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“By a continuing process of inflation,
governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the
wealth of their citizens. By this method they not only confiscate, but they
confiscate arbitrarily; and while the process impoverishes many, it actually
enriches some. And not one man in a million will detect the theft,”
John Maynard Keynes wrote in 1920.
On Dec 12th, a shadowy group of political
lackeys, voted 11-1 to launch what’s popularly dubbed as
“Infinity QE-4,” – the Federal Reserve’s most radical
scheme ever, that’s designed to enable the US-government to
continue borrowing as much as $1-trillion per year, for the next several
years, if necessary, in order to finance the burgeoning US-welfare state.
US-lawmakers are negotiating over the details of the so-called “fiscal
cliff,” but are simply nibbling at the edges of $1-trillion budget
deficits. Yet US-politicians from both sides of the isle, believe they can
stave off significant tax hikes and spending cuts, without having to pay a
penalty of sharply higher interest rates, which normally follows such fiscal
recklessness.
In an unprecedented step, the Federal Reserve said
on Dec 12th, that it would hold short-term Treasury yields near
zero –percent until the US-jobless rate falls to 6.5% as it launched a
new round of T-bond purchases to inflate the US-money supply. Fed officials committed to monthly purchases of $45-billion in
Treasuries on top of the $40-billion per month in mortgage-backed bonds they
started buying in September. The new round of government bond-buying dubbed
“Infinity QE-4” will be funded by essentially creating new money,
and further expanding the Fed's $2.8 trillion balance sheet today, to as much
as $6-trillion by the end of 2015.
“The Fed continues to operate an
open bar for the fiscal drunks in Washington,” says economist Ed Yardeni, referring to the Fed’s readiness to
finance Washington’s massive budget deficits. And since the Fed returns
any interest payments on the T-notes, back to the Treasury, the federal
government is able to borrow money at no cost. However, there is a cost to be
paid by the American people, - a massive inflation tax, that will eventually
take effect, when the cost of living in America begins to accelerate at a
frightening pace, and the cost of goods and services far exceeds the current
levels of US-household income.
The Fed is trying to cloak its mischievous role as
the chief financier of the US-government, by arguing that its objective,
according to Fed chief Ben Bernanke, “is to help the American middle
class. This is a Main Street policy because what we are
about here is trying to get jobs going,” Bernanke said at a press conference, where
reporters are only allowed to ask softball type questions. “If people
feel that their financial situation is better because their 401(k) looks
better, their house is worth more, they are more willing to go out and spend
and that’s going to provide the demand that firms need in order to be
willing to hire and to invest,” the former Princeton professor said,
explaining Bernanke’s theory of “trickle down” Economics.

Yet with 10-year US T-Note yields already suppressed
at historic lows, and pegged below the US-inflation rate, it is hard to argue
that what’s needed is to make credit even cheaper is another
$1-trillion of extra liquidity from the Fed. And with $1.5-trillion of
excess reserves in the US-banking system, it is hard to believe that the Wall
Street banking Oligarchs need more liquidity to bolster their balance sheets.
Instead, what Fed is trying to enforce is what’s called
“financial repression,” - defined as the “totalitarian control of credit under which Treasury financing can be
arranged cheaply in spite of a massive increase in the size of the national
debt, thru a system of combined and interconnected
open-market policies.”
The
Fed, the chief financier of the US-government is now holding $1.65-trillion
of US T-notes. It’s also spinning a
well-packaged web of lies that’s being sold to the masses, gradually,
and if somebody tries to speak the truth about the coming wave of hyper inflation, about to sweep the US-welfare state, the
“Boy who cries Wolf,” is made to seem utterly preposterous and a
raving lunatic. The US-public is fed information about the rate of inflation,
that’s under the control of the apparatchiks at the US Labor
department, - now touting new ideas, such as the chained-CPI, that’s
designed to eliminate future cost of living increases for entitlements.
Dallas Fed chief Richard Fisher, among the few token
hawks at the Fed, laments that with quantitative easing (QE),
“Financiers we have become. The US-Treasury is hooked on the monetary
morphine we provided, when we performed massive reconstructive surgery during
the 2008-09 panic. We have filled the gas tank and then some,” he said.
But more morphine is needed. The Fed has been asked by the ruling political
elite to buy $40-billion of US-T-Notes each month in the year ahead. The Fed
is stepping its QE injections, because America’s biggest lender, -
China, - is no longer willing to bankroll the US-Treasury. Beijing was a net
seller of $95-billion of US Treasury notes over the 12-months ending October
31st.
As of October 31st, foreign investors, -
mainly central banks, were holders of $5.85-trillion of US-T-Notes, up +11%
from a year earlier. However, in October, the pace of foreign buying slowed
to a trickle- a tiny $4-billion increase, which was far less than the average
$50.7-billion of purchases per month, over the previous 11-months.
Without the support of “Infinity QE-4”,
US T-Note prices could sink under the weight of an
$965-billion of new US-government debt to be auctioned in fiscal 2013.
Without QE-4, US-T-bond yields could rise sharply, and deal a major blow to
the US-stock markets, where traders are now treating blue-chip companies that
pay higher yielding dividends and arrange stock buybacks, as surrogates for
fixed income bonds. “I place economy among the first and most important
virtues, and public debt as the greatest of dangers. To preserve our
independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt,”
Thomas Jefferson warned.
Tokyo
Prepares to Launch “Big-Bang” QE,
One of the side-effects of the Fed’s QE
schemes is to weaken the US-dollar’s exchange rate against other
currencies. And that’s a major threat to the economic health of many
Asian economies that depend upon a high level of exports abroad. Perhaps no
other Asian country has been as badly damaged from the Fed’s ultra-easy
money policies, than Japan. Its economy contracted at an annualized -3.5%
rate in the third quarter, the worst contraction since last year’s
earthquake as exports slumped and consumer spending fell.
Japan’s exports have fallen for six straight
months in a row, compared with a year ago. Shipments to China, Japan’s
top export market, were -14.5% lower in November than a year earlier, because
of a Chinese consumer boycott of Japanese goods. Exports to Europe plunged -20% from a year ago, and were down for a 14th
straight month. As
a result, Japan’s trade deficit for the first 11-months of 2012, widened to
a record ¥6.2-trillion yen ($76.4-billion). Japan’s economy is expected to
contract -0.4% in the fourth quarter, meeting the textbook definition of a
recession. Nikkei-225 companies suffered a combined
drop of -31% in net income in the third quarter compared with a year ago.

However, in the hours after midnight on Dec 16th,
it became clear that Japanese citizens had voted for change. With its
coalition partner, New Komeito, the Liberal
Democratic Party (LDP) will control at least 323-seats, securing a two-thirds
super-majority in the 480-seat lower house. The Democratic Party of Japan
(DPJ) is expected to win no more than 77 seats, - a stunning collapse in
support, compared with the 308-seat landslide it won in 2009. Its leader, PM
Yoshihiko Noda, is stepping down as party chief as a result of the crushing
defeat. Instead, (LDP) chief Shinzo Abe is
returning as prime-minister, after 3-years in political exile.
Shinzo Abe
campaigned as a “currency warrior,” and is anxious to push back
against the Fed’s QE-4 scheme, with his own prescription for
Japan’s economic recovery. Abe met with Bank of Japan
chief Masaaki Shirakawa on Dec 18th and
urged the central bank to set an annual inflation target of +2% for the
consumer price index.
In their chat held a day ahead of a two-day BoJ Policy Board meeting, Abe also told
Shirakawa that his incoming government wants the BoJ to keep printing Japanese yen, until the inflation
rate hits +2%.

The idea is to weaken the yen and kick-start
Japan’s economy. According to some press reports, leaked to the media,
the LDP is preparing to detonate “Big-Bang” QE as early as
January 22nd, and flood the world money markets with $1.2-trillion
worth of Japanese yen. "We need to overcome the crisis Japan is undergoing. We have
promised to pull Japan out of deflation and correct a strong yen. The
situation is severe, but we need to do this,” Abe said on Dec 16th.
“Quantitative easing by the BoJ will help correct a strong yen and push up stock
prices. That will help boost investment and lead to rises in wages, jobs and
household revenues. We’d like to shorten the time needed for this to
happen,” Abe said.
It
could take several years for Japan’s consumer price index (CPI) to
reach +2%, from a negative -0.4% in October, because LDP Apparatchiks are in
charge of calculating Japan’s CPI, of course! Furthermore, every five
years, Japan’s government routinely changes the
items included in its CPI, preferring to lower of weighting of items that are
rising in price, while increasing the weighting of items that are declining
in price. This way, Japan’s CPI stays near zero-percent, and provides
political cover for the BoJ to monetize the
government’s debts.
Likewise, the Fed says it would consider
suspending its QE-4 operation, if the US-consumer price inflation rate climbs
significantly above its +2.5% target rate. However, Fed chief Bernanke says
it’s a mistake to include the prices of globally traded commodities,
such as food and energy, when calculating the rate of inflation. “As is
often the case, inflation has been pushed up and down in recent years by
fluctuations in the price of crude oil and other globally traded commodities,
including the increase in farm prices brought on by this summer's drought.
But the ebbs and flows in commodity prices have had only transitory effects
on inflation,” he told the Economic Club of New York on Nov 20th.
Essentially,
the Fed has given itself plenty of leeway to interpret a rise in the
inflation rate above +2.5% as transitory and temporary, and thereby not
requiring a pause in QE, let alone a tightening in monetary policy, - just
like the Bank of England, which has permitted above target inflation for the
past three years, in complete disregard of its legal mandate.

Currency War among World’s Top-2
Debtors, The
battle over the US$ /yen exchange rate has been raging for the past
4-½ years. Since April 2008, the BoJ has
expanded Japan’s monetary base, the most liquid form of cash in the
banking system, by +46% to an all-time high of ¥128-trillion. At the
same time, Fed has steadily increased the MZM money supply, the most liquid
form of cash, to a record $11.3-trillion today. That’s an annual rate
of increase of +9.5%, on average. Until recently, Tokyo was
losing the battle, even after injecting ¥14-trillion into
the foreign exchange market in 2011, through direct intervention that was
left unsterilized. As a courtesy to Washington, Tokyo recycled $128-billion
of its intervention effort into US Treasuries, - monetizing a big chunk of
the US-budget deficit. No wonder US president Barack Obama wants to meet Mr Abe in the White House in January 2013.
Yet
Tokyo’s massive intervention effort failed to give the US$ a
sustainable lift above ¥82. The US$ was stuck in quicksand, because the
Fed continually upped its QE ante, with bigger and bigger dosages of
liquidity. Also weighing heavily upon the US-dollar, the Fed
stripped the greenback of its interest rate advantage over Japan’s yen,
and frequently reminds listeners that the US-fed funds rate would remain
locked near zero percent for years to come. In other words, the Fed co-opted
the QE and ZIRP blueprints that were originally designed by the BoJ. Both central banks are now using a new scheme -
“inflation targeting.”
This
tug-of-war, between the world’s top-2 debtor nations,
over the US’s exchange rate versus the yen could last for many more
years. It’s unlikely that Tokyo would opt for
direct intervention in the currency market as its primary weapon of choice
for influencing the yen’s exchange rate. It already owns $1.13-trillion
of ultra-low yielding US Treasury notes. Instead, a determined LDP could make
further progress in pushing the Euro and US$ higher versus the yen in the
months ahead, by utilizing the Big-Bang” QE strategy. Tokyo could also
push for negative short-term interest rates to achieve its objectives.

Until
recently, Japan Inc was getting slammed by a double
whammy. The Euro currency had fallen below the psychological ¥100-level,
matching a 12-year low. The debt crisis in the Euro-zone, pushed its economy
into a double-dip recession, and caused Japanese exports to plummet. The
European Central Bank (ECB) slashed its overnight repo loan rate to a
historic low of 0.75% in July, adding to selling pressure on the Euro versus
the yen. Largely due to the super strong yen, the Nikkei-225 stock index was
a laggard, and trapped below the 9,000-level. Some
companies were hit harder than others.
Sony
traded at less than ¥1,000, for
the first time since 1980, the year it
introduced the Walkman portable cassette player. Japan’s electronics
giants, Sony, Panasonic, and Sharp became less competitive on pricing, and
also lost their lead in cutting-edge technologies to their South Korean
rivals, Samsung Electronics (005930:KS) and LG Electronics (066570:KS). Sony
posted a $5.7-billion loss for the fiscal year, its fourth consecutive year
in the red. Sharp lost $4.7-billion, forcing it to sell 10% of its shares to
Taiwan’s Hon Hai Group. Panasonic’s
losses were even larger totaling -$9.7-billion. Other less well-known
Japanese companies such as semiconductor maker Renesas
Electronics was also reporting losses.
The Bank
of Japan was getting steamrolled, even after dumping ¥14.3-trillion ($178-billion) into the currency market and
expanding its QE pipeline to ¥91-trillion in October. However,
since November 16th, the US-dollar has jumped to ¥84.50 this
week, - up from ¥78 earlier. The US$’s rebound is small in
percentage terms, but it’s a big bonus for Japan’s top exporters.
For example, every 1-yen increase in the US’s exchange rate leads to a
+2.4% increase in Nissan Motor’s (7201.T) operating profit. Likewise,
Toyota Motor’s profit increases by +3.3%. The US$’s rebound to
¥84.50 caught Japan’s Canon 7751.T by surprise. On Oct 16th,
the camera and printer maker, which generates 80% of its revenue abroad,
revised its forecast for the average US-dollar rate for the full year to
¥78, and kept its Euro rate forecast unchanged at ¥100. Since then however, the Euro has surged to
¥111.50.

In turn, the Nikkei-225 stock index surged
+1,200-points higher since Nov 16th to above the psychological
10,000-level on Dec 19th. Much of the Nikkei’s rally appears
to be spearheaded by Euro-yen “carry traders,” who are also
pocketing a currency profit. The Euro is gaining more ground against the yen,
because the ECB is sterilizing its bond buying operations. For retail
US-investors in Japan, there’s the potential for a currency loss. However,
the Wisdom-Tree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (NYSE
ticker: DXJ) does a reasonably good job of tracking the performance of the
Nikkei-225 index, and its portfolio is hedged against a loss in the
yen’s value against the US$, through short selling yen futures and
forward-contracts. So if the Japanese yen continues to
weaken, holders of DXJ could avoid the currency loss, while reaping the
rewards of a stronger Japanese stock market.
On Nov 30th, the fund managers at
Wisdom-Tree sought to increase increased DXJ’s exposure to
Japanese companies that earn much of their revenue from exports, and can
benefit from a weaker yen.Companies that earn more
than 80% of their revenues inside Japan will now be excluded from the mix.
Bumped from the top are NTT Docomo and Nippon
Telegraph & Telephone, two names that generate all of their revenues from
within Japan. Alternatively, Takeda and Canon will now be the #2 and #3 holdings,
with weighting of 5% and 4.5%, respectively, up from 2.6% and 2.1%
previously. In all, DXJ’s top-10 holdings earn 59% of their earnings from
overseas, on average%, up from 27% under the previous mix.
Still, the massive US-budget deficit is turning into
the biggest source of instability in the world markets today. More debt means
more money printing by the Fed, which in turn, could lead to a full blown
currency war, joined by many other central banks, all doing battle with each
other. Unfortunately, the corruption and incompetence in Washington politics
is beyond repair. Traders need to search for global opportunities to preserve
their purchasing power.
“The national budget must be balanced. The
public debt must be reduced; the arrogance of the authorities must be
moderated and controlled. Payments to foreign governments must be reduced, if
the nation doesn’t want to go bankrupt. People must again learn to
work, instead of living on public assistance,” – warned Cicero,
in 55 BC.
Gary Dorsch
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