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"As soon as you think you've got the key to the stock market, they change
the lock," lamented Joe Granville, who is mostly remembered for his bearish
calls on the US stock market during the 1970's, 1980's, and the 1990's. Nowadays,
many currency traders are scratching their heads, trying to figure out what's
behind the sudden resurrection of the US-dollar, which is flexing its muscles
for the first time in two-years, and defying conventional logic, by climbing
sharply higher against most foreign currencies, including those that offer
much higher rates of interest.
The Euro has plummeted 12% vs the US-dollar since July 15th, tumbling to as
low as $1.410 today. Earlier this week, Euro-zone Finance chief Jean-Claude
Juncker gave currency traders the green-light to trash the Euro. "Things are
developing in the right direction, in line with the commitments of the US Treasury
that it stated in recent months. The Euro is less than $1.44, and it reflects
economic fundamentals better than the Euro flirting with $1.60. I still think
that the Euro is overvalued, not only against the dollar, but also against
other currencies," he said.
There's been a major shift in market psychology surrounding the US-dollar,
that's caught many currency traders by surprise. Until July 15th, the key driver
fueling the Euro's historic advance against the US$, was a widening interest
rate advantage. In Frankfurt, Germany's 2-year yield rose to as high as +220
basis points above the comparable US-T-note in June, and up sharply from a
negative -80 basis points in April 2007, which in turn, guided the Euro on
a steady climb higher to $1.600.

Today, the German 2-year schatz still commands a hefty +165 basis point advantage
over the US-T-note, which just a few months ago, was sufficiently high enough
to buoy the Euro within a tight range of $1.540 to $1.600 in the second quarter.
And there's no indication that the Euro's wide interest rate advantage over
the US-dollar is about to shrink in the months ahead, neither by a series of
rate cuts by the ECB, nor by a series of rate increases by the Fed.
On Sept 4th, ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet ruled out a rate cut anytime
soon. "We just increased interest rates in July to 4.25%, to deliver price
stability during the course of 2010. We never pre-commit, and we always do
what is necessary to maintain price stability. At face value, today's press
conference should have dispelled any rate cut speculation for some time," he
warned.
On the flip side, the Fed won't raise rates after the US economy lost 84,000
jobs in August, and the jobless rate jumped to 6.1% in August, a 5-year high.
The US economy has shed 610,000 jobs for eight straight months, something that
has happened only eight other times since the end of the World War Two. In
each instance, the string of job losses signaled a US economic recession.
Worse yet, eleven US banks have failed so far this year, and the FDIC classified
117-banks as a "problem" in the second quarter, up 30% from Q'1. Nearly 1.2
million US homes are in foreclosure, weighing on a fragile market, with no
bottom in sight for home prices. "You simply must accept that the credit crisis
is far from over," warned Federal Deposit Insurance Corp chief Sheila Bair
on Sept 4th. She urged banks to strengthen their reserves. "It's a tough slog
but there's no easy way out," she said.

Bair expects more US bank failures which could exceed the FDIC's $45 billion
insurance fund. However, she noted the FDIC can tap into a $30 billion long-term
line of credit with the US Treasury Department and up to $40 billion of short-term
credit. Yet even a rash of US bank failures and the swirling crisis engulfing
Lehman Brothers, LEH, Wall's Street's fourth biggest investment bank, hasn't
put a dent in the US-dollar's newly minted Teflon armor.
Lehman's 8% preferred-J shares plummeted to $8 per share, lifting its junk-status
yield to 25%, after an eleventh-hour rescue attempt by the Korea Development
Bank (KDB) was placed in doubt. True to form, the credit rating agencies are
still touting LEH's credit status at single "A" even though the company is
essentially locked out of the credit markets. The cost of protecting Lehman's
debt with credit default swaps for five-years rose to 590 basis points, or
$590,000 a year to protect $10 million of debt, up from 325 basis points the
previous day.
When a bank loses the confidence of its customers, it can evaporate very quickly,
just like Bear Stearns. During the Bear Stearns crisis, the cost of insuring
its debt only went up to 450 basis points. Odds are Lehman won't be the last
major US bank pushed to the brink. Less than 48-hours earlier, the US government
seized mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, after it discovered they
had cooked the books, and didn't hold sufficient capital to cover their losses.
Arab Oil kingdoms Rescue the US-dollar
Yet despite all this negative news for the US-dollar, currency traders are
putting a positive spin on whatever mud that's thrown at the greenback. What's
behind this sea-change in market psychology towards the US-dollar, where the
focus has shifted away from interest rate differentials, and instead, has veered-off
towards other key factors? They are several reasons that are beyond the scope
of this article, but were highlighted in the August editions of the Global
Money Trends newsletter.

Throughout the US-dollar's tortuous 40% slide over the past six-years, the
Arab oil kingdoms in the Persian Gulf stayed loyal to their archaic US-dollar
pegs, even while the Fed's indifference to the sliding US-dollar sent inflation
shock waves through their dollar-linked economies. Saudi Arabia was forced
to expand its M3 money supply by more than 20% in order to defend the dollar
peg, which in turn, fueled inflation to +11.1% in July, it's highest in 30-years.
In Abu Dhabi, the biggest member of the UAE federation, prices were 12.9% higher
in June.
The Arab oil kingdoms rescued the US-dollar from the brink of collapse, by
rapidly expanding the supply of Kuwaiti dinars, Saudi riyals, and UAE dirhams,
and then recycled about $250 of Petro-dollars into US Treasuries over the past
12-months, through their brokers in London. In return, the US armed forces
are defending the Arab Oil kingdoms from their dangerous neighbors to the north
in Iran, which seeks nuclear weapons, and is closely aligned with czarist Russia,
and Venezuela's mercurial kingpin Hugo Chavez, - forming the "Axis of Oil."

The recycling of Arabian Petro-dollars into US Treasuries put a floor under
the US$ Index at the 70-level this summer, and persuaded bearish currency traders
to cover massive short positions that had been built-up in the US$ over the
past six-years. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia upped the ante, in support of
the dollar, by boosting the kingdom's oil output by 1.1 million barrels per
day (bpd) from a year-ago to 9.7 million in July, which finally deflated the
crude oil bubble by $45 barrel so far.
On Sept 3rd, Saudi Arabia announced that it had started pumping crude from
the Khursaniyah field, which would boost the kingdom's output capacity by 500,000
bpd to around 11.8 million barrels, and aims to boost its total oil production
capacity to 12.5 million bpd by the end of next year. But with crude oil experiencing
its largest slide in history, (in dollars) OPEC hawks Iran and Venezuela called
for production cutbacks, to put a floor under the market at $100 /barrel.
On Sept 8th, OPEC chief Chakib Khelil said he expected the oil market to be
oversupplied at the end of this year. "There is plenty of oil in the market,
stocks are pretty good. There will be an oversupply of one-million bpd by early
next year," he predicted. Khelil also noted that oil prices were easing as
the value of dollar rose. US crude fell to under $102 as the dollar hit an
11-month high against the Euro. "What we are seeing now is the inverse relationship
between the US dollar and the oil price is verified. The dollar is strengthening,
the oil price is going down," he added.
Arab oil kingdoms Aim for Election of "Maverick" McCain
On the eve of the OPEC meeting in Vienna, a senior OPEC source told the al-Hayat
newspaper that, "Reducing production, in such conditions, especially before
the first quarter of the year, when oil demand increases, would be unjustified." The
OPEC source revealed Riyadh's price target, "The current price is close to
a level that reflects market fundamentals in terms of supply and demand, which
indicate levels of $90 to $100 a barrel. OPEC should be cautious and should
monitor the market situation closely to prevent a big drop in prices," he said.
In a compromise, to placate the mullahs in Tehran, the Saudis agreed to a
surprising cutback in oil output, in an effort to stabilize the market. OPEC
is pumping roughly 790,000 bpd above target, the bulk of which comes from Saudi
Arabia, the central banker of oil, which is pumping around 750,000 bpd above
its official quota. "If you do your own calculations properly, OPEC will be
a lowering its production by about 520,000 barrels per day," said OPEC chief
Khelil.

But the Arabian monarchs also have their eyes on the US political calendar,
and have driven oil prices lower, in order to help John "Maverick" McCain get
elected, and become the next commander in chief of the US armed forces in the
Persian Gulf. On August 31st, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham reminded
the Arab oil kingdoms that Democratic vice-presidential nominee Joe Biden lacked
the backbone to stand up to powerful foes or to fix broken governments in the
Middle East.
"Biden has national security experience. But experience and judgment need
to come together. Biden voted against the first Gulf War to evict Saddam Hussein
from Kuwait. He opposed the surge in Iraq. He wants to partition Iraq," Graham
said. As chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Biden did oppose
the recent US troop buildup to defeat al-Qaeda and has called for separating
Iraq into three autonomous provinces - Shiite, Sunni, and Kurdish, which is
diametrically opposed to the views of the Arab oil kingdoms in the Persian
Gulf.
Between now and Nov 4th, the Saudi and Kuwaiti monarchs will attempt to put
a lid the oil market, allowing US gasoline prices to trickle lower, and ease
the anxieties of jittery swing voters who are worried about the economy. Soybean
and corn prices have already plunged by 30% since early July, in sympathy with
lower oil prices, and with a little bit of luck, Americans might see lower
food prices before the November 4th election. What's likely to happen to the
oil market after Nov 4th, will be presented in the upcoming Sept 12th edition
of Global Money trends.
Currency Traders betting on "Maverick" McCain
Not since the contest between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan in 1980, has
expectations of the outcome of a US-presidential election impacted the currency
markets in a big-way. In 1980, any signal that Carter was pulling ahead in
the polls, would send the dollar plummeting in the foreign exchange market.
Conversely, Reagan's landslide victory, by a 51% to 41% margin in the popular
tally, and a whopping 489 to 49 in electoral-college votes, set in motion a
vigorous four-year bull-run for the US dollar, and lifted the greenback to
3.50 German marks.
In 1980, when Reagan defeated Carter, the British pound lost 10% vs the dollar
after six-months, 22% after one-year and 47% by the end of Reagan's first term.
The "Reagan Revolution" included big tax cuts, and wide swaths of working-class
Democrats defected to the Republican Party, which Mr McCain hopes to attract
in the weeks ahead, with his plan to stimulate the US economy by cutting the
corporate tax rate 10% to 25%, and extending the Bush tax cuts beyond 2010.

There are several reasons that explain the sudden plunge in the Euro, including
the unwinding of "yen carry" trades, but few traders have noticed that the
dollar's resurrection is mirroring the odds of a McCain victory in November.
Futures traders dealing at the on-line parlor Inntrade, based in Dublin, Ireland,
have lifted their bids on "Maverick" McCain to a 47.5% probability of winning
the election, up from 30% in mid-July. The perceived shift in "Maverick" McCain's" political
fortunes are linked to the latest Gallup poll, putting him 5% ahead of Mr Obama,
due to a huge 15% shift of independent voters and women, leaning towards Alaskan
governor Sarah Palin.
Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska introduced herself to America before a roaring
crowd at the Republican National Convention last week, as "just your average
hockey mom" then pitched herself as a champion of government reform, sliced
and diced Democratic candidate Barack Obama as an elitist, and attacked the
liberal media. McCain wants to put Sarah Palin in charge of US oil and energy
policy if he becomes president, to lessen American dependence on foreign sources
of oil, which in turn, could have a big impact on the dollar in the years ahead.
Alongside McCain's jump in the polls, the US-Dollar Index rallied 12% towards
the 80-level, gaining support from the emergence of a militaristic Russia,
which invaded South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and threatened to cut-off energy
supplies to Europe. Kremlin kingpin Vladimir Putin has refurbished the US-dollar's
traditional status as a "safe haven" currency. Not since the end of the Cold
War, has the US-dollar been treated as a "safe-haven" currency in times of
dangerous geopolitical turmoil.

Nowadays, the Persian Gulf oil kingdoms regard the possibility of a nuclear
armed Iran as a "dire and direct threat" to their own existence, and are flocking
to the US-dollar as a safe haven. The sovereign wealth funds (SWF's) controlled
by Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have roughly $1.7 trillion between
them, dwarfing the largest private equity funds in the world. During the first
half of 2008 alone, Saudi Arabia raked in $192 billion from oil exports,just
$2 billion less than the kingdom's total oil export revenues in 2007.
With their enormous size, the Persian Gulf SWF's can easily move global financial
markets. By 2015, the Persian Gulf SWF's could grow to $5-6 trillion. If Chinese,
Russian, and Korean SWF's are taken into account, the total global SWF value
could top $12 trillion, or almost equal to the output of the Euro-zone's economy.
SWF's are quickly becoming the most powerful investors in the world, and account
for 12% of the trading volume in commodities. Their activities will increasingly
impact financial markets, and the distribution of strategic resources.
Raging Russian Bear Tarnishes Euro's Image
Currency traders are wondering just how far Vladimir Putin is prepared to
extend Russia's influence in Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Last month,
the Kremlin ordered an invasion of Georgia to prevent it from joining NATO,
and its army stands within 50-miles of a new oil pipeline, that carries one-million
barrels per day of crude oil from the Caspian Sea to the Turkish port of Ceyhan,
and jeopardizes Russia's stranglehold over energy supplies to the European
Union.
Armed with $580 billion of foreign reserves (the third largest), Kremlin kingpin
Vladimir Putin has become increasing bold, and is willing to use military power
to counteract what Moscow considers an unacceptable level of US infringement
on its interests in the Middle East and Central Asia. "We are not afraid of
anything, including the prospect of a Cold War," warned President Dmitry Medvedev.

Russia holds the world's largest natural gas reserves and the eighth-largest
oil reserves. It supplies one-quarter of Europe's oil supply and 30% of its
natural gas. In July, deliveries to the Czech Republic through the Druzhba
pipeline were cut by 40% after Prague signed an agreement with the US to install
an anti-missile shield. The emergence of a militaristic Russia, under former
KGB spy master Putin, in alliance with the "Axis of Oil," has tarnished the
Euro's stellar image, and added an extra degree of risk in investing in European
stock markets.
Putin has declared that a new Cold War with the West has already begun and
is considering arming Russia's Baltic fleet with nuclear warheads and pointing
them at European cities. "Of course we are returning to those times. It is
clear that if a part of the US nuclear capability turns up in Europe, and,
in the opinion of our military specialists will threaten us, then we are forced
to take corresponding steps in response. The strategic balance in the world
is being upset and in order to restore this balance, we will be creating a
system of countering that anti-missile system. Naturally, we will have to have
new targets in Europe," Putin warned.

Since Russia invaded South Ossetia and Abkhazia on August 7th, the Kremlin's
foreign exchange reserves have declined by $16.4 billion, the biggest outflow
of capital since the country's financial meltdown in 1998. Foreign investors,
who hold roughly half of all Russian shares outstanding, many listed in London
and New York, have sold an estimated $20 billion of Russian stocks. The Russian
central bank was forced to sell US$5 billion in the foreign exchange market
to stabilize the Russian rouble, after it tumbled 10% against the resurgent
US$, to a one-year low.
While the Kremlin's coffers have mushroomed, the Russian corporate sector
is still heavily reliant on foreign investors. The local bond market is small,
with just $60 billion worth of ruble issues. Russian companies borrow funds
on the world capital markets, and foreigners own half of the $1 trillion debt.
But now, Russian companies are facing a liquidity crunch, since foreign lenders
are balking and won't touch any Russian paper. The impact on the Russian stock
market has been severe.

The Russian Trading system Index (RTS) was roiled by the exodus of foreign
investors, who are on high alert for political risk. Since peaking in May,
the Russian stock market plunged 40%, shaving roughly $500 billion from the
value of Russian stocks. Foreigners dumped large blocks of Russian mining companies
after Kremlin kingpin Putin, accused a large steel and coal mining company,
Mechel, MTL.n of tax evasion, causing its share price to collapse. When Putin
targets a company, there can be dire consequences, such as the demise of Yukos,
a big oil company that was bankrupted on trumped-up tax charges.
Roughly half the RTS Index is comprised of energy related companies, which
have also been hard hit, by the slide in crude oil prices to $102 /barrel.
Soaring oil prices were behind Russia's political and economic resurgence,
and help lift the RTS Index by an astounding 720% from six-years ago. But nowadays,
the term "Peak Oil" is invoking images of a peak in oil prices and global demand,
due to a synchronized slide in the global economy, rather than fears that the
world is running out of oil.
One big surprise at this week's OPEC meeting was the presence of Russian deputy
prime minister Igor Sechin, sent by Putin, who announced that "Broad cooperation
with OPEC is one of Russia's top priorities. OPEC is one of Russia's key partners
on the global oil market." In the past, Russia has agreed to trim production
in line with OPEC output cuts to support prices, and traders must monitor Putin's
next move.
Most interesting is the observation that the Euro's slide against the US$,
is the near-perfect inverse image of the US-dollar's climb against the Russian
rouble. The emergence of militarist Russia, ready to aim its nukes at Europe,
and a stranglehold over Europe's energy supply, has triggered a mini-flight
of capital from the Euro and the Russian rouble. In contrast, the US-dollar,
backed by the world's most powerful military, wins by default as a safe haven.

Gold has a role as a "safe haven" in times of geo-political instability, hasn't
gained much traction from heightened tension between the Kremlin in the West,
or Iran's drive to acquire nuclear weapons. Instead, gold is tracking the global
commodity markets, for clues about the direction of inflation. Since peaking
at a record high on July 3rd, the annual rate of change for the Dow Jones Commodity
Index has plunged from a +40% clip to as little as +4% today. One doesn't need
a degree in Newtonian physics, to figure that headline inflation numbers, designed
by government apparatchiks, will show sizeable declines in the months ahead.
On September 5th, the Global Money Trends newsletter identified the 3 most
important market signals (not including the direction of the US$), that
can help traders forecast the direction of the commodities markets. The special
report also includes a big picture outlook for the global economy and stock
markets.
Foreign Exodus from Brazil's Bovespa, undermines Brazilian real
Yet there appears to be more reasons behind the US-dollar's rally against
all major foreign currencies, than just its newly polished image as a "safe-haven" currency.
Brazil is not under any threat of military attack from Russia or Iran, and
it's self-sufficient in energy, yet it's currency, the real, has lost -14%
against the US-dollar in recent weeks, even though Brazil's interest rates
are +11% higher.
Foreign investors pulled money out of Brazil's stock market for a third straight
month in August, triggered by the steepest plunge in commodities in five decades.
Slumping commodity prices led Sao Paulo's Bovespa stock index sharply lower,
to below the psychological 50,000-level, or 34% off from its May 20th all-time
high. More than half of the Bovespa index is made up of natural resources companies
and steel mills, whose fate largely hinges on the direction of the global economy.

The Dow Jones Commodity Index has tumbled 27% from a record high set eight
weeks ago. Steel prices have plunged 30%, and soybeans are 30% lower. Brazil
had posted a trade surplus of $40 billion last year on exports of $160 billion,
and strong demand for commodities helped secure a 27% jump in exports, from
January to July of this year, compared to the same period a year ago.
Latin America's largest economy enjoyed a current account surplus for the
last five years, its currency rose to a nine-year high while the central bank
stockpiled enough US-dollars to pay off its entire foreign debt and become
a net creditor for the first time. But imports are growing at twice the rate
of exports this year, due to the super-strong real, and Brazil's trade surplus
plunged 42% in the first half of this year. Now the virtuous cycle is moving
in reverse, as commodity prices slide, and foreigners repatriate their money,
to avoid losses related to the Bovespa index.
The Brazilian real has plunged 10% in the past 10-days to 1.77, its lowest
level against the dollar since February. The performance of Brazil's currency
and stock market, which largely hinge on the direction of commodity markets,
haven't differed much from Russia's. These top-2 emerging markets are leveraged
plays on the global economy, and when commodities trend lower, it has a double
barreled selling effect on emerging markets. There's no decoupling from the
developed economies of Europe, Japan, and the US, which account for 65% of
global GDP.
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