It was relatively quiet and somewhat mixed for U.S. stocks. For the week, the Dow gained about 1%, and the S&P500 added 0.6%. The Transports gained 1%, and the Utilities rose 1.5%. The Morgan Stanley Cyclical index added 0.8%, and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index jumped 1.4%. The broader market underperformed. The small cap Russell 2000 dipped 0.8%, and the S&P400 Mid-cap index slipped 0.3%. Technology stocks were mixed. The NASDAQ100 dipped 0.2%, while the Morgan Stanley Technology index added 0.4%. The Street.com Internet Index added 0.4%, while the Semiconductors gave back 0.4%. The NASDAQ Telecommunications index was about unchanged. The Biotechs declined 1%. The financial stocks were strong. The Broker/Dealers gained 1.4%, and the Banks jumped 1.6%. Although bullion was hit for $23.15, the HUI gold index declined only 0.5%.
The markets are keen to believe that Fed “tightening” cycle is about complete, and the Fed did not dissuade them. For the week, two-year Treasury yields declined 5 basis points to 4.35%, and five-year government yields fell 6 basis points to 4.37%. Bellwether 10-year yields sank 8 basis points for the week to 4.44%. Long-bond yields dropped 8 basis points to 4.65%. The spread between 2 and 10-year government yields fell to 9bps. Benchmark Fannie Mae MBS yields dropped 9 basis points to 5.77%, this week slightly outperforming Treasuries. The spread (to 10-year Treasuries) on Fannie’s 4 5/8% 2014 note declined one to 37.5, and the spread on Freddie’s 5% 2014 note declined one to 38. The 10-year dollar swap spread declined 2.5 basis points to 54. The implied yield on 3-month December ’06 Eurodollars fell 9.5 basis points to 4.765%.
December   16 – Bloomberg (Mark Pittman and Caroline Salas): “Hertz Corp., the car   rental company being acquired in a leveraged buyout…led borrowers of $13.7   billion in the U.S. this week, pushing 2005 bond sales above last year’s   total. Hertz…sold $2.7 billion of debt yesterday, the second-largest junk   bond offering this year… Corporate bond sales for the year climbed to $656   billion, compared with $639 billion in 2004, according to data compiled by   Bloomberg. A record $675.7 billion of corporate bonds were sold in 2001.” Investment   grade issuers included Goldman Sachs $1.6 billion, Lehman Brothers $1.5 billion,   CIT $1.25 billion, ILFC Capital Trust $1.0 billion, Countrywide Financial   $1.0 billion, Cardinal Health $500 million, American Honda Finance $500   million, BNFS Funding $500 million, Genworth Global $300 million, Brandywine   $300 million and United Dominion Realty $200 million.  Junk   bond fund flows reversed, with outflows of $319 million this week. Junk bond   issuers included Hertz $2.4 billion, CSC Holdings $1.0 billion, Omnicare $750   million, Centennial Communication $550 million, ZFS Finance $400 million,   Hopson Development $350 million, CIT Group $300 million, Atlas Pipeline $250   million, Atlantic & Western $250 million, Spansion $250 million, Verasun   Energy $210 million, Kimball Hill $200 million, Skilled Healthcare $200   million, Eurofresh $170 million, Block Communication $150 million and Pipe   Acquisition $130 million. Convert   issues included Intel $1.4 billion, Omnicare $850 million and Ceradyne $110   million.  Foreign   dollar debt issuers included Peru $1.25 billion, VTB Capital $1.0 billion, Landsbanki   $500 million, Banco BMG $300 million, Advanced Agro Public $250 million, LPG   International $250 million and Telecom Personal $240 million. Japanese   10-year JGB yields fell 3 basis points this week to 1.525%. Emerging debt and   equity markets continue to cruise into year-end with spectacular gains.   Brazil’s benchmark dollar bond yields declined 8 basis points to only 7.16%.   Brazil’s Bovespa equity index added 1%, with a y-t-d gain of 27%. The Mexican   Bolsa jumped 3% to another record, with 2005 gains rising to 37%. Mexican   govt. yields dropped 8 basis points to 5.48%. Russian 10-year dollar Eurobond   yields were unchanged at 6.49%. The Russian RTS equity index gained 1.6%,   increasing y-t-d gains to 79%.  Freddie   Mac posted 30-year fixed mortgage rates dipped 2 basis points to 6.30%, an   increase of 62 basis points from one year ago. Fifteen-year fixed mortgage   rates were down 2 basis points to 5.85%, yet were up 74 basis points in a   year. One-year adjustable rates declined one basis point to 5.16%, an   increase of 97 basis points from one year ago. The Mortgage Bankers   Association Purchase Applications Index declined 3.5% last week. Purchase   Applications were down 1.5% from one year ago, while dollar volume was up   2.3%. Refi applications sank 9.7% to the lowest level since June 2004. The   average new Purchase mortgage dropped to $235,500, and the average ARM sank   to $344,900. The percentage of ARMs rose to 33.5% of total applications.  Broad   money supply (M3) added $1.1 billion (week of December 5) to a record $10.12   Trillion. Over the past 29 weeks, M3 has inflated $495 billion, or 9.2%   annualized. Year-to-date, M3 has expanded at a 7.2% rate, with M3-less Money   Funds expanding at an 8.2% pace. For the week, Currency slipped $0.6 billion.   Demand & Checkable Deposits declined $13.9 billion. Savings Deposits   surged $27.8 billion. Small Denominated Deposits gained $2.1 billion. Retail   Money Fund deposits fell $3.3 billion, and Institutional Money Fund deposits   declined $7.1 billion. Large Denominated Deposits rose $4.9 billion.   Year-to-date, Large Deposits are up $262 billion, or 25.8% annualized. For   the week, Repurchase Agreements fell $12.4 billion, while Eurodollar deposits   gained $3.4 billion.  Bank   Credit jumped $30.8 billion last week to $7.467 Trillion, largely recovering   last week’s decline. Year-to-date, Bank Credit has inflated $703 billion,   or 11.0% annualized. Securities Credit added $0.3 billion during the week,   with a year-to-date gain of $138.4 billion (7.7% ann.). Loans & Leases   have expanded at a 12.6% pace so far during 2005, with Commercial &   Industrial (C&I) Loans up an annualized 14.9%. For the week, C&I   loans added $2.7 billion, and Real Estate loans jumped $14.6 billion. Real   Estate loans have expanded at a 14.7% rate during the first 49 weeks of 2005   to $2.894 Trillion. For the week, Consumer loans dipped $0.6 billion,   while Securities loans rose $8.3 billion. Other loans increased $5.4 billion.    Total   Commercial Paper dropped $26.5 billion last week to $1.627 Trillion. Total   CP has expanded $212.8 billion y-t-d, a rate of 15.7% (up 16.4% over the past   52 weeks). Financial CP fell $18.6 billion last week to $1.482 Trillion,   with a y-t-d gain of $197.6 billion, or 16% annualized. Non-financial CP   declined $7.9 billion to $144.8 billion (up 12.3% annualized y-t-d). ABS   issuance remained a robust $25 billion last week, including $18 billon Home   Equity ABS (from JPMorgan). Year-to-date issuance of $775 billion is 26%   ahead of comparable 2004. Home Equity Loan ABS issuance of $505 billion is 24%   above comparable 2004.  Fed   Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt declined $0.89 billion to $1.510   Trillion for the week ended December 14. “Custody” holdings are up $174.7   billion y-t-d, or 13.6% annualized. Federal Reserve Credit fell $2.0   billion to $811.6 billion. Fed Credit has expanded 2.8% annualized y-t-d. International   reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg’s Alex Tanzi –   were up $528 billion, or 15.1%, over the past 12 months to a record $4.035   Trillion. Mexico’s reserves were up 10.6% over the past year to $67.0   billion. Currency Watch: The   dollar index fell 1.7% this week to a 6-week low. On the upside, the Japanese   yen gained 4.3%, the Hungarian forint 3.0%, the Iceland krona 2.9%, and the   Indian rupee 2.0%. On the downside, the Brazil real fell 3.6%, the Indonesian   rupiah 2.0%, the New Zealand dollar 1.8%, and the Argentine peso 0.9%.  Commodities Watch: December 13 - Bloomberg (Meggan Richard and Anuchit Nguyen): “Rubber prices may reach the highest in 21 years as violence in Thailand prevents the world’s biggest supplier from meeting China’s surging demand. Plantation owners in Thailand, which supplies 38 percent of the world’s rubber, are being hampered by fighting between police and Muslim activists seeking a separate Islamic state in the 90 percent Buddhist country.” December   13 - PRNewswire: “CME, the world’s largest and most diverse financial   exchange, announced today that on Friday, December 9 it surpassed one billion   contracts… Year to date, CME has traded 1 billion contracts, an increase of   more than 32 percent from this time last year.” January   crude oil fell $1.33 to $58.06. January Unleaded Gasoline declined 3.2%, and   January Natural Gas ended the week down 4.6%. For the week, the CRB index   dipped 0.4%, reducing y-t-d gains of 14.9%. The Goldman Sachs Commodities   index fell 1.1%, with 2005 gains declining to 39.8%.  China Watch: December   14 – Financial Times (Richard McGregor): “China is poised to announce its   economy is significantly larger than the government’s official measure   following a national economic census which found a large underestimation of   the country’s thriving and largely private services sector. The revision is   also expected to show the economy is less reliant on investment and more   driven by consumption than previously projected, two trends that Chinese   leaders have been trying to encourage.” December   15 – Market News International: “The latest raft of Chinese economic data   offered little evidence to support expectations of a widely forecast   slowdown, with production and investment data if anything showing signs of   reacceleration. ….[F]ixed-asset investment - one of the government’s most   closely watched indicators - grew 27.8% in the January to November period,   gathering speed from the 27.6% recorded during the first ten months. ‘Growth   momentum remains strong - there's no sign of slowdown,’ said Qu Hongbin, an   economist with HSBC in Hong Kong. ‘Things are definitely not slowing.’” December   13 - Bloomberg (Nerys Avery): “China’s industrial production rose in November   at the fastest pace in five months, a larger-than-forecast increase that may   swell inventories and cause price declines for manufacturers. The 16.6   percent gain was higher than the 16.1 percent recorded in October…” December   12 - Bloomberg (Nerys Avery): “China’s money supply expanded at the fastest   pace in almost two years in November, the central bank said. M2, which   includes cash and all deposits, grew 18.3 percent from a year earlier after   expanding 18 percent in October… That’s the biggest gain since March 2004…” December   14 - Bloomberg (Nerys Avery): “China’s retail sales rose 12.4 percent in   November as higher incomes spurred spending… Sales increased to a record 591   billion yuan ($73.2 billion) after gaining 12.8 percent in October, the   Beijing-based National Bureau of Statistics said in an e-mailed statement.   Growth has stayed between 12 percent and 13 percent for eight straight   months.” December   12 - Bloomberg (Simon Kennedy): “China has overtaken the U.S. as the biggest   exporter of information-technology products, the Organization for Economic   Cooperation and Development said. China last year exported $180 billion of   goods such as digital cameras and laptop computers, compared with $149   billion from the U.S….” Asia Boom Watch: December   14 - Bloomberg (Mayumi Otsuma and David Tweed): “Business confidence in Japan   rose to the highest in a year and companies plan to increase investment at   the fastest pace since the bubble economy burst in 1990… The Bank of Japan   said today its Tankan index of confidence among large manufacturers climbed   to 21 in the fourth quarter from 19 in the third. The index for   non-manufacturers such as retailers and developers rose to 17, the highest in   13 years.” December   14 - XFN: “Department store sales in Tokyo rose 4.3% in November from a year   earlier to Y172.7 bln, the Japan Department Stores Association said. That was   the biggest year-on-year increase since September 2000 when sales rose by   5.4%, the association said.” December   12 - Bloomberg (Kartik Goyal and Cherian Thomas): “India’s industry grew in   October at the fastest pace in four months as rising incomes and consumer   borrowing spurred sales… Production at factories, utilities and mines   increased 8.5 percent from a year earlier after expanding a revised 6.9   percent in September…” December   15 - Bloomberg (Seyoon Kim): “South Korea’s jobless rate fell to an   eight-month low in November, adding to expectations that growth in Asia’s   third-largest economy may accelerate. The seasonally adjusted unemployment   rate dropped to 3.6 percent after falling to 3.9 percent in October…” December   15 - Bloomberg (Chan Sue Ling): “Singapore’s retail sales grew in October at   the fastest pace in six months as shoppers stocked up ahead of festivals and   cheaper car prices lured buyers. The 10.2 percent increase from a year   earlier…” Unbalanced Global Economy Watch: December   14 - Bloomberg (Peter Woodifield): “London’s most expensive homes appreciated   at their fastest rate in at least two years, driven by a shortage of   properties and bankers anticipating bigger bonuses, Knight Frank LLP said.   The average price of flats costing more than 1.5 million pounds ($2.7   million) and houses priced at 3 million pounds or more rose 1.3 percent last   month. Prices were up 7 percent at the end of November from a year ago…” December   16 - Bloomberg (Matthew Brockett): “Business confidence in Germany, Europe’s   largest economy, rose to the highest in more than five years in December as   export-driven growth fueled spending at home.” December   15 - Bloomberg (Jonas Bergman): “Swedish unemployment in November fell for   the fourth month in five as companies increased hiring amid rising foreign   and domestic demand for Swedish goods and as the government spends more on   training programs. The rate fell to 5.0 percent…from 5.6 percent in October…” December   14 - Bloomberg (Bradley Cook): “Russia’s economy grew an annual 7 percent in   the third quarter, the fastest pace for a year, led by retailers and   construction companies. The retail and wholesale industries expanded 12   percent, compared with the year-ago period.” December   14 - Bloomberg (Bradley Cook): “Russia will have a budget surplus of between   7 percent and 8 percent of gross domestic product this year, Finance Minister   Alexei Kudrin said today, Interfax reported.” December   12 - Bloomberg (Ayla Jean Yackley): “Turkey’s economic growth accelerated to   an annual 7 percent in the third quarter, the fastest pace this year as a   boom in the construction industry and corporate investment spurred growth.   The economy expanded for the 15th consecutive quarter, accelerating from   growth of 4.2 percent…” Latin America Watch: December   13 – Dow Jones (Claudia Assis): “Until recently, most low-income Mexicans   trod only one path to home ownership bliss: Sweat equity. They built their   own homes brick by brick, the result of years of scraping together to afford   a concrete foundation, then four walls, then a roof. Now, a burgeoning   mortgage-backed securities market is giving Mexico other ways to build houses   for the lower and middle classes, and showing investors another door to Latin   America’s second-largest economy. ‘You have a huge demand for housing in   Mexico, and it is still a hugely unattended market. With the capital markets,   you have an enormous pool of money available to fuel it,’ said Mark Zaltzman,   chief financial officer at mortgage bank Su Casita.” December   16 – Bloomberg (Patrick Harrington): “Mexico’s unemployment rate fell more   than-expected in November from the previous month as surging automobile   production spurred hiring. Mexico’s jobless rate in November fell to 2.99   percent from 3.57 percent in October…” December   14 - Bloomberg (Romina Nicaretta and Andrew J. Barden): “Brazil’s stock   market rally and expanding economy are fueling a boom in the construction of   luxury apartments in Sao Paulo. Sales of high-priced units, some with as many   as 17 underground parking spots, jumped 76 percent to 6,300 in the past two   years… Brazil’s largest residential complex, scheduled to open in 2007, will   include 120 stores, a helicopter pad and a spa bigger than a football field.   Half its 150 apartments already sold at prices that range from 1.5 million   reais ($681,447) to 10 million reais. ‘Some segments of the society are making   a fortune,’ Carlos Daniel Coradi, president of bank industry consultant   Engenheiros Financeiros & Consultores said in an interview in Sao Paulo.” December   13 - Bloomberg (Carlos Caminada and Romina Nicaretta): “Brazil, tapping into   a surge in its foreign reserves, will pay back before year-end the remaining   $15.5 billion it owes the International Monetary Fund. The central bank was   scheduled to make the payments in 2006 and 2007 and will save $900 million in   interest costs by paying ahead of schedule…” December   14 - Bloomberg (Simon Casey): “Chile, the world’s largest copper-producing   nation, will increase its mineral exports this year by 28 percent to $21.5   billion after prices for the metal used in wiring and pipes reached a record.” December   15 - Bloomberg (Alex Emery): “Peru’s economy expanded 7.2 percent in the 12   months though October compared to the same period a year ago, led by mining   and construction.” December   14 - Bloomberg (Andrea Jaramillo): “Colombia’s imports rose 18 percent in October   from a year earlier, boosted by sales of electronic appliances and car and   car parts. Imports rose to $1.71 billion in October…” Bubble Economy Watch: December   13 - Bloomberg (Kevin Carmichael): “The U.S. government reported the widest   November budget deficit ever, led by a jump in spending for reconstruction   after the hurricanes… The deficit expanded to $83.1 billion compared with a   shortfall of $57.9 billion in November 2004, the U.S. Treasury said in   Washington today. Spending rose 15.3 percent to $221.9 billion and revenue   rose 3.2 percent to $138.8 billion. Both figures also were November records,   the Treasury said.” December   13 - Bloomberg (Steve Matthews): “Construction companies plan to hire workers   at the fastest pace in 27 years as they rebuild areas devastated by   hurricanes and benefit from a strong economy in Western states, according to   a quarterly survey by Manpower Inc. The net employment outlook for   construction was 29, the highest since the third quarter of 1978…” December   14 - Bloomberg (Steve Matthews): “More than half of U.S. chief executive   officers said they plan to increase capital spending during the next six   months as their outlook for the economy improves after Hurricane Katrina… An   index measuring the CEOs’ outlook rose to 101.4, the second-highest level   since the survey started in 2002, from 88.2 in September following Katrina,   according to a report…by the Business Roundtable in Washington… The survey   showed 56 percent of executives expect their companies to increase capital   spending in the next six months. U.S. businesses are sitting on a mountain of   cash that can be tapped to propel investment in new equipment next year…” December   16 – Bloomberg (Kristy McKeaney): “U.S. spending on Visa brand cards rose   last week compared with the same week last year… In the week ending Dec. 11   purchases with Visa debit and credit cards rose 15.1 percent to $30.789   billion compared with the same week last year.” Speculator Watch: December   16 – Dow Jones (Steven Vames): “In just a few days, the global markets most   popular carry trades have gone from being ‘hot’ to being a ‘hot potato.’ For   investors involved in carry trades - borrowing money in low interest-rate   currencies, switching into high-rate currencies, and pocketing the rate   difference - the past few days have been nothing short of a rout due to   currency movements. It’s been particularly bad because the yen, the mother of   all borrowing currencies due to near-zero interest rates and high liquidity,   has staged such a massive rally. That creates losses for those who have   borrowed yen and switched to other currencies, because they then need more of   the other currencies to switch back to yen and pay back their loans. Evidence   of the unwinding of carry trades has been seen not just with the rally in the   yen and other low-rate currencies such as the Swiss franc, but also by   concurrent selloffs in higher-yielding currencies such as the New Zealand and   Australian dollars, the Brazilian real, and even the U.S. dollar.” “Project Energy” Watch: December   14 – Financial Times (Thomas Catan: “Royal Dutch Shell yesterday raised its   annual spending forecast by 27 per cent to $19bn (£10.8bn), citing   increasing costs and the need to find new oil and gas reserves. Europe’s   second largest oil company will next year invest at least $4bn more than   previously envisaged and said it was likely to keep spending at that level   for several years. Shell’s increase in expenditure comes as the industry   looks to plough more of its record profits into finding and producing oil and   gas.” December   14 - Bloomberg (Sonja Franklin): “EnCana Corp., Canada’ biggest natural-gas   producer, hired U.K. architect Norman Foster to design its new headquarters   in downtown Calgary. London-based Foster and Partners was picked last week as   the lead architect for the twin 60-story buildings… The proposed complex will   be the largest office tower west of Toronto and Canada’s highest since the   68-story Scotia Plaza was built in Toronto 17 years ago... The Calgary Herald   today cited unidentified officials who put the cost at C$540 million ($469   million).” Mortgage Finance Bubble Watch: December   16 – LA Daily News (Gregory J. Wilcox): “The median price of a Southern   California home hit a record $479,000 in November and sales remained near   all-time peak levels… Continued strong demand and concern that mortgage   rates will keep moving up drove the market, said the analysis from…DataQuick…   The November median price, the point at which half the homes cost more and   half less, increased an annual 15.4 percent. Prices moved up in all six   Southern California counties, with the gains ranging from a high of 23.2   percent in San Bernardino County to a low of 6.4 percent in San Diego County.   Price records were set in Los Angeles, Ventura and Riverside counties.   Riverside County’s median price passed $400,000 for the first time, settling   at $405,000. DataQuick’s…John Karevoll said the record prices were surprising   this late in the year and reflected robust new home-buying activity.” December   13 - Dow Jones: “The National Association of Realtors expects sales of new   and existing U.S. homes to drop to "high plateau" levels in 2006,   while home prices continue to rise. Existing home sales, expected to rise   4.7% to a record 7.10 million this year, are projected to fall 3.7% in 2006   to 6.84 million, the second-biggest figure on record, the NAR said Monday.   The realtors' group foresees a similar trend for new homes, with sales   projected to drop 4.8% next year to 1.23 million, also the second-biggest   number on record. ‘Home sales are coming down from a mountain peak, but they   will level out at a high plateau - a plateau that is higher than previous   peaks in the housing cycle,’ NAR Chief Economist David Lereah said. ‘This   transition to a more normal and balanced market is a good thing.’ Housing   construction is also expected to fall back after reaching this year the   highest point since 1972.” Most Unfavorable of Legacies: “Goldman   Sachs achieved its best annual results in 2005, generating record net   revenues, net earnings, and diluted earnings per common share.” Total   Revenues jumped 45% from 2004 to $43.4 billion, with Interest Income up 78%   to $21.25 billion. “The firm repurchased 63.7 million shares of its common   stock at an average price of $111.57…, including 20.5 million…in the   fourth quarter.” “Investment Banking generated net revenues of $3.67 billion,   its best annual performance in four years… Fixed Income, Currency and   Commodities (FICC) generated record net revenues of $8.48 billion, 16% higher   than the previous record. Equities generated record net revenues of $5.65   billion, 21% higher than 2004. Asset Management achieved record net revenues   of $2.96 billion, 16% higher than the previous record… Securities Services   achieved record revenues of $1.79 billion, 38% higher than the previous   record set in 2004.” Compensation & Benefits were up 51% y-o-y to $2.44   billion. Combined   Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers profits have almost tripled (up 188%) since   2002, to $8.89 billion. It is little wonder that Wall Street absolutely loves   the idea of Ben Bernanke and his obsession with deflation risks and   abhorrence of deflating asset Bubbles. The AMEX Securities Broker/Dealer   (XBD) index has surged 168% since Dr. Bernanke’s October 2002 speech, “Asset   Price ‘Bubbles’ and Monetary Policy.” During Greenspan’s watch, Securities   Broker/Dealer Assets ballooned from 1988’s $136 billion to September 30th’s   $2.105 Trillion. Broker/Dealer Assets are up 58% since the end of 2002 (11   quarters), and are on pace to expand a record $350 billion this year. To put   this number into some perspective, Broker/Dealer Assets increased $412   billion during the first 10 years of Greenspan’s chairmanship. The XBD index   is up 29% y-t-d.  We live in an extraordinary period. This experience is certainly providing even greater appreciation for the power of asset inflations and booms to captivate society and beguile policymakers. To be sure, Credit Bubbles must absolutely be reined in as early as possible - before the risk of popping them becomes more than policymakers can bear. Amazingly, the historic windfall profits being lavished on Wall Street and the energy sector (among others) are trumpeted by the optimists, when they should be recognized as byproducts of pernicious Credit inflation and Dysfunctional Monetary Processes. The third quarter’s 9.1% rate of non-financial debt growth and the 14% pace of household mortgage Credit expansion garner virtually no attention from the economic or analytical community. And $200 billion quarterly Current Account Deficits are now promulgated as proof of our robust economy outpacing our feeble trading partners. The well-oiled and inspirited propaganda machine functions superbly from Wall Street to Washington D.C. When   it comes to masterful propaganda, none compare to our departing Federal Reserve   chairman. His recent speech, “International Imbalances,” is one of the most   convoluted and disingenuous analyses he has delivered in his 17-year tenure –   and, of course, no one calls him on it. Our massive Current Account Deficit   and our Untenable Foreign Debts are the greatest danger to the well-being of   our society over the coming years. We should demand of him a discussion of   these most important topics in language assessable to ordinary citizens and   lawmakers. Not unpredictably, Mr. Greenspan has devoted great resources to   concocting sophisticated justifications and rationalizations that place his   Most Unfavorable of Legacies in doctored favorable light. A   lengthy book should be written exploring Mr. Greenspan’s ‘analyses’ of the   U.S. Current Account and other imbalances. It really is the greatest work   from the Master Obfuscator, deserving of considerably more time than I have   this Friday afternoon and evening. From   chairman Greenspan: “The rise of the U.S. current account deficit over   the past decade appears to have coincided with a pronounced new phase of   globalization that is characterized by a major acceleration in U.S.   productivity growth and the decline in what economists call home bias… The   decline in home bias is reflected in savers increasingly reaching across   national borders to invest in foreign assets. The rise in U.S.   productivity growth attracted much of those savings toward investments in the   United States…” “What is special about the past decade is that the decline in home   bias, along with the rise in U.S. productivity growth and the rise in the   dollar, has engendered a large increase by U.S. residents in purchases of   goods and services from foreign producers. The increased purchases have   been willingly financed by foreign investors with implications that are not   as yet clear.” The   Current Account Deficit is foremost the consequence of ultra-loose monetary   conditions, uninhibited asset-based lending and resulting asset inflation,   over-consumption, domestic mal-investment, and unprecedented global   (especially Asian) investment in manufacturing capacity. Contemporary Wall   Street finance/intermediation; the explosion of the global leveraged   speculating community; mushrooming derivatives markets; and ballooning global   central bank dollar securities holdings have all played critical roles in   ensuring a smooth and continuous recycling of escalating global dollar flows   right back to booming U.S. securities markets. Not coincidently, none of   these factors sees the light of day in Mr. Greenspan’s artful promulgation. If   productivity growth has been so phenomenal over an extended period, why then   is our economy hopelessly incapable of satisfying domestic demand? And his   newfound focus on “home bias” needlessly clouds the issue. The notion of some   ‘vast international savings transfer to finance U.S. investment” is   delusional, at best. The U.S. Credit Bubble, with resulting Current Account   Deficits, is the predominant creator of global liquidity and not an absorber   or international ‘savings.’ The dynamic process of a Global Liquidity Glut is   one of massive trade imbalances, unprecedented U.S. and global Credit   creation, aggressive financial intermediation and leveraged speculation. Why   does Mr. Greenspan avoid the issue of dollar accumulation by the global   leveraged speculating community, and why is there no effort by the Fed to   identify the holders of the now $10.7 Trillion of U.S. financial assets held   by “Rest of World?” He notes that “At some point, foreign investors will balk   at a growing concentration of claims against U.S. residents.” In reality, the   nearer term risk is a reversal of speculative flows by global speculators and   a bout of Risk Aversion to the unfathomable amount of dollar claims issued or   guaranteed by the U.S. financial sector (certainly including the banks,   broker/dealers, GSE, MBS, ABS, the “repo” market, Wall Street “structured   finance,” and derivatives). From   the Clever Theorist: “Were we to measure current account balances of much   smaller geographic divisions, such as American states…the trends in these   measures and their seeming implications could be quite different than those   extracted from the conventional national measures of the current account   balance.” “Increasing specialization goes back to the beginnings of the Industrial   Revolution. Movement away from economic self-sufficiency of individuals and   nations arose from the division of labor, a process that continually   subdivides tasks, creating ever-deeper levels of specialization and improved   productivity. Such specialization fosters trade. Trade, especially intertemporal   trade--that is, the trade of goods and services today in exchange for goods   and services at some future date--tends to give rise to a range of   surpluses and deficits across individuals and nonfinancial businesses… As a   result, the dispersion of such imbalances relative to incomes, or national   product, can be expected to increase as the scope of trade expands from   within regions, then nation-wide, and finally across national borders.” To   downplay the seriousness of our untenable Current Account, Mr. Greenspan   often invokes the analysis of the irrelevance of trade deficits between   individual U.S. states. I want to explore this area of analysis, using the   Economic Sphere and Financial Sphere framework. The free market trade of   goods/services between individual states/nations offers great (Economic   Sphere) specialization and division of labor benefits. Trade between national   economies, however, involves major departures from interstate trade,   departures that have a most prominent (although not easily discerned)   Financial Sphere component. Of course, nations have different currencies,   although New Economy proponents would have us believe that contemporary   derivative markets have greatly lowered the cost of hedging currency risks.   Much less straightforward, individual nations have differing financial   systems, Credit mechanisms and instruments, traditions of financial   intermediation and markets, and mores of policy intervention/central banker   activism.  Imagine   trade between Oregon and California. At the outset, Oregonians trade salmon,   lumber and apples to Californians for their avocados, lettuce and wine.   Everyone is better off and satisfied with the mutually-beneficial   relationship. Over time, however, the Californians begin to pay for   Oregon-produced goods with financial claims/IOUs (“intertemporal trade”).   Since California’s claims have traditionally functioned both as “money” to   consummate large transactions throughout the region and as a store of wealth/value   (“reserve currency”), they are readily accepted by Oregon producers. These   exporters easily exchange their IOUs for Oregon “currency” at their local   banks (these institutions issuing new claims – liabilities - and taking   possession of the California IOUs - assets, thus expanding their balance   sheets in the process). The Oregon economy enjoys the added purchasing power   that trade finance has rendered.  Meanwhile,   the California economy benefits as its claims are remitted back to the state   for the purchase of goods, houses, or perhaps to be deposited at local banks   where these new funds immediately create purchasing power to be lent for   buying consumer goods, capital equipment or property. The more the California   banking system lends for trade, the greater the funds individual state banks   receive as incoming deposits and then loan (claims inflation). Instead of   California’s mounting trade deficit draining liquidity as one might presume,   the rising funding requirements of “intertemporal” trade ensure self-reinforcing   Financial Sphere inflation and consequent system liquidity excess. Importantly,   (in our example) California’s lending institutions have demonstrated a long   history of growth and solvency. State policymakers have repeatedly intervened   to guarantee a constant flow of new Credit creation, safeguarding robust   financial markets and economic expansion. As such, the state commands a   decided competitive advantage when it comes to issuing perceived safe and   liquid (“money”-like) financial claims and, hence, an advantage in operating   liquid markets with active outside participation. However, unless restrained   by policymakers or by some mechanism to limit Credit expansion, the financial   and regulatory backdrop will by its nature foster a proclivity for   progressive over-issuance. This dynamic will only be reinforced over time by   the continued expansion of economic output and rising home prices. The broad   and highly liquid markets that evolve to trade and intermediate myriad   California claims will only fortify Golden State hegemony. Over time, the   monetary expansion will turn powerfully self-sustaining. The booming economy   and rising home prices stimulate only greater “intertemporal” trade,   resulting in additional inflation in both California’s and its trading   partners’ financial claims. In particular, rising asset prices incite   heightened demand for and the supply of Credit. The   monetary inflation associated with “intertermporal trade” will foster subtle   yet profound financial and economic distortions, gaining momentum over time.   The structure of the California boom-time economy will become increasingly   maladjusted as its lenders and borrowers gravitate toward housing and   speculating on ongoing asset inflation, while spending patterns are altered   by Credit-induced “wealth creation.” Specialty asset lenders and leveraged   speculators flourish, while asset-based finance evolves into the predominant   source of liquidity for both the Financial and Economic Spheres. All the   while, the economy relies increasingly on imports from Oregon and elsewhere   (other states become eager to exchange goods for the hot Golden State IOUs)   to satisfy demand.  Deep   structural economic maladjustment is fomented by both protracted boom-time   investment and consumption distortions. Trade, mortgage and asset lending   profits boom, while Credit excesses lavish “cash flow” on businesses   throughout (as well as the state coffer). The general backdrop encourages new   lenders and progressively more aggressive lending and speculating, excesses which   foment a corrosive breakdown in market pricing mechanisms. Resources – both   real and financial – are poorly allocated. Housing inflation increasingly   spreads to other asset markets, although boom-time “core” prices are held in   check by imports and the expanding supply and demand for services and luxury   goods (and new technologies).  Importantly,   California financial institutions – self-appointed governors of the expanding   “global” pool of California IOUs – grow exponentially, in the process   becoming only more financially and politically powerful. A prospering   California becomes asset market and speculation-centric, as well as totally   dependent on imports and, importantly, on unending claims inflation. The   Oregon economy booms and this expanding Bubble spreads to neighboring   Washington and Idaho. Banks throughout the region emulate California lending   practices, and the speculative fever spreads like wildfire. Nothing motivates   like watching your neighbor get rich. The   Oregon and California economies become increasingly interdependent and, most   importantly, hooked on unending monetary (claims) inflation. Superficially,   both respective booms may appear sound and sustainable. And, certainly, the   unusual arrangements coupled with rising financial wealth offer much for the   exuberant New Paradigm crowd. Some fundamental aspects of the boom are too   easily disregarded. First, the “global” system becomes dependent upon   increasing and unending Credit creation, a fragility that is unmercifully   masked throughout the life of the boom. Second, the Financial Sphere becomes   hooked on rising asset prices, fragility that is similarly hidden until it’s   much too late. And third, California will inevitably fail to honor its   outstanding claims - the nature of the Financial Sphere expansion   guaranteeing that the inflation of spurious claims (in particular, boom-time   inflated asset prices, malinvestment and fraud) escalates concurrently with   waning productive investment (especially in the context of a post-boom   environment). And while the unsustainable nature of the California claims   Bubble may appear increasingly conspicuous, the reality that fortunes are   being made in short order will prove especially enticing during the   late-stage blow-off period. I   sincerely apologize for these analytical ramblings. But when I read Greenspan   and Bernanke I become quite frustrated by what I believe is convoluted and   dangerously suspect analysis. Mr. Greenspan states that “being able to rely   on markets to do the heavy lifting of adjustment is an exceptionally valuable   policy asset,” when it should be clear by now that markets are demonstrating   greater propensity for self-reinforcing excess than necessary adjustment or   self-correction. Mr. Greenspan ends his “Imbalances” speech warning of the dangers   of federal deficits and protectionism. Yet these are predictable Credit   Bubble outcomes emanating from inflationary distortions and wealth   redistributions that his policies have cultivated.  And   from Greg Ip’s (Dec. 7) Wall Street Journal article, “Long Study of Great   Depression Has Shaped Bernanke’s Views:” “The lessons of Fed bubble-pricking   in the 1920s and the Bank of Japan’s in the 1980 is that ‘asset price crashes   have done sustained damage’ only when the central bank failed to respond, or ‘actively   reinforced deflationary pressures.’ Mr. Greenspan had reached the same   conclusion.”  Well,   I don’t buy it for a moment and furthermore am aware of no historical episode   of a major Credit Bubble not ending in some degree of problematic collapse. It   is becoming increasingly incontrovertible that the Greenspan/Bernanke “post-Bubble”   view and policy prescriptions have been disastrously misguided. They have   instead been actively reinforcing ongoing Credit Bubble inflationary forces.   And the sad irony is that they have assured just the type of major monetary   system breakdown Professor Bernanke has spent his career convincing himself   and others that an aggressive Fed could avoid.   |