| Energy   worries and tough talk from central bankers weighed on global equities.    For the week, the Dow and S&P500 were hit for 2.6%.  The Transports   fell 1.7%, and the Morgan Stanley Cyclical index was walloped for 3.4%.    The Morgan Stanley Consumer index declined 1.5%, and the Utilities sank 3.8%.    The broader market was under heavy selling pressure.  The small cap   Russell 2000 dropped 3.5% and the S&P400 Mid-cap index fell 3.3%.    The NASDAQ100 declined 2.9%, and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index fell   2.3%.  The SOX sank 3%, The Street.com Internet Index 2.7%, and the   NASDAQ Telecommunications index 2.7%.  The Biotechs were hammered for   4.7%.  The financial stocks outperformed, with the Broker/Dealers down   2% and the Banks 1%.  Although bullion jumped $5.55 (to another 17-year   high), the HUI gold index declined 1% this week. Treasuries   were unimpressive in the face of weak global equity markets.  For the   week, two-year Treasury yields added one basis point to 4.18%.    Five-year government yields rose 3 basis points to 4.22%.  Bellwether   10-year yields added two basis points for the week to 4.35%.  Long-bond   yields were about unchanged at 4.57%.  The spread between 2 and 10-year   government yields widened one to 17 bps.  Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS   yields jumped 5 basis points, once again underperforming 10-year Treasuries.   The spread (to 10-year Treasuries) on Fannie’s 4 5/8% 2014 note was unchanged   at 30, and the spread on Freddie’s 5% 2014 note was also unchanged at 30.    The 10-year dollar swap spread widened 0.25 to 46.25.  Corporate bond   spreads were little changed, with junk bond spreads widening slightly.    The implied yield on 3-month December Eurodollars was unchanged at 4.385%.    December ’06 Eurodollar yields added 0.5 basis points to 4.615%.         Investment   grade corporate issuance slowed to about $7.0 billion.  Issuers included   Lowes $1.0 billion, Seminole Tribe $730 million, Dover Corp $600 million,   Developers Diversified Realty $350 million, MGIC $300 million, Duke Energy   $200 million, Washington REIT $150 million, and Puget Sound Energy $150   million.  Junk   bond funds saw outflows drop to $69.4 million (from AMG).  Issuers   included Iffinion Group $270 million, Activant Solutions $185 million,   Sunstate Equipment $150 million, Pregis Corp $150 million, and Dycom   Industries $150 million. October   5 – Dow Jones (Matthew Cowley):  “Indonesia on Wednesday sold $1.5   billion in 10 and 30-year bonds, as rampant investor demand for emerging   market debt eclipsed concerns over sky-high oil prices and terrorism in the   Asian nation.  The successful bond offering…comes as risk premiums on   emerging market debt are at near-record lows, opening up avenues of cheap   funding for companies and governments alike.” Foreign   dollar debt issuers included Indonesia $1.5 billion and Banco Votorantim $200   million. Japanese   10-year JGB yields rose 3 basis points this week to 1.50%.  Emerging   debt and equity markets were under pressure.  Brazil’s benchmark dollar   bond yields jumped 27 basis points to 7.55%.  Brazil’s Bovespa equity   index dropped 5%, reducing y-t-d gains to 14.4%.  The Mexican Bolsa   declined 4% (up 19.5% y-t-d).  Mexican govt. yields rose 15 basis points   to 5.55%.  Russian 10-year dollar Eurobond yields jumped 17 basis points   to 6.27%.  The Russian RTS equity index fell almost 6% this week (up   54.5% y-t-d).   Freddie   Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped 7 basis points to 5.98%, a   27-week high and up 16 basis points from one year ago.  Fifteen-year   fixed mortgage rates rose 7 basis points, to 5.54%.  One-year adjustable   rates jumped another 9 basis points to 4.77%, up 31 basis points in three   weeks.  One-year ARM rates were up 69 basis points from the year ago   level.  The Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Applications Index dipped   1.9%.  Purchase Applications were up 3% from one year ago, with dollar   volume up 11.6%.   Refi applications were unchanged during the   week.  The average new Purchase mortgage increased to $243,900, while   the average ARM was about unchanged at $367,600.  The percentage of ARMs   rose to 29.8% of total applications.     Broad   money supply (M3) jumped $20.3 billion to a record $9.984 Trillion (week of   September 26), with a noteworthy 19-week gain of $359 billion, or 10.2%   annualized.  Year-to-date, M3 has expanded at a 7.1% rate, with M3-less   Money Funds expanding at an 8.0% pace.  For the week, Currency added   $1.3 billion.  Demand & Checkable Deposits jumped $13.6 billion.    Savings Deposits dropped $21.0 billion. Small Denominated Deposits added $1.9   billion.  Retail Money Fund deposits increased $2.0 billion (7 straight   gains), while Institutional Money Fund deposits declined $4.6 billion.    Large Denominated Deposits jumped $16.0 billion.  Year-to-date, Large   Deposits are up $232 billion, or 28.7% annualized.  For the week,   Repurchase Agreements increased $11.3 billion, and Eurodollar deposits added   $0.4 billion.                Bank   Credit expanded $15.9 billion last week.  Year-to-date, Bank Credit   has inflated $643 billion, or 12.7% annualized (up 10.7% from a year   earlier).  Securities Credit added $3.3 billion during the week, with a   year-to-date gain of $169.1 billion (11.8% ann.).  Loans & Leases   have expanded at a 13.4% pace so far during 2005, with Commercial &   Industrial (C&I) Loans up an annualized 17.5%.  For the week,   C&I loans gained $5.1 billion, while Real Estate loans rose $2.7 billion.    Real Estate loans have expanded at a 14.5% rate during the first 39 weeks   of 2005 to $2.82 Trillion.  Real Estate loans were up $363 billion,   or 14.5%, over the past 52 weeks.  For the week, Consumer loans dipped   $1.1 billion, while Securities loans added $0.2 billion. Other loans expanded   $5.7 billion.    Total   Commercial Paper dipped $1.8 billion last week to $1.610 Trillion.  Total   CP has expanded $196.1 billion y-t-d, a rate of 18.0% (up 20.4% over the past   52 weeks).  Financial CP added $0.1 billion last week to $1.469   Trillion, with a y-t-d gain of $184.5 billion, or 18.7% annualize (up 21.4%   from a year earlier).  Non-financial CP declined $1.9 billion to $141.1   billion (up 11.6% ann. y-t-d and 10.2% over 52 wks). October   3 – Bloomberg (Walden Siew):  “The finance units of General Motor Corp.   and Ford Motor Co. are among companies that may sell a record $100 billion in   debt backed by loans this year after the two biggest U.S. automakers’ debt   was cut to junk in May, Standard & Poor’s said.” ABS   issuance was up somewhat this week to $14 billion (from JPMorgan).    Year-to-date issuance of $583 billion is 18% ahead of comparable 2004.  Home   Equity Loan ABS issuance of $380 billion is 20% above comparable 2004.  Fed   Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt dipped $198 million to $1.464   Trillion for the week ended October 5.  “Custody” holdings are up $128.0   billion y-t-d, or 12.5% annualized (up $172bn, or 13.3%, over 52 weeks).    Federal Reserve Credit declined $402 million to $800.2 billion.  Fed   Credit has expanded 1.6% annualized y-t-d (up $35.3bn, or 4.6%, over 52   weeks).   International   reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg’s Alex Tanzi -   were up $600 billion, or 17.8%, over the past 12 months to $3.962 Trillion. October   6 – Bloomberg (Bradley Cook):  “Russia’s foreign currency and gold   reserves are about $163 billion as of today, Interfax reported…  The   reserves stood at $160 billion at the end of September…” Currency Watch: Currency   markets were especially unsettled this week.  The dollar index reversed   from earlier strength to end the week down about 0.5%.  On the upside,   the Indonesian rupiah jumped 2.5%, the Swill franc 1.9%, the Danish krone   1.8%, and the Euro 1.8%.  On the downside, the South African rand fell   1.5%, the Argentine peso 1.0%, the Canadian dollar 0.7%, and the Mexican peso   0.7%.     Commodities Watch: October 3 – Financial   Times (Kevin Morrison ):  “The rise in natural   gas prices to record highs last week has replaced healthcare expenses for   workers as the biggest cost concern to US manufacturers. Industries from   chemicals to steel complain that the sevenfold increase in US gas prices over   the past four years will cause more manufacturers to move offshore.” October   7 – Bloomberg (Rip Watson):  “Persistent delays in Mississippi River   barge shipments are driving up agricultural shipping costs… Spot charter   rates for barges are triple the average for the past three years, Weeden Co.   analyst Kevin Starke said… Shipping costs rose 25 percent in a month,   National Corn Growers Association economist Paul Bertels said.” November   crude oil sank $4.40 to $61.84.  November unleaded gasoline fell 13%   this week and November Natural Gas dropped 5%, although neither gave up all   of last week’s gains.  For the week, the CRB fell 2.3%, reducing y-t-d   gains to 14.5%.  The Goldman Sachs Commodities index sank 5.5%, with   2005 gains slipping to 42.9%.   China Watch: October   3 – China Knowledge:  “Credit and debit card payments in Beijing,   Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen account for 30% of total retail spending,   according to the People’s Bank of China…  Total credit and debit card   retail spending in China reached RMB 600 ($75bn) billion in 2004, an almost   four-fold an increase over RMB 128 billion in 2001…” October   7 – XFN:  “China’s trade surplus will triple to about $90 bln  to   $100 bln this year from last year's $32 bln, generating new trade    frictions and adding to pressure for a revaluation of the currency, the China   Daily said.  The state-run newspaper cited a Ministry of Commerce report   that said a 30% jump in exports to $750 bln will account for much of the   increase, outstripping an 18% rise in imports to $660 bln over the same   period.” Asia Boom Watch: October   4 – Bloomberg (Kyoko Shimodoi and Mayumi Otsuma):  “Oil price gains may   partly need to be passed to Japan’s consumers because companies can’t keep   absorbing rising costs, said Hiroyuki Hosoda, the chief government spokesman.   ‘That’s an issue companies are discussing about, as oil price are soaring and   businesses are under pressure to pass on rising costs’ to consumers, Hosoda   told a daily briefing…” October   7 – Bloomberg (Cherian Thomas):  “India’s tax collection rose 19 percent   from a year ago to 1.43 trillion rupees ($32 billion) in the six months ended   Sept. 30… Direct tax collections, which include taxes on personal income and   company profits, rose 24 percent…” October   4 – Bloomberg (William Sim):  “South Korea’s economic growth will   accelerate to about 5 percent in the second half as consumer spending picks   up and exports remain strong, the Ministry of Finance and Economy said.” October   7 – Bloomberg (Theresa Tang):  “Taiwan’s exports grew in September at   the fastest pace in five months, helped by a weaker currency and rising   demand from China and Japan for the island's electronics. Shipments rose 8.5   percent from a year earlier to $16.2 billion…” October   4 – Bloomberg (Stephanie Phang):  “Malaysia’s exports grew in August at   the fastest pace in five months…   Exports rose 12.5 percent…” October   3 – Bloomberg (Anuchit Nguyen):  “Thailand’s inflation accelerated in   September to the highest in seven years as rising fuel prices increased transport   and construction costs, adding pressure on the central bank to raise interest   rates. The consumer price index rose 6.0 percent from a year earlier…” October   7 – Bloomberg (Anuchit Nguyen):  “Thailand’s revenue from tax   collections, profits of state companies and other income rose 13 percent last   financial year, boosted by higher corporate earnings and consumer spending,   the finance ministry said.” October   3 – Bloomberg (Arijit Ghosh and Aloysius Unditu):  “Indonesia’s   inflation accelerated at its fastest pace in 33 months in September… Consumer   prices in Southeast Asia’s largest economy climbed 9.1 percent from a year   ago…” October   4 – Bloomberg (Amit Prakash):  “Manufacturing in Singapore expanded more   than estimated in September to reach its highest level in a year after   factories reported gains in export orders and production, a key gauge showed.” October   5 – Bloomberg (Jason Folkmanis):  “Vietnam’s inflation rate accelerated   in September as higher fuel prices pushed up costs in industries such as   transportation. Consumer prices rose 7.8 percent from a year earlier, up from   a 7.3 percent annual gain in August…” October   3 – Bloomberg (Jason Folkmanis):  “Vietnam’s economy accelerated in the   in the first three quarters, driven by faster manufacturing growth and a   services industry benefiting from the country’s rising consumer wealth and   increased tourist arrivals. Gross domestic product expanded 8.1 percent   during the first nine months of 2005…” Unbalanced Global Economy Watch: October 4 – Financial   Times:  “Oil exporters are the new kids on the global imbalances' block   but being new does not make them unimportant: they have been the prime movers   in driving trade imbalances higher in the past few years.  The $40 a   barrel increase in the price of oil since the beginning of 2002 has shifted   $1,200bn a year from oil consuming countries to oil producers.  The   magnitudes are not just large in absolute terms. Middle East oil exporters   now have a larger current account surplus than the whole of emerging Asia,   including China, and their surpluses account for about 30 per cent of the US   current account deficit. Include Russia, Nigeria and Venezuela and the   importance of oil exporters cannot be overlooked.” October   6 – Bloomberg (John Fraher and Simone Meier):  “European Central Bank    President Jean-Claude Trichet moved closer to raising interest rates for the   first time in five years, saying the ECB is becoming increasingly concerned   about inflation in the dozen nations using the euro. ‘Strong vigilance with   regards to upside risks to price stability is warranted,’ said Trichet… ‘All   the elements we have indicate that risks to price stability are on the   upside. We will move if needed at any time.’” October   5 – Bloomberg (Sandrine Rastello):  “European service industries growth   accelerated more than expected in September, indicating the economy in the   dozen nations sharing the euro may be picking up. An index of industries such   as banks and airlines rose to 54.7 from 53.4 in August…” October   6 – Bloomberg (Matthew Brockett):  “Factory orders in Germany, Europe’s   largest economy, fell for the first time in four months in August, led by a   drop in demand from abroad for goods such as factory machinery. Orders   dropped 3.7 percent from July, when they jumped 4.1 percent…” October   5 – Bloomberg (Laura Humble):  “U.K. consumer confidence dropped to the   lowest in at least 17 months in September, a survey of 1,000 people by   Nationwide Building Society showed.” October   5 – Bloomberg (Aaron Pan):  “The surge in U.K. house prices is   contributing to ‘binge’ drinking, as younger people who can’t afford houses   spend cash on alcohol instead, the Daily Telegraph said, citing a Lancaster   University Management School professor.” October   3 – Bloomberg (Jacob Greber):  “Manufacturing growth in Switzerland   accelerated to the fastest pace in more than a year in September, an industry   report showed today, adding to evidence Europe’s eighth-largest economy is   strengthening…” October   3 – Bloomberg (Tasneem Brogger):  “Danish manufacturing growth in   September accelerated at the fastest pace since December 2003, led by a surge   in new orders and an increase in production.” October   5 – Bloomberg (Paul Tobin and Ben Sills):  “Spain’s industrial   production rose the most in 11 months in August as an export-led recovery in   France and Germany fed through to Spanish producers. Production at factories,   farms and mines increased 3.2 percent from a year earlier…” October   5 – Bloomberg (Bradley Cook):  “Russia lured $10.7 billion in foreign   direct investment in the first half of the year, more than double the $4.5   billion it received in the same period last year, the daily Vedomosti said,   citing central bank data.” October   5 – Bloomberg (Halia Pavliva):  “Russia’s services industries expanded   in September at the fastest pace since May 2004 as the growing economy helped   strengthen demand, Moscow Narodny Bank said.” October   4 – Bloomberg (Nasreen Seria):  “South African vehicle sales surged 26   percent in September from a year ago as the lowest interest rates in almost a   quarter of a century boosted consumer and business spending, an industry   group said.” Latin America Watch: October   6 – Bloomberg (Guillermo Parra-Bernal):  “Brazil’s industrial production   rose more than expected in August as companies bolstered output capacity to   meet growing demand for home appliances and cars. Output by miners and   manufacturers rose 3.8 percent from the year-earlier period, up from growth   of 0.6 percent in July…” October   5 – Bloomberg (Daniel Helft):  “Argentina’s annual inflation rate surged   to a 28-month high in September as retailers marked up goods on growing   consumer demand ahead of the summer season. Consumer prices rose 10.3 percent   in the 12 months through September…” October   4 – Bloomberg (Matthew Walter):  “Chile’s inflation rate rose to a   30-month high in September as fruit and vegetable prices soared and    record oil prices drove up transportation and heating costs. Consumer prices   jumped 1 percent in the month…” October   5 – Bloomberg (Peter Wilson):  “Venezuela, the world’s fifth-largest oil   exporter, expects 2006 spending to rise by at least 16 percent, El Nacional   reported, citing the head of the country’s budget office.” Bubble Economy Watch: October   7 – PRNewswire:  “Almost one third (31%) of Americans say they are using   more credit to pay the higher prices for energy and other consumer goods   resulting from Hurricane Katrina, according to the Cambridge Consumer Credit   Index.  19% say they are using less credit, while 50% say they are using   the same amount of credit as they did a year ago.” October   3 – Bloomberg (Art Pine):  “Inflation, which Federal Reserve policy   makers have proclaimed ‘well-contained’ at least 11 times this year, is   threatening to burst its container. Rising energy costs are rapidly spilling   over into the prices of everything from a bottle of Pepsi-Cola to a room at   the Marriott, sparking concern that such increases are seeping into the   pricing patterns of companies, and may accelerate throughout the economy.    ‘The dangers of high energy prices spilling over into core inflation are   clearly increasing,’ says former Federal Reserve Governor Lyle Gramley…” October   7 – Reuters:  “U.S. inflation pressures climbed in September to their   highest in over five years, according to a report on Friday that suggested   the Federal Reserve was right to remain vigilant over price increases. The   Economic Cycle Research Institute said its Future Inflation Gauge rose to   122.7 last month, its highest since June 2000, the tail end of the late   1990s economic boom.” October   3 – Bloomberg (Bob Willis):  “U.S. construction spending rose in August   to a record, led by a jump in highway projects, and may climb for the rest of   the year as rebuilding after Hurricane Katrina accelerates. Spending on   construction rose 0.4 percent to $1.109 trillion at an annual rate…   Construction spending, which rose 6.1 percent in August from a year earlier   will add to economic growth in the second half of the year as government   spending picks up following passage of a $286.5 billion highway bill …” October   5 – Bloomberg (Rip Watson):  “North American railroad freight rates,   already at ‘unprecedented’ levels, may rise faster in the next six months…   according to a Morgan Stanley survey. The survey of 300 customers showed that   shippers of coal, grain and other cargo expect an average increase of 5.6   percent, excluding fuel surcharges…” October   3 – Bloomberg (David M. Levitt):  “Manhattan’s office vacancy rate fell   to 9.6 percent in the third quarter as demand by large users absorbed   available space, said officials of Cushman & Wakefield Inc… Commercial   rents in Manhattan, the U.S.’s larges and most expensive office market, rose   to $41.35 a square foot from $40.80 the quarter before…” Mortgage Finance Bubble Watch: October   4 – Bloomberg (Kathleen M. Howley):  “Manhattan apartment prices fell 13   percent in the third quarter, the most in 16 years, evidence the most   expensive market in the U.S. may have peaked. The average apartment price   dropped to $1.15 million from a record $1.32 million in the second quarter,   according to a report today from Miller Samuel Inc…and Prudential Douglas   Elliman, a Manhattan real estate broker. Prices had soared 30 percent in the   previous three months.” October   4 – New York Times (David Leonhardt and Motoko Rich):  “A real estate   slowdown that began in a handful of cities this summer has spread to almost   every hot housing market in the country, including New York. More sellers are   putting their homes on the market, houses are selling less quickly and prices   are no longer increasing as rapidly as they were in the spring, according to   local data and interviews with brokers. In   Manhattan, the average sales price fell almost 13 percent in the third   quarter from the second quarter… The amount of time it took to sell a home   was also up 30.4 percent over the same period.  In another sign that the   housing market might have reached a peak, executives at big home builders   have sold almost $1 billion worth of company stock this year. Outside Washington,   in Fairfax County, Va., the number of homes on the market in August rose   nearly 50 percent from August 2004.”  Sphere Analysis: Sphere   Analysis is these days one of the more useful tools available in our   analytical toolkit.  There is the Economic Sphere that comprises the   makeup and functioning of the real economy (production, services,   distribution, imports/exports, employment, spending on goods, services, and   investment, etc).  It gets most of the attention from conventional   analysts.  And there is the Financial Sphere, loosely embodying the   Credit system, financial and asset markets, and the financial system   generally.  Its dynamics are of critical significance today, although it   doesn’t fall within the context of most analytical frameworks and tends to be   ignored.  Credit inflation, by its very nature, is product of Financial   Sphere expansion.  Inflationary manifestations, on the other hand, are   both Financial Sphere and Economic Sphere phenomena, very much depending on   the interplay between the nature of the financial system and structure of the   real economy.  The types of predominant inflationary effects vary   considerably depending on commanding Monetary Processes and the structure of   the underlying economy, along with expectations for prices, business profits   and financial returns. I   believe that the Federal Reserve made a serious policy error when it   aggressively cut rates during the second-half of 2002 and held them at 1%   through the first-half of 2004.  And while I appreciate the conventional   Wall Street view that the global economy was facing a serious deflationary   risk, this threat was exaggerated.   Importantly, the King Dollar   Bubble was already in the process of bursting as the Fed initiated its   ultra-aggressive monetary stimulation.   I   argue strongly that King Dollar Monetary Processes had played an integral   role in shaping atypical Inflationary Manifestations during the 1999 to 2002   period - domestically as well as globally.  Historic Credit Inflation   was becoming deeply rooted throughout the U.S. Financial Sphere, although the   created liquidity/purchasing power was having its most pronounced effect on   U.S. asset markets - first technology stocks/telecom debt and later U.S.   bonds and housing.  Endemic asset inflation was nurturing an enormous   and aggressive speculator community, with contemporary finance commissioning   The Community with armaments of astounding sophistication and power. In   the Economic Sphere, there were three pronounced spending distortions:    a massive technology investment binge; a housing construction boom; and a   wealth-induced consumption boom.  The technology sector provided an   extraordinary (unprecedented?) opportunity for wildly inflated expenditures   to manifest without fomenting traditional inflationary pressures.  The   housing sector also provided an outlet for enormous new purchasing power,   with rising home prices and a construction boom also largely outside of   traditional inflation radar.  And exuberant homeowner could trade in his   Taurus for an Expedition, spend more on a bevy of services, communications,   technology, digital media and, of course, imported goods.  He could go “upscale”   on everything.  Core CPI was tame and safely out of the fray. The   Economic Sphere’s consumption boom was easily accommodated.    Domestically, the transformation to a services-based economy was well   underway (also helping buttress the U.S. economy from global manufacturing   strains).  The tech, telecom and media booms both promoted spending and   provided enormous capacity to absorb elevated expenditures (misdiagnosed as a   “productivity miracle”).  Foreign suppliers – especially Asian – had   both excess capacity (over-investment and tepid domestic demand) and a   hankering for King Dollars that only appreciated in value.  Asia was   still recovering from its devastating financial and economic crisis, while   Latin America was frantic to stave off a similar regional collapse.   King   Dollar offered much more than just a favorable Medium of Exchange for   imported goods and energy.  Bubble Dollars were being directly recycled   back to booming U.S. securities markets, with Monetary Processes inundating   U.S. markets with liquidity at the expense of markets and economies across   the globe.  What many interpreted as mounting deflationary pressures and   risks were, paradoxically, in realty Inflationary Manifestations engendered   by Credit Bubble dynamics and highly dysfunctional Monetary Processes.    But things were about to change and dramatically.   The   inevitable bursting of the King Dollar Bubble was to profoundly remake   Monetary Processes.  Liquidity from the unrelenting U.S. Credit Bubble   was poised to spread across the globe, although our mortgage lending excesses   guaranteed that global flows did in no way impinge domestic monetary   conditions (liquidity abundance).  The global liquidity onslaught would   stimulate economies, markets and prices generally, especially energy,   commodities and emerging securities markets that had borne the brunt of the   one-dimensional King Dollar monetary regime.  Additionally, the weaker   dollar would stimulate U.S. exports and fuel a major investment boom   throughout U.S. basic industry (that had been starved of finance during the   tech/telecom/Internet boom).  The falling dollar (recognizing the   ill-structured U.S. economy) would foster only more egregious Current Account   Deficits, ensuring that the liquidity spigot being opened to the world would   in no time overflow with excess.   Importantly,   the weak dollar and newfound global liquidity would increasingly provide great   leeway for domestic Credit systems (especially China and the emerging   markets) to expand (inflate), a rather abrupt reversal from the forced   discipline imposed by weak and vulnerable currencies and Credit systems.    Synchronized domestic Credit Inflations also buttressed the flagging   greenback, postponing a crisis that would have surely subverted Monetary   Processes and impaired Credit-creating mechanisms.  Wall Street   asset-based finance took strong hold throughout Europe and elsewhere. Here   at home, 1% Fed funds provided unneeded rocket fuel for a Mortgage Finance   Bubble already well-advanced and demonstrating an especially robust   inflationary bias.  Similarly, ultra-loose monetary policy pushed the   Global Leveraged Speculation Bubble to blow-off excesses.  Liquidity   flooded into the hedge fund community, only to come out the other side as   even greater (leveraged) liquidity.  Wall Street balance sheets   ballooned to finance customer trades and their own leveraged holdings.    The Credit default swap market became a frenzy of excess, supporting the   global boom in debt securities issuance.  An unparalleled Financial   Sphere inflation created liquidity more than sufficient to inflate asset   markets around the world. It   has been remarkable to observe pundits fixate on the deflation thesis   throughout history’s greatest Credit Inflation.  The Fed and   conventional analysts focused their inflation analysis on the Economic   Sphere.  For sure, a rather convincing argument was made that   productivity and globalization had forever altered inflation dynamics,   analysis that neglects the realty of changing Financial Sphere and Inflation   dynamics.  It also became popular to refer to inflated home and   securities values as “wealth creation.”  This was all well and good,   except for the reality of a massive and relentless Financial Sphere   Inflation. There   are myriad problems associated with uncontrolled Financial Sphere Inflations.    For one, conventional analysis completely ignores – is oblivious to - them.    When the prevailing Inflationary Manifestation happens to be rising asset   prices, there will be no constituency favorable to reining in Credit excess;   increasingly powerful interests will, instead, assure their survival.    As we have also witnessed, monetary authorities will be unwilling to even   acknowledge - let alone pierce - increasingly commanding Bubbles.    Meanwhile, the combination of abundant liquidity and inflating asset markets   ensure the amount of finance committed to speculative pursuits expands   exponentially (nurturing a ballooning pool of speculative finance and a   Global Liquidity Glut).  To accommodate Financial Sphere excess is to   ensure an escalating problem and future crisis. Protracted   Financial Sphere expansions transform perceptions and expectations.    Asset inflation is extrapolated and abundant marketplace liquidity is taken   as a given.  Optimistic assumptions on future spending patterns are made   and are embedded in the economic structure.  Most importantly - wait   long enough and the nature of Inflationary Manifestations will change.    Altered inflationary dynamics then catch investors, speculators,   businesspersons and policymakers totally unprepared.  Liquidity   conditions – so taken for granted during the boom – can change abruptly when   the highly leveraged players reverse positions.  When greed inevitably   turns to fear, there is no one able and willing to take the other side of   enormous speculative trades (a dynamic of critical issue today with the   explosion of speculative leveraging and derivative trading).  Debt   structures, built so confidently during the asset inflation, become   immediately suspect when pumped-up prices reverse.  In the Economic   Sphere, the post-Bubble pattern of spending can offer an abrupt and radical   departure from expectation.   It   is my view that we are in the early stage of some rather profound changes in   Inflationary Manifestations.  Not only is there today a Global Liquidity   Glut, U.S. securities markets are underperforming much of the rest of the   world.  Will the U.S. dollar and securities markets enjoy the   traditional benefit of safe-haven status come the next episode of global   financial tumult?  There is today global Marketplace Liquidity and   Credit Availability like never before.  Inflation expectations have   evolved to the point where businesses and governments around the world have   serious concerns regarding procuring necessary energy supplies (along with   other commodities).  Here at home, we are at the cusp of a full-fledged   energy crisis.  Policymakers, executives, business owners, and   households will now fear a cold winter, then a hot summer and another active   hurricane season and another winter...       Financial   Sphere expansion and Rooted Monetary Processes have for too long directed   cheap finance for the construction of too many large homes, too many   inefficient vehicles, and too much asset-inflation induced over-consumption.    Worse yet, unending Financial Sphere expansion is providing a horde of   purchasing power to global economies to compete against us for a limited supply   of energy resources.  Monetary Processes have fostered an economy that   consumes too much energy and produces too little, along with a global   liquidity environment conducive to price spikes and shortages.  It is   difficult to see this dynamic sustained for much longer.   Importantly,   prevailing Financial Sphere (Credit Bubble) Inflationary Manifestations are   being transmuted to the energy arena from the asset markets.  This   latest strain of inflation, by its nature, will feed directly through to   goods and services prices.  The longer it is accommodated by easy Credit   and liquidity, the greater the self-reinforcing “secondary effects.”    Heightened (traditional) inflation will promote various outlets of Credit   growth, along with wage and benefit cost pressures, while stimulating a range   of economic activity that will tend to underpin inflationary pressures   generally.   It   appears the Fed is quickly waking up to the risk.  Not only is the Fed   regrettably late to this recognition, the reality of the situation is that   rampant energy inflation is a global phenomena and issue.  Global   liquidity must be reined in, a task no longer accomplished by tinkering with   U.S. rates or even stabilizing the U.S. Current Account Deficit.   Here   at home, the challenge for the Fed was to actually tighten liquidity and   Credit conditions – to bridle the Financial Sphere expansion.  But the   Greenspan Fed – much to Wall Street’s satisfaction – focused on the Economic   Sphere and system fragility rather than the Financial Sphere’s overwhelming   inflationary bias.  Financial Sphere Bubble Dynamics assured that “measured   transparent baby-steps” was never going to work.  Instead, it   accommodated the Mortgage Financial Bubble blow-off, the Global Liquidity   Bubble, and the Great Global Energy Inflation.  Financial Sphere   expansion (note: growth in bank Credit, ABS, Wall Street balance sheets, “repos,”   hedge funds and foreign official reserves) went to dangerous blow-off   extremes and, hence, became much more difficult to control. To   what extent the Fed now recognizes its dilemma is unclear.  And while   the focus is on how high the Fed will (baby-step) push rates, this misses the   larger issue:  Financial Sphere expansion – The Credit Bubble – must be   reined in.  The mechanism creating the excess liquidity and Credit must   be checked; dysfunctional Monetary Processes must be broken; and speculative   impulses that have come to command liquidity dynamics in markets across the   globe must be quashed.  And if anyone has any notion that such a feat can   today be accomplished without major financial and economic disruption, I   suggest they read more financial history. Major   Financial Sphere Inflations are not amenable to slowdowns, let alone   reversals (faltering liquidity, de-leveraging, marketplace dislocation,   economic upheaval, etc.).  But let’s not get too far ahead of   developments.  The first order of business is to recognize that the U.S.   Credit system must redirect its emphasis.  There is now little   alternative than for our economy to devote significantly greater resources to   locating, extracting, producing, refining, researching, and conserving energy   resources.  Especially since there is little existing slack in the   Economic Sphere, the vast resources required for “Project Energy” must be   redirected from other sectors.  And it does not take rocket science to   see how the distended housing and household consumption sectors play into The   New Equation.  Not only are they currently gluttons for system   (Financial and Economic Sphere) resources, they are clearly integral aspects   of burgeoning inflation problem (too much energy consumption and too much   global liquidity). Housing   and retail stocks are signaling that an important inflection point has been   passed.  To some, developments point to a healthy moderation of growth   that will temper inflationary pressures and lend support to the bond market.    To others, the economy is at the edge of a cliff.  I’m not so convinced   of either.  Barring financial crisis, it will take some time (and   dislocation) before significant resources are redirected from the   housing/consumption boom.  In the meantime, the Time is of the Essence   Project Energy (not to mention hurricane recovery) will place increasing   demands on the system.  Those zestfully awaiting the bursting of the   housing Bubble for another (NASDAQ bursting-like) bond market gravy train may   instead face something much less hospitable.      There   are major Financial Sphere and Economic Sphere developments in the offing.    There’s too much Credit being created and much of it misallocated.    There is, as well, excessive and destabilizing speculation.  These   Credit Bubble facets - seemingly innocuous for quite some time - are finally   imparting conspicuously deleterious effects on an increasingly maladjusted   Economic Sphere.  For good reason, the Fed is getting nervous.  No   longer can Federal Reserve and Wall Street analysts simply ignore Financial   Sphere developments.  And global central bankers have at this point   surely given up hope that the Global Financial Sphere would commence the   process of returning to some semblance of order and sustainability with the   imminent slowdown in U.S. housing finance.  Not only has U.S. mortgage   growth accelerated this year, global central bankers are today facing the   prospect of a global energy crises and systemic liquidity-induced asset   Bubbles.  They now likely recognize that ultra-loose global monetary   conditions have lasted far too long and accommodated precarious excesses.     It’s   going to be a very interesting – and I’ll bet tumultuous - fourth quarter.     Central bankers are nervous connoting that the leveraged players are anxious.    And this week did have the feel that the leveraged speculating community “boat”   began again to rock back and forth a bit – the energy markets, the currencies,   global equities, gold…  And when the boat starts to rock and we know   that there are too many on the boat and too many all huddled together for   safekeeping, well – unexpected things are bound to happen. | 
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