|    This week, the Dow gained   1.5% (up 10.6% y-t-d) and the S&P500 1.0% (up 8.1% y-t-d). Economically   sensitive issues performed well. The Transports jumped 2.6% and the   Morgan Stanley Cyclical index 2.2%. The Utilities added 0.6%, while the   Morgan Stanley Consumer index was about unchanged. The broader market   was strong. The small cap Russell 2000 gained 2.0% (up 9.9% y-t-d), and   the S&P400 Mid-Cap index rose 1.3%. The NASDAQ100 gained 1.9% and   the Morgan Stanley High Tech index 1.3%. On the back of Micron’s   earnings disappointment, the Semiconductors declined 0.7%. The   Street.com Internet Index jumped 2.9% (up 8.3% y-t-d), and the NASDAQ   Telecommunications index advanced 3.1% (up 16% y-t-d). The Biotechs   surged 5.6%. The Broker/Dealers rose 3.1%, increasing y-t-d gains to   20.1%. The Banks added 0.8% (up 9.9% y-t-d). With bullion down   $25.50, the HUI gold index declined 2.8%. For the week,   two-year Treasury yields rose 5.5 bps to 4.74%. Five-year yields gained   6 bps to 4.64%, and bellwether 10-year yields jumped 7 bps to 4.70%. Long-bond   yields gained 7 bps to 4.84%. The 2yr/10yr spread ended the week   inverted 4 bps. The implied yield on 3-month December ’07  Eurodollars rose 7 bps to 4.86% in a volatile week for prospective short-term   interest rates. Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields rose 5 bps to 5.91%,   this week outperforming Treasuries. The spread on Fannie’s 4 5/8% 2014   note narrowed about one to 31, with the spread on Freddie’s 5% 2014 note   little changed at 31. The 10-year dollar swap spread increased one to   54.75. Corporate bonds generally made up some ground on Treasuries this   week, with junk spreads narrowing about 4 bps.  Investment grade   issuers included Lowes $1.0 billion, ABX Holdings $1.0 billion, GE Capital   $750 million, Southwestern Public Service $450 million, MidAmerican Energy   $350 million and GATX $200 million.  Junk bond funds saw   inflows of $137 million during the week (from AMG). Junk issuers   included Peabody Energy $900 million, Semgroup $600 million, ITC $500 million   and Indianapolis P&L $150 million. Convert issuers   included United Dominion Realty $250 million, Forest City Enterprises $250   million, Diodes $200 million, World Acceptance $100 million and Lecroy $60   million. International dollar   debt issuers included NXP BV $3.75 billion, DNB Nor Bank $2.0 billion, Banco   Mercantil $600 million, and Bertin LTDA $250 million. Japanese 10-year “JGB”   yields rose 3.5 bps this week to 1.70%. The Nikkei 225 index gained 1.9%   (y-t-d up 2.0%). German 10-year bund yields increased 3 bps to 3.75%. Emerging   markets were mostly impressive. Brazil’s benchmark dollar bond yields   declined 3.5bps to 6.32%. The Bovespa equity index surged 4.1% this week   (up 13.4% y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa gained 1.9%, increasing 2006 gains   to 25.5%. Mexico’s 10-year $ yields added one basis point to 5.77%. The   Russian RTS equities index added 0.3%, increasing y-t-d gains to 38%.  India’s   Sensex equities index was little changed (2006 gains of 31.7%). China’s   Shanghai Composite index gained 1.6% this week, increasing y-t-d gains to   50.9%. This week, Freddie   Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates dipped one basis point to 6.30% and   now are up only 32 bps from one year ago. Fifteen-year fixed mortgage   rates were unchanged at 5.98%, 44 bps higher than a year earlier. One-year   adjustable rates declined one basis point to 5.46% (up 69bps y-o-y). The   Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Applications Index jumped 7.6% this   week. Purchase Applications were down 14.4% from one year ago, with   dollar volume 14.8% lower. Refi applications surged 17.5% to the highest   level since last October. The average new Purchase mortgage jumped to   $227,100 (18-week high), and the average ARM rose to a record $382,700. Bank Credit jumped   $30.9 billion last week to $8.034 TN.  Year-to-date, Bank Credit has   expanded $528 billion, or 9.4% annualized. Bank Credit inflated $628   billion, or 8.5%, over 52 weeks. For the week, Securities Credit   recovered $14.5 billion. Loans & Leases gained $16.5 billion   during the week and were up $385 billion y-t-d (9.4% annualized). Commercial   & Industrial (C&I) Loans have expanded at a 14.7% rate y-t-d and   13.2% over the past year. For the week, C&I loans declined $5.0   billion, while Real Estate loans surged $15.7 billion (2-wk gain of $30.7bn). Real   Estate loans have expanded at a 10.7% rate y-t-d and were up 11.3% during the   past 52 weeks. For the week, Consumer loans dipped $0.8 billion,   while Securities loans gained $2.6 billion. Other loans were up $4.0 billion. On   the liability side, (previous M3 component) Large Time Deposits expanded   $14.6 billion.     M2 (narrow) “money”   supply gained $7.0 billion to $6.897 TN (week of 9/25). Year-to-date,   narrow “money” has expanded $211 billion, or 4.2% annualized. Over 52   weeks, M2 has inflated $283 billion, or 4.3%. For the week, Currency added   $0.8 billion, and Demand & Checkable Deposits increased $12.8 billion. Savings   Deposits dropped $19.5 billion, while Small Denominated Deposits rose $7.2   billion. Retail Money Fund assets increased $5.6 billion.    Total Money Market   Fund Assets, as reported by the Investment Company Institute, surged $24.8   billion last week to a record $2.243 Trillion. Money Fund Assets have   increased $186 billion y-t-d, or 11.7% annualized, with a one-year gain of   $290 billion (14.8%) - $6 billion greater than the gain in M2!.  Total Commercial   Paper rose $5.7 billion last week (9-wk gain of $118bn!) to a record $1.908   Trillion. Total CP is up $267 billion y-t-d, or 21.2% annualized, while   having expanded $312 billion over the past 52 weeks (19.6%).  Asset-backed   Securities (ABS) issuance slowed this week to $10 billion. Year-to-date   total ABS issuance of $527 billion (tallied by JPMorgan) is running about 5%   below 2005’s record pace, with 2006 Home Equity Loan ABS sales of $381   billion in line with last year’s pace. Also reported by JPMorgan,   y-t-d Global CDO (collateralized debt obligation) Issuance of $328 billion is   running 69% ahead of 2005. Fed Foreign Holdings   of Treasury, Agency Debt jumped $13.3 billion to a record $1.675 Trillion   (week of 10/4). “Custody” holdings were up $156 billion y-t-d, or   13.3% annualized, and $210 billion (14.4%) over the past 52 weeks. Federal   Reserve Credit rose $4.4 billion to $829.6 billion. Fed Credit is up   $3.2 billion (0.5%) y-t-d, while having expanded 3.7% ($29.5bn) over the past   year.  International   reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg’s Alex Tanzi –   were up $578 billion y-t-d (18.6% annualized) and $662 billion (16.7%) in the   past year to a record $4.5 Trillion.  October 3 –   Bloomberg (Kevin Cho): “South Korea’s foreign-exchange reserves gained   for a third month in September… The reserves, the world’s fifth-largest,   climbed…to $228.2 billion last month [up 10% y-o-y]…” Currency Watch: October 4 –   Bloomberg (Ye Xie): “Global daily currency trading will exceed $3   trillion next year, with more than 44 percent of volume conducted   electronically, TowerGroup said. …an increase from $1.77 trillion in 2004.” The dollar index   gained 0.6% to 86.20. On the upside, the Iceland krona increased 2.5%,   the Israeli shekel 1.3%, the Turkish lira 1.2%, the New Zealand dollar 0.8%,   and the Indian rupee 0.8%. On the downside, the Norwegian krone declined   2.2%, the Swiss frank 0.8%, the Mexican peso 0.8%, the Canadian dollar 0.8%,   the Australian dollar 0.8% and the Japanese yen 0.7%.  Commodities Watch: October 5 –   Bloomberg (Tony C. Dreibus): “Wheat prices in Chicago rose, extending a   10-year high, on speculation that the crop in Australia, the world’s   third-biggest exporter of the grain, will be smaller than forecast because of   drought.” Gold fell 4.3% to   $574 and Silver 3.2% to $11.175. Copper dipped 2%, reducing y-t-d gains   to 76%. November crude fell $3.22 to end the week at $59.69. November   Unleaded Gasoline dropped 2.9%, while November Natural Gas surged 14.5%. For   the week, the CRB index declined 1.8% (down 9.5% y-t-d), and The Goldman   Sachs Commodities Index (GSCI) dropped 1.8% (down 2.7% y-t-d).  Japan Watch: October 2 –   Bloomberg (Lily Nonomiya): “Japan’s business confidence unexpectedly   rose to a two-year high in September, increasing prospects that the central   bank will raise interest rates by the end of the year.” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Kyoko Shimodoi and Toru Fujioka): “Hiroko Ota, Japan’s   minister of economic and fiscal policy, said the end of deflation is in sight   in the world’s second-largest economy. Japan’s corporate sector   continues to do well and household spending is benefiting from the strength   of the corporate sector… The economic recovery is being fueled by domestic   demand, she added.” China Watch: October 6 –   Bloomberg (Nipa Piboontanasawat and Janet Ong): “China’s surplus on the   current account, which measures exports and imports of goods and services,   widened in the first half… The gap swelled to $91.6 billion from $67.3   billion the same period last year…” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Yidi Zhao): “Almost 1000 new cars hit the roads of Beijing   every day, state-run Xinhua News Agency reported… Beijing registered 155,936   vehicles in the first half, more than any other Chinese city and 7 percent of   the country's total…” Asia Boom Watch: October 2 –   Bloomberg (Young-Sam Cho and Seyoon Kim): “South Korea’s exports climbed   to a record in September on rising sales of cars and chips… Overseas   shipments rose 22.1 percent from a year earlier to $29.9 billion…” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Stephanie Phang): “Malaysia’s exports growth slowed in August   as declining crude prices saw the value of oil shipments fall for the first   time in four months. Exports rose 14.8% from a year earlier…following a   revised 15.9% in July…” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Aloysius Unditu and Arijit Ghosh): “Indonesia’s central bank   cut its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point, the fifth   reduction since May… Bank Indonesia…reduced the rate…to 10.75 percent.” Unbalanced Global   Economy Watch: October 4 –   Bloomberg (Alexandre Deslongchamps): “Canada’s existing-home sales will   reach a record for the sixth straight year in 2006, as low unemployment and   rising incomes boost demand, the Canadian Real Estate Association said.” October 3 –   Bloomberg (Craig Stirling): “Britons’ borrowings against the value of   their homes rose 13 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier,   evidence that the $6.8 trillion housing market is supporting consumer   spending.” October 6 –   Bloomberg (Gabi Thesing): “German factory orders unexpectedly surged in   August led by sales of plants and machinery. Orders increased 3.7 percent in   August compared with a revised 2.1 percent the previous month…” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Ben Sills and Kristian Rix): “Industrial production in Spain,   Europe’s fifth-largest economy, expanded for a 10th month in August as growth   among the country’s European trading partners fueled exports. Production   at factories, farms and mines rose 4.9 percent from a year-earlier…” October 6 –   Bloomberg (Bunny Nooryani and Beate Evensen): “Norway, the world’s   third-largest oil exporter, raised its forecast for economic growth and said   it will increase spending on roads, health care and education as high energy   prices boost revenue. The mainland economy…is set to expand 3.4 percent this   year…” October 2 –   Bloomberg (Jonas Bergman): “Norway’s domestic credit growth accelerated   in August to the fastest pace since March 1988, adding to pressure on the   central bank increase its interest rate. Credit for households,   companies and municipalities rose an annual 14.7 percent…” Latin American Boom   Watch: October 4 – Dow   Jones (Gerald Jeffris): “Brazil posted net foreign exchange inflows in   September of $5.13 billion, up from $1.29 billion in net inflows the previous   month… The September foreign exchange result brought net inflows to   $32.04 billion for the January to September period, up from $9.5 billion in   the same period last year.” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Telma Marotto): “Brazil’s industrial output growth slowed in   August, the latest sign that a currency rally is cutting into the expansion   in Latin America’s biggest economy. Production rose 3.2 percent from the   year-earlier period, less than the 3.5 percent increase in July…” October 2 –   Bloomberg (Matthew Walter): “Argentina’s September tax revenue rose 29   percent from a year earlier, the country’s tax collection agency reported.” October 6 –   Bloomberg (Alex Kennedy): “Venezuelan vehicle sales rose to a record in   September…Sales of cars, trucks and buses…rose 90 percent to 33,384 units…” Central Banker   Watch: October 5 –   MarketNewsInternational (Claudia Hirsch): “Federal Reserve Board Vice   Chairman Donald Kohn said…that any signs of further inflation would be bad   for the economy and could require additional monetary policy response. ‘I   would be very, very concerned if I saw inflation moving higher from   here," Kohn said… ‘We need to be confident that it is moving down.’ Further   indications of inflation ‘would be very adverse for the economy and I think   would require further policy actions.’” October 5 –   MarketNewsInternational: “European Central Bank President Jean-Claude   Trichet said Thursday he supported stronger international coordination of   hedge fund supervision in the wake of recent troubles in the industry. ‘It   is quite obvious that you can and that you have to improve the situation in   this area… In this area we need a world-wide solution. So there are no   part solutions such as one continent, because it is a problem and a question   that arises at the world level, obviously.’” Bubble Economy   Watch: October 6 –   Bloomberg (Joe Richter): “The U.S. economy created 51,000 jobs in   September, fewer than economists predicted, a figure that was offset by   upward revisions to payroll growth in previous months. Last month’s gain   in employment followed a 188,000 rise in August that was almost 50 percent   bigger than previously reported…The unemployment rate unexpectedly fell   to 4.6 percent, matching a five-year low… The figures suggest job creation is   generating enough income to sustain consumer spending as the housing market   slumps. Wage growth over the last 12 months [4.0%] matched a five-year   high… The report also showed job growth during the 12 months   ended in March may have been about 45 percent higher than previously reported.   In a preliminary estimate, the Labor Department said payrolls for the 12   months ended in March 2006 will be revised higher by 810,000, the biggest   revision since the Labor Department started benchmarking numbers in 1991.” The ISM   Manufacturing Index declined 1.6 points to 53.5, with the Prices Paid   component down 12 points to 61. New Orders were unchanged at 54.2. The   ISM Non-Manufacturing Index dropped 4.1 points to 52.9, the lowest level   since . It is worth noting that the New Orders component actually jumped   5.1 points to 57.2, while the overall index was impacted significantly by the   15.7 point drop by the Prices Paid component.  Initial Jobless Claims   dropped 14,000 last week to 302,000, a 10-week low. October 6 – Dow   Jones (John McAuley): “Chain store sales registered another solid   year-over-year gain in September… Year-over-year sales were said to have   increased in a range of 3.8% to 4.1% from the September 2005 level after a   similar increase in August and an average 3.7% rate of increase in the first   half of the year.” October 2 – The Wall   Street Journal (Christopher Conkey): “A year into the housing market’s   slowdown, Americans have yet to snap shut their wallets, defying predictions   that the cooling market would have a chilling effect on consumer spending.     This year, despite what appears to be the most significant housing-market   slump in more than a decade, the nation’s consumers have increased their   purchases of goods and services at an inflation-adjusted annual rate of more   than 3% -- just as they have for the past two years. ‘They’re not backing   off,’ says Janet Hoffman, managing partner of consulting firm Accenture   Ltd.'s North American retail practice.” October 6 –   EconoPlay.com (Gary Rosenberger): “Another massive import wave in August   threatens to blow away the record trade gap set one month earlier…say cargo   executives. But declining crude oil prices are likely to provide some balm   for the trade gap in August and contribute to a sharp narrowing in September   and beyond… Export activity also looked strong in August but took a back seat   to imports… The big drop in oil prices also means a reprieve on   transportation inflation, with fuel surcharges having come down hard in   recent weeks and more declines scheduled for November. The big story   for the second consecutive month was the import swell at the nation’s two   largest container ports, Los Angeles and Long Beach, where combined imports   rose 16% year-over-year – well above the steady 10% to 12% increases seen   from January through July. ‘These are monster numbers no matter how you   cut them – it was our highest inbound total ever and the highest total ever,’   said Art Wong, spokesman for the Port of Long Beach.” October 4 – The Wall   Street Journal (Ryan Chittum and Vauhini Vara): “Judging from its first   week, one of the nation’s largest urban malls, the Westfield San Francisco   Centre, is poised to shake up the city’s retail landscape. Shoppers waited in   a line that stretched around the block at Market and Fifth streets to preview   the 338,000-square-foot Bloomingdale’s, second in size only to the flagship   Bloomingdale’s store on Manhattan's East 59th Street… ‘It’s kind of like   Vegas,’ a 36-year-old lawyer, Allison Wang, commented to her husband, Tim   Wang, as they stood near the historic domed rotunda incorporated into the   design of the nine-story mall.” Real Estate Bubble   Watch: October 6 – The Wall   Street Journal (Damian Paletta): “A federal banking regulator sounded   warnings about potential problems ahead with commercial real-estate loans and   subprime adjustable-rate mortgages. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.,   in its quarterly state-profile analysis, said the concentration of commercial   real-estate loans has reached ‘historic highs.’ Regulators, including the   FDIC and Federal Reserve, have struggled to warn small lenders in particular   against becoming overexposed in this sector, requesting higher capital   protections and stricter internal controls for banks with large commercial   real-estate portfolios. Also, the FDIC said analysts in its San   Francisco and New York regions have reported ‘deterioration in the   performance’ of subprime ARMs compared with fixed-rate mortgages. This trend ‘may   reflect ‘payment shock’ for some adjustable-rate borrowers,’ the FDIC said.” October 4 – The Wall   Street Journal (Jennifer S. Forsyth and Christine Haughney): “Rent for   office tenants rose in the third quarter at the fastest pace in six years,   while vacancy rates continued to decline… …The amount office tenants   actually pay once concessions are factored in – grew 2.3% nationwide from   July to September of 2006.” October 4 –   Bloomberg (Kathleen M. Howley): “Manhattan cooperative apartment prices   fell 16 percent in the third quarter as more New Yorkers avoided lengthy   co-op approval proceedings by opting for condominiums that typically have   fewer regulations and higher prices. The average price of a co-op…fell to   $1.09 million from a record $1.3 million...according to…Miller Samuel Inc. …” October 4 –   Bloomberg (David M. Levitt): “Manhattan office vacancy rates fell to   their lowest levels in five years in the third quarter, pushed by financial   services and law firms expanding as the stock market booms, real estate   brokerage Cushman & Wakefield said… Lower Manhattan led the growth, with   office vacancies there falling to 9.1 percent from…11.5 percent a year ago…   Midtown vacancies fell to 6.5 percent from 6.9 percent the quarter before.” October 3 –   Bloomberg (David M. Levitt): “Construction spending in New York City   will rise to a record $20.8 billion this year and exceed $21 billion in each   of the next two years, fueled by a surge in public spending, said the New   York Building Congress, an industry group. Mass transit, schools and highways   will account for the biggest share, jumping 20 percent to $11.6 billion in   2006, $12.1 billion in 2007 and $13.2 billion in 2008, based on current city   and state budgets. Demand for housing also is contributing, with more than $5   billion in spending and the addition of 30,000 new units annually through   2008.” Financial Sphere   Bubble Watch: October 4 –   Financial Times (Michael Mackenzie): “Hedge funds focused on debt   markets are set to achieve some of the strongest returns in the industry this   year, while others such as those focused on macro strategies or equities   stumble, according to JPMorgan. Credit funds…are achieving returns of   10-15 per cent in the year to date, analysts at the bank said. However,   the main source of these gains has been increasingly concentrated bets on the   booming European leveraged loan market… ‘Amid all the reports of losses at   a large multi-strategy fund and poor performance across the macro fund   community, it is easy to overlook the performance of credit funds,’ said   Stephen Dulake, European credit analyst at JPMorgan… Demand for loans from   hedge funds and other specialist investors remains very strong, which in turn   allows banks to feel comfortable in continuing to lend more funds to   low-rated companies helping to keep the default rate low.” October 3 – Dow   Jones (Marietta Cauchi): “Private equity firms have raised a massive   $300 billion so far this year and the total is set to hit $400 billion for   the full-year… The money raised to date, by 436 new private equity   funds, is an increase of 6% on the $283 billion raised for the whole of 2005   and smashes industry records, according to…Private Equity Intelligence. U.S.-based   funds raised the lion’s share of the total - some $199 billion in 225 new   funds, followed by European-based funds which raised $70 billion and 101   funds based in Asia and elsewhere raising a total $31 billion.” October 4 –   Financial Times (Peter Smith): “Buy-out groups levied near record   amounts of debt on European companies they bought or refinanced in the third   quarter, according to research from S&P’s Leveraged Commentary and Data. The   credit industry newsletter found that, on average, the ratio of total debt to   ebitda rose to a multiple of 5.8 in the three months ended September, its   highest level since 2000. The previous high of 5.7 for leveraged buy-out   deals in the current cycle was recorded in the opening quarter of 2006, with   a dip to 5.4 in the second quarter of this year.” Energy Boom and   Crude Liquidity Watch: October 5 – Financial   Times (Richard Dean): “Gulf Arab investors are looking to pour billions   of dollars into Indian real estate, as Indian regulators ease restrictions on   foreign capital flowing into the sector. The Gulf’s oil-fuelled current   account surplus will hit $227bn this year, according to the Institute of   International Finance, and that money is looking for a home. With domestic   real estate markets saturated and the west seen as increasingly hostile by   some, Gulf investors are turning to India’s emerging property market. ‘The   opportunities in India are immense,’ said Rakesh Patnaik, head of real estate   investment at Global Investment House, a Kuwaiti investment bank. ‘India is   still a new market. It is only in the past 12-24 months that it has opened   up.’” October 5 –   Bloomberg (Will McSheehy): “Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world’s   biggest chemical maker by market value, plans to raise as much as $6 billion   next year to fund construction of new plants to meet Asian and European   demand.” Speculator Watch: October 4 –   Financial Times (Michael Mackenzie): “Chicago’s big two derivatives   exchanges saw strong trading volume growth in the third quarter led by bets   on interest rates as investors positioned themselves for a pause by the US   Federal Reserve and a slowing economy… At the CBOT, trading volume rose 21   per cent during the third quarter from the same period in 2005, with average   daily volume up 23 per cent from the prior year. Meanwhile, the CME said   average daily volume during the quarter rose 28 per cent from the same period   a year ago with interest rate volumes climbing 27 per cent...” October 6 –   Bloomberg (Katherine Burton): “The Vega Select Opportunities hedge fund,   known for making bets on bonds, received redemption requests for as much as   $400 million after falling almost 11 percent last month, investors said. Vega   Select started September with $1 billion of assets, down from $2.2 billion at   the end of 2004…” October 4 –   Bloomberg (Jenny Strasburg): “The number of new hedge funds fell 55   percent in the first six months of 2006 as the $1.2 trillion industry failed   to sustain the record pace of startups… Managers opened 549 hedge funds in   the first half, compared with 1,211 a year earlier…”  Inflationary Biases   and Chasms at the Fed: At 4.6%, the U.S.   Unemployment Rate has not been lower since June of ’01. The 4.0% y-o-y   increase in average hourly earnings is at a five-year high. At the same   time, September’s 51,000 jobs gain was unimpressive and below consensus,   although the August jobs expansion was revised up almost 50% to a respectable   188,000. And, apparently, the Department of Labor is about to revise   last year’s payrolls data higher by 810,000. Perhaps today’s action   signals that the bond market will no longer so easily ignore tight labor markets. So, Wednesday the   plain-spoken chairman Bernanke commented that housing is in a “substantial   correction” and likely to shave 1% off GDP. The Dow surged 123 points,   bond yields dropped, and emerging markets powered higher. Clearly, the   (global) marketplace has fondly vivid memories of the Greenspan Fed inciting   an historic bout of housing inflation to help mitigate the financial and   economic fallout from the technology bust. The markets can be forgiven   for perceiving that (The Inflationist) Prof. Bernanke would be just delighted   by further bond and equity market rallies.  Mr. Bernanke, the   academic, relies heavily upon his economic forecasting models. He can   confidently predict quantitative impacts to both GDP and core inflation from   a housing slowdown. I would today, however, suggest unusual caution with   such an analytical approach. The great unknown at this point – one that   certainly cannot be effectively incorporated into econometric models - is how   the financial markets would respond to the prospect of a Bernanke Fed easing   cycle and, importantly, how such a response would dictate the pace and nature   of economic activity. Considering his scholarly emphasis and expertise,   Dr. Bernanke would dovishly view today’s housing markets (faltering Bubbles) with   trepidation, while paying merely lip service to inflationary risks deemed   fleeting in nature. His idiosyncratic perspective has suited the bond   market just fine. Interestingly, Vice   Chairman Donald Kohn and Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser came out   Thursday and spoke directly to their views that inflation is these days   likely a greater risk than economic weakness. Astutely, I would say, Mr.   Plosser commented that it’s difficult to know how housing will impact the   general economy in the short-run, and it may turn out that monetary policy   has not been sufficiently tight to restrain heightened inflationary   pressures. Mr. Kohn, with 35 years of Fed experienc, stated that “the   risk to my outlook for economic activity may be skewed to the downside, while   those to my forecast of gradually declining inflation are tilted to the   upside. In the current circumstance, the upside risks to inflation are   of greater concern.” Mr. Kohn also stated that “to date there is little   evidence that this correction in the housing market has had any significant   adverse spillover effects on other parts of the economy.” It is also   worth noting that Mr. Kohn’s long-time close colleague, Alan Greenspan, this   afternoon was quoted as saying that the “the worst may well be over” for the   housing slump (believe it or not…) Thus far, the bond   market has largely ignored the (deepening?) chasm at the Fed between the   doves and hawks. With the Federal Reserve’s tradition of acceding the   Chairman overwhelming command over policy, the analytical prism through which   Mr. Bernanke views the world has been widely adopted by market analysts. The   new Fed chief assures the marketplace that he’s ready to respond to any   further acceleration in core prices – if he really must, and such pretense (in   an environment of weak housing and robust inflationary impulses that largely   eschew “core” consumer prices) has more than sufficed in the eyes of the   market. I would suggest, however, that Dr. Bernanke’s rather eccentric   (dovish) views on monetary management leave his credibility with traditional   (hawkishly-inclined) central bankers on tenuous footing. This could   become a major issue for the markets in the event the economy reaccelerates   and/or inflationary pressures do not wane. I found Bill Gross’s   October investment outlook particularly pertinent. Mr. Gross quoted   (two-time world poker champ) Puggy Pearson: “Ain’t only three things to   gamblin’: knowing the 60/40 end of a proposition, money management, and   knowing yourself.”  He then noted how this was “incredibly similar to my   [Gross’s] own philosophy” gleaned from a mathematics professor and the   blackjack table. The key to success to be applied to investing was “identifying   opportune moments when the odds favored the player as opposed to the dealer and   by altering the size of the bets accordingly.” At least until   today, the bond market has perceived that we’re in the midst of one of those   opportune moments when it makes sense to bump up the bets and take some of   the house’s money. The consensus view is that housing markets are in   serious trouble and, hence, the economy is highly vulnerable - with perhaps   even latent deflationary biases. The odds favor – as reflected in fixed   income prices - the Bernanke Fed will likely resort to cutting rates in   the not too distant future. Besides, the specter of the bond bears and   derivative traders all scrambling amongst each other to cover Treasury and   agency short positions - when much of the actual supply of these securities   is today tucked away at foreign central banks and institutions - has   been, in its own right, a proposition worthy of a decent-sized wager.  The marketplace has   certainly been more than willing to disregard heightened inflationary   pressures, strong employment, rising income growth, and an economy that   has proved notably “resilient” through various shocks and setbacks. The   bond bears have of late been impaired, with the path of least resistance   leading to higher bond prices. Recent bullish enthusiasm - subsequent to   the cuddliest of bond (teddy) bear markets - implies a robust bond and Credit   market Inflationary Bias. It is not   unreasonable to assume chairman Bernanke has a bias against further   tightening, nor is it brash to presume that he fully intends to move early   and aggressively to thwart the financial and economic risks associated with   bursting Bubbles – housing or otherwise. Yet there are very serious   risks associated with this entire notion of Greenspan/Bernanke New Era   central banking. This is a regime where asset and economic Bubbles are   ignored as they’re inflated, only for the Fed to adopt aggressive (“risk   management”) inflationary tactics when they eventually risk being deflated. Basically,   the gist of such an approach is that a bursting Bubble can and should be   mitigated by inflating elsewhere – in particular inciting sufficient Credit   creation and “animal spirits”/speculative impulses to maintain abundant   system liquidity; to keep asset markets sufficiently levitated; and to ensure   expanding economic output. The dilemma that emerges   from the remediation of one Bubble with another (bigger one) is multifaceted. For   one, it fosters an overwhelming profit motive/speculative bias that evolves   over time to permeate all asset markets. Second, it accommodates and   eventually firmly ingrains a Financial Structure (i.e. the powerful GSEs,   Wall Street firms, hedge funds, derivatives, securitization markets, “structured   finance,” bank real estate lending, etc.) that propagates asset inflation and   Bubbles (U.S. bonds 1993, emerging markets 1993-1997, technology, stocks,   bonds again, housing, etc. thereafter). Third, an aggressively expanding   Financial Sector and attendant securities markets inflation guarantee a   self-reinforcing escalation in financial leveraging, instigating Monetary   Processes whereby speculative positions over time play an increasingly   instrumental (if largely unrecognized) role in system liquidity conditions. Fourth,   when a central bank actively induces leveraged speculation as an expedient   policy mechanism for system stimulation/inflation – as it clearly did in 2002   – it will not easily divorce itself from obliging a small but powerful   cross-section of society. Fifth, as we’re now witnessing with housing,   policies that incite serial Bubbles ensure inherent fragility that inevitably   traps policymakers in an overly accommodative posture.  The upshot of the   Fed’s experimental policy regime is a volatile confluence of enticing asset   inflation and an enormous and immensely powerful Financial Sphere towering   over a submissive little central bank hamstrung by myriad susceptible Bubbles   largely of its own making. Basically, elemental fragility is held at bay   only through loose monetary policies, counterproductive inordinate   transparency, and resultant ongoing profligate financial conditions. And   such a backdrop certainly won’t go unnoticed by a gumptious financial   apparatus immersed in a Credit inflation, asset Bubbles and speculative   profits bonanza. Again, it is this extraordinary backdrop that forces my   analysis to focus on systemic Inflationary Biases, while at this point   downplaying obvious vulnerabilities in housing and the economy. Bloomberg’s Brian   Sullivan moderated a panel discussion this week on the U.S. residential   housing slowdown. While I agreed with the premise of many of their   comments, I was struck by how confident Stephen Roach and Nouriel Roubini   were in forecasting rapid U.S. economic retrenchment. Unless one is   confident predicting the direction of highly unsettled financial markets and   Credit conditions over the coming months – which I am admittedly not - I   would urge caution when it comes to predicting economic performance.    In particular, Roach   and Roubini were in strong agreement that the Fed – “serial Bubble blowers”   that they are – has simply run out of Bubbles to mitigate the bursting   housing Bubble. Such analysis is close enough to correct to be   dangerous. Indeed, I believe their view overlooks the paramount dynamic   today impacting both the Financial and Economic Spheres: the system remains   extraordinarily governed by Credit Bubble “blow-off” dynamics. The   Mortgage Finance Bubble hasn’t as yet taken so much as a tender body blow,   while corporate and government finance remains in rapid expansion mode. M&A   and stock repurchases are on record pace. And, importantly, Income   Growth has supplanted housing inflation as a key Inflationary Manifestation.  The system is on   track for record Credit creation this year, with resulting massive Current   Account Deficits and energized Credit systems across the globe fueling   systemic asset inflation and ongoing liquidity overabundance around the world   – recent sinking commodities prices notwithstanding. The expansive   leveraged speculating community remains at the epicenter of systemic   Inflationary Biases, as well as recent commodities selling. To be sure,   the list of major hedge fund casualties is growing, but to this point the   losses meted out to the energy and commodities bulls, along with the bond and   equities bears, has proved awfully constructive for the bond and Credit bulls   (note from Financial Sphere Watch above how debt market and “credit” hedge   funds are among this years top performers).  More than housing –   the system’s weak link lies today, as it has for some time, in securities   leveraging. And while the summer bond rally has provided relief for bond   investors (as well as fun and games for some), it is been destabilizing for   the system. The bond bears were run out of town, hedges against higher   rates were unwound, while speculations and hedges for lower rates were   established. And I would suspect the financial markets’ overwhelming   Inflationary Bias has not gone unnoticed by the Fed “hawks,” including   Messrs. Kohn, Lacker, Moscow and Plosser.  It’s my own view   that the summer rally has likely only postponed any eventual move by the Fed   to cut rates and has even increased the possibility that more hikes will be   necessary. If the interest-rate markets are now forced to abruptly   reverse course and price in such a scenario, well, the markets will have   relished in the opportunity to do the most damage to the largest number. It   is, after all, the dreaded “V” move in market yields – especially MBS – that   can prove especially destabilizing to the leveraged players and derivative   traders – hence system liquidity. And I don’t want to get all carried   away by a couple days of rising market yields. But I do see the current   backdrop of Myriad Inflationary Biases haviing the distinct possibility   of Deepening Chasms at the Fed.      |  
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