|    Global   stocks and bonds benefited from overly abundant liquidity.  For the   week, the Dow gained 2.2%, and the S&P500 gained 1.9%.  The   Transports were on the defensive, slipping 0.8%.  The Utilities rose   1.4%, and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index added 1.6%.  The Morgan   Stanley Cyclical index increased 1.3%.  The broader market was strong.    The small cap Russell 2000 gained 2.2%, and the S&P400 Mid-cap index   increased 1.8%.  Technology stocks performed well.  The NASDAQ100   added 2.2%, the Morgan Stanley High Tech index 2.3%, and the Semiconductors   3.1%.  The Street.com Internet and NASDAQ Telecommunications indices   gained 2.5%.  The Biotechs rose 1.9%, increasing y-t-d gains to 18.7%.    Financial stocks were mixed.  The Broker/Dealers jumped 3.3%, while the   Banks could muster only 0.5%.  With bullion up $4.80 to a 9-month high   $449.20, the HUI gold index gained 3.5%. A   little reality returned to the bond market.  For the week, two-year   Treasury yields jumped 12 basis points to 3.87%, and five-year government   yields rose 10 basis points to 3.94%.  Ten-year Treasury yields rose 9   basis points for the week to 4.12%.  Long-bond yields added 11 basis   points to 4.40%.  The spread between 2 and 10-year government yields   narrowed 3 to 25 basis points.  Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields rose 9   basis points, in line with 10-year Treasuries. The spread (to 10-year   Treasuries) on Fannie’s 4 5/8% 2014 note narrowed 1.5 basis points to 29.5,   and the spread on Freddie’s 5% 2014 note narrowed one basis point to 30.    The 10-year dollar swap spread declined 1.25 to 42.75.  Corporate bond   spreads generally narrowed.  Junk bond spreads narrowed, recovering from   some of last week’s widening.  The implied yield on 3-month December   Eurodollars rose 12 basis points to 4.08%, and December ’06 Eurodollar yields   gained 13.5 basis points to 4.275%.      This   week’s investment grade corporate issuance included HSBC $3.35 billion, Eli   Lilly $1.5 billion, Verizon Global $1.5 billion, Nisource Finance $1.0   billion, Monumental Global $600 million, Nuveen Investment $550 million, ERP   Operating LP $500 million, Merrill Lynch $400 million, Lennar $300 million,   and Realty Income $175 million.   Junk   bond funds reported inflows of $84.5 million (from AMG).  Issuers   included Williams Companies $700 million, Unisys $550 million, and Videotron   $175 million.  Convertible   debt issuers included Maxtor $325 million and Dobson Communications $150   million. Foreign   dollar debt issuers included Brazil $2.25 billion, Resona Bank $1.3 billion,   Inter-American Development Bank $1.0 billion, Philippines $1.0 billion and   Korea Development Bank $750 million. September   8 – Bloomberg (Elzio Barreto):  “Brazil’s benchmark 11 percent bond due   2040 rose to its highest level ever… The yield to the 2015 call date on the   2040 bond…fell to 8.01 percent…” Japanese   10-year JGB yields added 3.5 basis points this week to 1.34%.  Emerging   debt markets more than held their own.  Brazil’s benchmark dollar bond   yields dropped 15 basis points to 7.58%.  Mexican govt. yields were   about unchanged at 5.17%.  Russian 10-year dollar Eurobond yields fell 5   basis points to 5.96%.   Freddie   Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates were unchanged for the week at 5.71%,   with rates down 12 basis points from one year ago.  Fifteen-year fixed   mortgage rates slipped 2 basis points to 5.30%, a 7-week low.  One-year   adjustable rates declined 3 basis points to 4.45%, down 13 basis points in   three weeks but up 45 basis points from the year ago level.  The   Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Applications Index jumped 6.1%.    Purchase applications were 5.4% ahead of the year ago level, with dollar   volume up about 18%.  Refi applications rose 7.7%.  The average new   Purchase mortgage increased to $242,900, while the average ARM surged to   $371,900.  The percentage of ARMs declined to 26.5% of total   applications.     Broad   money supply (M3) expanded $10.2 billion to a record $9.913 Trillion (week of   August 29).  Year-to-date, M3 has expanded at a 6.8% rate, with M3-less   Money Funds expanding at an 8.0% pace.  M3 has expanded $287.5 billon   over the past 15 weeks, or 10.4% annualized.  For the week, Currency   added $0.9 billion.  Demand & Checkable Deposits rose $4.6 billion.    Savings Deposits dropped $17.1 billion, while Small Denominated Deposits   gained $3.4 billion.  Retail Money Fund deposits added $1.1 billion, and   Institutional Money Fund deposits jumped $15.8 billion (2wk gain of $20.7bn).    Large Denominated Deposits jumped $10.0 billion, with a 4-week gain of $66.4   billion.  Year-to-date, Large Deposits are up $208.1 billion, or 29.5%   annualized.  For the week, Repurchase Agreements dipped $3.4 billion,   and Eurodollar deposits declined $5.1 billion.                 Bank   Credit jumped another $31.3 billion last week.  Year-to-date, Bank   Credit has expanded $612.1 billion, or 13.4% annualized (up 10.7% from a year   earlier).  Securities Credit rose $20.5 billion during the week, with a   year-to-date gain of $169.2 billion (13.1% ann.).  Loans & Leases   have expanded at a 13.9% pace so far during 2005, with Commercial &   Industrial (C&I) Loans up an annualized 17.5%.  For the week,   C&I loans declined $2.3 billion, while Real Estate loans jumped $11.4   billion.  Real Estate loans have expanded at a 15.8% rate during the   first 35 weeks of 2005 to $2.812 Trillion.  Real Estate loans were   up $369 billion, or 15.1%, over the past 52 weeks.  For the week,   Consumer loans declined $3.1 billion, while Securities loans rose $11.4   billion. Other loans dropped $6.6 billion.    Total   Commercial Paper declined $2.8 billion last week to $1.599 Trillion.  Total   CP has expanded $185.1 billion y-t-d, a rate of 18.9% (up 18.0% over the past   52 weeks).  Financial CP fell $5.9 billion last week to $1.454   Trillion, with a y-t-d gain of $170.1 billion (19.1% ann.).    Non-financial CP gained $3.1 billion to $144.5 billion (up 16.7% ann. y-t-d   and 10.6% over 52 wks). ABS   issuance surged to $34 billion (from JPMorgan).  Year-to-date issuance   of $513 billion is 22% ahead of comparable 2004.  Home Equity Loan ABS   issuance of $329 billion is 25% above comparable 2004.  Fed   Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt dipped $1.7 billion to $1.4665   Trillion for the week ended September 7.  “Custody” holdings are up   $130.7 billion y-t-d, or 14.1% annualized (up $175.6bn, or 13.6%, over 52 weeks).    Federal Reserve Credit rose $1.47 billion to $799.3 billion.  Fed Credit   has expanded 1.6% annualized y-t-d (up $34.8bn, or 4.6%, over 52 weeks).     International   reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg’s Alex Tanzi -   were up $610 billion, or 18.4%, over the past 12 months to $3.92 Trillion.   Russia reserve assets were up 75% y-o-y to $148 billion. Currency Watch: The   dollar index gained less than 1% this week.  On the upside, the   Indonesian rupiah rebounded 1.2%, the Australian dollar gained 1.2%, the   Brazilian real 0.9%, and the Canadian dollar 0.8%.   On the   downside, the Iceland krona was hit for 2.0%, the Swedish krona fell 1.4%,   and the Swiss frank declined 1.0%.       Commodities Watch: October   crude oil fell $3.49 to $64.08.  October Unleaded gasoline lost 11%,   giving back a good part of last week’s rise.  For the week, the CRB   index dropped 2.4%, reducing y-t-d gains to 13.9%.  The Goldman Sachs   Commodities index sank 5.0%, with 2005 gains slipping to 41.8%.   China Watch: September   7  - Bloomberg (Patricia Kuo):  “Eric Leung, the chief financial   officer at China Gas Holdings Ltd., expected some tough bargaining when he   set out to borrow $40 million for the Shenzhen, China-based gas distributor   in April. Instead, he got $60 million and didn’t have to pledge assets in   return. ‘We were very surprised,’ says Leung… after France’s Societe Generale   SA, Germany’s Commerzbank AG and Singapore’s Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.   arranged China Gas’s first foreign-currency loan. ‘International banks are   less conservative than Chinese banks on unsecured  lending.’    Dozens of international banks are vying to lend in China, undeterred by a   bad-loan rate of at least 10 percent at the four largest state-run lenders.” September   6 - Bloomberg (Philip Lagerkranser):  “Hong Kong’s retail sales growth   unexpectedly picked up in July as increased consumer spending offset   declining tourist arrivals from mainland China. Sales increased 7 percent to   HK$17.4 billion ($2.2 billion) after rising a revised 6.1 percent in June…” Japan Watch: September   9 – Bloomberg (Masahiro Hidaka and Mayumi Otsuma):  “Japan’s financial   system has recovered its health and stability as lenders have gradually   written off bad loans, Bank of Japan Governor Toshihiko Fukui said. ‘Japan’s   financial system has finally regained its health and the central bank will   continue to support institutions’ attempts to improve their businesses   through inspections, monitoring and seminars, Fukui said… Bad loans at   Japanese lenders fell 28 percent in the fiscal year…the third straight annual   decline…” September   9 – Financial Times (David Turner and David Pilling ):  “Japan reached   another milestone on the road to economic recovery yesterday when figures   showed bank lending rose for the first time in seven years. Although it is   too early to declare the tide has turned, any sustained upturn in bank   lending would indicate that financial institutions had at last recovered   their appetite for risk after years of scaling back their exposure to bad   borrowers.  As well as boosting economic activity, an expansion of   credit could have a significant impact on monetary policy by restoring the   transmission mechanism by which central bank monetary expansion flows into   the real economy… The BoJ, in its monthly economic report, said:  ‘The   lending attitude of private banks is becoming more accommodative.’” September   8 – Bloomberg (Kathleen Chu and Noriko Tsutsumi):  “Office vacancies in Tokyo   fell to their lowest in more than three years last month as supply of office   space declined… The vacancy rate in Tokyo’s five main business districts…declined   to 4.57 percent in August…” Asia Boom Watch: September   7 - Bloomberg (Theresa Tang):  “Taiwan’s exports grew in August at the   fastest pace in four months as overseas demand for the island’s laptop   computers and flat-panel displays increased.  Shipments rose 7.6 percent   from a year earlier to $15.9 billion after gaining 5.3 percent in July…” September   7  - Bloomberg (Kevin Cho):  “South Korean household debt had the   biggest increase in almost three years in August as consumers borrowed to buy   property and to finance education, a central bank report showed.  Bank   lending to households rose 4.5 trillion won ($4.5 billion) from a month   earlier to 296.6 trillion won… August’s gain was the largest since October   2002…” September   8 – Bloomberg (Laurent Malespine):  “Thailand’s tax revenue rose a fifth   in August, boosted by higher corporate and consumption tax receipts,   reflecting rising company profits and personal income, the finance ministry   said today. Total tax receipts last month rose 19.9 percent to 181.4 billion   baht ($4.42 billion)…” September   7 - Bloomberg (Anuchit Nguyen):  “Thailand’s central bank raised its   benchmark interest rate by a half-point, the seventh increase in a year, to   curb inflation caused by higher oil prices…  The Bank of Thailand set   the 14-day repurchase rate at a five-year high of 3.25 percent…” Unbalanced Global Economy Watch: September   8 – Bloomberg (Theophilos Argitis):  “Canada’s industrial companies used   more of their production capacity than at any time in more than four years in   the second quarter… Manufacturers, miners and electric utilities used 86.7   percent of their production capacity between April and June, the highest   level since the fourth quarter of 2000…” September   6 - Bloomberg (Ben Sills):  “Retail sales in the dozen nations that   share the euro rose the most in at least 20 months in August as retailers cut   prices and  unemployment declined.” September   7 - Bloomberg (Sam Fleming):  “U.K. house prices jumped in August by the   most in 11 months after last month’s interest-rate cut by the Bank of England   spurred demand for property, HBOS Plc said.  Prices rose 1.6 percent to   an average of 165,967 pounds ($306,167), the most since September 2004, the   U.K.’s biggest mortgage lender said…” September   6 - Bloomberg (Simone Meier):  “German manufacturing orders unexpectedly   increased the most this year in July, led by foreign demand for goods such as   factory machinery, adding to signs that Europe’s largest economy is returning   to growth.  Orders rose 3.7 percent from June…” September   9 – Bloomberg (Francois de Beaupuy):  “France’s industrial production   fell in July, recording its biggest decline in 11 months… French factories,   utilities and mines unexpectedly cut production by 0.9 percent from June…” September   8 – Bloomberg (Jeffrey T. Lewis and Jim Silver):  “Portugal’s economic    growth accelerated at the fastest pace in almost five years in the second   quarter, helped by a pickup in consumer spending and gains in exports… The   economy grew 1 percent in the three months ended in June…” September   9 – Bloomberg (Marketa Fiserova):  “The Czech economy expanded at the   fastest pace in nine years in the second quarter as new manufacturing plants   maintained export growth… The $117 billion economy rose an annual 5.1 percent…” September   6 - Bloomberg (Eduard Gismatullin):  “OAO Russian Railways, which runs   the world’s second-largest rail network, plans to spend at least 530 billion   rubles ($19 billion) between 2006 and 2008 to upgrade tracks, locomotives and   cars.” September   8 – Bloomberg (Adam Brown):  “Car sales in Romania will rise 50 percent   this year to 250,000 units from a year ago, Romania’s Association of Automobile   Producers and Importers said… Sales in the first eight months of the year   rose 60 percent to 168,000 units…” September 7 - Bloomberg (Victoria Batchelor and Gemma Daley): “Australia’s economy grew faster than expected in the second quarter as miners such as BHP Billiton invested more to extract coal, iron ore and copper to meet demand in China. Gross domestic product rose 1.3 percent in the three months ended June 30, the fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2003…” September   8 – Bloomberg (Victoria Batchelor and Gemma Daley):  “Australian   employers unexpectedly hired extra workers in August, extending the longest   run of job gains in 10 years and helping drive growth in Asia-Pacific’s   fifth-largest economy… Employment climbed 32,600 last month, compared with a   12,100 gain in July… The jobless rate remained at a 29-year low of 5 percent…” Latin America Watch: September   9 – Bloomberg (Andrew J. Barden):  “Brazil’s industrial production rose   in July at its slowest pace in almost two years, heightening speculation the   central bank will cut the benchmark lending rate next week.” Bubble Economy Watch: September   9 – Bloomberg (Jesse Westbrook):  “Hurricane Katrina may cost U.S.   insurers including Allstate Corp. a record $60 billion, almost double earlier   estimates, as the scale of devastation becomes clear, said storm modeler Risk   Management Solutions Inc.  Katrina would trump Hurricane Andrew as the   most costly catastrophe in U.S. history… Total damages may exceed $125   billion, up from $100 billion, the company said.  ‘When we think about   economic loss and insured loss, there are few events that rival Katrina,’   said Kyle Beatty, a meteorologist at…Risk Management.” The   ISM Non-Manufacturing index jumped 4.5 points to a robust reading of 65, the   highest level since April 2004.  And, if my data are correct, April 2004’s   reading was the only month higher than August’s.  At 65.8, the New   Orders index was the strongest in two years.   September   8 – From Freddie Mac’s monthly Economic Outlook:  “While lower near-term   mortgage rates will continue to fuel nation-wide housing demand, the   reconstruction efforts will place additional upward pressure on construction   material costs. The most immediate effects will be on plywood and roofing   tiles, as many homeowners make repairs in the broader Gulf region. Since   construction  materials account for about one-third of the cost of a new   home, increases in costs for lumber, cement, gypsum board and other materials   of only 5% to 10% could add 2% to 3% to new home costs in coming months,   supporting existing home values. The net effect (lower interest rates but   higher construction material costs) on overall construction is likely to add   to new starts in 2006 and existing home sales, relative to what they would have   been. Thus, mortgage originations will be slightly greater too, compared to   our pre-Katrina projection.” September   7 – Bloomberg (Rip Watson):  “U.S. truckers, who deliver 80 percent of   the nation's shipments, expect to spend $85 billion this year for fuel, 37   percent more than last year as diesel prices continue to rise after Hurricane   Katrina cut production.  The American Trucking Association trade group   today raised its estimate of annual fuel spending from $80 billion.” Speculator Watch: September 9 – Bloomberg (Linda Sandler):  “Bruce   McMahan, a Connecticut-based hedge-fund manager who plans to start a fund in   London, bought the pocket watch Horatio Nelson had with him when he died at   the Battle of Trafalgar. McMahan, who runs the Argent Funds Group, paid more   than 350,000 pounds ($637,000) for the gold watch, made by Josiah Emery in   about 1787…McMahan bought the watch partly to mark Argent’s expansion into   London…” California Bubble Watch: September 7 – Bloomberg (Michael B. Marois): “California lawmakers approved a bill increasing the state’s minimum wage to $7.75 an hour within two years, the highest of any U.S. state… The state’s Democratic-controlled Senate today passed the bill in a 26 to 13 vote. It passed the Assembly in June. The bill would raise the minimum wage from $6.75 to $7.75 an hour…” Mortgage Finance Bubble Watch: September   6 – “New Century Financial, a real estate investment trust and parent company   of one of the nation’s premier full-service mortgage finance companies, announced   today that loan production volume for August 2005 increased 91 percent to   $6.1 billion compared with the same period in 2004.” The Greenspan Levee: In   light of Katrina’s devastation, I have been encouraged to update my “Town by   the River – A Derivative Story.” I will patiently await changes in the   financial landscape before penning the next “chapter.” Although I will note   (to regular readers) that, to this point, the hastily constructed Levees up   the river continue to hold the potential cataclysmic flood at bay.  What’s   more, the altered flow of water has induced booms to sprout up all along a   world of new lake waterfronts and tributaries provided by the enormous   expanding upstream pool of liquid.  Risk-taking has been emboldened and,   importantly, it has broadened.   Few   (in the Town by the River) recognize that the issue of flood management has   become immensely more complex, now involving scores of additional thriving   communities, markets and policymakers – not to mention the unfathomable   amounts of accumulating water!  And while authorities in The Town huff   and puff about their increased concern for the aged housing boom along the   river, the enterprising players in the Bubbling insurance and asset markets   have understandably unwavering confidence that timid local politicos will no   longer risk more than tinkering with the fragile Levee system.  The   consequences of a Levee failure and resulting complete system breakdown have   become too catastrophic to even contemplate. I   do often contemplate the real world weakness of the flood insurance analogy –   that while booming activities in the insurance and building sectors do   significantly heighten systemic risk, they at least don’t influence weather   patterns (make it rain more!).  In financial insurance markets, however,   rapid growth in derivatives does directly increase the probabilities of a   financial crash.  If one believes that Credit, leveraged speculation and   liquidity excesses pose inevitable serious risks to system pricing and   trading mechanisms, and that booming derivatives markets by their very nature   spur an expansion of Credit, speculation, leverage and liquidity -- are   financial insurance markets not then the contemporary bane of system   stability? Are   there pertinent financial lessons to be gleaned today from Katrina’s   devastation?  Well, I am again reminded of the notion that “a culture of   optimism is a culture of denial.”  Many argue that this disaster was a   very low-probability, unpredictable event.  In reality, however, a storm   with sufficient force to breach New Orleans’ aged Levee system was a near   certainty – only a matter of “when and not if.”  It was also clear that   a period of relative tranquility masked the reality that underlying   conditions were ripening for a mega-storm. But   as a society, we are simply incapable these days of objectively analyzing   potentially devastating scenarios.  “Negativism” is un-American.    We certainly won’t tolerate it from our leaders, and they don’t want it from   us.  Don’t worry… Why weren’t we better prepared to respond to Katrina’s   devastation?  Because it is virtually impossible to openly contemplate,   discuss, plan and mobilize significant resources in preparation for such a   catastrophe.  Lip service, perhaps, but nothing more.  We and our   policymakers are conditioned to emphasize potential positive returns, to   downplay risks and virtually disregard the potential for disaster.    After all, with our nation’s vast resources and legendary resourcefulness,   why not assuredly exploit all opportunities, ignore perceived low-probability   negative outcomes and enthusiastically employ a “mop-up strategy” if things   somehow ever run amok?   To   acknowledge the possibility of a catastrophic outcome is unacceptable, as it   would demand a change in behavior and sacrifice that we, as a society, are   simply unwilling to make prior to its occurrence.  And, let’s face it,   the more financially stretched one becomes, the more inclined one is to   totally disregard the worst-case scenario. We   see such a mindset phenomenon at work with the manner in which households   manage their finances; with government and business management of spiraling   healthcare costs and underfunded pensions; with the execution of the war in   Iraq; and with the federal deficit and the Current Account.  If there is   no easy solution, then better to not even address the dilemma.  We are   conditioned to scoff at warnings of global warming, much to the chagrin of   the rest of the world.  And evidence of future energy shortfalls is not   sufficient to have us question our god-given right to SUVs and our huge new   homes a long drive out to the suburbs of suburbia.  And while “risk-management”   is all the rage throughout the expansive business of finance and   monetary/economic management, the financial sector just drifts farther and   farther away from having any capacity to effectively manage a catastrophic   development. It   has become, these days, increasingly interesting to watch key policymakers   (Mr. Greenspan, in particular) and our more attuned pundits jockeying to   buttress their reputations in preparation for the inescapable financial   storm.  The always-ingenious Mr. Greenspan has focused the debate on   narrow “risk premiums” and unsustainable liquidity, in the process   setting the stage for policymaker finger-pointing at overzealous market   participants when boom inevitably turns bust.  Powerful Market Pundits,   on the other hand, would like to fashion the debate around the “Greenspan   Put,” attempting to walk a very fine line as stalwart supporters of Wall   Street finance and general supporters of Federal Reserve inflationary   policies.  Things have been so good – the Greenspan Fed so successful in   fostering “price stability” – that the upshot of low yields across the risk   spectrum has been an ironic expansion of risk-taking behavior.  Minksy’s   astute “stability is destabilizing” hypothesis is, today, an all too alluring   expedient.  It is, nonetheless, decidedly unsuitable analysis.         The   Fed’s ultra-aggressive 2002-2004 accommodation was an example of policy   errors begetting bigger ones, in the process compounding liquidity-induced   Monetary Disorder.  I simply cannot stomach the “stability is   destabilizing” analysis for a period where California home values, energy   prices, and our Current Account Deficit spiraled completely out of control.    The fact of the matter is that acute asset inflation and speculation are, as   always, telltale indications of some degree of underlying Monetary Disorder.    Inflationary Disorder was conspicuous throughout the technology sector,   including tech stocks, telecom debt and Silicon Valley home prices, in the   late-nineties.  Later, with Fed prodding and gung-ho Wall Street   enthusiasm, Monetary Disorder expanded, broadened, and solidified to the   point of encompassing financial asset and real estate markets the world over.     If   it were merely a case of years of system stability breeding a bout of   risk-taking behavior, the core of underlying system fundamentals would today   be sound.  They are patently unsound.  If a stable financial and   economic backdrop was the locus fueling destabilizing behavior, the Fed would   not have allowed itself to be hogtied into (ineffective) baby-step rate   increases.  Indeed, the key dynamic today is financial and economic   systemic fragility, and this reality resonates kindly throughout the bond   market.  The Conundrum is a manifestation of the Powerful Bubble   Interplay of Acute System Fragility and Ongoing Rampant Asset-based   Lending/Liquidity Excesses (Mega-Monetary Disorder). I’ve   never been a big fan of the notion of the “Greenspan Put.” I am, however,   warming to the notion of a Greenspan Levee.  The Greenspan Put conveys   that there is a market instrument/mechanism always available to right the   markets’ wrongs – an exercise of “mopping things up.”  A Levee, on the   other hand, works splendidly until it fails.  If the water level is   sufficiently high, a breach guarantees a catastrophic outcome (only   afterwards will the toxic mop-up commence).  The Greenspan Levee brooks   the massive and unrelenting inflation of Wall Street finance.  Worse   yet, we have passed the point where our policymakers will dare scrutinize   precarious system dynamics or attendant acute systemic risk. And,   quite definitely, there is a moral hazard component to ongoing excesses.    But the prominent aspect of today’s Credit Bubble and Associated Global   Liquidity Bubble is the structural nature of asset-based lending,   securitization and securities trading, and derivative risk-transferring   Credit systems now prominent on a global basis.  The so-called “Greenspan   put” is not some pardonable policy error that nurtured extra risk- taking (to   be “mopped-up” whenever deemed necessary) that Wall Street would like us to   believe.  It cannot be defended as a necessary response to systemic   risks, “deflation” or otherwise.  Rather, the Greenspan Levee became a   fundamental aspect of the evolving financial system - a critical facet of The   World of Wall Street Finance, with Trillions of dollars of MBS, ABS, CDOs,   CLOs, CMOs, and myriad “structured” products; unfathomable amounts of   interest-rate, Credit, currency and other financial insurance; explicit and   implicit debt guarantees (including the GSEs); and the widespread use of   dynamic hedging trading strategies for “risk management.”   For   the Wall Street Finance Juggernaut to remain viable, Greenspan had to   guarantee liquid and “continuous” (no panics!) markets.  For this, he   has to ensure an ever-expanding financial sector.  For this, he had to   peg financing costs, manipulate financial returns and do so transparently.    Because of this, he essentially invited massive leveraged speculation that   then had to be accommodated.  Because of this, he and Dr. Bernanke had   to erect an edifice of marketplace assurances that the Fed would never   tolerate system deleveraging and/or Credit contraction – all in the name of   fighting the scourge of deflation.  These assurances – the “Greenspan   Levee” – have worked to this point swimmingly.  But the dilemma for the   Greenspan Levee is that it has emboldened the Wall Street Inflationary   Liquidity Machine, along with energized Credit systems around the globe,   that cannot today be reined in.  A breech and a “flood” are anything but   low probability events.     Watching   the markets’ response to Katrina – higher stock and bond prices at home and   abroad – I will err on the side of expecting continued economic “resiliency.”    There will surely be wide-ranging financial ramifications and some economic   dislocation.  But, for the economy as a whole, I expect activity to   continue to be dictated by interest-rates, mortgage rates in particular.    And while some point to economic weakness prior to the storm, I will stick   with the analysis of a U.S. and global economy demonstrating inflationary   boom characteristics.  If the inflationary bias is as prevalent as I   suspect it is, then expect the major impact of Katrina to be higher prices   for things ranging from gasoline and other fuels, to chicken, shrimp and   oysters, to lumber and other building supplies.  If some of these reside   in “core CPI,” then we can simply adjust the core, again.  To be sure,   this catastrophe will ensure that an unsound and unbalanced economy becomes   more so.   |