Thursday, December 4, 2008

commodity price bust is going to keep going, and so will the stock market decline, and these moves will not be orderly

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Analysis of the day’s rate cuts will occupy most of the morning today, but by midday foreign exchange traders will probably turn their attention to the payrolls report at 8:30 am tomorrow. Yesterday ADP forecast the private sector component at a loss of 250,000 and other estimates are all over the place, with some whisper numbers as high as 400,000.

The problem will assuming that a really bad number tomorrow will be dollar exchange rate negative is that it’s already built in - isn’t it? Usually we get a two-way spike, both down and up, on the release. Payrolls is the most unforecastable of all the economic numbers, and so has become the most important. It’s not clear that the Fed views it as the most important, but never mind. This time we already know the news is going to be bad, and revisions will probably be worse. Depending on what happens to the automakers, it could get a lot worse before it starts getting better.

We are guessing that a bad payrolls number might have a US dollar rate -negative effect in the US dollar to Japanese yen exchange rate but not elsewhere. After all, falling employment is “good” in that it means the race to the bottom is proceeding at a rapid pace in the US, while it lags everywhere else. This is the FIFO argument from a few weeks ago (first-in, first-out) and while there’s a lot wrong with this idea, it can have a powerful grip on traders’ imaginations. Foreign Exchange Traders always try to anticipate. Obama has said employment is key and recovery plans will aim to create millions of jobs. So far we believe him.

Not getting enough attention is the report from the Government Accountability Office, which said on Tuesday "There is heightened risk that the interests of the government and taxpayers may not be adequately protected and that the program objectives may not be achieved in an efficient and effective manner." In other words, the Treasury has been throwing money out of windows, perhaps more than $3 trillion so far and easily another trillion or two to go, without being able to pin down exactly who got it and why. Someday the US dollar rate is going to fall on the blazingly obvious incompetence and mismanagement of this ad hoc rescue effort.

But we also think the commodity price bust is going to keep going, and so will the stock market decline, and these moves will not be orderly. Fear of volatility alone may suffice to support the US dollar exchange rate. Dollar bulls do not want to see commodity prices and stocks to rise, which is surely a bad thing in its own right.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

risk aversion is rising and rising risk aversion is dollar exchange rate favorable

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The USM service sector report is due today, probably a drop to 42 or the lowest since the index was invented in 1997. We also get the ADP Macro forecast of private sector jobs ahead of Friday’s critical payrolls report. This is oddly not much on the radar screen yet, even though on Monday the DJ Newswire reported a median estimate of 200,000 jobs lost. Potentially disturbing is a story in the WSJ asserting that Paulson is thinking about asking for the other half of the 700 billion in TARP money authorized by Congress. Originally his idea was to leave half of it for the incoming Obama administration. He would act next week if he acts at all (he leaves for China today or tomorrow, a wasted trip if ever there was one). This raises the question of what Paulson knows that the rest of us do not.

We hate to say it, but if stocks are down today, that implies risk aversion is rising and rising risk aversion is dollar exchange rate favorable. Bah. This is no way to run a currency market. With average daily ranges shrinking and little directional guidance, we have to expect a breakout at some point - but probably not today. We may have to wait for Friday’s payrolls for that, unless tomorrow’s rate cuts do the job.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
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Monday, December 1, 2008

Australia and New Zealand Dollar, the prospect of rate cuts is currency-negative this time.

Foreign Exchange Outlook : As we have been emphasizing, one major reason for the US dollars firmness during this crisis is "it's worse elsewhere," making the dollar a safe haven. The news from the UK is particularly dire. The Reserve Bank of Australia, Bank of England and ECB are all expected to cut interest rates this week, a move that traditionally weakens a currency but recently has been seen as a good thing because it may unclog the credit pipes and also demonstrates responsiveness. With central banks wagging an admonitory finger on credit quality behind the scenes, it’s not clear that lower rates have their accustomed power to goose lending and activity, though.

Still, in Australia (and New Zealand), the prospect of rate cuts is currency-negative this time. After a tame inflation report in Australia, the Australian Dollar fell on the widening view that the RBA could cut as much as 75 bp to 4.5% at the policy meeting tomorrow. Curiously, the Australian stock market fell on the rate cut outlook.

Aggressive rate-cutting around the world may be a dollar exchange rate supportive factor-or may not. A lot depends on the rhetoric. Too much fear and panic expressed out loud by central banks is good for the US dollar rate, while too smug a view (by, for example, the ECB) is also good because it shows a lack of responsiveness. In short, central banks have to perform a real balancing act. The appearance of desperation is also dollar friendly via the oil and other commodity price connection. We continue to think the oil - dollar correlation is more important than any other intermarket analysis.

In the US, we get a ton of data this week, including the ISM's manufacturing sector data for Nov and a Bernanke speech today, plus the usual barn-burner, the payrolls report on Friday. The ISM report is likely to show a contraction in manufacturing for the 4th month in November, perhaps to the lowest in 28 years, according to Bloomberg. This is bad for the economy and for confidence but very nice for the price of oil resuming its downtrend.

Most of the factors are lining up for a dollar rally today and perhaps all week. We worry a little that normally dollar exchange rate negative factors are being ignored, thought. Any development along those lines (terrorism, China, payrolls) could cause a confusing halt in the run.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
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Wednesday, November 26, 2008

We can't name the event that will end the US Dollar rally, but at a guess, we haven’t seen it yet.

Foreign Exchange Outlook: At last the Treasury and Fed have launched an initiative that the market likes and is responding to. At last the government is doing something about housing directly and not indirectly through credit default swaps or capital injections to banks. At last the government is listening to the market, since the structure of the TALF was something proposed by player (according to Market News). This is tremendously good news. Unable to force banks to lend—the one big missing ingredient in the Citi bailout and the earlier capital injections-the government has found a way to "incentivize" the banks. And it took only three months, if we count from end-August. For a country as big as the US with so many conflicting lumps of self-interest, this is actually not too bad.

Ironically and perversely, though, a workable initiative is dollar exchange rate negative, since it means global risk is down and opportunity is up. It’s nice to have greed plus fear back again and not just fear and fear, but some issues do remain-not the least of which is “Is it enough?”

We may get a hint today in the form of personal income and spending, with spending expected down a big 1% after -0.3% in Sept, according to the Bloomberg survey. Who ever heard of the US consumer reducing spending? We say the UK is about 9 months in front of the US on this and many other fronts. Household spending fell to a multi-year low in the UK and we probably have to expect it here, too. We also get data on durable goods order, new home sales and consumer confidence.

The other big factor is prospective interest rate cuts in the UK, Europe and US in December. Remember that rate cut were a currency favorable event in Australia (with the Australian Dollar exchange rate ralling) and the UK a few weeks ago, since they showed "responsiveness." If the ECB is seen as recalcitrant or dragging its heels, the euro exchange rate could get punished for that lack of responsiveness more than rewarded for having a favorable yield differential. (Foreign Exchange Traders dont need a reason to Sell Euros at the moment)

This is a topsy-turvy world.

Similarly, Foreign Exchange Traders will buy pounds if the Bank of England is aggressive, as seems likely. We are holding to our story that all the bad news is not out yet and any fresh instance of systemic failure will fall to the US dollars favor. This includes a retreat in equities, renewed weakness in commodities (especially oil), a big bank failure somewhere (anywhere), and so on. This doesn't even include all the terrible things that can happen in the political or natural world-riots, assassinations, earthquakes, and the like. It seems improbable that a giant rate cut in China will restore everything to conditions before. In fact, we think it really is a new era.

Downsizing is serious business.

We can't name the event that will end the US Dollar rally, but at a guess, we haven’t seen it yet.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

the US dollar is not a dead duck

Foreign Exchange Outlook: Risk aversion could come flying back in the window when we get two bits of data this morning, the Q3 GDP revision (8:30 am EST) and the Conference Board consumer confidence index (10 am EST). GDP will likely be rived from -0.3% to -0.5%, while the confidence index was probably steady at 38 in Nov, the same as Oct, according to the Bloomberg survey. This is not a deterioration but still the lowest since records began in 1967.

It’s notable that while we all hear Obama talking about infrastructure spending as a big component of the stimulus package, focus remains on the consumer. Even the finance guys at the Fed and Treasury moved from saving their buddies at the banks first to consumer credit second (not the housing sector, which would have been more logical). But consumer spending is not going to get us out of this thing. The only way for that to have been true would have been Helicopter Ben throwing $24,000 out of the sky for every person in the country. The Obama approach calls for the industrial sector to be revitalized by government spending, whether it’s wind farms or road-building.

This could be the post-industrial industrial revolution. Nobody has the slightest idea what it will look like, but given technology advances, it will probably result (in five-ten years) in a tremendous increase in labor market productivity. We tend to think of productivity as how many widgets a worker can churn out in an hour, but in practice, the US is a service economy and it runs on trucking. Better roads and bridges, together with an improved national electrical grid, are a tremendous injection of value into the economy (buy UPS and FedEx). Besides, it will be fun to see whether it’s really true, as we saw with Eisenhower’s interstate highway system, whether government is sometimes the solution and not always the problem, the old Reagan mantra.

This is to a certain extent the basis of the new optimism - one way or the other, all these experts, under Obama’s leadership, will fix things. Well, no. These are the same experts who may have warned us of impending doom but failed to get action (Summers) or to instigate action (Geithner). It ain’t over yet and nobody can even tell us what inning we are in. It’s the proverbial black swan situation and optimism-in the form of giant stock index rises-is unwarranted. We believe in trends. The Dow was up but has not reached red resistance. It could be an aberration. The same thing is true of oil, although gold has a pretty scary chart-two gap openings in a row.

Assuming more dismal new releases are out there waiting to hit us over the head with some calamity or another, the US dollar is not a dead duck. As noted above, the case for the dollar exchange rate demise has not yet been proven. We do not doubt that it will be one day, but not yet. Keep the faith.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller Foreign Exchange Trading
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Monday, November 24, 2008

We guess the US dollar will survive this round, too

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Everyone is looking at institutional factors like the Citibank bailout and hardly anyone is looking at macroeconomic indicators, but today we get existing home sales, probably a drop by 3.5% to an annual pace of 5 million. It will be the biggest monthly drop since Sept 2007, according to the Bloomberg survey. In the absence of a plan to stabilize the foreclosure rate and housing prices, the focus is in institutional failure rather than the economic consequences of the data itself. This is US dollar exchange rate negative. But can it be overwhelmed by an Obama spending plan due this week? Yes, but perhaps only temporarily. Spending itself is not enough you need a wide, deep and intelligent plan that everyone can believe in. Already we are seeing “anti-Keynesian” diatribes. Poor Keynes. He is getting blamed for a lot of things he never said or recommended. He did not say "spend your head off, debt doesn’t matter." Of course debt matters.

Without going further down that ideological road, consider the advice from some currency gurus who say “buy currency of creditor countries (like Japan) and sell the currency of debtor countries (like the UK and US).” This is like buying stocks of companies whose book value is greater than their stock prices. But countries don’t have book values. What counts is not the balance sheet, but the ability to generate cash. And here we have to consider not only the government and its ability to tax, but also the ability of private institutions, mostly banks, to generate the cash to pay the monthly bills and survive one more month. In the US, the TED spread (the 3-month Treasury rate vs. interbank LIBOR) is widening out again to 216 bp (according to Bloomberg), from the low in May of 76 bp and the worst-case high of 464 bp on Oct 10. The Fed is making funds available to just about every central bank in the world, including the Swiss and the Mexicans, but who comes first? US banks.

Longer run, the US printing all that money is an evil thing that will come back to haunt us. But in the immediate futures, like this week and next, it’s a powerful argument for the safe-haven status of the US to continue. Institutionally, perhaps the US doesn’t deserve the crown of safe-haven. The US is blundering badly. But in this matter of the crisis, it is still the leader-liquidity comes before solvency. We can worry about credit quality later.

How much money are we talking about? Bloomberg added up all the government programs and arrives at a figure of $7.4 trillion, or about half of US GDP. “Bloomberg News tabulated data from the Fed, Treasury and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and interviewed regulatory officials, economists and academic researchers to gauge the full extent of the government’s rescue effort.” The bailout includes the $700 billion in TARP; $2.4 trillion in commercial paper; $1.4 trillion from the FDIC to guarantee bank-to-bank loans; $29 for the JP Morgan takeover of Bear Stearns; $122.8 billion in addition to TARP allocations for AIG, and now $20 billion directly to Citi plus $306 billion of government guarantees for troubled mortgages and toxic assets.

Bloomberg writes “The money that’s been pledged is equivalent to $24,000 for every man, woman and child in the country. It’s nine times what the U.S. has spent so far on wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to CBO figures. It could pay off more than half the country’s mortgages.” Moreover, the Fed is responsible for $4.4 trillion of pledges, or 60% of the total commitment of $7.4 trillion-this is what we should be worried about, not the $700 billion in TARP. Bloomberg is miffed because the government won’t disclose the collateral taken, with Bernanke calling it “unproductive” to disclose it.

It goes without saying that this is the biggest bailout ever, dwarfing the Chrysler version, the steel companies, the S&L’s, etc. Is it quibbling to ask whether it’s “investing” or “spending”? Probably not, since the rule of deleveraging together with bad credit quality means downsizing, i.e., permanent losses. We are all going to be made poorer by this, but in the end, what counts is the ability of the US government to sell the paper to get the money it needs to save Citibank and all the others. Can we do it? Yes. Britain is neck-and-neck on aggressive stimulus and other plans. Paulson did a bad job but the job is getting done. We guess the US dollar will survive this round, too.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller Foreign Exchange Trading
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Tuesday, November 18, 2008

US Dollar and consumer spending is about to fall off the cliff

Foreign Exchange Outlook : We don’t like it that stock markets are the dominant factor in the currency market. It makes for weird effects and puts hard economic data and a sane perspective on the economy in a secondary position. This week we get a plateful of data, including PPI and CPI for October, along with the NAHB housing market index and Philadelphia Fed survey for November. But if some important company reports bad earnings, even good numbers would be overshadowed. It’s dumb and it’s dangerous. The one thing it may prevent us seeing in deflation in the US, as in the UK.

Deflation and fear of deflation has a funny effect on people. We simply do not understand a world in which prices fall, companies fail, and GDP contracts. Most of all, we don’t understand it when the US consumer stops consuming but if the outlook for employment is as dire as we see in the Empire State report yesterday, consumer spending is about to fall off the cliff. The domino effects reach into the darkest corners of the world.

This morning we get the Treasury report on capital flows for Sept, which was the evil month in
which Lehman was allowed to go under. The August report had shown an outflow of $400 million after an outflow of $33.6 billion in July, despite an increase in foreign purchases of long-term Treasuries and repatriation by US investors. Market News notes that over the past five years, US investors bought nearly $1 trillion in overseas stocks and bonds, more than in the previous 25 years, so there remains a lot to come home if that is what is happening. Some strategists say this is the important factor behind the US dollars rise.

For reasons we don’t like, the dollar exchange rate is likely to do okay in the near future. For some reason, the US dollar is not being punished for incompetent government. As long as stocks continue to slide and scare everybody, the US dollar is a safe haven. And in the perspective of “it’s worse elsewhere,” we have yet to see the worst occur in places like China and other emerging countries. India is still forecasting high growth next year, for example. These guys just don’t get it. When the US sneezes, the rest of the world catches not a cold, but pneumonia. At what point do we see geopolitical unrest arise because of slumping economies? If history is any guide, India and Pakistan should pick a fight with one another any day now.

Another factor is oil. Many countries have said $60 is the breakeven point at which social programs and subsidies have to be cut. Indonesia and Malaysia have already seen turmoil over this issue-what about Venezuela or Mexico?

Those who are long dollars should be careful what they wish for.

Bye for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
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Monday, November 17, 2008

BNP Paribas has a forecast of euro to dollar exchange rate to go to 1.07 by the end of Q1. Holy Toledo!

Foreign Exchange Outlook: The rest of the world is falling into recession faster and bigger than the US, which is to blame for the trigger events that started the recession in the first place. (Talking-head TV pundits said over the weekend that a lot of fingers were pointing blame at the US at the G-20 meeting.) The National Association for Business Economics says the US will still put in growth of 1.4% in 2008, sliding to a contraction of 0.2% in 2009. Compare to the UK with a peak-to-trough of 2.5%. On the quarterly basis, Q4 will contract at an annual pace of 2.6% and in Q1, by 1.3%-but then the US will resume growth of 0.5% in Q2. This improvement will mirror recovery in real estate/housing. Really? This implies the worst is nearly over. We'd have only 4 months to go (to Q2 next year). This must assume GM doesn’t blow up and that the Obama stimulus/rescue plan is really big and really successful (whatever it is) and that oil prices remain low and a few other assumptions that are probably unrealistic.

We get a dose of cold water today with the Empire State index from the New York Fed, probably a drop to -26 from -24.6 in Sept, according to the Bloomberg survey.

But again, conditions elsewhere are worse than in the US. The ECB next meets on Dec 4, with opinion wildly divided on whether itthe ECB will cut interest rates. IMF managing director Strauss-Kahn said the ECB has room to cut rates. He told the BBC "In some parts of the world--Japan, the United States--interest rates have been cut very much, but it can be done more aggressively in other parts. I think now [the ECB has] room to decrease the interest rate, but nevertheless the stress has to be put on fiscal policy." This presumably means each country has to give up fiscal prudence. But we thought that was already a given--?

With the market seeing rate cuts as the right thing to do and not a currency-negative, we are faced with the perverse idea that if the ECB doesn’t cut in Dec, the euro exchange rate will be punished. This seems backwards of the usual response to rate cuts but it has justification today. Cuts are virtuous and refusing to cut is pig-headed. So did Strauss-Kahn give us a clue? Yes, maybe, that Trichet and/or the policy board are reluctant to cut a second time in as many months out of fear of looking panicky or some other reason. Watch for additional news about the ECB attitude toward a cut. If the policy board is looking reluctant, the euro rate can drop another 500 points. In fact, general sluggishness on the European front is inspiring some wild forecasts of a crashing euro. BNP Paribas has a forecast of euro to dollar exchange rate to go to 1.07 by the end of Q1. Holy Toledo!

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Barbara Rockefeller

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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Net-net, the US dollar Rate is at or near a turning point. It seems to be holding ground against the euro, pound and yen

Foreign Exchange Outlook : We get the US service sector PMI this morning, probably a drop to 47 from 50.2 in Sept for the 6th drop in 10 months, according to Bloomberg. We say the big picture will dominate today rather than data confirming the US slowdown. The big picture includes the reception of the US Treasury refunding, political things like Obama’s choice of TreasSec and/or intentions to propose a stimulus plan right away, and the new perspective on rate cuts.

Rate cuts first: The Australian dollar was rewarded with a rise after the Reserve Bank of Australia cut by more than expected. This is the opposite of the usual response under normal conditions. Commentary from the UK indicates that a larger-than-expected rate cut by the Bank of England tomorrow, even as much as 100 bp, would be sterling-favorable because it shows the government to be "pro-active." The market has priced in a 50 bp cut, but of 60 economists surveyed by Blomberg, 8 expect 100 bp and 6 expect 75 bp. A UBS analyst writes “In times of economic stress markets may become more concerned by future growth rates as a driver of future returns than movements in cash rates.”

Evidently a global recession/possible Depression is sufficiently well-appreciated that rate cuts are seen as foreign currency supportive.

Might the same thing happen to the euro exchange rate tomorrow, and might the market be expecting just that response? Yes. Also, the following day we get the US payrolls report, expected to be bad but perhaps not fully priced in yet. We think the euro downtrend looks safe, but on the intermediate chart (360 minutes), the euro exchange rate is pressing against the linreg channel top and we need to see a level under the last intermediate low (1.2523) to feel confident. It’s not unheard of for a currency to move that much in two days, especially given the wild swings lately. In fact, the current average daily true range is 158 points, so over two days we could easily reach 1.2500. But everything has to go right for the us dollar to achieve the 1.2500 level before the mud hits the fan early Friday morning in the form of payrolls.

The Obama Effect: We may not hear before then of any Obama stimulus plan in the remaining months of the current Congress. (Congress remains out for another two weeks but technically has two months after that). The Obama plan is probably a $175 billion package including outright subsidy checks to consumers (which didn’t work all that well in April), a tax credit for job creation, and a big public works initiative - roads, bridges and schools.

Should we be worried that an Obama plan will also contain Hooverish measures against free trade or reactionary unionism? Probably not.

His advisors include former Fed chair Volcker, former TreasSec Summers, Warren Buffett, George Soros, and former TreasSec Rubin, who has said Obama understands that any government, especially one proposing big spending, needs to announce a commitment to long-term fiscal discipline. Failure to do so undermines the bond market and the dollar exchange rate. This was Rubin’s stance in the Clinton administration and he was right. As far as we know, Obama takes expert advice like this.

A funny monkey wrench is the works is the upcoming (Nov 15) summit of G20 in Washington, proposed by French Pres Sarkozy and hijacked by Bush. We expect nothing to come out of this meeting but hot air.

Net-net, the US dollar Rate is at or near a turning point. It seems to be holding ground against the euro, pound and yen, but not against the "riskier" currencies Australian Dollars and Canadian Dollars. If hope rises of a US recovery via Obama or anything else, the Australian Dollars and Canadian Dollars upswings will continue as risk appetite comes roaring back.

Does this lead the others?

Possible.

Ironically, the prospect of recovery in the US can be US dollar negative.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Foreign Exchange Outlook

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The US dollar has two big black clouds hanging over it. First is the election and then there is payrolls.

Today the US election is everything. If it’s an Obama landslide and/or if there is no dispute over the fairness of the counts, that would remove a black cloud hanging over the dollar from the last election. We also want to hear right away - this week - the name of the incoming Treasury Secretary and some broad outlines of the financial plan. A $1 trillion budget deficit is very big dollar exchange rate negative. Assurances of an effort to balance the budget would go a long way, even if they are not really credible.

Once the election is over, attention will turn immediately to ADP’s forecast tomorrow of the payrolls numbers on Friday. Market News gets a survey average result of a drop of 200,000 in Oct, but estimates range from –85,000 to –230,000. The jobless rate, the worst fiction in the data pantheon, will probably rise from 6.1% in Sept to 6.3% but perhaps as much as 6.4%. Realistically, it’s probably 8-10% already if the count were done properly.

There is a consensus of opinion from Foreign Exchange commentators everywhere on the US election. Calyon wrote "We think a decisive win in the Senate for the Democrats as well a win for Senator Obama, as the polls indicate, would boost risk appetite as the risk of political paralysis will be reduced going forward.” Separately, UBS says the focus will shift to the "transition between administrations and how the president-elect handles the growing budget deficit."

Let’s say McCain wins and payrolls show a gigantic drop of 230,000 or more. The US dollar exchange rate would be toast by noon on Friday - to the recent high of 1.3298 - on the prospect of more shooting wars, endless deficits, and probably a disputed vote count. Can an Obama win offset really bad payrolls data? Yes, maybe. If Obama wins, the US dollar has a real chance of proceeding on its upward trend on "fundamentals" other than the safe-haven flow from deleveraging, or "forced liquidation," as Jimmy Rogers puts it. In other words, the US dollar would get a positive reason to be firm rather than a negative one. As we all know from the Economist’s poll and other surveys, the world would vote for Obama if it could. This is just a funny tidbit except in the context of confidence in US management of the economy and thus potential capital inflows.

We could name a third black cloud - Crude Oil.

With a new embrace of risk and stock markets generally unwilling to accept the recession/deflation/Depression scenario, it’s possible that oil stops falling. It’s hard to say how big a factor this might be. To sell dollars in a knee-jerk “because” oil is rising sounds stupid, but some folks do it. At the least it can have an effect for a few days. A bigger effect is on the US current account deficit (remember that?). We need oil prices to fall to avoid another round of twin deficit talk.

Even with falling oil prices, the current account deficit has structural characteristics that make it slow to fall. And with the appetite for a doubling of long-term debt unknown (hence talk of revising a 3-year note to bridge maturities), the US could actually face funding difficulties. The Treasury capital flow report has not been dollar exchange rate friendly lately, although it’s distorted by emergency cash–raising, revulsion from Freddie/Fannie, and the like. But in the Big Picture, the US needs to show progress on the current account if funding needs are doubling. It’s not clear how that can be accomplished. Again, we have to say that longer-term, it’s all too easy to make the case against the dollar. But in the meanwhile, keep the faith. Things are worse elsewhere.

A big bad Event can easily restore the US dollars fortunes, and if we have learned anything over the past year, it is to expect surprises

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Barbara Rockefeller
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Monday, November 3, 2008

The US dollar will continue to benefit from the financial market crisis

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Foreign Exchange market analysts say the market will be “distracted” tomorrow by the US election but it won’t have a big effect on prices. We are not so sure. For one thing, the market likes big, decisive actions. A landslide by Obama, which is a real possibility, will be rewarded. But the longer-lasting effects of the election are yet to come. They pertain to political philosophy as much as economic outcomes, and here’s how:

We review a ton of headlines and skim hundreds of stories looking for the gold nuggets that form the basis of an foreign exchange outlook. Sometimes it’s all just noise, especially lately when it’s hard to know what is critical and what is not. The government “saving” Bear Stearns but allowing Lehman to fail was obviously a big deal but we didn’t see at the time that it would have such an enormous ripple effect. Now everyone blames the Lehman failure for consequences still coming out (like the HBOS write-down today and tomorrow’s data on credit default swaps). Today we have a tidbit from Economy.com that hadn’t sunk in yet but we now see as the single most important thing for the next 9-18 months. Here it is again: “Nationwide, 7.3 million American homeowners are expected to default on their US mortgages between 2008 and 2010, about triple the usual rate, according to Moody's Economy.com, a research firm. Some 4.3 million of those are expected to lose their homes.”

With 111.16 million households in the US as of 2007, the default rate is 6.6% of all households. The number of new homeless households is 3.8% of total households. Quite apart from the effect on unemployment, retail sales, home prices and other standard economic variables, think about the effect of this many new homeless households on national health, crime rates, and the socio-political Zeitgeist.

The Far Right dislikesthe idea of a social contract-the US is a country of individualists. You can’t have individualism as your core ruling principle and then provide a nanny state, aka socialism. Bush One tried to soften this with “compassionate conservatism,” and we saw how well that worked out with Bush Two in New Orleans. Nobody doubts that if Katrina had happened in (white, Republican) Orange County, the place would be rebuilt better than ever by now. The bottom line for the US is the question of what should the people expect of government in times of crisis as well as regular times? Some things can be provided only by government, like national defense, transcontinental highways, and so on. Should the state also “take care of” these 4.3 million people who will become homeless? We say the US is about to give itself a lesson in Political Science 101. We fondly imagined this debate would end with the election tomorrow, but surely we cannot brush under the rug such a high number of homeless households as 4.3 million.

We probably need to assume that a McCain presidency would mean a policy of letting the private market solve the homeless problem. Foreign Exchange Markets basically don’t like poor people, so this simply would not work.

Assuming we get Obama and assuming he believes in a social contract that deals with 4.3 million homeless households, the turmoil is going to be horrendous. Conservatives want to prevent the “Europeanization” of America. Economists worry, too - can it be done without the price distortion and misallocation of resources that are so prevalent in Europe? In France, for example, the state requires a failing company to remain in operation to provide employment.

This is bad business and stupid public policy. Surely the US wouldn’t go that far-?

Something very big is happening.

It’s not clear what effect it will have on the US dollar exchange rate, but longer run, a Europeanized America will have even bigger deficits and without the safety net of the Maastricht Treaty and Stability Pact, not to mention the single central bank mandate of controlling inflation. We complain that “Europe” lacks region-wide institutions, hence the scattershot national bank rescue plans, but the eurozone does have that one, giant, splendid thing named “fiscal prudence.” With the world falling down around our ears, nobody much cares about fiscal prudence today, but that won’t last forever. And it can get worse. Maybe the number of homeless households is not 4.3 million but double that. Maybe the government rescue plans only delay getting the true housing market bottom and the end of bank consolidation, both prerequisites for recovery. Maybe sovereign wealth funds and others lose confidence in the US and stop buying all the trillions in new paper the US Treasury will issue to pay for it.

Longer run, you can see that we can easily make the case for the dollar exchange rate falling out of favor. In the meanwhile, falling commodity prices, impending recession worse in other places than in the more robust US, and additional shoes left to drop also outside the US all imply the US dollar will continue to benefit from the financial market crisis. In particular, we expect the emerging markets - inlcuding China - to get harder hit than anyone is now expecting.

If and when one of them hits the wall, the dollar will be the immediate beneficiary.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Retracements in foreign exchange are not as forecastable as some technical analysts would have you believe

Foreign Exchange Technical Notes : Retracements in foreign exchange are not as forecastable as some technical analysts would have you believe. We can make three or four estimates and one of them will be close to correct, but the next time, a different technique will be the right one. For the euro exchange rate, we can note that the last correction was 9/11 to 9/23 and a rise of about 870 points. The equivalent move today would be to 1.3254 by mid-November, although it looks like the level will be reached faster this time. Using the last intermediate high/low is a strong idea because we define a trend as a series of higher highs or lower lows. Breaking a high/low means the trend was broken - but not always.

We can also look at hand-drawn diagonal support and resistance, key moving averages like the 20-day, and Fibonacci levels. We would not be surprised to see an important correction like this one stop at an important Fibonacci/Gann level like 50%, mostly because everybody and his brother will be drawing them to set stops and targets.

We can also look to intermarket information and fundamentals for a clue as to when a correction will stop-or get confirmed as a new trend. Today we see oil and the commodity price index up quite a bit and since they are assumed to have a negative correlation with the dollar, that is itself a factor. Let us remind you that it’s a spectacularly unreliable one.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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We continue to think the dollar exchange rate will come back after this big and abrupt correction, which has by no means proven itself a true reversal

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The Fed funds rate at 1% matches the level of June 2003 and before that had not been in force since the 1950’s. That should suffice to scare everybody, not least because we have no idea what’s next-0.50%, or zero, as in Japan? The Fed is running out of traditional ammunition. Today we must expect Q3 GDP to be a negative number. The Bloomberg survey comes up with a drop of 0.5%. As always, we have to wonder if a lesser drop would be dollar exchange rate supportive and a bigger drop even more sharply dollar-negative. This gets tricky and tangled because a bigger drop implies lower oil and commodity prices, which “should” be US dollar-favorable. The scary rise in commodity prices, especially oil, on the US rate cut is probably doomed. It’s a bad assumption under current conditions to think rate cuts can goose activity and restore growth to its old path. The old path is gone. This should be welcome because we needed to break the circular link between oil and the dollar.

The big-picture reasons to think the US dollar will not reverse trends include that the unwinding of leveraged positions is not over yet. It took about 5 years to establish these positions. Surely it takes longer than a few months to unwind them all. In fact, those who put on carry trades five years ago are not in hot water yet… raising the question of whether they need to get unwound. Besides, there are always some diehards. Even those positions that are not heavily leveraged may get undone. State Street said last week that US investments overseas total $5 trillion. Everyone fell in love with the idea of diversification, but maybe it looks less appealing today, especially in emerging foreign exchange markets.

Another big-picture idea is that US rates are now almost at rock-bottom, while Europe still boasts an overnight rate of 3.75%. As ECB chief Trichet warned, a rate cut next week is a real possibility-and the market thinks more are possible, too, for a total of 75 bp by year-end to 3%. This would give the eurozone an advantage of 200 bp, but in a global recession, higher rates are a drag, not an advantage. Besides, as we have seen, the rate for euros is no longer the key rate. Instead the key rate is the US Dollar rate among European banks, and since they won’t lend to one another, the US Fed is providing the funding, at a premium. In sum, European banks have a trust issue and can get credit only from their own central bank in a currency that the central bank does not issue. This is embarrassing and significantly lowers the status of eurozone institutions both private and public.

We continue to think the dollar exchange rate will come back after this big and abrupt correction, which has by no means proven itself a true reversal.

Faith in the US dollar is based on the same factors as before-the safe-haven bid will return with a vengeance when the next Shock hits. At this point, despite the uneven implementation of the US rescue plan, the most likely location of the next Shock is outside the US.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

We get the Crude Inventory report tomorrow, probably a sizeable build.

The Dec Nymex Crude oil futures contract closed at $63.22 from $64.15 on Friday, but rose back to $64.89 and is trading at $63.86 a barrel at 9:50 am GMT on the news that OPEC may hold yet another production-cutting meeting in December. Also, the dollar exchange rate fell and Mexico has had to close two facilities due to weather.

We get the inventory report tomorrow, probably a sizeable build.

Buy for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

Thursday brings the first hard evidence of recession in the US in the form of the official Q3 GDP, probably a contraction of 0.5%

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Today seems to be a bit of calm before new storms, and do not doubt for a minute that new storms are coming. We have the probable bailout of the auto companies. We have potential currency and stock market intervention by Japan, Hong Kong, and others. More immediately, we have the Fed cutting rates-or not-this week, with the Bank of Japan on Friday probably following suit. In the current environment, he who cuts rates gets rewarded, not punished. Trichet already said the ECB will join. A major question is whether it’s a joint decision like last time. The markets seem to like coordinated action. A coordinated rate cut would (ironically) be US dollar-negative, because it would imply that somebody is in charge and knows what he’s doing. There isn’t and they don’t, but that would be the knee-jerk reaction.

Thursday brings the first hard evidence of recession in the US in the form of the official Q3 GDP, probably a contraction of 0.5%. The actual number doesn’t matter as much as confirmation of "recession," now no longer the official two quarters of contraction but pretty much whatever the speaker or commentator chooses it to be. The poor NBER-it lost its preeminence on this one after failing to name the last recession until after it was over.

Next Tuesday we have the US election and right afterwards, on Friday, the nonfarm payrolls for October, probably a lot more than 100,000. This week and forevermore we have massive new Treasury issuance. Meanwhile, the commodity bubble continues to deflate and China inches closer to the same global slowdown affecting everyone. The political fallout everywhere from worsening conditions trends to be authoritarian—keep the peace at any cost.

The only thing really supporting the US dollar exchange rate is flight-to-safety and panic selling of emerging market and commodity assets, whether forced by de-leveraging or by choice. This is not over and therefore we assume the dollar rally is not over. But boy, the rally faces a lot of threats, even bottom-fishing among the newly cheap assets. Keep the faith and watch the charts-the instant an intermediate top is seen in the euro exchange rate, we can buy dollars in size some more.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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This is the sense in which the credit crisis will end when house prices stop falling.

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Deleveraging is a word that has now reached the mainstream. Call it what you like - capitulation, liquidation, contraction - cash is now king again. Heaven only knows how long it will take for "credit-worthiness" to be a viable concept again. Not to be overly simplistic, but if you can't lend on the word of honor of the borrower, how about lending against collateral? That works when the price of the collateral is known and there is a liquid market for the collateral.

This is the sense in which the credit crisis will end when house prices stop falling.

This gets a little tricky since we know prices always overshoot, but we may have some evidence-home sales rose 5.5% in the latest month, mostly due to unloading of foreclosed properties. The median sales price of single-family detached homes plunged from $405,000 a year ago to $239,000 last month. How much is enough? Rising sales are scattered across the country and it’s not a universal phenomenon yet… and globally, foreclosures and price drops are just starting in some places, like China.

What about other forms of collateral, like high-value manufactured goods or even commodities like gold? They gain value only when the sale price is known, as in the form of a bill of sale or receivable that can be discounted. We are back to factoring and discounted trade paper, which they had in Babylon. This is not such a bad thing but it speaks volumes about modern embellishments to the credit scene-dross, all of it.

Nothing says this louder than the ratings agency executives testifying to Congress last week. They tried to weasel out of acknowledging complicity in putting a rating on paper that deserved to be rated “zero quality.” Yes, there’s plenty of blame to go around but the ratings agencies seem the most venal, alongside the originators.

To get back to cash, Business Week reports that in Dubai’s lush luxury real estate market, lenders are requiring as much as 70% down. At another extreme, after the stock market meltdown in Japan in the early 1990’s, citizens preferred cash and postal (government-guaranteed) savings. Bankers used to go door-to-door politely asking housewives to make a bank deposit from the nestegg under the floorboards. The US is not Japan but there might be a universal human impulse to embrace risk aversion. Business Week reports that sales of home safes are up 50% in the past 4 weeks and currency in circulation is up sharply in the last month for the biggest increase since Y2K in 1999. You can see the chart at the St. Louis Fed website (http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/WCURCIR). It’s worth a quick look.

Everyone knows the multiplier effect from Econ 101. Banks need deposits to make loans, even if they were willing to make loans in the first place. Deposits are the raw material of banking. We do not yet have the rising unemployment that will contract deposits naturally, but we already have hoarding of cash. This is not healthy for GDP. We get the preliminary Q3 GDP on Thursday, probably a contraction of 0.5% (like the UK). This is going to scare people even more.

But for once the US dollar exchange rate is not suffering from the grim outlook because conditions are worse elsewhere. Bloomberg reports that the deleveraging that already began in the US and Europe is now spreading to emerging markets. "Banks have extended about $2.5 trillion in foreign currency loans to emerging markets, according to Barclays, which cited data compiled by the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland. Some 70% of the claims on developing nations in Asia mature in less than one year, while the amount for emerging European countries is 43%."

Barclays says “The increasing difficulty facing developing countries to roll over their foreign currency loans may set the stage for even greater strengthening of the US dollar.'' A sum like $2.5 trillion is not trivial. We need to start thinking of failed states. So far we have Iceland and Argentina, but soon we will be getting the list of the others from the experts. We will be surprised by some of the names-we always are. The Ukraine, the Baltic states-and who else?

Back in the US, we have unreasoning panic starting to develop. We don’t need the government to say "Liquidate! Liquidate everything!" as the Treasury Secretary said during the Hoover years—we have individuals and the private sector doing that on their own. Pretty soon we will hear another round of blame laid at the doorstep of hedge funds, which will be unfair. Some 10,000 hedge funds hold some $1.7 trillion in assets and will have to contract to only a few hundred funds holding perhaps $300 billion in assets, but hedge funds are only the visible part of the contraction. Regular banks, regular pension funds and regular mutual funds are dumping assets, too. Again, as we wrote before, we don’t know who has the credibility and stature to bring this to a halt. Maybe Obama? But when?

Until we get leadership, the only thing to do is buy dollars and buy Treasuries.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Thursday, October 23, 2008

If you can’t earn anything in a savings account or T-bill, you might as well have gold, right?

The Nov NYMEX crude oil futures contract rolled to the Dec contract, which closed at $66.75. Overnight it rose to $68.50 on talk from the Iranaians of a 2 million barrel per day cut at the Friday OPEC meeting, but the market understands demand is falling… and the price fell back to $67.17 at 12:31 pm GMT. As Bloomberg notes, prices have more than halved since the record high $147.27 on July 11. The US Energy Dept report yesterday confirmed that demand elasticity is better than anyone expected, with fuel demand down 8.5% y/y. Demand for gasoline fell 4.3% y/y.

See the gold chart. We think it was necessary to erase the upsloping channel and restore the old downchannel from the peak in March (over $1000). As with oil, we have the chicken-and-egg issue of US dollar exchange rate up, commodity price down and vice versa. As we all know to our rue, gold is not really an inflation hedge-it keeps up but does not yield anything over inflation over long periods of time. This time, it’s obvious that after the recession starts bottoming (sometime next year, presumably), inflation is likely-and then gold will take off again. But you have to wonder where the gold bugs are today-why are they not buying ahead of massive uncertainty? If you can’t earn anything in a savings account or T-bill, you might as well have gold, right?

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

OPEC sabre-rattling that takes the oil price up is a splendid opportunity to short oil at a higher price

The Nov NYMEX oil futures contract closed a little higher at $74.25 from $71.85 the day before on the wobblies ahead of the emergency OPEC meeting on Friday that is sure to result in production cuts of 1-2 million barrels per day. But the market is not impressed by OPEC, which always cheats-as cartels go, it’s an ineffective one. The price initially rose to $75.69 but then fell to a low of $73.12 overnight and is trading at $73.86 at noon in London.

Oil economist Jim Williams (www.energyeconomist.com) points out that many OPEC countries are already producing under quota for various reasons, including Venezuela (because it has lost production capability) while at the same time they need the money. He writes “OPEC hasn't published quotas for any country except its new members Angola and Ecuador since 2005. The primary reason for this is that Venezuela would be forced to admit that it lost over a million barrels per day of production capacity since Chavez took office. Since 2005 OPEC has styled its quota as production cuts without actually stating the numbers.”

As usual, everybody cheats. And the Saudis are the biggest producer with the highest capacity, and thus they hold the key. Williams says “The Saudis could gain some benefit from allowing prices to go even lower. A price of $60 per barrel, for example, would harm Iran and quite possibly slow Iran's nuclear progress. As we see it, the Saudis are every bit as concerned about Iran developing nuclear weapons as Israel. Lower prices are an indirect way for the Saudis to slow Iran's progress in developing or acquiring weapons of any sort.

“Ultimately this is a Saudi decision and so far the Saudis are holding their cards close to the vest. Whatever, the cut we do not expect a high level of compliance and it is possible if not probable that oil prices move back below $70 per barrel following the meeting. It would take prices near $60 and another meeting to have the weak sisters in OPEC participate in earnest.”

What we take from this is that any scaredy-cat response over the next few days to OPEC sabre-rattling that takes the oil price up is a splendid opportunity to short oil at a higher price. In other words, an announcement effect that is all tail and no dog.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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The Fed is in a no-win situation now.

Foreign Exchange Outlook ; We continue to see a widening gap between the truly socialist European and the more free-market American approaches. Talk of the US going pinko, whether in the government itself (the Treasury and Fed) or the presidential race, is dumb. We have no evidence that government interference in free markets is going to become institutionalized for the long-run in the US. In any case, the election will be held two weeks from today and we will be able to put aside all this silly talk, and acknowledge that everything being done is being done for the sake of expediency, with nary a core principle in sight.

The key point is that it’s ain’t over yet. Banks may be loosening up for one day or one-week or even 3-month tenors, but that doesn’t mean they will be there for the rollover into a more distant future. By the time this thing is over-sometime next year, we assume-the US will have spent well over $1 trillion, the banking landscape will be littered with the corpses of bad banks, and the people will be thoroughly discouraged, having lost much of their net worth.

This is a good thing-a fresh start-but it’s painful.

By then also the demand for US Dollars will be waning if not gone, and how is the Fed going to sweep them up without discouraging economic activity? The Fed is in a no-win situation now.

But that’s off in the future. For today, we still like the dollar exchange rate, in part because we know the Fed will be cutting interest rates, perhaps to zero (like Japan) and this looks good in contrast to holdouts who refuse to acknowledge disaster. Admitting you have a problem is the first step to curing it, or something. Weirdly, the pounds to dollars gets the occasional burst from the same reasoning.

It’s bizarre, but not wrong.

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Barbara Rockefeller
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+ 44 207 183 2790

Monday, October 20, 2008

Oil traders think it will go well under $50

The Nov NYMEX Crude Oil futures contract rose to $71.85 at the close on Friday after $69.85 the day before, but events are racing ahead. OPEC will hold its meeting early on Oct 24 and announce a cut of 1-2 million barrels per day, according to OPEC Pres Khelil. This sounds like disarray. Fear of production cuts took the oil price up substantially to $74 overnight and $73.86 at 11:10 am GMT.

ING says that if oil goes to $50 next year, the GDP of the Gulf Cooperation Council (including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain) would contract 25%. Bloomberg reports that put options on Dec NYMEX futures at $50 “soared 28- fold in the past two weeks,” meaning “Contracts that allow holders to sell 1,000 barrels of oil for $50 each by December closed at $280 on the Nymex on Oct. 17, up from $10 on Oct. 3.” This means some Oil traders think it will go well under $50. Deutsche Bank has a 2009 forecast of $60 on the possibility of a major world recession.

We may think that cheaper oil is a nice antidote to recessionary forces, but it’s also a disincentive to exploration and investment, not to mention investment in alternative energy.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Bank of New Zealand and Canada to cut interest rates

Foreign Exchange Outlook : We have yet to get an “October surprise,” the attention-grabbing Event manufactured specifically to influence the election. Perhaps conditions are so bad today that collectively they are the October surprise. Or perhaps in a few days we will get another tape from Osama bin Laden, who sent one four days before the 2004 election.

Even without a terrorist event, we have plenty of potential surprises. Today we get the Conference Board leading indicators, and we know it will be dismal. Bernanke testifies to the House Budget Committee on the US economic recovery. Recovery? We can’t talk about recovery until we have hit bottom, can we? Tomorrow we get the Bank of Canada (and Reserve Bank of New Zealand) rate decision. Canada is seen cutting 50 bp and New Zealand to cut interest rates 100 bp. These are smaller economies but probably in the forefront of more cuts to come until there’s nothing left for savers at all, exactly as occurred in Japan.

We have far too much information in the world today. Nobody can digest it all. It’s tempting to forget about the world of finance and just watch the increasingly lurid soap opera of the US presidential election. But some things stand out-if Iceland really did commit a sovereign default, it doesn’t matter that it’s a tiny country with fewer people than a Manhattan block of apartment buildings. It’s the way of the market to ask "Who’s next?" and then try to get a self-fulfilling prophecy. Hungary? Ukraine? Russia itself? All the fine talk of “recovery” is PR smoke.

There can be no recovery until all the damaged planes have crashed.

We are not there yet.

Still to come are regional US banks that the Feds won't save, among other disasters. All in all, this is awful stuff but good for the US dollar exchange rate.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Friday, October 17, 2008

Crude oil futures contract fell $4.69, or 6.3%, on a good US crude inventory report,

The Nov Crude oil futures contract fell $4.69, or 6.3%, on a good US crude inventory report, to close at $69.85, which is the first close under $70 in over a year. OPEC is rattled, and will meet next week instead of November. Market observers now say OPEC will agree to a cut of one million barrel per day to get the price back up-and the market believed the story. The price rose sharply $73.02 before sinking back to $70.98 at 12:12 pm GMT, according to Bloomberg.

So now it’s a duel between producers determined to keep their budgets funded and a market that sees recession cutting demand by a great deal for a very long time. Mastercard said, for example, that demand for gas fell 9% in the latest week. Demand was not as inelastic as we all thought over the past year. The current thinking is that demand increases from booming economies like China will offset drops in the West for a net flat demand outcome.

Well, maybe. The US consumes 24% of the world’s oil. The US Energy Dept report yesterday that fuel demand averaged about 18.6 million barrels a day during the past four weeks, the lowest since June 1999. US oil supplies rose 5.6 million barrels to 308.2 million barrels last week, and crude inventories are set to rise another 2.6 million barrels, according to the Bloomberg survey.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Government rescue of hedge funds is not going to happen

Foreign Exchange Outlook :

We keep running into some remarkably foolish commentary now that the world has blown up.

Stratfor claims that it can predict economies without actually knowing any economics, which a little like taking stock tips from the shoeshine boy, isn’t it? It predicted the Russian invasion of Georgia, which had no real effect on global markets and doesn’t pass the “so what? test. Even if you can see the broad outline of upcoming events, that doesn’t mean you know how to trade it. Trading skills are entirely different from macro analytical skills.

Probably the most foolish idea of all is that those nasty hedge funds are going to get their comeuppance, with 30% of them failing (Credit Suisse). According to the WSJ, this is the worst year ever for hedge funds, collectively down 5.4% in September and 10.1% for the year (which is still better than indexing to the S&P, down 20% over the same period). This is because banks are pulling back credit and the funds have to reduce leverage, which means they must sell positions in everything-stocks, bonds, commodities, alphabet soup paper, currencies. That’s on top of having to sell positions to repay investors, most of whom had to sit through a long waiting period to get their money back.

We don’t deny that the contraction everywhere in the financial universe will cause hedge funds to contract, too, but we object to the imposition of a value judgment on the hedge funds as somehow predatory. A good hedge fund offers some protection against the market dropping—the original raison d’etre of hedge funds-which means the investor is prudent and conservative. That’s a good thing, not a bad one. Hedge fund investors include giant massive pension funds, for example, as well as the savings of rich folks. As a value, we’d rather pension funds invest conservatively than be out flailing around speculatively, don’t we? Hedge funds are systematic, too, another good thing. The only thing we can really complain about is leverage, and that’s certainly the pot calling the kettle black. There is not a single financial entity out there not using leverage except maybe Aunt Millie, who doesn’t have a credit card and has paid off the mortgage.

We are not convinced that things have changed forever, government intervention or not, and will be convinced only when all governments everywhere agree to regulate leverage. (Even then the leverage-seeking can find haven in Jersey or somewhere.)

We know that Long-Term Capital had leverage of about 30x and Bear Stearns, 35x. But like the rain falling on the just and the unjust alike, the involuntary contraction of hedge funds due to deleveraging will wreak havoc across the whole industry. It is not necessarily true that the funds left standing will those the least leveraged-a highly leveraged fund can do better than a lightly leveraged one if it was invested in the right stuff. It’s wrong to take joy in the destruction of the hedge funds-that’s somebody’s retirement going down the drain. Unless you want the public to fund all retirements with government plans, we should be figuring out ways to help the hedge funds, too, not cheering their demise.

Government rescue of hedge funds is not going to happen, of course.

In fact, Paulson said there would be no money for “unregulated” companies, presumably referring to hedge funds but also perhaps with a gimlet eye on others—auto companies? Therefore, the fate of hedge funds-whether 30% fail or 80%-depends on when prices stabilize in financial and commodity markets. We should assume that hedge fund managers really do know something the rest of us do not, including timing the economic cycle. TrimTabs, which tracks hedge funds as well as mutual funds, says hedge funds sold $43 billion in September and perhaps as much as $50 billion in Oct. “In many cases, the funds seemed to be raising cash preemptively,” says a TrimTabs executive. Hmm, “preemptively.” Does that mean rejigggering portfolios in the newly deleveraged environment is a worthwhile exercise? Of course. And it also means being less defensive. Gold and cash are both a crummy “investment.” They have no intrinsic yield and the opportunity cost is high. As Warren Buffett says in the NY Times, "Today people who hold cash equivalents feel comfortable. They shouldn’t. They have opted for a terrible long-term asset, one that pays virtually nothing and is certain to depreciate in value." Indeed, the policies that government will follow in its efforts to alleviate the current crisis will probably prove inflationary and therefore accelerate declines in the real value of cash accounts.

Equities will almost certainly outperform cash over the next decade, probably by a substantial degree. Those investors who cling now to cash are betting they can efficiently time their move away from it later. In waiting for the comfort of good news, they are ignoring Wayne Gretzky’s advice:I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.’ Buffett is putting his personal money, previously all in Treasuries, into US stocks.

The other big Event to look forward to is the overall calming of panic and frenzy. Alas, panic and frenzy are US dollar -favorable. As the TICS analysis above shows, demand for dollars is an emergency thing. When things go back to normal, this demand will evaporate, and the US will have an unfunded current account deficit. The Middle East and China are sitting this one out, showing not the slightest inclination to rescue anybody. Unless everyone follows Buffett’s advice and the US stock market recovers lustily, we can’t count on foreign capital inflows to balance the deficit. Besides, the dollar exchange rate is not highly correlated to the stock indices. This is the nightmare scenario that so many doom-and-gloom analysts have predicted for so many years.

We take comfort and a strong US dollar exchange rate scenario from the idea that while screaming panic may be gone-overnght LIBOR at 10% for European banks is screaming panic-anxiety is not gone, and rightly so. The bailouts can fail. The bailouts can be insufficient and cause governments to pony up even larger sums. Other companies and industries "too big to fail" can emerge, like the auto companies or insurance companies or perhaps a black swan. The recession can be bigger, deeper and longer-lasting, and hurt other economies worse than the US.

We are sticking with the strong US Dollar scenario a bit longer.

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Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Thursday, October 16, 2008

Oil Prices are down 18% from a year ago and have dropped 51% from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11

The Nov NYMEX oil futures contract closed lower at $74.53 from $78.63 the day before. It is now firmly under the $80 key level. Today it fell further to $71.21, the lowest since Aug 2007, and is trading on the soft wide at $72.30 at 11:09 am GMT. Bloomberg says Prices are down 18% from a year ago and have dropped 51% from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11.

So, OPEC can hold an emergency meeting in November but it may not have any effect on the price of oil-fear of recession and demand destruction are stronger. Even Hurricane Omar, which caused a Virgin Islands refinery to shut down, is not having the usual effect.

Gold Futures are soft, having fallen to $835.50 from $836.30 the day before. Some analysts say gold is not thriving because some futures traders are getting hit with margin calls or otherwise need to raise cash.

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Barbara Rockefeller Forex Trading Reports

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Oil Prices are down 18% from a year ago and have dropped 51% from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11

The Nov NYMEX oil futures contract closed lower at $74.53 from $78.63 the day before. It is now firmly under the $80 key level. Today it fell further to $71.21, the lowest since Aug 2007, and is trading on the soft wide at $72.30 at 11:09 am GMT. Bloomberg says “Prices are down 18% from a year ago and have dropped 51% from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11.”

So, OPEC can hold an emergency meeting in November but it may not have any effect on the price of oil-fear of recession and “demand destruction” are stronger. Even Hurricane Omar, which caused a Virgin Islands refinery to shut down, is not having the usual effect.

Gold Futures are soft, having fallen to $835.50 from $836.30 the day before. Some analysts say gold is not thriving because some futures traders are getting hit with margin calls or otherwise need to raise cash.

Buy for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

Buying Euros - best euro exchange rates call IMS Foreign Exchange +44 207 183 2790

Does this mean the Fed has room for another interest rate cut, or series of cuts? Yes.

Foreign Exchange Outlook: Everybody wants to know how deep the recession will go. Yesterday’s retail sales for Sept were worse than forecast, a drop of 1.2% (including a drop of 4% for autos), while every one of the 12 regional Feds reported a slowdown in consumer spending. The Empire State manufacturing index slumped to a shocking -24.6 from 7.5 in Oct. And inflation hasn’t really started falling much-the headline PPI fell 0.4% but ex-energy, rose 0.4%. PPI is up 8.7% y/y, and core PPI is up 4%. Some of this is the pig in the python and will eventually get digested, but the misery index is about to go up quite a bit, and moreover, everyone knows it.

Today we get CPI at 8:30 am ET, probably a rise of 0.2% (but with forecasters showing a wide range from –0.3% to +0.2%, according to Bloomberg). Core CPI is probably up 5% y/y, better than Aug at 5.4% y/y. Core CPI is probably 2.5% y/y, the same as August.

Does this mean the Fed has room for another rate cut, or series of cuts?

Yes.

It will be interesting to see how the Fed weaves together monetary policy, now in lights-flashing emergency mode, with a new willingness to consider bursting bubbles before they blow up too far. This seems to be the new Bernanke stance, after two decades of the Greenspanian hands-off attitude toward bubbles. Speaking to the Economic Club of New York yesterday, Bernanke said we need to take a fresh look at how regulation and monetary policy might take on the “dangerous phenomenon” of asset bubbles—after the current crisis is past. It’s fun to note that when Greenspan held his first Fed board meeting, according to Woodward’s Maestro and other books about the Greenspan Fed, he asked why the Fed was doing nothing about the stock market at the time. This was just ahead of Black Monday. In other words, Greenspan was not always a hands-off guy on Randian principles.

Also today we get industrial production for Sept, probably a drop of 0.8% in the Sept month for the second month of decline.

The other important piece of data today is the August Treasury capital flow report, TICS. Bloomberg reports that forecasters expect foreign investors to have raised their stakes in US assets in August to $30 billion from $6.1 billion in July. We await the authoritative report from Bank of New York capital flow expert Woolfolk, who separates out the true long-term flows from the shorter-term hot money.

The sentiment in the oil industry is that the recession will be deep and long-lasting, hence the dramatically falling prices. With the US already having done a consumer stimulus in the spring, many interest rate cuts, and a bank bailout, is it running out of bullets? We say the oil gang lacks faith in the ingenuity of politicians newly motivated to keep their jobs. We tend to throw the bums out when they fail us so drastically. What else can the US do to goose growth and avert recession another day? Plenty. Congress could do an emergency tax cut for business, or another stimulus for consumers, plus the usual rate cuts. Poor Bernanke-he really is going to be stuck with the Helicopter Ben image.

Does this stuff work?

Yes, as we saw with the $300/$600 tax rebates.

Does it suffice to keep the economy rolling along for one or two more months? Yes. As Keynes said, the long-run is only a series of short runs. It’s a little like catching a cold-suppress the symptoms, and while you still have a cold, it does pass after ten days. The goal of the Fed and government is to prevent us feeling the symptoms-scratchy throat, runny nose, and coughs. Your head can rationally say conditions are terrible but an extra $300 in your pocket makes you willing to overlook what the brain is telling you. We don’t know nearly enough about behavioral economics, but we bet that some initiatives (like job creation in the alternative energy sector) will have a salutary effect even among people who could never get one of those jobs, because it gives the sense that “somebody is doing something.”

This brings us back to the election, now less than three weeks away.

McCain wants to give a tax break to rich people, which does trickle down but not to the extent he claims.

Obama wants to give a tax break to the working class, subsidize alternative energy, and spend big sums on infrastructure, among other things, which puts cash in more pockets right away.

It’s a no-brainer which is better for the economy and the prospect of the US coming out of recession. Foreign Exchange traders are opportunistic-even if they buy the old Reagan ideology, they can see which side of the bread has the butter. This is the sense in which Obama is dollar exchange rate favorable and McCain is not, quite apart from the cost of the war in Iraq. People don’t want ideology today-they want cold, hard cash.

Considering the state of the auto industry and the difficulty of getting a car loan today, we would not be surprised to see some new government program to subsidize the average Joe buying a new car. Maybe there can be a Freddie/Fanny for car paper guaranteed by the government? Quick, stop them before they invent another new program.

On the whole, the US dollar exchange rate looks good for a day or two, before the next Event.

Buy for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Forex Trading Reports

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

The dollar could dive a lot early in the week, especially if oil rallies as it appears likely to do

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The US may have lost some of the shine off its FIFO standing by having dithered a little, with Paulson changing his mind about direct investment in banks instead of just buying paper, now that the UK led the way with a big 3-part plan pretty much accepted by the rest of the world. What the US has that the ECB does not have is the ability to support the corporate world directly by buying/backstopping commercial paper. Other central banks have to keep the banks funded and hope they lend to the players in the real economy. Cold, hard cash is always nicer than hope in a panic.

On the whole, the US has better recuperative powers than other economies, so the FIFO story is not gone and forgotten. And the US has some problems that other economies do not have, namely Detroit and a discouraged consumer who is two-thirds of the economy. Germany, to take an example, can stimulate exports with subsidies and tax breaks. The US doesn’t have that option—does it? Don’t ever think this is not a competition. It is certainly viewed as a competition in Europe, if not in Washington. We laughed until it hurt upon reading the first report that the combined European rescue plan is $1.4 trillion, exactly double the US number. You can just imagine those guys sitting around saying “That’ll show ‘em who has guts.” (The dollar amount of the combined European plans keeps changing in each report, but it’s true that it’s roughly double.)

As for the inevitable recession, pundits are now saying that the probability of a Depression has receded to a low level now that governments have acted (and the stock market voted them good guys again, at least for a day). Business Week says the recession will likely be long but mild. Past recessions since the War lasted 10.4 months, cut 2% from GDP from peak to trough, and unemployment rose about 3%. It’s interesting that inflation (ex food and oil) always falls in a recession. In retrospect, the NBER will probably date the current recession from Dec 2007. If it runs 16 months to April next year, that would put it on a par with the recessions in 1973-75 and 1981-82. If we consider what was going on in the world during those earlier recessions, especially the oil crisis in 1973 (and subsequent floating of the dollar), maybe what’s happening now is not that much more of a shock. After all, Warren Buffett was not the only doom-sayer. Plenty of people, including new Nobel laureate Krugman, said the housing bubble could have disastrous consequences. So let’s say the US loses 2%--we would still have growth around 1.5% by the middle of next year. Europe will be lucky to get 1%.

We’re not so sure that this recession is not different in some qualitative ways even if in the end the economic data puts it in the same class as other recessions. For one thing, the moral dimension is far bigger, broader and deeper. Individuals behaved badly. Banks and mortgage brokers behaved badly. Investment managers behaved badly, buying pie-in-the-sky stories from quants. Governments and their regulators behaved badly. The Fed behaved badly, if you accept that Greenspan’s Randian fantasies overruled common sense. If you cut interest rates to 1%, you need to take other steps, chiefly regulatory, to avoid abuse. How can the Rand/Greenspan libertarians not see that avarice is a powerful and anti-social thing? It’s not healthy for a society that so many people turned a blind eye to lying on mortgage applications and mortgage approvals. Subprime may be only a small portion of the overall problem but it’s a pernicious disease. In the old Soviet Union, there was a joke that “the workers pretend to work and the state pretends to pay them.” In the US, we have a similar joke—“we pretend we are rich and the banks and brokers pretend to believe us.”

Now the US faces a moral dilemma of the highest order—the government will decide which financial institutions will survive and which will not. Capitalism is not supposed to work this way, but that’s not even the main point. This is how we’re doing it for the sake of expediency, so let’s accept it for a moment. The question then becomes HOW will the government decide who survives and who does not? The opportunities for fraud, corruption, error and injustice are nearly endless.

The other moral component is the punishment to be meted out to the miscreants. In Europe, executive heads are going to roll-that has been the sentiment all along and was featured in German FinMin Steinbrueck’s 8-point list of prerequisites for rescue plans. So far we have heard that the Royal Bank of Scotland CEO was given his walking papers, with no golden parachute. TreasSec Paulson has said he disapproves of government dictating executive pay, but these are not normal circumstances. He who pays the piper gets to call the tune, right? And it’s not just jettisoning the top executives. The public is pounding on the table for some of these guys to go to jail, certainly not to be allowed to stay in their jobs at high pay. Presumably we can spare them with over 100,000 former financial sector workers on the street and a great sector consolidation about to begin. Alas, we fear that the only charge available will be “stupidity” and you can’t send a guy to jail for that (can you?). When it comes to the moral outrage issue, it looks like the British and Europeans have a firmer grasp on the concept of the social contract that says people fortunate enough to rise to wealth and high social status are duty-bound not be to greedy cads.

But back in the real world of money flows, we need to note two developments. The first is that bond yields everywhere will be rising as governments issue new paper to fund the bailouts. Even if the US, UK and Europe engage in additional interest rate cuts on the very short end, the yield curve must steepen as new paper comes along. This is also a competition for the world’s savings, and as we know, the world’s biggest savers reside in Japan, China and other emerging markets. What about Middle East sovereign funds? We are getting silence on that front.

Panic and blood on the street always causes hot money flows. Market News reports a fascinating development, that during Sept, capital flowed out of China. “Foreign exchange reserves hit a new record of $1.906 trillion at the end of September, up about $98 billion from the $1.808 trillion at the end of the first half. But a monthly breakdown of the quarterly increase suggests an estimated $20 billion to 25 billion left China in September, according to Stone & McCarthy…. The $21.4 billion increase in September --much smaller than the combined $29.3 billion trade surplus and $6.64 billion foreign direct investment during that month -- could raise the spectre of capital outflows, rather than the inflows that the government has long been concerned with.”

Exactly whose money is this? It could be private individuals, including wealthy Chinese and some living outside the country, who expected the crisis to spread to China, or it could be corporate money going home in the Western credit crunch. Remember, there’s a lot of Japanese money in the Chinese stock market, too. In a related matter, some analysts say the dollar exchange rate could be the beneficiary of repatriation flows for the same reason. How much money does (say) GM or GE have in China?

We expect the dollar exchange rate to seesaw early in the week as we await the market’s judgment on the various bailout plans. So far analysts are impressed by the Europeans lacking the institutional infrastructure to create a clear and coordinated master plan. We say this is wrong. It is a huge plan when all the pieces are put together and there is no reason it won’t work just as well (if not better) than a eurozone-wide plan. And the US plan to be announced in more detail today has many potential pitfalls. The dollar could dive a lot early in the week, especially if oil rallies as it appears likely to do. But by the end of the week, if real confidence is restored, the US dollar can come back on the FIFO growth story. We hate to say it, but we must watch the stock market as the symbol of sentiment.

Bye for now

Barbara Rockefeller - Forex Trading Reports

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