|    The highflyers took   it on the chin at home and abroad… For the week, the Dow added 0.5%,   while the S&P500 slipped 0.4%. The Transports declined 1%, and the   Utilities were hit for 2.4%. The Morgan Stanley Cyclical index lost   0.9%, while the Morgan Stanley Consumer index added 0.9%. The small cap   Russell 2000 declined 1.6%, reducing y-t-d gains to 7.9%. The S&P400   Mid-cap index fell 1.9%. Technology stocks were under pressure. The   NASDAQ100 fell 2%, and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index lost 2.4%. The   Semiconductors were hit for 6.6%, reducing 2006 gains to 4.8%. The   Street.com Internet Index dipped 0.6%, and the NASDAQ Telecommunications   index slipped 0.5% (up 15.4% y-t-d). The Biotechs dropped 3%. Financial   stocks were mixed. The hot Broker/Dealers cooled 3.3% (up 11.1% y-t-d),   while the Banks added 0.4%. With bullion sinking $24.35, the HUI gold   index dropped 8.3%. Yield curve   speculators had their hands full… For the week, two-year US Treasury   yields dipped 1.5 bps to 4.73%. Five-year government yields rose 6 bps   to 4.77%, and bellwether 10-year Treasury yields jumped 8 bps to 4.76%. Long-bond   yields rose 9 bps to 4.75%. The 2yr/10yr curve steepened about 9 bps   this week, leaving the spread between 2 and 10-year yields at a positive 3   bps. Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields rose 4 bps to 5.93%, this week   nicely outperforming Treasuries. The spread on Fannie’s 4 5/8% 2014 note   was little changed at 34.5, and the spread on Freddie’s 5% 2014 note was   about unchanged at 36. The 10-year dollar swap spread declined one to   53.75. Investment-grade spreads narrowed slightly and junk spreads   narrowed moderately. The implied yield on 3-month December ’06   Eurodollars rose 4 bps to 5.195%.           Investment grade   issuers included Wachovia $3.0 billion, DaimlerChrysler $2.5 billion,   Honeywell $1.25 billion, Nissan Motors $1.0 billion, Caterpillar $500   million, Con Edison $400 million, Kimco $300 million, Dun & Bradstreet   $300 million, Anheuser Busch $300 million, Nationwide Life $250 million, and   Equity One $125 million.  March 7 – Moody’s: “The   slack pace of bond defaults globally sent corporate default rates to   near record lows in February, Moody’s Investors Service reported… Moody’s   global speculative-grade default rate fell to 1.6% in February from 1.8% in   January, its lowest level since 1997. Following the global trend, Moody’s   European speculative-grade default rate dropped to 0% in February.” Junk issuers   included Alliant Techsystems $400 million, Level 3 $400 million, Levi Strauss   $350 million, and Serena Software $200 million. Convertible issuance   is heating up. This week issuers included Informatica $200 million,   Coherent $175 million, and Albany International $150 million.    Foreign dollar debt   issuers included Vodafone $1.85 billion, Penerbangan Malaysia $1.0 billion,   Commercial Bank of Australia $700 million and Korea Midland Power $200   million.  March 9 – Financial   Times (Steve Johnson): “Cash-laden Asian and Middle Eastern central   banks are poised to invest billions of dollars in emerging market debt,   says Jerome Booth, head of research at London-based Ashmore Investment   Management. Mr Booth counts a number of central banks among his clients at   Ashmore, which manages $18bn in emerging market funds. He believes several   banks are about to invest heavily in developing nations in order to raise   returns and diversify away from the dollar. ‘We have central banks as   clients, and we know they are going to put billions of dollars into emerging   market debt. They are starting from zero…This is predominantly coming out of   Asia and the Middle East. That is where the excess reserves are.’” Japanese 10-year JGB   yields rose 3 bps this week to 1.65%, as the Nikkei 225 index rose 3%   (unchanged y-t-d).  The darling emerging debt and equity markets were   under selling pressure this week. Brazil’s benchmark dollar bond yields   rose 21 bps to 6.51%. Brazil’s Bovespa equity index dropped 6% (up 10.3%   y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa declined 4%, with y-t-d gains falling to 3.5%. Mexico's   10-year govt. yields jumped 17 bps to 5.78%. Russian 10-year dollar   Eurobond yields rose 5 bps to 6.72%.  The Russian RTS equity index sank   8%, reducing 2006 gains to 20%. India’s Sensex equity index rose 1.6%   this week to a new record (up 14.5% y-t-d). Freddie Mac posted   30-year fixed mortgage rates jumped 13 bps to 6.37%, up 52 basis points from   one year ago. Fifteen-year fixed mortgage rates rose 11 bps to 6.00% (up   62 bps in a year), to the highest level since June 2002. One-year   adjustable rates increased 11 bps to 5.45%, an increase of 121 basis points   from one year ago to the highest level since September 2001. The   Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Applications Index dipped 0.4% last   week. Purchase Applications were down 11.8% from one year ago, with   dollar volume declining 6.4%.   Refi applications were up 2.6%. The   average new Purchase mortgage increased to $234,100, and the average ARM   jumped to $348,200. Broad money supply   (M3) jumped $28.3 billion to a record $10.361 Trillion (week of Feb. 27). Year-to-date,   M3 has expanded $150.9 billion, or 8.5% annualized. Over 52 weeks, M3   inflated $823 billion, or 8.6%. For the week, Currency added $0.6   billion. Demand & Checkable Deposits gained $11.2 billion. Savings   Deposits fell $13.4 billion, while Small Denominated Deposits added $3.5 billion. Retail   Money Fund deposits increased $5.4 billion, and Institutional Money Fund   deposits surged $23.1 billion (up 9.3% annualized y-t-d). Large   Denominated Deposits dipped $0.9 billion. Over the past 52 weeks, Large   Time Deposits were up $257 billion, or 22.2%. For the week, Repurchase   Agreements dropped $6.7 billion. Eurodollar deposits rose $5.5 billion.         Bank Credit expanded   $24.1 billion last week to a record $7.661 Trillion, with a y-t-d gain of   $155 billion, or 11.9% annualized. Over the past   year, Bank Credit inflated $687 billion, or 9.8%. For the week,   Securities Credit jumped $15.7 billion. Loans & Leases were up 11.8%   over the past 52 weeks, with Commercial & Industrial (C&I) Loans up   15.2%. For the week, C&I loans added $0.6 billion, while Real Estate   loans declined $4.1 billion. Real Estate loans have expanded at a   9.9% rate y-t-d and were up 12.8% during the past 52 weeks. For the   week, Consumer loans jumped $14.3 billion, while Securities loans declined   $4.8 billion. Other loans added $2.4 billion.    Total Commercial   Paper declined $7.6 billion last week to $1.696 Trillion. Total CP is up   $47.3 billion y-t-d (10wks), or 14.9% annualized, while having expanded $252   billion over the past 52 weeks (17.4%). Last week, Financial Sector CP   borrowings declined $5.6 billion to $1.560 Trillion (up $51.7bn y-t-d), with   a 52-week gain of $256 billion, or 19.7%. Non-financial CP dipped $2.0   billion to $136.5 billion, with a 52-week decline of 3.1%.  Total asset-backed   securities (ABS) issuance slowed to $12 billion (from JPMorgan), with Home   Equity Loan (HEL) ABS issuance at $10 billion this week. Year-to-date   total ABS issuance of $139 billion is 12% ahead of 2005’s record pace, with   the $95 billion y-t-d HEL issuance running 20% above last year. Fed Foreign Holdings   of Treasury, Agency Debt (“US marketable securities held by the NY Fed in   custody for foreign official and international accounts”) jumped $11.9   billion to a record $1.560 Trillion for the week ended March 8. “Custody”   holdings are up $72.6 billion y-t-d, or 24.9% annualized, and $211.4 billion   (15.3%) over the past 52 weeks. Federal Reserve Credit declined $5.4   billion last week. Fed Credit has declined $11.0 billion y-t-d, or 6.9%   annualized, to $815.4 billion. Fed Credit expanded 4.9% during the past   year.  International   reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg’s Alex Tanzi –   were up $457 billion, or 12.2%, over the past 12 months to a record $4.203   Trillion.   March 8 – Bloomberg   (Yanping Li): “China’s foreign-exchange reserves rose $26.8 billion   in January to reach $845 billion, Great Wall Securities said in a   research note published in the official China Securities Journal, citing   central bank data.” March 9 – Financial   Times (Ralph Atkins): “Asian countries’ rapid and ‘unprecedented’   accumulation of foreign reserves is heightening the dangers of inflation and   asset bubbles, the European Central Bank has warned. World foreign   exchange reserves have tripled in the past decade to more than $4,000bn last   year, with the rate of increase accelerating in the past few years. As a   result, a series of ‘risks and costs’ could materialize, with implications   for the global economy, the ECB concluded…” Currency Watch: The dollar index   rose 1.4% this week. Last year's strong currencies were among this week’s   biggest losers. On the downside, the Iceland krona fell 6.3%, the New   Zealand dollar 3.6%, the Polish zloty 3.3%, the Canadian dollar 2.3%, and the   Japanese yen 2.2%.     Commodities Watch: March 8 – Bloomberg (Danielle Rossingh): “Global sugar production will fall short of demand this year by twice as much as initially expected, the International Sugar Organization said, citing declining stockpiles and growing demand in Russia. The shortfall will be 2.225 million metric tons in 2005/06, the London-based ISO said in a report late yesterday…” Commodities were   generally under heavy liquidation. April crude oil sank $3.71 to $59.96. April   Unleaded Gasoline fell 3%, while April Natural Gas declined 2%. For the   week, the CRB index dropped 3.6% (y-t-d down 3.7%). The Goldman Sachs   Commodities index fell 3.7% this week, extending the 2006 decline to   4.1%.  Japan Watch: March 8 – Bloomberg   (Lily Nonomiya): “Japan’s banks increased lending for the first time in   more than nine years, adding to evidence that growth in the world’s   second-biggest economy will end deflation. Loans rose 0.2 percent in February   from a year earlier, the Bank of Japan said… The value of loans has fallen by   more than a fifth since the central bank started tracking the figure in 1991.” March 6 – Bloomberg   (Lily Nonomiya): “Japanese companies increased capital spending for the   eleventh quarter, signaling corporate expansion will help sustain growth in   the world’s second-largest economy. Capital spending including software rose   9.5 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier…” March 9 – Bloomberg   (Kathleen Chu): “Office vacancies in Tokyo fell last month to their   lowest since October 2001, as demand continues to outstrip supply, according   to a report by real estate broker Miki Shoji Co. The vacancy rate in Tokyo’s   five main business districts…declined for the eighth straight month to 3.67   percent…” China Watch: March 8 – China   Knowledge: “According to the results of a survey conducted by Manpower,   an international human resource solution provider, 24% of the companies in   China and more than 40% of the companies worldwide are facing a talent   shortage, as reported by China Business News.” March 7 – China Knowledge: “According to the latest statistics   released by the Hong Kong government, Hong Kong's retail sales reached   HK$21.2 billion in January, up 11.6% compared with the same period in 2005…” March 6 – Bloomberg   (Rob Delaney and Wing-Gar Cheng): “China will begin storing strategic   oil reserves at the end of this year, after finishing the first of four   government storage facilities, said Ma Kai, chairman of the National   Development and Reform Commission. Remaining strategic reserve   facilities will be completed in 2007 and 2008, Ma said at a press conference   in Beijing today. The country’s current oil reserves are controlled by   private enterprise, Ma said.” March 6 – Bloomberg   (Rob Delaney): “China aims to control ‘soaring’ property prices to   address complaints from people unable to buy homes, Zhu Zhixin, deputy   commissioner of the National Development and Reform Commission, said. ‘The   soaring property prices -- and in some regions and localities there is   serious market disorder -- are a focus of public complaints,’ Zhu told reporters…” Asia Boom Watch: March 10 – Bloomberg   (Sam Nagarajan): “India’s foreign-exchange reserves rose by $1.56   billion to $143.15 billion in the week ended March 3, the nation’s central   bank said…” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Theresa Tang): “Taiwan’s exports rose at the fastest pace in a year in   February because of distortions caused by the timing of the Lunar New Year   holiday. Overseas sales rose 26 percent from a year earlier to $15.5 billion   after gaining 4.5 percent in January…” March 7 – Bloomberg (Stephanie   Phang): “Malaysia’s exports grew in January at the slowest pace in four   months as Lunar New Year holidays disrupted shipping activities. Exports rose   11.7 percent from a year earlier to 43.6 billion ringgit ($11.8 billion),   after a gain of 13.2 percent in December…” Unbalanced Global   Economy Watch: March 10 – Bloomberg   (Theophilos Argitis and Alexandre Deslongchamps): “Canada’s jobless rate   unexpectedly fell in February, matching a three-decade low, and labor costs   increased at the fastest pace in five years last quarter as an oil boom in   Alberta spurred demand for workers. The unemployment rate dropped to 6.4   percent…” March 9 – Financial   Times (Deborah Brewster): “Sotheby’s had its best year in 2005 for at   least 15 years as the art market boomed, fuelled in part by new Asian and   Russian buyers. Sotheby’s yesterday said it sold $2.75bn in art last year,   generating revenue of $513.5m and an 85 per cent rise in net income to $63m.   Sales this year show prices continuing to rise across the board. ‘Worldwide   sales to date [this year] have been exceptional,’ the group said. Sotheby’s   and Christie’s together sold a record $451m of artworks at last month’s main   London sales.” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Simon Kennedy): “Inflation in the 30-nation Organization for Economic   Cooperation and Development accelerated in January as energy prices gained.   Consumer prices rose 3 percent from a year ago, higher than 2.7 percent in   December…” March 9 – Bloomberg   (Brian Swint): “The European Central Bank said interest rates are still ‘very   low’ after it raised borrowing costs for the second time in three months last   week. ‘Interest rates across the entire maturity spectrum still remain at   very low levels in both nominal and real terms,’ the Frankfurt-based central   bank said in its monthly report published today. ‘The evidence suggests that   economic activity is improving.’” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Jacob Greber): “Switzerland’s unemployment rate unexpectedly fell in   February to the lowest in almost three years as an accelerating economy   prompted employers to hire more workers. The jobless rate fell to 3.5 percent…” March 9 – Bloomberg   (Jonas Bergman): “Swedish industrial production in January rose 1.7   percent, climbing for a second month, as orders posted their biggest monthly   gain since November 2001. Production climbed 5.9 percent from a year earlier…” March 9 – Bloomberg   (Tasneem Brogger): “Denmark’s jobless rate unexpectedly dropped to 5   percent in January, the lowest in 30 years, the statistics office said today.” March 9 – Bloomberg   (Marketa Fiserova): “The Czech economy grew 6.9 percent in the last   three months of 2005, the fastest pace in at least a decade, as exports grew   more than twice faster than imports.” Latin America   Watch: March 7 – Bloomberg   (Matthew Walter): “Chile’s trade surplus in February nearly doubled from   a year ago, as prices for copper, the country’s top export, rose to records. The   country’s trade surplus rose to $1.04 billion…” March 6 – Bloomberg   (Matthew Walter): “Chile’s economy grew 5.5 percent in January from a   year earlier as manufacturing expanded at its fastest pace in nine months and   prices for copper, the country’s top export, rose to records.” Bubble Economy   Watch: January’s Trade   Deficit was reported at a record $68.5 billion, up from the year ago $58.3   billion. Goods Exports were up 14.4% from January 2005 to a record $81.7   billion, while Goods Imports rose 15.8% to a record $155.1 billion. February’s   job creation (243k) was strong and broad based. And the month’s 3.5% y-o-y   gain in Average Hourly Earnings was the strongest since September 2001. Fourth-quarter   Unit Labor Costs were up 3.3% annualized, with Productivity down 0.5%. March 7 – Bloomberg   (Claudia Hirsch): “U.S. hiring activity grew at a healthy clip in February   and wages continued to trend higher, led by recovery in the manufacturing   sector, staffing executives said. Personnel professionals in all regions   reported labor conditions tightening by varying degrees… Manufacturing growth   drove hiring in most other areas, where pay climbed for skilled workers in   particular. Executive recruiting was also energetic.” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Courtney Schlisserman): “U.S. taxpayers have received an average income   tax refund of $2,480 so far this year, up 4.6 percent from the same time in   2005.” March 8 – The Wall   Street Journal (David Rogers): “As the U.S. enters its fourth year in   Iraq this month, the annual cost of military operations is growing -- even as   the Pentagon assumes the number of troops there will shrink. Monthly   expenditures are running at $5.9 billion; the U.S. commitment in Afghanistan   adds roughly another $1 billion. Taken together, annual spending for the two   wars will reach $117.6 billion for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 -- 18%   above funding for the prior 12 months. That escalation reflects the fact   that America's military today is a higher-cost war machine than the one that   fought in Vietnam decades ago.” March 9 –   CNNMoney.com: “The number of billionaires surged this year, as did their   collective pile of cash, according to Forbes magazine's annual billionaire   list. The magazine said the number of billionaires worldwide increased   by 102 people in 2006 to 793, a record number, largely due to bullish global   stock markets. Their total net worth jumped 18 percent to $2.6 trillion…New   York seemed to be the hot spot for the super rich, attracting 40   billionaires, followed by Moscow with 25 and London with 23…” March 8 – Bloomberg   (Josh P. Hamilton): “New York City private sector jobs grew by a revised   1.8 percent over the 12 months ending in January, double the long-term   average rate, as financial services companies added workers, the state Labor   Department said. Nongovernmental employers in the U.S.’s largest city boosted   their payrolls by 52,600 in the 12-month period, to 3,029,400.” Mortgage Finance   Bubble Watch: March 10 – Bloomberg   (Al Yoon): “Freddie Mac, the second-biggest source of money for U.S.   residential loans, said it delayed the release of 2005 financial data until   May, disappointing analysts who expected the company to complete a three-year   accounting overhaul this month. The company last year said it would deliver   its 2005 earnings report by the end of March…” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Al Yoon): “U.S. mortgage-backed bond investors are at greater risk of   homeowner defaults in coming years amid an increase in lending to riskier   borrowers, according to a report by the Bank for International Settlements.   Mortgages considered below prime backed more than three-quarters of debt sold   by companies other than government-chartered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, up   from less than half in 2001, the report released today said.” Energy and Crude   Liquidity Watch: March 5 – Bloomberg   (Alice Ratcliffe): “Oil exporting countries deposited a record $82   billion with banks worldwide in the third quarter, the Bank for International   Settlements said. Deposits from oil exporters, as well as from some   central banks in Asia, contributed to an overall net outflow of $40 billion   from emerging markets in the third quarter, the Basel, Switzerland-based BIS   said in its quarterly report.” March 8 – Bloomberg   (Joe Carroll): “Exxon Mobil Corp., the world’s largest oil company,   plans a 13 percent increase in capital spending this year to lift reserves   and help meet a target of 23 percent output growth by 2010. Spending will   rise to $20 billion and stay near that level annually through 2010…” March 7 – Bloomberg   (Joe Carroll and Sonja Franklin): “Chevron Corp., the second-largest   U.S. oil company, plans to increase capital spending by 8 percent next year   to $16 billion to help meet a target of more than 3 percent annual production   growth through 2010.” Fiscal Deficit   Watch: February’s federal   deficit jumped to $119.2 billion, the largest ever for one month (according   to Bloomberg’s Kevin Carmichael and Vincent Del Giudice). Fiscal y-t-d   Receipts (5 months) of $873 billion are running 10.5% ahead of last year,   with Individual Income Tax receipts up 10.8% and Corporate Income Taxes up   29.6%. At $1.090 Trillion, Total y-t-d Spending is 7.6% ahead of fiscal   2005.  March 7 – Dow Jones   (John Connor): “Estimating that the U.S. incurred a budget deficit of   $219 billion in the first five months of fiscal-year 2006, the Congressional   Budget Office said outlays for net interest on the national debt were up 28%   in this period from a year earlier. The budget office projected that   outlays for net interest will be about 20% higher at the end of the fiscal   year than they were last year… Net interest outlays for the first five months   of the fiscal year were estimated at $92 billion, compared with $72 billion a   year earlier.” Speculator Watch: March 7 –   PRNewswire: “The world’s media wrote about hedge funds a record 39,989   times in 2005, a 43% jump from 2004 and more than six times as often as in   2000, according to…new research from Walek & Associates… ‘More than 100   times a day the world's press writes about hedge funds and their influence   and insights in M&A, corporate governance, trading, investing and other   core areas of the global economy," said Thomas Walek, President of Walek   & Associates…” Q4 2005 “Flow of   Funds:” There is no mystery   surrounding strong job creation, rising wage pressures, continued robust   consumer spending, the resilient U.S. (Bubble) and global economies, rising   bond yields, record U.S. trade deficits, over-liquefied and highly   speculative international markets, or recent heightened global financial   instability. Just take a close examination of the Fed’s most recent   Z.1 “Flow of Funds” report. It’s a dandy. A record fourth   quarter concluded a historic year for the U.S. Credit system.  During the   quarter, Total (Financial and Non-Financial) Credit Market Debt (TCMD)   expanded by a seasonally-adjusted and annualized record $3.827 Trillion, a   growth rate of 10.1% (vs. Q3 2005’s $3.197TN and Q4 2004’s $3.095TN). For   all of 2005, TCMD expanded $3.340 Trillion to $40.230 Trillion, with   debt growth up more than $500 billion compared to 2004’s record increase   ($2.818TN). For comparison, Annual Total Credit Market Debt Growth   averaged $1.237 Trillion during the nineties. Bubble Dynamics are   conspicuous in the data and, in particular, take note throughout this   analysis of the progressive nature of Credit expansion.  TCMD   expanded $1.667TN during 2000, $1.929TN in 2001, $2.213TN in 2002, $2.713TN   in 2003, and $2.818TN in 2004. One has to go all   the way back to 1986 to surpass 2005’s 9.5% rate of expansion in   Non-Financial Debt. At a record $2.295 Trillion, Non-Financial Debt   expanded at more than three times the nineties average ($710bn). Non-Financial   Debt expanded $839bn during 2000, $1.117TN in 2001, $1.316TN in 2002,   $1.608TN in 2003, and $1.948TN in 2004. Total Household Borrowings expanded   11.7% during 2005, the fastest pace since emerging from prolonged stagnation back   in 1985. Total Business Debt expanded at the fastest pace (7.8%) since   2000. State & Local Debt expanded 10.6% during 2005, and Federal   government borrowings grew 7.0%. Not surprisingly,   the Mortgage Finance Bubble went to only greater ("blow-off")extremes. Total   Mortgage Debt (TMD) expanded an astounding $1.470 Trillion last year (14.0%).  To put this number into perspective, it is five and one-half times the   average annual mortgage debt growth during the nineties ($267bn). TMD   expanded $546bn during 2000, $661bn in 2001, $822bn in 2002, $990bn in 2003,   and $1.238TN in 2004. TMD ballooned 29% in just two years ($2.708 TN)   and more than doubled in seven (up 107%). TMD increased to a record   96% of GDP during 2005, up from the 67% to commence Year 2000 and   51% back in 1982. Household Mortgage Debt expanded a record $1.133TN, or   14.1%, up from 2004’s record $992 billion growth and compared to the nineties   average of $230 billion. Commercial Mortgage Debt expanded a record   $266 billion, or 15.6%, to $1.968TN. This is ten times the $26   billion nineties annual average Commercial Mortgage Debt growth. Financial Sector   Credit Market Debt expanded 8.2%, up from 2004’s 7.4%, although keep in   mind that this Credit aggregate excludes bank deposits (non-market debt). The   Banking sector enjoyed banner growth. Bank Credit expanded 10.1% to   $7.459 Trillion, the strongest rate of growth since 1985. In nominal   dollars, Bank Credit increased $686 billion, up sharply from 2004’s record   $571 billion and the $215 billion averange from the nineties. Bank   Credit posted a two-year gain of $1.257TN, or 20.3%. Bank Loans grew   11.6% ($558bn) over the past year and 21.8% ($963bn) over two years, with   Mortgage loans up 14.0% ($363bn) and 31.1% ($702bn) to $2.958TN. Corporate   Bond (including ABS) holdings increased 22.8% during the year to $688   billion (up 43% in 2yrs), while Government Securities holdings were little   changed over the past year (down 1.6%) and up only 4.7% over two years. And what new   financial claims/Credit instruments were created in the process of financing   this spectacular Bank Credit inflation? Well, Total Deposits expanded   $461 billion, or 9.2%, to $5.489TN, with a historic two-year gain of $974.1   billion, or 21.6%. Saving Deposits increased $271 billion (8.3%) to   $3.531TN and Large Time Deposits grew $226 billion (20.2%) to $1.347TN. Large   Time Deposits surged 44.2% over two years. The Liability “Federal   Funds and Securities Repos (net)” expanded 12% during 2005 to $1.091TN, and   Credit Instrument Liabilities increased 11.5% to $824 billion. Bond   Liabilities expanded 13% to $494 billion. “Structured Finance”   (combined GSE, MBS and ABS) bounced back from a relatively slow 2004 (5.5%   growth) to expand 8.1%, to $9.542TN. A small contraction (down 2.3%) in   GSE assets and meager growth in agency MBS (up 3.8%) was more than offset by   a historic expansion of the Asset-backed Securities (ABS) marketplace. ABS   expanded $200 billion during the fourth quarter (28% annual.) and $646   billion for the year, or 26.7%, to $3.059TN. ABS increased $971 billion,   or 46.5%, in just two years and is up almost 130% so far this decade. Examining   ABS assets, Mortgage holdings increased $717 billion during 2005 (111% of   asset growth). And after ending 2002 with Mortgages comprising 42% of ABS   pool assets, this ratio surged to 70% by the end of 2005.         The Securities   Broker/Dealer community boom runs unabated. Total Assets expanded in   2005 by a record $299 billion, or 16.2%, to $2.144TN. This compares to   average annual growth of $76 billion during the nineties. Broker/Dealer   Assets surged 33% ($531bn) in two years and 61% ($809bn) in just three years. On   the Asset side, Credit Market Instrument holdings were up 23% last year to   $486 billion. Miscellaneous Assets surged $226 billion (23%) to   $1.220TN, with a two-year gain of 42%. Corporate Bond holdings increased   $85 billion (34%) to $338 billion, while both the Treasury and Agency/GSE MBS   categories posted small contractions. On the Liability side, Repos   surged $209 billion (40%) to $736 billion. Security Credit gained $24   billion (3%) to $798 billion. “Due Affiliates” jumped $104 billion   during the year (14%) to $835 billion. Elsewhere, Money   Market Funds (MMF) posted their first year of growth since 2001. MMF   Assets increased $130 billion during the fourth quarter (27.8% annual.) and   $127 billion for the year, or 6.8%, to $2.007TN. Fed Funds and Repos   expanded $361 billion during the year, or 21.8%, to $2.011TN. “Funding   Corp” Assets were up 15.7% for the year to $1.488TN. Savings Institution   Liabilities expanded $140 billion, or 8.9%, to $1.789TN, with a notable   two-year gain of 22%. Credit Union Assets expanded 4.7% to $686 billion,   while Finance Company Assets contracted 8.4% to $1.335TN. Real Estate   Investment Trust (REIT) Liabilities surged 26.5% to $581 billion, with a   two-year gain of 86%. Life Insurance Assets expanded $250 billion, or   6.1%, during the year to $4.381TN. As goes the U.S.   Current Account Deficit, so go Rest of World (ROW) holdings of our assets. For   the year, ROW holdings of U.S. Financial Assets surged $1.318TN to $11.154TN,   with a stunning (and unfathomable) two-year gain of $2.774TN (33%). Of   this, Total Credit Market holdings jumped $896 billion during the year to   $5.576TN, with a two-year gain of $1.657TN, or 42%.  ROW Treasury   holdings increased $298 billion to $2.198TN, absorbing essentially all of   2005 Treasury issuance ($307bn). Agency holdings jumped $172 billion to   $934 billion, significantly more than the new Agency debt issued during the   year ($51bn). Holdings of U.S. Corporate Bonds (includes ABS) jumped a   record $351 billion to $2.103 Trillion, while holdings of U.S. Equities   increased $86 billion to $2.304TN. Over the past year, Foreign Direct   Investment (FDI) rose $20 billion to $1.820TN. During the past four   years, FDI increased $366 billion, while U.S. Corporate Bond holdings   ballooned $987 billion and U.S. Equity holdings increased $237 billion (47%).    Once again, the   Household (and Non-profit) Sector Balance Sheet provides a wealth of Credit   Bubble insight. Household Liabilities expanded at a 12.9% rate during   the fourth quarter and increased $1.181TN, or 11.0%, for the year to   $11.916TN. Household Liabilities were up 24.1% in two years and 50.7% in   four. Yet, during 2005 Household (“perceived”) wealth inflated almost five   times the nominal amount of increased Household debt. For the year,   Household Assets surged $5.038TN, or 8.5%, to a record $64.023TN. Real   Estate Holdings jumped $2.803TN last year (14.9%) to $21.580TN, after   inflating $2.304TN (14.0%) during 2004, $1.490TN (9.9%) in 2003, and $1.253TN   (9.1%) in 2002. Household Real Estate holdings were up $7.850TN, or   57%, in four years. During 2005, Financial Asset holdings increased   $2.036TN, or 5.6%. Deposits Assets jumped $433 billion (7.9%) to   $5.888TN. Credit Market Instrument holdings gained $53 billion (2%) to   $2.733TN. Mutual Fund Shares gained $256 billion to $4.208TN and “Equity   of non-corporate business” jumped $850 billion to $6.678TN.  With Household   Assets last year inflating $5.038TN and Household Liabilities increasing   $1.181TN, Household Net Worth jumped $3.857TN during the year to a record   $52.107TN (down somewhat from 2004’s $4.418TN expansion   in Net Worth). In only three years, Household Net Worth has inflated   $13.033TN, or 33%. This significantly surpassed the - at the time - unprecedented   $11.904TN Bubble wealth surge in the years 1997 through 1999.  Household   Net Worth ended the year at 417% of GDP, up from 1995’s 351% and 1985’s 335%.  Government inflows   and outflows provide another vantage point to view the current inflationary   environment. Federal Government Receipts jumped 12.1% during calendar   2005 to $2.303TN, with a two-year gain of 23%. Federal Expenditures were   up 7.7% during 2005 to a record $2.613TN, with a two-year rise of 16.1%. State   & Local Receipts were up 5.7% to a record $1.719TN, with a two-year gain   of 15.4%. S&L Expenditures jumped 6.8% during 2005 to $1.732TN, with   a two-year gain of 14.5%  We are witnessing –   both in the Fed’s “flow of funds” and with real world flows of finance - the   consequences of many years of unrestrained asset and speculative-based Credit   growth. The current explosion of non-productive Credit Inflation   literally required decades of (U.S. and global) Financial Sphere and Economic   Sphere “evolution.” It has been amazing to me that the economic   community has generally disregarded the monumental changes that have   transformed both finance and the nature of economic output. Instead of   thoughtful and judicious analysis, carelessness conquered and repressed. It   is a New Era, they preach to us. Credit growth doesn’t matter; Current   Account Deficits don’t matter; mushrooming leveraged speculation and   derivatives markets are healthy for the system; inflation has been pulverized   and the Fed has complete and masterful control of both THE price level and   the economy's growth rate.   As diligently as I   have tried, my analytical efforts have been futile. It has been more   than a challenging exercise to explain in real-time the various corrosive   aspects of Credit and Asset Inflation, as well as the highly deleterious   effects of Credit Bubble “Blow-offs.” It has been a struggle to   comprehend and illuminate the characteristics of a Credit system where the   demand for borrowings has minimal impact on the price of (unlimited) finance. My   view of the great risks associated with asset markets and economies distorted   by leveraged speculation-based liquidity has gained few adherents. Even   subsequent to the spectacular technology boom and bust, the analysis that   booming corporate profits and cash-flows are a Credit Bubble Phenomenon   simply hasn’t resonated one iota. It has been virtually impossible for   me to elucidate why ongoing enormous huge consumer sector debt growth and the   disappearance of “savings” is problematic. Ditto the notion that Credit   Bubble-induced wealth disparities and unjust wealth redistributions will   eventually lead to myriad animosities and backlashes, including sentiments   supportive of “protectionism” and antagonistic to free markets. I   have never adequately made the case why it is so vital for our nation to be   much more self-sufficient. As easy as it seems   that it should have been, I don’t feel I effectively countered the absolute   nonsense that our Current Account Deficit is driven by unrelenting global “capital”   inflows. And I have not even come close to shedding light on the reality   that unchecked – and inevitably unwieldy and unstable - global finance has   been a commanding force within what the New Paradigm crowd trumpets as virtuous   free-market “globalization.”  Why then, you may   question, do I suspect that Credit Bubble-like analysis will garner more   attention going forward? Well, I believe the Fed and global central   bankers may finally comprehend that they are facing a very serious problem –   that Credit and speculative excesses begetting greater excess demand a true   tightening of global financial conditions. Importantly, hope that a   cooling housing market will obligingly chill the Bubbling U.S. economy is   fading rapidly. As the “Flow of Funds” confirmed, the Credit system is   currently firing on all cylinders and the Bubble economy has a full head of   steam. The U.S. Current Account and Global Imbalances are poised to only   worsen, fueled by Bubble dynamics that now command Credit systems and asset   markets around the globe. Expectations for a slowing U.S. are shifting   to fears of a runaway Global (Credit) Boom.  The U.S. Bubble   economy has had years to adjust and adapt to a progressive rise in Credit   growth and liquidity. I do not expect a bust to manifest first in the   real economy. The Economic Sphere comfortably absorbed $3.3 Trillion of   new Credit growth during 2005, and I see little reason why it couldn’t muster   the same with, say, upwards of $4 Trillion this year. But boy is that   Global Pool of Finance Ballooning - today exponentially. The resulting   Asset Inflation, Bubbles and Imbalances were problematic last year, and they   are destined to be much more so this year.  The Wildly Inflating   Global Financial Sphere is the key issue today; it will likely remain the key   issue until it cracks. Massive Credit inflation may flow effortlessly   through contemporary real economies, but the residual is an Accumulating   Elephantine Pool of Unwieldy Global Finance, much of it in the hands (directly   and indirectly) of an aggressive international leveraged speculating   community. With a notably more hawkish (collaborative) tone from the   Fed, the ECB, and even the BOJ, global speculative finance has passed a key   inflection point.  The more highflying   and speculative markets around the world have suffered their first serious   downdraft in some time. Perhaps, even a bit of fear has begun to   supplant what has been copious greed. Have liquidity conditions begun to   change – are we seeing meaningful de-leveraging - or will this prove more a   case of a pause that refreshes over-liquefied speculative impulses? Will   the powerful speculator community call the central bankers' bluff? I   will not venture a guess as to whether we have been observing the initial “piercing”   of The Global Speculative Finance Bubble. But I will continue to suggest that   we have entered a much more volatile and uncertain market environment across   virtually all asset classes, the Problematic Terminal Bubble Phase where   underlying fragilities and vulnerabilities begin to emerge.  |