankers Fear £12bn Run On Rock
Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
U.S. Banks Brace for Storm Surge as Dollar and Credit System Reel
“Business Expert” (?) Ann Coulter: It’s Good for Wall Street to Bomb Iran
Britons Withdraw Billions in Bank Run
Northern Rock besieged by savers
Pound slides, yen up on N. Rock jitters
New saver queues at Northern Rock
E*Trade Cuts Earnings Estimate 25% on Mortgage Losses
Fears Rise Over Online Banking
Stocks may rise on expected interest rate cut
Fears grow for British economy as panic over Northern Rock spreads
World’s banks hit for $30billion in credit crunch
Oil Hits $80 A Barrel For First Time
Senate panel okays $850 billion debt increase
Dollar’s retreat raises fear of collapse
Further signs of US economic pain
British Bank Rocked By Bank Run
Forecast: Housing woes pose risk of recession
Mortgage Lender’s Bankruptcy
US dollar hits record lows
Foreclosures gain on sales
American economy: R.I.P.
US Heads for Recession as Foreign Investors Rush for the Exit from US Dollar Holdings
Dollar Hits 15 Year Low
Gold Rallies Past $700
Greenspan: Turmoil Like 1998
Bad News Puts Political Glare Onto Economy
US economy loses jobs for first time in 4 years
ECB Injects €42.2BN Into Money Markets
Is China quietly dumping US Treasuries?
Markets Brace For Seismic September
Fed Injects 31.25 Billion Into Market
Credit Crisis Has Hallmarks of Classic Bank Run
U.S. at risk of recession from housing
Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11? Trades
Credit Crisis Compared To 1930
Bank Warns Emergency Borrowers
Bush Unveils Mortgage Proposals
Congressman: Stock Market Will Eventually Collapse
Comptroller: U.S. Facing Economic Collapse
BIS Warns of Great Depression Dangers from Credit Spree
Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
U.S. Recession Risk Highest Since 9/11
Economy, credit worries drive Wall St down sharply
Fed Injects 17.25 Billion In Market
Foreclosures Up 93% In One Year
After Foreclosure A Big Tax Bill From The IRS
After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
Warren Buffett Sees Opportunities In Chaos
Run On The Banks in Los Angeles
Zimbabwe Inflation Rate Hits 7600%
Yields On T-Bills Down Most In 2 Decades
Bruised investors suffer as market continues to swing
The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
World Stocks Plummet Yet Again
Economic Expert: We Are Already In An Engineered Recession
China is not the Problem
Heavy losses sweep world markets
Wall Street Pulls Off Late Comeback
Fed Poised To Dump More Money Into Market
Stock Market Brush Fire & Run On The Banks
Food prices rising in double digits
Existing Home Sales Fall In 41 States
Banks Add More Funds To Stabilize Markets
Economic Meltdown Favors The Elite
Central Banks Add Cash To Avert Crisis
Stocks End Mixed After Raucous Week
China dollar attack would be ‘foolhardy’: Bush
Fed Adds $38 Bln in Funds, Most Since September 2001
The “Plunge Protection Team” Working Overtime to Save US Stock Market
China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales
World stocks slide on fresh US credit concerns
Dow Plunges 387 On Subprime Fears
Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
American Home to Declare Bankruptcy, Employees Told by Managers
Mad Money Cramer: Bernanke, Wake Up
Wall Street shaken by late-day market surges

 



Bernanke panics by ’launching a nuclear missile into the financial system’

Bernanke panics by ‘launching a nuclear missile into the financial system’
“By lowering interest rates by half a point while the market priced in a quarter point drop and the US dollar index is under 80 Bernanke is doing the equivalent of launching a nuclear missile into the financial system.”

Mike Swanson
Commodity Online
September 20, 2007

I was shocked by yesterday’s decision by the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates by 50 basis points and then signal that there is more to come in its statement. The Fed is in a tough bind. I know there are frightening things happening in the credit markets and banks and Wall Street is clamoring for rate cuts. We saw the near collapse of Countrywide Financial a few weeks ago and England’s Northern Rock has experienced a full fledged bank run. At the same time though inflation is accelerating as oil prices hit all-time highs and gold breaks through $700 an ounce and the DOW is only 1.7% off of its all-time high.

Look the Fed saved the stock market from crashing on August 16th by intervention. We’ve since seen a rally going up into yesterday’s expected Fed announcement while the credit markets continued to deteriorate. The move down in July was the first act of a financial crisis – and normally those unfold in two stages. The first being when people realize there is a big problem causing huge frightening losses the extent of which are unknown and are forcing institutional investors to selling due to margin calls and redemptions.

The second act is when the market finds out how big the losses are and who has them. This is what happened in 1998. The market fell hard in August of that year due to turmoil in the international bond market, bounced, in September, and then dropped hard again to form a double bottom when the Long-Term Capital hedge fund blew up.

If the Fed hadn’t lowered interest by .50 basis points yesterday the market most likely would begin a correction by the end of this week that would bring it down to retest the August lows by the middle of October. The market most likely would have then made a double bottom and be geared up to up through the end of the year. If the Fed had to it could have even intervened again to force a bottom.

Just about everyone expected the Fed to lower rates by a .25 basis points yesterday. To me this seemed like the logical thing to do. This way the Fed would save some ammo for later and deliver a message that it was there to step in if needed, but things weren’t too serious.

But by lowering rates by .50 points the Fed not only surprised the stock market, which forced shorts to close out positions and caused people to react to the news and create an outsized rally, but sent a very powerful message: The Fed will not allow the market to have a pullback of any sort. The Fed will not allow banks that made bad loans to go under and simply doesn’t care about inflation or the value of the dollar at this stage of the game.

I know many people reading this are excited to see the market go up, but you need to step back and think about things for a minute. Why did the Fed do what it did yesterday? What the Fed did is dire, because it is lowering interest rates in a huge dramatic way when the DOW is only 1.7% off of its all-time high and inflation is accelerating. Not even Alan Greenspan did anything like this.

This is one of the most shocking things I’ve ever seen in the markets. August 16th was shocking. And if you listened to my podcast the following weekend you know it troubled me. I thought the stock market almost crashed that day and I took it as a sign that the macro big picture was changing – that subprime was a true problem in the markets that could lead to a wipeout in the coming weeks. I did not know what was going to happen, but I decided to actually stay out of the markets for the most part until the picture became more clear.

Well, past history suggested that we would see a retest of the lows and the success or failure of that retest would tell us the depth of the credit problems and give us a good idea of what the market would do the rest of the year.

Yesterday the Fed lowered rates by .50 points to shock the markets and force a rally to prevent such a retest. Yesterday is just as dramatic as the market action on August 16th, because it does indeed tell us that the macro picture is changing in a big way. A way that I didn’t anticipate, because it is incredibly reckless and dangerous on the part of the Federal Reserve. It is almost insane. It would be the equivalent of George Bush saying “I am losing in Iraq and I need to win a war somewhere so I am going to launch nuclear strikes on Iran so I can go out a winner. Dick Cheney says it is a good idea so it must be.” By lowering interest rates by half a point while the market priced in a quarter point drop and the US dollar index is under 80 Bernanke is doing the equivalent of launching a nuclear missile into the financial system.

When the stock market went bust in 2000 Greenspan didn’t lower rates to almost a year later and with the Nasdaq almost cut in half. During the 1998 Long-Term Capital Crisis he first cut by a quarter point and then lowered rates later when the market dropped again. The Fed is supposed to lower rates as you approach the trough of a business cycle, not right up near the top when there is inflation. To do so is very dangerous and if Bernanke continues this course he will destroy the value of the dollar. The Fed is saying that it will now print money like mad to prevent any sort of market pullback of any kind and it doesn’t care about the value of the dollar. The US Dollar index is trading below its 30 year support level and will eventually collapse if the Fed continues upon the course that it announced yesterday.

And he is sending a message that he is willing to do this.

I can think of only two reasons:

1)The problems in the mortgage markets are worse than we know and the entire banking system is bankrupt. In other words the mortgage securities that banks hold are worth nothing. The Fed in turn is going to print money and lower interest until housing prices go back up, so mortgage securities will rally, and if inflation explodes and the dollar becomes worthless it is worth the cost, because the banks must be saved. And the banks own the Fed.

Of course this seems crazy. Yeah there is turmoil in the banking system, but can it really be that bad? But it would have to be to justify such action on the Fed and even then some would argue that its not worth jeopardizing the dollar to save the banks.

Just because the Fed panics doesn’t necessarily mean there is anything to fear. If you recall at the end of 1999 Alan Greenspan pumped the money supply in fears of a phantom Y2K menace. That action helped create the final blow-off for the Nasdaq bubble and made the ensuing bear market worse than it would have been. It was a huge mistake.

If the banking system isn’t about to go bankrupt then to cut interest rates at this pace is a mistake that makes the Y2K menace look like a little bruise on a knee.

2)Ben Bernanke has a PH.D in economics and is obsessed with the idea that the Fed caused the Great Depression, because it didn’t lower interest rates fast enough. He’s an academic who is putting the theories he learned as a young man to use.

I can understand this. I was an academic once. I was in a university PH.D history program and left with a Master’s Degree. I know what academic life is about. When you go through graduate school you have to write a doctoral thesis, which will start your real career. Usually those thesis – if they are successful – lead to books and then more writings that branch off of the original thesis. Creative minds, and there is a difference between being imaginative and smart, then investigate new avenues of thought throughout their careers and come up with innovative theories and groundbreaking research.

The unimaginative though spend the rest of their career circling around the theories behind their doctoral thesis. They remain anchored to it and don’t actually come up with any new ideas the rest of their lives that amount to anything. They may be successful professionally, but deep down they aren’t anything but a one hit woner.

That is essentially what Bernanke is. He wrote a thesis claiming that the Great Depression happened because the Fed didn’t lower interest rates fast enough after the stock market topped out in 1929. I don’t believe this at all, but to explain why is a subject left for another time. What is important though is that if you look at a chart of the stock market between 1929 and 1932 and look at what the Fed did you’ll see that the Fed lowered interest shortly after the market topped out and continued to lower rates in the following years and the market fell anyway. Rates and the stock market fell together.

What this means though is ff you believe the Fed didn’t lower rates interest fast enough as Bernanke does then you think the Fed should have lowered rates all at once instead of doing so as the market dropped.

It appears that Bernanke is putting that theory to test right now. At the very least he is trying to prevent the market from reaching phase two of this crisis, in which the extent of the subprime losses are revealed, by restoring the balance sheets of troubled hedge funds with a big stock market rally of his creation.

Based on Bernanke’s Depression thesis it seems that he is going to lower rates dramatically and quickly over just a few months, because he believes that if he doesn’t the banking system will collapse, the stock market will crash, we’ll have a Depression or who knows what. In the end this probably won’t make any bit of difference and will cause a hyperinflation of consumer prices and a collapse in the value of the dollar – and may not be even needed at all. He’s fearing that the credit markets and banking problems justify such a course of action, but that isn’t a 100% certainty. Maybe the problems aren’t as bad as he fears. But we won’t know that.

Instead a year from now if he continues this course we’ll have a different set of problems – a dollar that has collapsed in value and eventually a huge spike in interest rates as foreign investors flee the dollar and the US government bond market.

I almost wish I had no money in my brokerage account or my banking accounts right now and just had a closet full of gold bullion. One could sell everyone one has and put it in gold and not have to worry about a thing right now. But of course gold stocks will go up huge over the next 6-8 months so there is more money to be made in them. I’ll just have to buy the next pullback or 1-2 week period of consolidation in them and get on board that ride. But at some point it will be prudent to take profits and move the money into pure gold or a foreign currency as I fear that the dollar could actually become worthless when Bernanke’s is done.

Look even Bloomberg has a headline that states “FOMC now stands for Friend of Market Committee” on their website this morning.

Here are some more must read reactions:

Billionaire Jim Rogers before the rate cut in a must see Bloomberg video:

““Every time the Fed turns around to save its friends on Wall Street, it makes the situation worse if Bernanke starts running those printing presses even faster than he’s doing already, yes we are going to have a serious recession. The dollar’s going to collapse, the bond market’s going to collapse. There’s going to be a lot of problems in the U.S.”

In an article on Financialsense.com Frank Barbera writes:

“Forget about any ‘Moral Hazard,’ and forget about the purchasing power of those hard earned Dollars. Clearly, that is the message that the Fed is sending to the International community with today’s action. A shocking, potentially reckless move, where will the Bid be found on the greenback, and at what point will foreigners decide that a 4.48% yield on a 10 year Bond doesn’t cover the bet? (Heck, it ticked up a whole basis point today.) Only time will tell, but for now, the Fed’s stark message seems to be re-inflate at all costs. In pursuing this arguably high-risk path, the Fed is opening the door to a potential Pandora’s Box. Conspiracy theorists may argue that Central Banks are working together, and that despite a lower value for the Greenback, foreign money will continue to be recycled into US Dollars. Yet, what if that is wrong? What if foreign money decides to flee the Dollar market? In that reality, this high stakes gambit by the Fed could blow up in its face, as exiting foreign capital hammers the Dollar and begins to send long term rates sharply higher. At that point, we face a melt down, as rising long term rates would be another nail in the coffin for the US Residential Market, and could continue to generate chaos in credit markets. A marked departure from the Greenspan gradualism, the Fed appears to be leaving its equilibrium at the political alter of an election year, and at the special interest alter of Wall Street investment banks. How ironic that if presumed foreign cooperation is renounced, the Fed could end up standing alone in a long suffering melt down. Looking back at past interest rate cutting cycles, we see that the trend in the US Dollar has not been anything but ugly. Now, with the US Dollar on the verge of all time record lows against most major currencies, is it possible that today’s aggressive rate cut will be seen as anything but an Admiral Farragut style “Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead” decree of a global “we don’t care” weak dollar policy?”

The Fed lowered interest rates with the DOW only 1.7% off of its highs. How low will they lower interest rates if the economy continues to slowdown and real estate prices don’t rebound? When will it end? We know the trend now. It is clear what the macro picture has become – the Fed is going to print money like mad and inflation is going to explode. You buy gold, gold stocks, and other commodity stocks to profit from that trend. And at the same time you pray that the trend doesn’t run to its final destination.

Everytime that Fed has lowered interest to bail out a segment of the financial markets it has created another financial bubble somewhere else until that bubble had a blow off stage and collapse of its own. When Greenspan lowered rates in 1998 to bail out Long-Term Capital a bubble in tech stocks formed the next year. When that bubble burst in 2000 and he lowered rates to stop the carnage he created a bubble in housing prices. That bubble ended a year ago and when banking problems and the collapse of mortgage securities hit the market as a result in the past six weeks Bernanke lowered rates.

The next bubble to come appears to be gold, commodities, and inflation. If that bubble runs it course and has a blow-off stage it will end with the collapse of the dollar and a panic on the part of foreign investors when it comes to anyone holding US debt and dollars. We may have a time over the next couple of months in which the stock market goes up in dramatic fashion, but at the end game anyone holding their savings and assets in US dollars will be wiped out.

The Fed signaled yesterday that it is willing to take that risk in order to save a bunch of Wall Street banks and hedge funds. Welcome to socialism for the rich. If the dollar goes to nothing hundreds of millions of people will lose their saving to bail out a few Wall Street bankers. It will one of the greatest transfers of wealth in history of money from the poor to the rich.

 



Canadian Dollar at Parity with USD, Bernanke and Saudis Abuse US Dollar

Dollar plunges on fears Saudis might drop peg
Euro breaks above $1.40 for first time; parity for Canadian dollar

Market Watch
September 20, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — The dollar fell sharply across the board Thursday, hitting a new all-time low against the euro and falling to parity with its Canadian counterpart, pressured by lower U.S. interest rates and a report Saudi Arabia might end its dollar peg.

The Canadian dollar rose slightly above one-to-one parity with the U.S. dollar in early trading, marking the first time this has happened since November 1976. The dollar was last trading at C$1.0013 after moving as low as C$0.9996, down from C$1.0155 Wednesday.

The euro broke through the $1.40 level into uncharted territory for the first time, just two days after the Federal Reserve made an aggressive cut of half a percentage point to its benchmark interest rate target.

The euro was last up 0.7% at $1.4068. It earlier rose to $1.4097, its highest level since the currency began trading in January 1999.

The trade-weighted dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of currencies, was down 0.9% to 78.610, after earlier hitting a new 15-year low.

“The environment has been developing for a U.S. dollar bearish move,” said David Watt, senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets. “A weight of evidence has been accumulating.”

The dollar has fallen significantly against most major currencies since the Fed made a larger-than-expected half-point cut in both its federal funds target and discount rate Tuesday, in a move aimed at preventing the credit woes from dragging down the broader economy.

Lower rates erode the returns on dollar-denominated assets, so the Fed’s announcement sent the dollar into a tailspin against most major currencies.

The greenback was down 1.4% to 114.40 yen, even though Japan’s 0.5% interest rate is the lowest in the developed world.

It also dropped against the British pound, which has taken a knock in recent days on worries about the U.K. banking system. The pound was trading at $2.0096, compared to $2.0010 late Wednesday.

“The U.S. dollar is clearly being sacrificed by the Federal Reserve in a last ditch effort to save the mortgage bankers,” said Ned Schmidt, editor of the Value View Gold Report.

“Foreign investors would be foolish to buy U.S. investments knowing that the value of the dollar will decline,” Schmidt said.

On Thursday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said in prepared testimony before a House panel that more delinquencies and foreclosures can be expected in the subprime adjustable-rate mortgage market as borrowers face interest-rate resets. See full story.

Saudi Arabia mulling peg drop?

Fueling bearish sentiment on the dollar, a report in the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph newspaper on Thursday pointed out that Saudi Arabia’s central bank didn’t take action in the wake of the Fed’s rate cut.

“Saudi Arabia has refused to cut interest rates in lockstep with the U.S. Federal Reserve for the first time, signaling that the oil-rich Gulf kingdom is preparing to break the dollar currency peg in a move that risks setting off a stampede out of the dollar across the Middle East,” the report said.

But Marc Chandler, currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman, said speculation that Saudi Arabia may abandon the peg between its riyal and the dollar and to reduce its holdings of dollars seems unfounded.

“While SAMA [Saudi Arabian monetary agency] may abandon the peg at some point, it is unlikely this will lead to a mass exodus from the U.S. bond markets, especially by central bank reserve managers,” Chandler said in a research note. “The largest reserve holders are not in the Middle East but in Asia and account, together with Russia, for over 63% of total reserve holdings.”

Referring to the currency peg, Chandler said that the governor of SAMA has said the bank held rates steady to fight inflation.

No coincidence

Stocks were lower Thursday. See Market Snapshot. Treasury bonds, typically a safe-haven buy when stocks drop, also languished under the weight of the dollar’s drop. See Bond report.

Gold futures, another safe-haven buy, rose more than 2% to top $745 an ounce in New York, to levels not seen since 1980. See Metals Stocks.

Crude-oil futures also rose Thursday, hitting as a new record of $83 a barrel. See Futures Movers.

“Is it a coincidence that the U.S. dollar, oil and gold are all breaking significant levels at the same time? No,” wrote Kathy Lien, chief strategist at Forex Capital Markets.

“The reason why the dollar can be blamed for the strength of oil and gold is because a weak dollar induces inflationary pressures, and since oil is priced in dollars, OPEC nations have a vested interest in seeing oil prices rise just so that they do not see a significant shortfall in profits,” Lien said.


Oil hits high over $84

Reuters
September 20, 2007

Oil surged to $84 a barrel on Thursday in the seventh straight record-breaking session as companies shut Gulf of Mexico output on forecasts a tropical depression churning through the region would become a storm.

U.S. crude settled up $1.39 at $83.32 a barrel after touching an all time high of $84.10 earlier. London Brent settled up 62 cents at $79.09 a barrel.

Oil has traded above $80 for the past week in part due to concerns about U.S. supplies after government data showed crude stocks in the top consumer fell for the fourth straight week.

A tropical depression blowing into the Gulf of Mexico exacerbated worries as companies shut offshore oil and natural gas output on expectations it would become a tropical storm.

Energy companies have shut over 360,100 barrels of oil per day, some 27.7 percent, of Gulf crude oil production and 16.7 percent of natural gas production on the storm threat, the U.S. Minerals Management Service said on Thursday.

“Energy companies shutting down Gulf of Mexico production and Fed Chief Bernanke’s optimistic words on the economy were supportive for this latest record rise in crude futures,” said Phil Flynn, analyst at Alaron Trading in Chicago.

RISING PRICES

U.S. Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke said he expected rising defaults on U.S. mortgages but added the Fed was committed to preventing new lending problems after cutting interest rates sharply on Tuesday.

The dollar fell to a lifetime low against the euro and reached parity with the Canadian currency on Thursday on expectations more interest rate cuts could be made.

Oil has risen by a third this year, driven by worries of fuel shortages during the Northern Hemisphere winter, supply risks in producer countries, the weaker dollar and rising money flows from investors.

The recent surge to record prices came after producer group OPEC agreed to add 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) to global markets to help calm consumer nation concerns.

While analysts are divided over whether prices can sustain current levels, some OPEC officials said oil will not stay above $80 for long.

“This situation is not stable and cannot be permanent,” said Hossein Kazempour Ardebili, Iran’s OPEC governor.

Wednesday’s rise to record highs came after data showed crude oil stocks in the United States fell by 3.8 million barrels last week, nearly twice the 2 million-barrel draw expected in a Reuters poll of analysts.

Related News:

Home Price Falls Hit 26% Of U.S. Homeowners
http://today.reuters.com/news/articleinvesting.aspx?type=bondsNe…..XML

Greenspan Admits Fed Is Not Beholden To Any Government Agency
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/september2007/210907Beholden.htm

Greenspan: House Prices To Drop Much Lower
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL2146624120070921?sp=true

Jon Stewart to Alan Greenspan: Why Do We Need the Fed?
http://www.jbs.org/node/5640

Recession Too Mild a Word
http://www.bestcyrano.org/THOMASPAINE/?p=309

Canadian Dollar Trading At Parity With USD
http://www.bloomberg.com/ap….gmV7h0cU&refer=currency

Borse Dubai Gets Stake In Nasdaq
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iDJRbVtgwg7Ao6zLElV969fyg9Jg

Federal Workers Owe Billions in Unpaid Taxes
http://www.wtop.com/?nid=428&sid=1034585

UN Global Taxes Before U.S. Senate
http://www.fmnn.com/WorldNews.asp?nid=49206

Saudi Currency De-Peg To Dollar Inevitable
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601083&sid=aGO6cU_5z57M&refer=currency

Inflation fears end rally, sending stocks down
http://www.reuters.com/article/hotStocksNews/idUSL2036288720070920?sp=true

Analyst: Mystery Trades Were Profit Scam For Fearmongers
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/september2007/200907_profit_scam.htm

Dollar hits new low against euro
US expert warns of fresh shocks
Northern Rock: ‘One in 10 chance of property crash’
Congress Asked To Lift Debt Ceiling
Zimbabwe Close To Economic Collapse
Home foreclosures triple in Hawaii
Bank of England doubles emergency loans available to British banks
Fears of dollar collapse as Saudis take fright
China’s Ultimatum: Let Us Invade Taiwan Or We’ll Dump The Dollar
Rogers: Fed Rate Cut Will Trigger Recession
Greenspan Working To Destroy US Economy
Alan Greenspan Defends Himself
Greenspan says euro could replace U.S. dollar as reserve currency of choice
EU Warns China Of Trade Imbalance
Oil hits new high over $82 after Fed rate cut
U.S. gold futures hit 28-year peak
Failed Lender Makes Grab for Employee Funds
Greenspan predicts falling house prices, rising inflation
Greenspan Says China Will Determine World Economic Fate in 2030
Alan Greenspan warns of UK house prices drop
Greenspan alert on US house prices
Credit turmoil set to benefit big banks
Northern Rock: ‘One in 10 chance of property crash’
Hopes of UK interest rate cut ‘before Christmas’ after FTSE rises follow Fed’s swoop to cut rates
Relief as Northern Rock shares up
Treasurys Fall Ahead of Fed Decision
Fed Announces Big Rate Cut
Subprime Fallout: More Companies Slammed
Prepare for prolonged turmoil, says US Treasury Secretary
$200 Dollar a Barrel Oil Is Bilderberg Plan To Destroy Middle Class
Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
Mystery Trader To Collect On Financial Meltdown?
Ron Paul Sees Crisis Ahead For Country
Bankers Fear £12bn Run On Rock
Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
U.S. Banks Brace for Storm Surge as Dollar and Credit System Reel
“Business Expert” (?) Ann Coulter: It’s Good for Wall Street to Bomb Iran
Britons Withdraw Billions in Bank Run
Northern Rock besieged by savers
Pound slides, yen up on N. Rock jitters
New saver queues at Northern Rock
E*Trade Cuts Earnings Estimate 25% on Mortgage Losses
Fears Rise Over Online Banking
Stocks may rise on expected interest rate cut
Fears grow for British economy as panic over Northern Rock spreads
World’s banks hit for $30billion in credit crunch
Oil Hits $80 A Barrel For First Time
Senate panel okays $850 billion debt increase
Dollar’s retreat raises fear of collapse
Further signs of US economic pain
British Bank Rocked By Bank Run
Forecast: Housing woes pose risk of recession
Mortgage Lender’s Bankruptcy
US dollar hits record lows
Foreclosures gain on sales
American economy: R.I.P.
US Heads for Recession as Foreign Investors Rush for the Exit from US Dollar Holdings
Dollar Hits 15 Year Low
Gold Rallies Past $700
Greenspan: Turmoil Like 1998
Bad News Puts Political Glare Onto Economy
US economy loses jobs for first time in 4 years
ECB Injects €42.2BN Into Money Markets
Is China quietly dumping US Treasuries?
Markets Brace For Seismic September
Fed Injects 31.25 Billion Into Market
Credit Crisis Has Hallmarks of Classic Bank Run
U.S. at risk of recession from housing
Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11? Trades
Credit Crisis Compared To 1930
Bank Warns Emergency Borrowers
Bush Unveils Mortgage Proposals
Congressman: Stock Market Will Eventually Collapse
Comptroller: U.S. Facing Economic Collapse
BIS Warns of Great Depression Dangers from Credit Spree
Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
U.S. Recession Risk Highest Since 9/11
Economy, credit worries drive Wall St down sharply
Fed Injects 17.25 Billion In Market
Foreclosures Up 93% In One Year
After Foreclosure A Big Tax Bill From The IRS
After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
Warren Buffett Sees Opportunities In Chaos
Run On The Banks in Los Angeles
Zimbabwe Inflation Rate Hits 7600%
Yields On T-Bills Down Most In 2 Decades
Bruised investors suffer as market continues to swing
The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
World Stocks Plummet Yet Again
Economic Expert: We Are Already In An Engineered Recession
China is not the Problem
Heavy losses sweep world markets
Wall Street Pulls Off Late Comeback
Fed Poised To Dump More Money Into Market
Stock Market Brush Fire & Run On The Banks
Food prices rising in double digits
Existing Home Sales Fall In 41 States
Banks Add More Funds To Stabilize Markets
Economic Meltdown Favors The Elite
Central Banks Add Cash To Avert Crisis
Stocks End Mixed After Raucous Week
China dollar attack would be ‘foolhardy’: Bush
Fed Adds $38 Bln in Funds, Most Since September 2001
The “Plunge Protection Team” Working Overtime to Save US Stock Market
China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales
World stocks slide on fresh US credit concerns
Dow Plunges 387 On Subprime Fears
Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
American Home to Declare Bankruptcy, Employees Told by Managers
Mad Money Cramer: Bernanke, Wake Up
Wall Street shaken by late-day market surges

 



Analyst: Mystery Trades Were Profit Scam For Fearmongers


Analyst: Mystery Trades Were Profit Scam For Fearmongers
So-called Bin Laden trades used to chill confidence in market before rate cut

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
September 20, 2007

A financial analyst has slammed the so-called “Bin Laden trades” as part of a fearmongering scam that was used to chill confidence in the markets and enable insiders to reap huge profits after stocks plunged earlier this week.

As we reported last month, an anonymous investor placed a bet of 245,000 put options on an index of Europe’s top 50 stocks falling by a third to a half before September 21st. In addition, unusual options were placed betting on a big drop in the S&P 500.

This led many to speculate that the trader was exploiting foreknowledge of a new 9/11 or another imminent catastrophe that would send markets tumbling.

However, market analyst Clif Droke of SilverSeek.com has slammed the trades as being part of a “summer of fear,” a scare tactic used by insiders to profit from consequential dips in stocks as the credit crunch sunk its teeth in.

“These high-profile “mystery” trades were just some of the fear tactics used by several independent and mainstream media outlets to conjure up images of another 9/11-type terrorist episode. Indeed, Halloween was early in coming this year for many,” writes Droke.

“I predict the promoters of this particular fear campaign will simply put their hands in their pockets, walk away and whistle a rousing rendition of “Dixie,” all the while conveniently forgetting they ever made such dire predictions in the first place. Their mission was accomplished: they convinced millions of everyday investors and observers to hit the panic button and run for cover while they, the fear promoters, profited immensely on the very fear they engendered.”

The fact that the massive put options were placed is not in doubt. Dow Jones Financial News confirmed the trades in their August 16th article, ‘Mystery trader bets market will crash by a third’.

But was this part of a broader strategy to chill confidence in the markets and make a more widespread profit after stocks dipped following the Northern Rock bank crisis at the end of last week before the Fed cut interest rates?

 



Oil hits new high over $82 after Fed rate cut
September 19, 2007, 12:20 pm
Filed under: Dow, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, gold, Inflation, Oil, Petrol, Stock Market, Wall Street

Oil hits new high over $82 after Fed rate cut

Reuters
September 17, 2007

Oil surged to a peak over $82 a barrel on Tuesday, the fifth record in as many trading days, as a U.S. Federal Reserve decision to slash interest rates heightened concerns of a winter supply squeeze in the world’s top energy consumer.

The move to cut benchmark interest rates by 50 basis points was more aggressive than some investors had expected and raised expectations the economy will weather the U.S. credit crisis, insulating industrial and retail demand for fuel.

“When the economy expands, so does oil demand,” said Peter Beutel, president of Cameron Hanover in Connecticut.

U.S. crude surged $1.81 to a record $82.38 a barrel at 1720 GMT in electronic trade after settling up 94 cents at $81.51 in the regular session. London Brent crude was up 61 cents at $77.59.

Hurricane and other supply risks, shrinking U.S. fuel inventories and fund flows into energy from poorly performing equity markets have fueled a rally of more 30 percent in oil prices so far this year.

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed last week to boost output by 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) from November, but the move has failed to soothe consumer concerns.

“The winter season will look remarkably tight,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, senior oil market analyst at BNP Paribas. “The OPEC increase will fall short of the needs of the market come wintertime.”

U.S. crude oil supplies are running at their lowest level in eight months while inventories of gasoline are at their lowest since Hurricane Katrina knocked out several oil refineries on the Gulf coast in 2005.

Some OPEC members say the exporters may have to pump more if oil stays above $80 for long.

“If the high price lasts, say, more than 15 to 20 days, there would at least be consultations between ministers. They’d have to do something about it,” an OPEC source told Reuters.

Though crude prices have quadrupled since 2002, when adjusted for inflation the price is below the $90 peaks of the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

Goldman Sachs on Monday forecast U.S. oil prices would surge to $85 a barrel by the end of the year, up $13 from its previous forecast, and said crude could climb as high as $90 due to tight supplies.

U.S. oil supplies probably dropped again last week for the fourth straight week as imports shrank, said industry analysts polled by Reuters ahead of Wednesday’s government data.

Forecasts called for a 2 million-barrel draw in crude stocks, a 700,000-barrel decline in gasoline stocks and a 1.3 million-barrel build in distillates, which include heating oil, ahead of peak winter heating demand in the Northern Hemisphere.

U.S. gold futures hit 28-year peak

Reuters
September 18, 2007

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. gold futures rose to a 28-year high in screen trade on Tuesday, after the Federal Reserve slashed the benchmark interest rate by a half-percentage point in a bid to boost the economy.

At 2:37 p.m. EDT, on the Globex electronic platform used by the New York Mercantile Exchange and its COMEX metals division, the December gold contract was up $8.50 or 1.2 percent at $732.30 an ounce. Just minutes earlier, it rallied to a high of $733.40.

That exceeded the previous high set on May 12, 2006, when the New York gold contract hit an $732 ounce, which marked the loftiest level since January 1980.

“Obviously this was a very substantial, aggressive move. I think it’s bullish for gold. I think it has potential inflationary implications,” said Bill O’Neill, partner of LOGIC Advisors in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey.

Related News:

Credit turmoil set to benefit big banks
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5cd12702-6614-11dc-9fbb-0000779fd2ac.htmlNorthern Rock: ‘One in 10 chance of property crash’
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/m….ock619.xml

Hopes of UK interest rate cut ‘before Christmas’ after FTSE rises follow Fed’s swoop to cut rates
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/….age_id=1770

Relief as Northern Rock shares up
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7000035.stm

Treasurys Fall Ahead of Fed Decision
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119003650356029773.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Fed Announces Big Rate Cut
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070918/wall_street.html?.v=28

Subprime Fallout: More Companies Slammed
http://www.cnbc.com/id/20829623

Prepare for prolonged turmoil, says US Treasury Secretary
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/t….finance/article2477842.ece

$200 Dollar a Barrel Oil Is Bilderberg Plan To Destroy Middle Class
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/september2007/170907_middle_class.htm

Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
http://news.independent.co.uk/business/news/article2966842.ece

Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
http://www.bloomberg.c….20601102&sid=ah8r5g05TuIU&refer=uk

Mystery Trader To Collect On Financial Meltdown?
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/september2007/170907_mystery_trader.htm

Ron Paul Sees Crisis Ahead For Country
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003885552_paul15m.html

Bankers Fear £12bn Run On Rock
Oil Trades Near Record on Speculation of Reduced U.S. Supplies
Oil industry ‘sleepwalking into crisis’
U.S. Banks Brace for Storm Surge as Dollar and Credit System Reel
“Business Expert” (?) Ann Coulter: It’s Good for Wall Street to Bomb Iran
Britons Withdraw Billions in Bank Run
Northern Rock besieged by savers
Pound slides, yen up on N. Rock jitters
New saver queues at Northern Rock
E*Trade Cuts Earnings Estimate 25% on Mortgage Losses
Fears Rise Over Online Banking
Stocks may rise on expected interest rate cut
Fears grow for British economy as panic over Northern Rock spreads
World’s banks hit for $30billion in credit crunch
Oil Hits $80 A Barrel For First Time
Senate panel okays $850 billion debt increase
Dollar’s retreat raises fear of collapse
Further signs of US economic pain
British Bank Rocked By Bank Run
Forecast: Housing woes pose risk of recession
Mortgage Lender’s Bankruptcy
US dollar hits record lows
Foreclosures gain on sales
American economy: R.I.P.
US Heads for Recession as Foreign Investors Rush for the Exit from US Dollar Holdings
Dollar Hits 15 Year Low
Gold Rallies Past $700
Greenspan: Turmoil Like 1998
Bad News Puts Political Glare Onto Economy
US economy loses jobs for first time in 4 years
ECB Injects €42.2BN Into Money Markets
Is China quietly dumping US Treasuries?
Markets Brace For Seismic September
Fed Injects 31.25 Billion Into Market
Credit Crisis Has Hallmarks of Classic Bank Run
U.S. at risk of recession from housing
Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11? Trades
Credit Crisis Compared To 1930
Bank Warns Emergency Borrowers
Bush Unveils Mortgage Proposals
Congressman: Stock Market Will Eventually Collapse
Comptroller: U.S. Facing Economic Collapse
BIS Warns of Great Depression Dangers from Credit Spree
Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
U.S. Recession Risk Highest Since 9/11
Economy, credit worries drive Wall St down sharply
Fed Injects 17.25 Billion In Market
Foreclosures Up 93% In One Year
After Foreclosure A Big Tax Bill From The IRS
After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
Warren Buffett Sees Opportunities In Chaos
Run On The Banks in Los Angeles
Zimbabwe Inflation Rate Hits 7600%
Yields On T-Bills Down Most In 2 Decades
Bruised investors suffer as market continues to swing
The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
World Stocks Plummet Yet Again
Economic Expert: We Are Already In An Engineered Recession
China is not the Problem
Heavy losses sweep world markets
Wall Street Pulls Off Late Comeback
Fed Poised To Dump More Money Into Market
Stock Market Brush Fire & Run On The Banks
Food prices rising in double digits
Existing Home Sales Fall In 41 States
Banks Add More Funds To Stabilize Markets
Economic Meltdown Favors The Elite
China’s ” nuclear=”” option=”” is=”” real=””>
Central Banks Add Cash To Avert Crisis
Stocks End Mixed After Raucous Week
China dollar attack would be ‘foolhardy’: Bush
Fed Adds $38 Bln in Funds, Most Since September 2001
The “Plunge Protection Team” Working Overtime to Save US Stock Market
China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales
World stocks slide on fresh US credit concerns
Dow Plunges 387 On Subprime Fears
Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
Uncle Sam Your Banker Will See You Now
American Home to Declare Bankruptcy, Employees Told by Managers
Mad Money Cramer: Bernanke, Wake Up
Wall Street shaken by late-day market surges

 



Mystery Trader To Collect On Financial Meltdown?


Mystery Trader To Collect On Financial Meltdown?
Suspicion increases about so-called Bin Laden trades as markets tumble after bank run

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
September 17, 2007

A run on the Northern Rock bank in Britain has increased the possibility that a mystery trader could stand to collect around $2 billion should a panic send markets tumbling during the course of this week, as investors have predicted.

Last month, we reported on the mystery trader who risks losing around $1 billion dollars after placing 245,000 put options on the Dow Jones Eurostoxx 50 index, which led many analysts to speculate that a stock market crash preceded by a new 9/11 style attack or another catastrophe could take place before or during the third week of September.

The anonymous trader only stands to make money if the market crashes by a third to a half before September 21st, which is when the put options expire.

Following the run on the Northern Rock bank in Britain, specialist investors are now warning of an imminent and severe correction in the markets.

“The credit cycle has turned, bad debts are soaring, banks will go bust and stock markets will fall much further,” Ken Murray, the founder and chief executive of Blue Planet Investment Management, told the Financial Times today, shortly after selling half the equities in his portfolio.

The Northern Rock crisis was followed by Alan Greenspan’s warning that both the US and UK housing markets are on the verge of a major downturn as Prime Minister Gordon Brown holds an emergency meeting with US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson today.

Thousands of people around Britain queued for hours at Northern Rock branches throughout Friday and Saturday attempting to withdraw their money as the global credit crunch sunk its teeth in again following the sub-prime mortgage fallout in the US.

Analysts from TheStreet.com dismissed last month’s so-called Bin Laden trades as nothing out of the ordinary, but still noted that the transactions outstrip anything else seen in a year.

Though the current climate will undoubtedly send stocks tumbling, to see a downturn of a full third within a week is unlikely bar a catalyzing outside event like the announcement of military operations against Iran or a terror attack in the west on the scale of 9/11.

 



Stocks may rise on expected interest rate cut

Stocks may rise on expected interest rate cut

Herbert Lash
Reuters
September 16, 2007

Wall Street expects Federal Reserve policy-makers to cut interest rates next Tuesday to help ease a global credit squeeze, a much anticipated event that spurred stock prices higher this week and could boost them next week.

Investors expect the Federal Open Market Committee to cut the federal funds rate in response to growing concerns that the U.S. economy is slowing and may be heading into recession.

Short-term interest rate futures on Friday indicated investors believe a half a percentage point cut in the federal funds rate is slightly more likely than a quarter percentage point cut when the FOMC meets.

Some investors say the stock market has priced in a quarter-percentage point rise, limiting any upside. But if the past is a guide, investors will react to the actual event, said David Bianco, chief U.S. equity strategist at UBS in New York.
“I think the market’s going to have a positive reaction to it, I really do,” said Bianco, who expects a 25 basis point cut in the federal funds rate and a 50 basis point cut in the discount rate.

“It will signal a response to what’s going on, to try to prevent credit market troubles from spreading to the real economy,” he said.

Reuters polls showed on Thursday that economists see about a 30 percent chance that the United States enters recession in the next 12 months should the effects of a housing slowdown continue to seep into the wider economy.

Major U.S. stock market gauges moved up this week in anticipation of a rate cut, with the Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI: Quote, Profile, Research) posting its best week since April.

For the week, the Dow rose 2.5 percent, the benchmark Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (.SPX: Quote, Profile, Research) gained 2.1 percent and the Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC: Quote, Profile, Research) rose 1.4 percent.

On Friday, the Dow closed up 17.64 points, or 0.13 percent, at 13,442.52; the S&P 500 closed up 0.30 points, or 0.02 percent, at 1,484.25, and the Nasdaq closed up 1.12 points, or 0.04 percent, at 2,602.18.

OPTIONS EXPIRATION TO STIR VOLATILITY

Investors will want to see if the subprime mortgage trauma has worsened for four big investment banks — Lehman Brothers (LEH.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Morgan Stanley (MS.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. (BSC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) — when they release fiscal third-quarter earnings results over three days next week.

The release of third-quarter earnings for most companies doesn’t begin in earnest until October.

The banks have diversified business models and are able to profit from worldwide economic growth, which will alleviate any downdraft of credit market issues, said Michael Cuggino, chief investment officer of the Permanent Portfolio family of funds in San Francisco.

“We may be surprised to find the negative impact was not as great in the third quarter as people may have expected,” Cuggino said.

Volatility is likely to intensify at week’s end because of the expiration of four different options and futures contracts, a quarterly event known as “quadruple witching.”

Investors also will be parsing inflation data for August, information on housing starts and building permits, also for August, and unemployment claims for the week ending September 15.

According to a Reuters poll of economists, producer prices, which are a measure of prices paid at the farm and factory gate, are expected to decline 0.2 percent in August when the Labor Department releases data on Tuesday.

The following day, a Labor Department reading for the Consumer Price Index, a key inflation gauge, is expected to be unchanged from July.

Also on Wednesday, housing starts for August are expected to decline to 1.35 million and building permits are expected to decline to the same amount, 1.35 million.

On Thursday, a Labor Department report on U.S. workers signing up for jobless benefits is expected to show initial claims of 321,000.

Although the labor market has shown recent softness and the housing sector is clearly suffering, both Bianco and Cuggino said the overall U.S. economy is not in that bad shape.

“It’s been almost astounding how good things have been outside of the financial economy,” Bianco said. “For the most part the energy companies, the industrial companies and the technology companies are on the verge of a full recovery of the dip.”

Cuggino said that “for every financial service firm that’s having difficulties, there’s a technology firm that’s experiencing pretty good earnings growth and pick-up in business.”

 

Fears grow for British economy as panic over Northern Rock spreads
Experts warn that a decade-long borrowing binge has left Britain dangerously exposed to the fallout from the global liquidity crisis

London Observer
September 16, 2007

US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson flies in to London tomorrow to discuss the worsening global credit crisis with Chancellor Alistair Darling, as fears intensify that the lending squeeze could be the last straw for Britain’s buy-now-pay-later economy.

Thousands of anxious customers queued outside branches of Northern Rock to withdraw their savings this weekend, ignoring calls for calm from Darling, after he helped broker an unprecedented emergency loan from the Bank of England to rescue the bank.

City economists warned that a decade-long borrowing binge had left the UK economy dangerously exposed to the fallout from the credit crunch. ‘I think the UK is extremely vulnerable to this,’ said Danny Gabay, director of consultants Fathom. ‘The UK has a double vulnerability. We are vulnerable because of our hugely over extended consumer sector, and because of our large financial services sector.

‘This is a financial market event; but the longer it goes on, the greater the risk that it becomes a real economy event – and I think we are at a tipping point.’

As the Federal Reserve prepares to cut interest rates – perhaps by as much as a half percentage point – to restore confidence in financial markets, Darling and Paulson will discuss proposals for better transparency, to prevent a recurrence of the ‘contagion’ that has spread the impact of bad loans in the US housing market around the world.

But analysts are still scrambling to calculate the potential impact of the current squeeze. Ross Walker, UK economist at RBS, said: ‘We were already looking for a noticeable slowdown next year, and now there are further downside risks.’ He predicted that the Bank would have to cut interest rates twice by the end of next year, to prevent the downturn becoming too severe with growth slowing to 2.2 per cent, from almost 3 per cent this year.

Richard Donnell, head of research at property data firm Hometrack, said the latest evidence of the severity of the sub-prime crisis would rock confidence in a housing market already struggling to absorb five interest-rate rises.

‘It’s taken a good year for the impact of higher rates to reach London but, finally, the whole market’s feeling the pain.’

It emerged this weekend that several financial institutions have run the slide rule over Northern Rock in recent weeks, as its advisers Hoare Govett and Merrill Lynch battled to avert a Bank of England bailout by finding a buyer.

However, most potential bidders have privately ruled themselves out of the frame. Lloyds TSB has been the favourite candidate, but banking sources indicated it was unlikely to be interested. HSBC – under fire from institutional shareholder Knight Vinke for failing to capitalise on its emerging-markets interests – is also thought unlikely to bid, despite its relatively small share of the UK mortgage market. Other leading banks, including HBOS, RBS and Barclays, are also seen as unlikely to be interested.

One bank executive questioned the logic of bidding for a bank whose name has been tarnished by the Bank of England bailout and whose customers – seen as higher risk -are paying low rates on their largely fixed-rate loans and therefore likely to move elsewhere when these expire. Rival banks are instead likely to focus on poaching that business. Nor is there much scope for cutting costs, as Northern Rock is already the most efficient mortgage bank.

‘What do you get with Northern Rock?’ asked the banking executive. ‘You get a load of customers who are probably also ours already, and you do not get a branch network to speak of.’

Northern Rock’s plight has also raised concern about the prospect of heavy losses among Bradford & Bingley’s buy-to-let loans, which account for more than half of its mortgage book. James Hamilton, banking analyst at Numis, thinks the increasing threat that the credit crunch will spread into an economic slowdown means that the housing market will be hit – and buy-to-let is likely to be the first area to suffer rising defaults.

An analysis by Jon Kirk at Redburn Partners shows that B&B has the second highest ratio of loans to deposits after Northern Rock, with loans accounting for 1.8 times its savings and deposits base, compared with 3.1 times for Northern Rock. While B&B was quick to reassure on Friday that it is financially secure, securitisations and wholesale markets account for 42 per cent of its funding.

Financial disasters

2002
Investors lose millions in split capital investment trusts, devised for paying school fees

2001
Insurer Equitable Life is brought to the brink of collapse and the value of policyholders’ investments crumbles

1995
Barings Bank brought down by rogue trader Nick Leeson

1992
Southdown building society forced to merge with Leeds Permanent

1991
Fraudulent bank BCCI becomes insolvent causing investors to desert smaller banks, some of which go bust

1991
Town & Country building society brought to its knees by bad loans

1988
Investors lose life savings after Barlow Clowes group closes
1973/5
Bank of England organises ‘lifeboat’ for small banks hit by widespread secondary banking crisis

Related News:

World’s banks hit for $30billion in credit crunch
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to….e/article2459578.ece

Greenspan alert on US house prices
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/31207860-647f-11dc-90ea-0000779fd2ac.html

Oil Hits $80 A Barrel For First Time
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070912/oil_prices.html?.v=34

Senate panel okays $850 billion debt increase
http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSN1225097720070912

Dollar’s retreat raises fear of collapse
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/13/news/econ.php

Further signs of US economic pain
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6995115.stm

British Bank Rocked By Bank Run
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070914172730.btxyggv4&show_article=1

Forecast: Housing woes pose risk of recession
Mortgage Lender’s Bankruptcy
US dollar hits record lows
Foreclosures gain on sales
American economy: R.I.P.
US Heads for Recession as Foreign Investors Rush for the Exit from US Dollar Holdings
Dollar Hits 15 Year Low
Gold Rallies Past $700
Greenspan: Turmoil Like 1998
Bad News Puts Political Glare Onto Economy
US economy loses jobs for first time in 4 years
ECB Injects €42.2BN Into Money Markets
Is China quietly dumping US Treasuries?
Markets Brace For Seismic September
Fed Injects 31.25 Billion Into Market
Credit Crisis Has Hallmarks of Classic Bank Run
U.S. at risk of recession from housing
Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11” Trades
Credit Crisis Compared To 1930
Bank Warns Emergency Borrowers
Bush Unveils Mortgage Proposals
Congressman: Stock Market Will Eventually Collapse
Comptroller: U.S. Facing Economic Collapse
BIS Warns of Great Depression Dangers from Credit Spree
Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
U.S. Recession Risk Highest Since 9/11
Economy, credit worries drive Wall St down sharply
Fed Injects 17.25 Billion In Market
Foreclosures Up 93% In One Year
After Foreclosure A Big Tax Bill From The IRS
After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
Warren Buffett Sees Opportunities In Chaos
Run On The Banks in Los Angeles
Zimbabwe Inflation Rate Hits 7600%
Yields On T-Bills Down Most In 2 Decades
Bruised investors suffer as market continues to swing
The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
World Stocks Plummet Yet Again
Economic Expert: We Are Already In An Engineered Recession
China is not the Problem
Heavy losses sweep world markets
Wall Street Pulls Off Late Comeback
Paulson says U.S. economy can withstand turmoil: report
Fed Poised To Dump More Money Into Market
Stock Market Brush Fire & Run On The Banks
Food prices rising in double digits
Existing Home Sales Fall In 41 States
Banks Add More Funds To Stabilize Markets
Economic Meltdown Favors The Elite
China’s “Nuclear Option” Is Real
Central Banks Add Cash To Avert Crisis
Stocks End Mixed After Raucous Week
China dollar attack would be ‘foolhardy’: Bush
Fed Adds $38 Bln in Funds, Most Since September 2001
The “Plunge Protection Team” Working Overtime to Save US Stock Market
China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales
World stocks slide on fresh US credit concerns
Dow Plunges 387 On Subprime Fears
Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
Uncle Sam Your Banker Will See You Now
American Home to Declare Bankruptcy, Employees Told by Managers
Mad Money Cramer: Bernanke, Wake Up
Wall Street shaken by late-day market surges

 



Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11” Trades


Analysts Dismiss Suspicious “New 9/11” Trades

Experts track down nature of transactions but concede they represent biggest gamble since last September

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
August 31, 2007

Market analysts from TheStreet.com have dismissed concerns about suspicious trades that seemed to indicate a major terror attack or other catastrophe was around the corner, leading to a stock market crash, but still concede that the transactions outstrip anything seen since last September.

As we reported on Monday, a mystery trader risks losing around $1 billion dollars after placing 245,000 put options on the Dow Jones Eurostoxx 50 index, leading many analysts to speculate that a stock market crash preceded by a new 9/11 style attack could take place within the next month.

The anonymous trader only stands to make money if the market crashes by a third to a half before September 21st, which is when the put options expire.

However, experts at TheStreet.com have dismissed the so-called “Bin Laden trades” as nothing more than nervous lenders trying to attract customers at a time when the market is fraught with apprehension following the sub prime mortgage crisis coupled with last week’s stock downturn.

“Dan Perper, a Partner at Peak 6, one of the largest option market makers and proprietary trading firms, has confirmed that the trades are part of a “box-spread trade,” report Steven Smith and Aaron L. Task.

“This was done as a package in which the box spread was used [as a] means of alternative financing at more attractive interest rates” explained Perper.

“Simply put, two parties agree to trade the box at a price that essentially splits the difference between current rates.”

“For example, the rough numbers would be that given the September 700/1700 box must settle at a value of 1,000 — it is currently trading around 997 — that translates into a 5% interest rate.”

“For the seller it is a way to borrow money at a slight discount to the prevailing rate, and for the buyer, it is a way to lend money at a low rate of return, but it’s better than nothing at a time when others are scared and have painted themselves into a box (ha ha) because they have run out available funds.”

Though seemingly skeptical that the trades could foreshadow outside events, as was the case with the put options placed against American and United Airliners in the days before 9/11, the analysts concede that the volume of the trades “completely outstrips anything seen last September.”

They also note that, “The positions in question had option industry experts perplexed to come up with a rational explanation, which are far from the best or most efficient way to profit from what would be outlier events.”

 

Credit Crisis Compared To 1930

Guardian
August 31, 2007

The US financial industry displayed fresh signs of distress from the credit crunch afflicting global money markets yesterday, with one mortgage provider describing lending conditions as the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Leading accountancy firm H&R Block revealed huge losses at its up-for-sale mortgage arm, Option One, and said it was considering a halt on new loans. Reporting a quarterly loss of $302m (£150m), Mark Ernst, chief executive, said: “The loan originations market is in the midst of the most severe dislocation it has seen in years, maybe the most severe since the 1930s.”

During early trading, the Dow Jones industrial average slipped by 104 points, taking it 750 below its record high set in mid-July. The Federal Reserve injected $10bn of liquidity into the banking system and by lunchtime in New York the blue-chip index had pared back its losses and was down only 16 at 13,272.

Freddie Mac, the US government-sponsored mortgage aggregator that buys loans and repackages them as securities to keep costs down for low-income households, revealed that it had taken a $320m hit on credit losses in the three months to June.

Standard & Poor’s, the credit rating agency, predicted more pain in coming months for investment banks, which, it said, could see their banking and trading profits fall by as much as 70%. In a research note, S&P’s credit analyst, Nick Hill, said revenue for Wall Street institutions could be down by as much as 47% – worse than the 31% drop in the second half of 1998, when the markets were hit by an economic collapse in Asia and a currency devaluation by Russia.

“There is a common theme between the two years,” he said. “The source of the problem has shifted from emerging markets to the world’s most developed economy.”

An Australian hedge fund that has lost as much as 80% of its value during the month’s market turbulence threw in the towel yesterday. Basis Capital declared bankruptcy for its A$100m (£40m) Yield Alpha Fund and applied to courts in London and New York for protection from creditors. Steve Akers, of liquidators Grant Thornton, said investments included forays into Britain and the US. “We believe there are assets in those two jurisdictions which need to be protected,” he said.

The power of hedge funds in global markets was underlined by a study showing that they are responsible for 30% of all bond trading in the US – double their share a year ago. Greenwich Associates, the consultancy that carried out the research, said hedge funds are no longer an “important part” of the market for fixed-income products – they are the market.

Related News:

Bank Warns Emergency Borrowers
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/9004b03a-5728-11dc-9a3a-0000779fd2ac.html

Bush Unveils Mortgage Proposals
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070831/ap_on_go_pr_wh/bush_housing_slump

Congressman: Stock Market Will Eventually Collapse
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2007/290807_eventually_collapse.htm

Comptroller: U.S. Facing Economic Collapse
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KGpY2hw7ao8

BIS Warns of Great Depression Dangers from Credit Spree
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/06/25/cncredit125.xml

Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2007/270807_market_crash.htm

U.S. Recession Risk Highest Since 9/11
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_w….i9RqBMxCO5V8cF

Economy, credit worries drive Wall St down sharply
Fed Injects 17.25 Billion In Market
Foreclosures Up 93% In One Year
After Foreclosure A Big Tax Bill From The IRS
After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
Warren Buffett Sees Opportunities In Chaos
Run On The Banks in Los Angeles
Zimbabwe Inflation Rate Hits 7600%
Yields On T-Bills Down Most In 2 Decades
Bruised investors suffer as market continues to swing
The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
World Stocks Plummet Yet Again
Economic Expert: We Are Already In An Engineered Recession
China is not the Problem
Heavy losses sweep world markets
Wall Street Pulls Off Late Comeback
Paulson says U.S. economy can withstand turmoil: report
Fed Poised To Dump More Money Into Market
Stock Market Brush Fire & Run On The Banks
Food prices rising in double digits
Existing Home Sales Fall In 41 States
Banks Add More Funds To Stabilize Markets
Economic Meltdown Favors The Elite
China’s “Nuclear Option” Is Real
Central Banks Add Cash To Avert Crisis
Stocks End Mixed After Raucous Week
China dollar attack would be ‘foolhardy’: Bush
Fed Adds $38 Bln in Funds, Most Since September 2001
The “Plunge Protection Team” Working Overtime to Save US Stock Market
China threatens ‘nuclear option’ of dollar sales
World stocks slide on fresh US credit concerns
Dow Plunges 387 On Subprime Fears
Credit Crunch In U.S. Upends Global Markets
Uncle Sam Your Banker Will See You Now
American Home to Declare Bankruptcy, Employees Told by Managers
Mad Money Cramer: Bernanke, Wake Up
Wall Street shaken by late-day market surges

 



Bush Warns of ’Holocaust’ if Iran Gets Nukes

Bush Warns of ‘Holocaust’ if Iran Gets Nukes

AFX
August 28, 2007

US President George W Bush warned today that letting Iran acquire atomic weapons risked putting the Middle East ‘under the shadow of a nuclear holocaust.’

‘Iran’s active pursuit of technology that could lead to nuclear weapons threatens to put a region already known for instability and violence under the shadow of a nuclear holocaust,’ he told a veterans group here.

Bush’s speech to the American Legion aimed to convince a war-weary US public that the war in Iraq was the central front in the fight against what he described as the Sunni Muslim extremism of the Al-Qaeda terrorist network and the Shiite extremism fuelled by Iran.

‘Iran’s actions threaten the security of nations everywhere, and the United States is rallying friends and allies to isolate Iran’s regime to impose economic sanctions. We will confront this danger before it is too late,’ he said.

Tehran denies seeking nuclear weapons and says that its atomic programme means to provide civilian power.

US Opposition Political Leaders Issue Urgent False Flag Terror Warning
Warn of imminent plot to “orchestrate and manufacture a new 9/11 terror incident”

Steve Watson
Infowars.net
August 27, 2007

A group of former government officials along with current Congressional candidates, authors and activists has issued an urgent warning that a faction of the US government allied with Dick Cheney is planning to stage a terror event or provocation as a pretext for launching military attacks against Iran and implementing emergency powers in America.

Former US Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, along with former US Diplomat and Colonel in the US Army reserve Ann Wright have put their names to an open letter warning that massive evidence points to an upcoming event.

Current Congressional candidates Cindy Sheehan and Craig Hill are also among the signatories to the letter.

Here is the letter in full:

To the American people, and to peace loving individuals everywhere:

Massive evidence has come to our attention which shows that the backers, controllers, and allies of Vice President Dick Cheney are determined to orchestrate and manufacture a new 9/11 terror incident, and/or a new Gulf of Tonkin war provocation over the coming weeks and months. Such events would be used by the Bush administration as a pretext for launching an aggressive war against Iran, quite possibly with nuclear weapons, and for imposing a regime of martial law here in the United States. We call on the House of Representatives to proceed immediately to the impeachment of Cheney, as an urgent measure for avoiding a wider and more catastrophic war. Once impeachment has begun, it will be easier for loyal and patriotic military officers to refuse illegal orders coming from the Cheney faction. We solemnly warn the people of the world that any terrorist attack with weapons of mass destruction taking place inside the United States or elsewhere in the immediate future must be considered the prima facie responsibility of the Cheney faction. We urge responsible political leaders everywhere to begin at once to inoculate the public opinion of their countries against such a threatened false flag terror operation.

(Signed) A Group of US Opposition Political Leaders Gathered in Protest at the Bush Compound in Kennebunkport, Maine, August 24-25, 2007

CYNTHIA MCKINNEY, FORMER US CONGRESSWOMAN, GEORGIA

CINDY SHEEHAN, CANDIDATE FOR US CONGRESS, CALIFORNIA

CRAIG HILL, CANDIDATE FOR US CONGRESS, VERMONT GREEN PARTY

BRUCE MARSHALL, CONVENOR, PHILADELPHIA PLATFORM

JAMILLA EL-SHAFEI, KENNEBUNK PEACE DEPARTMENT

WEBSTER G. TARPLEY, AUTHOR

ANN WRIGHT, COLONEL US ARMY RESERVE, FORMER US DIPLOMAT

DR. DAHLIA WASFI, WWW.LIBERATETHIS.COM

GEORGE PAZ MARTIN

JOHN KAMINSKI , PRESIDENT MAINE LAWYERS FOR DEMOCRACY

The letter was signed by the group at an anti war protest this weekend which saw four thousand march near the Bush family residence on Walker’s Point in Kennebunkport.

The warning comes on the heels of a spate of recent news stories and reports indicating that “chatter” about a terror event is at an all time high.

Further evidence that some form of event is imminent has emerged with strange stock market activity occurring just as did in the weeks and days preceding 9/11.

A mystery trader risks losing around $1 billion dollars after placing 245,000 put options on the Dow Jones Eurostoxx 50 index, leading many analysts to speculate that a stock market crash preceded by a new 9/11 style catastrophe could take place within the next month.

The Kennebunkport group have demanded the immediate impeachment of Dick Cheney in order to prevent any such activities coming to fruition.

Related News:

“We Are Going to Get Hit Again”
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20466414/site/newsweek/page/0/

Study: US preparing ‘massive’ military attack against Iran
http://rawstory.com//news/2007/Study_US_prepari…._0828.html

US attack on Iran ‘impossible’: Ahmadinejad
http://www.spacewar.com/2006/070828142614.mm009ask.html

Pat Buchanan: Democrats will fall in line with ‘popular’ war on Iran
http://rawstory.com//news/2007/Scarborough_A….on_0827.html

France’s Sarkozy raises prospect of Iran airstrikes
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3442638,00.html

Local Troops Deploy To Nation’s Capital
http://www.wesh.com/news/13949580/detail.html

Terror label ‘paves way for air strikes’
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessi..5LIBTVAW….wiran126.xml

Air Force Ready To Aid Insurgencies
http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Air_Force_publica….ce_0823.html

Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2007/270807_market_crash.htm

Bolton: I ‘Absolutely’ Hope The U.S. Will Attack Iran In The Next ‘Six Months’
http://thinkprogress.org/2007/08/22/bolton-iran-six-months/

Lieberman: If “we” don’t attack Iran we’ll be seen as weak..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEK76FQc4hE

Chatter about an “incident” on West Coast at all time high
Video: FOX News Attacks Iran
CIA Missed Chances To Stop Al-Qaeda
CIA Report: Former Director Tenet Ultimately Responsible For 9/11
Former CIA officer: US to attack Iran within 6 months
Nuke Drill Sparks Soros’ Martial Law Speculation
Bin Laden Supposedly Alive
U.N. approves planning for possible force in Somalia
Military exercise in Hawaii Aug 20-24
David Hunt on 9/11 State Sponsored Terrorism
Neo-Cons: Make Bush Dictator Of The World
World’s Worst: Keith Destroys FOX’s John Gibson
Think Tank Calls For Bush to Be Dictator For Life
US Funding Al-Qaeda out of VP’s Office to Attack Iran
U.S. pre-9/11 memos: Pakistan backs Taliban
Pakistan Provided Military Aid, Troops to Taliban

ABC: Al Qaeda Videos May Be Doctored

Iranian Unit to Be Labeled ‘Terrorist’

Iran: U.S. Supports Terrorists In Iraq

US Actions Against Iran Raise War Risk, Many Fear

Kucinich: ‘Belligerent’ Bush Admin. trying to ‘deceive’ US into ‘yet another war’

US: Military action on Iran ‘not being contemplated’

Woolsey Claims Iran Could Have Nuclear Bomb In ‘A Few Months’

Bush, Congress Could Collide on Iran

Iran’s President ‘Doubts’ Arming Taliban

Iran accuses Britain of digging tunnel to ferry spies into embassy

“Need Another 9/11” Hack Back-Peddles

NY Hikes Security On Dirty Bomb Threat

Bush Says Iraqi Leader Shares His View on Iran

Biological Protection Program Delayed

FOXNews Defends Idea That Another 9/11 Would Help America

Cheney Urging Military Strikes on Iran

Cheney Antsy to Kill Iranian Toddlers and Grandmothers

Fears of US attacks on Iran grow as media campaign heats up

Pitching For More Dead Americans: A Neo-Con Fetish

Ideological Terrorists

We Need Another 8/8

Expert Suspiciously Reverses Stance On Doctored Al-Qaeda Tapes

Italy: U.S. Allegations On Iran Baseless

Analyst: Al-Qaeda Videotapes Digitally Doctored

Novak: Bush Considering Military Action In Turkey

Foxnews: U.S. Terror Attack — ‘Ninety Days at Most’

Al-Qaeda not ‘monolithic’ group: US officials

CNN says “just kidding” after terror scare

Al Qaeda’s Best Publicist: George W. Bush

CNN: TSA knew ‘dry run’ terror alerts were bogus

Martial Law Threat is Real: Lucky that the Military is Breaking Down

Plan Outlines Government to Use Military Force Against U.S. Citizens Over Political Issues

Homeland General: Attack ‘Could Happen Any Day’
CIA Bin Laden Chief: Next Attack ‘Bigger Than 9/11–
Bush Insists Al-Qaeda In Iraq Threatens U.S.
Airports warned about terror dry runs
Neocons Press Pakistan Endgame
U.S. threatens action in Pakistan
US academics admit aiding Iran “Democracy Drive”
Christians United for Israel call on US to attack Iran immediately
Sam Brownback: I’m Ready To Strike Iran
Cheney Pushes Bush to Act on Iran
Neocon Bill Kristol expects Bush to attack Pakistan
White House Gets Defensive Over Accusation Bin Laden is Dead
Senior Qaeda figure in Iraq a myth: U.S. military
Old-line Republican Warns ‘Something’s in the Works’ to Trigger a Police State
White House Preparing to Stage New 9/11 – Reagan Official
Former Reagan Official: Bush May Stage False Flag Events To Reinstate Draft
My wake-up call: Watch for another 9/11-WMD experience
Proof Bin Laden Tape Is 5-Year-Old, Re-Released Footage
“New” Osama video released; Update: Mystery solved — new video matches video shot in 2001
Tonkin Gulf II and the Guns of August?
Absurd Terrorism Theories Invade The Homeland
Bin Laden Uncovers Secret Formula to Halt Ageing Process
Another Dubious Osama Tape Appears When The Neo-Cons Need It Most
London Times: Al-CIAda Terrorist Given Sanctuary By MI5
U.S. Intel Officer: Al Qaeda Leadership Allowed To Operate Freely
AOL Attacks Ron Paul For Tonkin Warning
Terror Commander: New Attack Will Dwarf Failed Bomb Plot
Ron Paul: U.S. In “Great Danger” Of Staged Terror
The Politico Covers Ron Paul’s Staged Terror Warning
Sheehan: Distinct Chance Of Staged Attack, Martial Law
Bush Administration Prays For More Dead Americans
Signal to Attack? Worries Over Latest al Qaeda Tape
Bill Kristol Expects Bush To Attack Pakistan
Bush: Insurgents in Iraq same as 9/11 attackers
Military Analyst: West Needs More Terror To Save Doomed Foreign Policy
White House Claims No Specific Terror Threat
Al-CIAda Has Rebuilt Strength U.S. Says
Iraq’s Al-Qaeda Threatens To Attack Iran
Al-CIAda Cell In The U.S. Or On Its Way
Bush denies al Qaeda as strong today as pre-Sept 11
Olberman Rips Into Chertoff on “Countdown”
Al-CIAda Warns of Fresh Terror Attacks
U.S. Government Uses Al-Qaeda to Attack Iran
Officials worry of summer terror attack
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Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11


Market Crash Forecast Suggests New 9/11

Mystery trader bets on huge downturn that could only be preceded by catastrophe

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
August 27, 2007

A mystery trader risks losing around $1 billion dollars after placing 245,000 put options on the Dow Jones Eurostoxx 50 index, leading many analysts to speculate that a stock market crash preceded by a new 9/11 style catastrophe could take place within the next month.

The anonymous trader only stands to make money if the market crashes by a third to a half before September 21st, which is when the put options expire. A put option is a financial contract between two parties, the buyer and the writer (seller) of the option, in which the buyer stands to benefit only if the price of the asset falls.

“The sales are being referred to by market traders as “bin Laden trades” because only an event on the scale of 9-11 could make these short-sell options valuable,” reports financial blogger Marc Parent. Dow Jones Financial News first reported on the story.

The trader stands to make around $2 billion from their investment should an event trigger a market crash before the third week in September.

Such a cataclysmic jolt could only happen as a result of two factors, China dumping its vast dollar reserves in reaction to the sub-prime mortgage collapse, which it has threatened to do, or a massive terror attack on the same scale or larger than 9/11.

9/11 itself was foreshadowed by unprecedented put options that were placed on United and American Airlines. Though the Securities and Exchange Commission refused to reveal who placed the options, private researchers traced the investments back to the Deutsche Bank owned Banker’s Trust, which was formerly headed by then Executive Director of the CIA, Buzzy Krongard.

Put options on Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch, two of the World Trade Center’s most prominent occupants, also spiked in the days before 9/11.

News of the suspicious trades is dovetailed by the comments of Former US Treasury secretary Larry Summers yesterday, who told ABC News that the risk of a recession in the U.S. was greater that at any time since 9/11.

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After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead
August 19, 2007, 1:48 pm
Filed under: Dow, Economy, Federal Reserve, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, Wall Street

After Fed’s Rescue, Volatile Days Ahead

Reuters
August 18, 2007

The Federal Reserve came to the stock market’s rescue on Friday but unless credit markets remain stable next week, the salvation may prove little more than a brief respite from its late summer sell-off.

“It restores confidence, but we’re not out of the woods yet,” said Bill Hoskins, managing director of fixed-income research at Mellon Capital Management, in San Franscisco.

In a surprise before the market’s open on Friday, the Fed cut the discount rate on its loans to banks to 5.75 percent from 6.25 percent. The fed funds rate on interbank loans was left at 5.25 percent.
Hoskins said the Fed has created a safety net that makes it possible for banks to lend to credit-worthy borrowers. But he also said financial institutions remain leery about lending to one another after the blowup in subprime mortgages.

Subprime loans are the lowest tier of the mortgage market where borrowers received loans despite poor credit histories.

If investors are looking past faltering credit markets for cues on what to do next, the week offers only a few pieces of economic data and a very thin calendar of corporate earnings.

Stocks, which erased nearly all of a 300-point decline in the Dow industrials in the final hour of Thursday’s trading, rocketed higher on Friday after the Fed’s move.

But the rally on Friday was not enough to prevent the major indexes from finishing with losses for the week.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI: Quote, Profile, Research) ended the week down 1.2 percent, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index (.SPX: Quote, Profile, Research) fell 0.5 percent and the Nasdaq composite index (.IXIC: Quote, Profile, Research) declined 1.6 percent.

For the year, though, all three U.S. stock indexes are still higher. The Dow is up 4.9 percent, the S&P is up almost 2 percent and the Nasdaq is up 3.7 percent. Friday’s surge helped the S&P recover from the previous two days, when the broad index had given up all its gains for the year.

Investors will obviously start the new week hoping that Friday’s rebound will hold.

STOCKS MAY KEEP CLIMBING

“I’m expecting some follow-through on the upside,” said Ralph Acampora, chart analyst and director of research at Knight Capital Group in Jersey City, New Jersey.

Acampora noted that the decline reached the point of a 10 percent pullback from all-time highs in the major indexes, in technical parlance a “correction” that washes out excesses. Secondary indexes had an even steeper pullback.

“I’m not looking for it to be huge by any means, but I think we’ll get a little more out of it,” Acampora said of the continued rally that he expects. But he warned that the subprime problems have “tentacles” that extend very far.

Countrywide Financial Corp. (CFC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) shares soared on Friday after six days of declines that brought the stock to its lowest point in nearly four years. Countrywide is the largest U.S. mortgage lender.

Giri Cherukuri, head trader at OakBrook Investments LLC in Lisle, Illinois, said volatile days lie ahead.

“I think there will be more of the same in terms of volatility,” Cherukuri said. “People are still trying to figure out what companies are exposed, and to what degree, in terms of financial companies. I think that’s the big focus,”

NEW HOME SALES UNDER THE MICROSCOPE

One key piece of data does not come until Friday, when the Commerce Department reports on new home sales for July.

Sales last month likely remained in a slump at an annual rate of 820,000 homes, down from 834,000 in June, according to the median forecast in a Reuters poll of economists.

On the same day, the markets get a report on durable goods orders for July. Economists expect a 1.0 percent increase following a 1.3 percent rise in June.

The week’s data includes the Conference Board Index of Leading Economic Indicators, which is expected to rise 0.4 percent after a decline of 0.3 percent in June. That report comes on Monday.

The week’s list of companies reporting corporate earnings is also short, with retailers in the majority.

Home improvement chain Lowe’s Cos. Inc. (LOW.N: Quote, Profile, Research) releases results on Monday. Analysts expect a small increase from a year ago. The report will get special attention because of the company’s involvement in housing, and also because rival Home Depot Inc. (HD.N: Quote, Profile, Research) recently reported a 15 percent drop in profit.

Discount chain Target Corp. (TGT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) reports on Tuesday. Rival Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) recently posted earnings that were higher than a year ago but beneath Wall Street’s estimates.

Other retailers reporting earnings are Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Limited Brands Inc. (LTD.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Gap Inc. (GPS.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Staples Inc. (SPLS.O: Quote, Profile, Research).

Outside of the retailing arena, reports are due from medical device maker Medtronic Inc. (MDT.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Tuesday and food company H.J. Heinz Co. (HNZ.N: Quote, Profile, Research) on Friday. Heinz said on August 15 that its profit would exceed Wall Street’s forecasts.

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The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News
August 17, 2007, 11:26 am
Filed under: Dow, Economy, Fox News, Greenback, Inflation, Wall Street

The Dow Plunges, FOX Reports Happy Economic News

News Hounds
August 16, 2007

Yesterday, August 15, 2007, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell dramatically again, this time by almost 200 points in a session the Wall Street Journal described as “whipsawed by uncertainty and volatility.” But that night, Harris Faulkner, during the Hannity & Colmes news break, ignored the Dow and reported good economic news, only: that consumer prices rose more slowly than expected. With video.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbPyvSjMl2M

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