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About $3.6 trillion of market value was wiped-out from global stock markets
in the three-days between Sept 15-17th, triggered by the bankruptcy filing
by Lehman Brothers, and fireworks in the $62 trillion credit default swap market.
The collapse of Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch's eleventh-hour flight for safety
into the arms of Bank of America, and the meltdown at American International
Group, were all linked to credit default swaps on mortgages that led to the
fall of these titans.
Investors pulled-out a record $144.5-billion from US money-market funds on
Sept 17th, and yields on three-month US Treasury bills plunged to 0.02%,the
lowest since World War II, after the Reserve Primary Fund became the first
money-market fund in 14-years to "break the buck" and exposed investors to
losses. The TED Spread, the difference between US Treasury bill and Eurodollar
rates, soared to a record 3.13%, far above average of 0.90% over the past two
years.
The panicked selling in money market funds was directly linked to the seizing
up of the credit markets - including a $52 billion contraction in commercial
paper - and rumors of additional money market funds "breaking the buck," or
dropping below $1 net asset value. The Fed injected $250 billion of liquidity
worldwide on Thursday during European trading hours to head-off an avalanche
of sell orders that could have brought large tracts of the US credit markets
to a complete halt.
"The US was literally days away from a complete meltdown of our financial
system, with all the implications here at home and globally," said Senator
Christopher Dodd. Around 3-pm on Sept 18th, US Treasury chief Henry Paulson
leaked word to CNBC that a massive government led bailout of the banks would
soon be launched. Speculators scrambled to cover short positions in financial
stocks, fueling a 1,000-point advance in the Dow Jones Industrials from the
depths of hell.

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange erupted into cheers, as
word spread of a grand Treasury plan to unclog the arteries of the banking
system and prevent the US economy from suffering a fatal heart attack. But
the US-dollar began to suffer a massive hangover from the Treasury's plan due
to a soaring debt burden. The $700 billion the US Treasury is seeking from
Congress to buy toxic mortgages comes at a time when the federal budget deficit
is already soaring.
The US budget deficit for the year that begins Oct 1st is expected to hit
$482 billion, a record in dollar terms, but Goldman Sachs predicts the number
could reach $586-billion, if tax revenues slow. It does not include $300 billion
for the Federal Housing Administration to refinance failing mortgages into
new, reduced-principal loans with a federal guarantee, passed as part of a
broad housing rescue bill. Federal takeovers of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and
AIG, the central bank's expansion of lending to financial firms will add $455
billion to borrowing demands.
And at least $87 billion in repayments to JP Morgan for underpinning trades
with bankrupt investment bank Lehman Brothers is also part of the taxpayer
tab. It's not certain if the entire $700 billion the Treasury is seeking to
soak-up bad mortgages will be needed. But when all the numbers are tallied
up, in the worst-case scenario, the US government's borrowing demands could
reach $1.8 trillion in fiscal 2009, or about 13% of US gross domestic product.
President George Bush's secretive Working Group on Financial Markets,
(aka: the infamous "Plunge Protection Team" - PPT) will be working overtime,
pulling all the strings at their disposal, in order to find a way to prevent
a tsunami of new government debt from swamping the bond markets, and sending
interest rates sharply higher. But the US government's choices are clear -
either increase taxes to cover the debt, instruct the Federal Reserve to print
more money to inflate the debt away, or allow interest rates to rise sharply
to attract overseas lenders.
The Fed opted for monetization on Sept 19th, when it printed $69 billion
out of thin-air, in orderto buy debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
and Federal Home Loan Banks through primary dealers. According to the Fed,
the agency discount notes amount to about 5% of the assets of the money market
mutual fund industry, so the step was an effort to firm up this market, and
prevent money funds from falling under $1 /share.Word of the Fed's monetization
sent the Euro soaring 3.5 US-cents the next day to a high of $1.4825.

The amount of US Treasuries outstanding has been rising at a rapid clip, and
stands at $9.6 trillion, up from $4.5-trillion when President Bush took office
in 2000. The cost of servicing the interest on the debt has risen to $400 billion
annually. The US Treasury relies heavily on wealthy investors from overseas,
who own $2.7 trillion of the Treasury's debt, to help keep US bond yields artificially
low.
In the first half of 2008, the OPEC cartel collected $645 billion from oil
exports, and Saudi Arabia accounted for one-third of that total, raking in
$192 billion.High oil prices keep petrodollars flowing into the coffers of
the Arabian oil kingdoms, which peg their currencies to the US-dollar. Trading
through their brokers in London and Dubai, the Arab oil kingdoms recycled $280
billion into US Treasuries over the past 12-months, to prevent their dollar-pegs
from breaking apart.
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 US-dollar pegs,
even while the Fed's indifference to the sliding US-dollar sent inflation shock
waves through their dollar-linked economies. In return, the US armed forces
defend the Arab Oil kingdoms from Iran's mullahs, who are close to acquiring
nuclear weapons, and are closely aligned with the Kremlin, and Venezuela's
mercurial kingpin Hugo Chavez, - forming the "Axis of Oil. However, the cozy
ties between the Gulf States and the US Treasury can change, if the Democrats
capture the White House in November.
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
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. If Biden becomes
the architect of US foreign policy in the Middle East, the Arab oil kingdoms
might flee the US Treasury market, and take the US-dollar off artificial life
support.

China is the second largest holder of US Treasuries, after Japan, and recycled
two-thirds its trade surplus into the US Treasury and agency market. However,
Beijing has suffered huge losses on its US debt investments, due to the US-dollar's
18% devaluation against the Chinese yuan since mid-2005. Beijing accepts the
pain of holding depreciating US Treasuries, in return for free and unfettered
access to the US consumer market, under a gentleman's agreement with the Bush
clan.
However, if the Democrats gain control of the White House and Congress, Beijing
could come under heavy pressure to speed-up the devaluation of the dollar against
the yuan, or face big tariffs on its exports to the United States. Beijing
could respond by dumping US Treasuries, thereby driving US mortgage rates higher
and crippling the US banking system and real estate market.
Big changes in US foreign policy in the Persian Gulf and towards China, could
dry-up the flow of capital to the US Treasury markets from abroad, at a time
when it's needed the most. Worse yet, the Arab oil kingdoms and China could
become net sellers of US Treasuries in the year ahead, if the Democrats enact
a hasty US-troop withdrawal from Iraq, or fashion protectionist legislation
aimed at Beijing.

Republican nominee, John "Maverick" McCain is expected to continue the Bush
administration's defense and trade policies with the Arab Oil kingdoms and
Beijing, in return for the recycling of Petro-dollars and China's trade surplus
into US Treasuries. Therefore, expectations over the outcome of the upcoming
US presidential elections, set for Nov 4th, are having a big impact on the
value of the US-dollar Index. Traders are tracking McCain's odds of winning
the election at www.inntrade.com
If "Maverick" McCain loses the upcoming elections, pundits can point to his
erratic and unbalanced performance during the chain of events that unfolded
on Sept 15-17th, - the demise of Wall Street giants Lehman Brothers and Merrill
Lynch, the nationalization of AIG, the 1,000-point meltdown in the Dow Jones
Industrials, and the nation's largest money market fund "breaking the buck," which
tarnished his "commander in chief" credentials in a time of crisis.
As a result, McCain watched his 4-point lead in the opinion polls, swing into
a deficit of 3-points. In Dublin, Ireland's on-line betting parlor, where traders
buy and sell futures contracts based on the odds of the eventual winner, the
odds of McCain winning the White House fell 8-points from a week ago to 46%
today, while the odds of Barack Obama residing in the White House, jumped 6-points
to 52-percent.

The Saudis would like to see "Maverick" McCain as commander in chief of the
US-armed forces next year, and are trying to extinguish any sudden spikes in
the crude oil market ahead of the US-election. Riyadh is exceeding its official
oil output quota by 790,000 barrels per day (bpd), in a determined effort to
drive oil and gasoline prices lower, and swing undecided voters to the McCain-Palin
ticket.
Crude oil's slide from a record high of $148 /barrel in mid-July, to below
$100 /barrel last week, led to a sharp plunge in Obama's odds of winning the
election from 65% to just 43%, a sign that the Saudis' magic wand was working.
But while the Saudis can control the supply of oil, they can't control speculative
demand in the oil futures markets in London and New York, which is driven by
the Euro /dollar exchange rate.
The Euro's rebound from a seven month low of $1.400 to as high as $1.4825
this week, enabled the crude oil market to regain its footing. Oil prices soared
as much as $26 per barrel on Sept 22nd, the biggest one-day gain on record,
briefly touching $130 /barrel, and boosting Obama's odds of winning the election
to 52%. The spike in crude oil to $130 /barrel last for just a few minutes
however, before quickly collapsing to $105 the next day.
OPEC chief Chakib Khelil said the direction of world oil prices are still
influenced by factors that are beyond the cartel's control. "I repeat that
the sub-prime crisis, combined with a weakening of the dollar and a rising
movement of speculation, is behind the big rise in oil prices until July 15th." Since
July 15th, "there was a drop in prices because of the strengthening dollar.
Factors behind the weak dollar include speculation and the injection of liquidity
by the Federal Reserve to help banks."

Gold logged its biggest advance ever on Sept 17th soaring by $120 /oz within
a 24-hour span to $900/0z, beating an $85 daily gain from the January 1980
bull market. Investors plowed paper assets into "safe-haven" gold, afterthe
Fed injected $250 billion into the global money markets, by arranging swap
agreements with foreign central banks, to get US-dollars circulating and head-off
a crazed stampede out of money market funds, which hold $4-trillion. Gold bullion
held by the Street-Trackers Gold Trust, ticker GLD, jumped 111-tons to a record
725-tons.
"These measures are designed to improve the liquidity conditions in global
financial markets," the G-7 central banks said. "Central banks work together
closely and will take appropriate steps to address ongoing pressures." Earlier,
central banks inJapan, Australia, and India pumped $28 billion into the money
markets, and the Kremlin injected $44 billion into Russia's top banks. On Sept
19th, the Fed monetized $70 billion of short-term debt issued by Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac.
Prior to the Fed's massive money injections, banks were hoarding cash and
curbing lending, which in turn, led to a sharp slowdown in the growth rate
of the MZM Money supply. MZM is a measure of all liquid money supply that can
be immediately redeemed without suffering a penalty or a capital loss. MZM
represents all money in M2, including money market funds, but excluding time
deposits and CD's.

Gold is a hedge against monetary inflation, or the expansion of the world's
money supply, including MZM, which peaked at an annual growth rate of +17.2%
in March, before slowing to +11.8% last month. The sharp slowdown in the MZM
growth rate, contributed to a $300 /oz correction in the gold market. With
gold trading around $890 /oz today, traders are betting the Fed's massive money
injections over the past week will be long-lasting and not withdrawn anytime
soon.
However, the Fed surprised the currency and gold markets on Sept 24th, by
draining $25 billion out of the US banking system, through reverse repos, capping
the gold market at $900 /oz, and knocking the Euro lower. What other tricks
does the Fed and the "Plunge Protection Team" have up their sleeves, to keep
dollar bears and gold bugs off-balance? What contrarian scenario could support
the US-dollar in the weeks ahead? The answers are in the Sept 26th edition
of Global Money Trends.
For now, a dark-grey cloud still hangs over the US-dollar, since it's the
only currency that's seriously at risk of monetization by the central bank. "The
situation we face here in Europe is less acute and member states do not at
this point consider that a US-style rescue plan is needed," said EU Economic
and Monetary chief Joaquin Almunia on Sept 24th. Mocking the US-government's
bailout of Wall Street, European Socialist leader Martin Schulz declared, "Profits
are being privatized, losses are being nationalized and that has got to stop.
More than ever, the future requires supervisory powers over casino capitalism
that never respected anything," he said.
Kremlin Intervenes in Stock Market, Russian rouble
Government intervention in the stock market hasn't been limited to the United
States. The Chinese and Russian authorities also ordered their agents to buy
local bank shares, in order to put a floor under their stock markets, which
lost 60% and 70% respectively, from their peak levels. The Kremlin suspended
trading for two days, after a plunge of over 10% last week left the Russian
Trading System Index (RTS) down 60% from its all-time high reached in May.
The Russian stock market is enduring its worst slump since the catastrophic
economic collapse of 1998, due to a toxic cocktail of global financial turmoil,
falling oil and natural gas prices, and a local credit crunch. Russian markets
are also paying a big price for the Kremlin's decision to invade South Ossetia,
which spurred $35 billion of foreign capital to flee Russia and weakened its
currency, the rouble. Even after a bargain hunting rally last Friday, the RTS
Index is still more than 50% lower since May, erasing nearly $800 billion in
paper value.

But the Kremlin is much better positioned to confront the current crisis than
the last time in 1998. With virtually no debt, a budget surplus and more than
$550 billion in foreign currency reserves, and $172 billion in an oil trust
fund, Moscow can prevent a run on banks and contain the financial turmoil.
The Kremlin offered $44 billion in emergency loans to the country's top banks
and unveiled a plan to spend as much as $20 billion more to bolster the market
by buying shares.
Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin has re-nationalized key industries and expanded
his control over the economy, and the latest emergency measures will result
in more state control over the banking sector. While the US government is forced
to go deeper into debt to bailout its banks, Russia has a huge surplus to tap
for stabilizing its banking system. And the US Congress also wants state-ownership
in US-banks, by demanding warrants in exchange for purchases of toxic mortgages.
Buoyed by its vast oil wealth, Putin is shrugging off the worst stock market
meltdown in a decade, arguing that Russia's economy will emerge intact. This
time around, oil prices are closer to $110 a barrel, and ten-times higher than
in 1998, when the Kremlin's foreign exchange reserves were whittled down to
$8-billion. The Russian rouble fell 10% against the deficit-ridden US-dollar
since Russia invaded South Ossetia on August 8th, but simply matched the Euro's
12% slide against the greenback to $1.400. This time around, Russia was able
to defend its own currency, by dumping $20 billion dollars from its FX reserves,
to prop-up the rouble. The Kremlin would profit from the intervention, if the
US-dollar plummets.
If the US dollar's reign as the world's currency is in its twilight, highlighted
by the toppling of Wall Street's Titans and America's endless flow of budgetary
red-ink, the Russian rouble would be in a position to strengthen against the
dollar, despite its troubles with Western financiers. Putin is salivating at
the prospect of an Obama-Biden administration, giving him the keys to create
more tension in places like the Caspian Sea and the Middle East, to boost the
price of Urals blend crude oil.
This article is just the Tip of the Iceberg of what's available in
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