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With two weeks left before the US presidential election, is Arizona Senator
John "Maverick" McCain's sprint for the White House at a dead-end? His challenger,
Illinois Democrat Barack Obama raked in $150 million in donor contributions
from domestic and possibly foreign sources last month, and is planning an unrelenting
brainwashing campaign until Election Day, in order to cement his lead in the
opinion polls, and guide the Democrats to complete control of the US-government.
Democratic strategists are wildly optimistic that the ongoing financial crisis
and sharp decline in the stock market can lead to a landslide Obama victory. "There
is going to be an exceptionally large turnout, and that will disproportionately
help Obama," predicts Democratic pollster Peter
Hart. Only two candidates have beaten the odds against them at this juncture
in the election campaign. In 1980, Ronald Reagan surged from a 7-point deficit
in the closing two weeks of the campaign, to a 10-point victory, beating Jimmy
Carter by a landslide.
In 1948, Harry Truman was the underdog, and came back from a bigger deficit
than the one McCain now faces. But if history is any guide to the future, the
most likely scenario is the race will tighten slightly, and McCain would fall
short of an upset victory. That's what happened to incumbent Gerald Ford in
1976, when he erased a 30-point summer-time deficit but narrowly lost by 2-points
to Jimmy Carter.
October tends to be a good month for the US-stock market if the incumbent
party in the White House is about to win the presidential election. When the
incumbent party is about to lose however, the stock market tends to perform
poorly. Since 1900, the DJI has posted an average +2.7% gain in those presidential
election years in which the incumbent party proceeded to win the election,
in contrast to a -1.5% decline when that party lost. So far, the DJI is -14.6%
lower in October 2008, after trading as much as -27.5% lower on the morning
of October 10th.
The odds of a McCain upset victory look even more daunting from another perspective.
For the year to date, the DJI-30 is 30% lower, the biggest loss in a presidential
election year through Nov 1st, since 1932. That year, Democrat Franklin Roosevelt
beat Republican President Herbert Hoover. In 1960, the DJI was -14% lower through
Nov 1st, when Democratic candidate John F. Kennedy defeated Richard Nixon,
then the incumbent Republican vice president.

Traders at the on-line betting parlor intrade.com are watching the wild gyrations
on Wall Street, and bidding 86-cents on the dollar in anticipation of an Obama
victory, up from as low as 46-cents on Sept 8th. Obama's surge at intrade.com
was fueled by US Treasury chief Henry Paulson's reckless decision to pull the
plug on Lehman Brothers, which in turn, ignited the October stock market meltdown
and worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. McCain's campaign was
derailed by Paulson's betrayal and the loss of $4.5 trillion in stock market
wealth.
The vast majority of Americans are unfamiliar with Libor rates, the Community
Re-Investment Act, credit default swaps, or the yen carry trade, and how these
mechanisms impact the stock market. But they do understand that home prices
are sinking, and the US stock market is 40% lower from a year ago, which combined,
has wiped-out $15 trillion of household wealth. And with -763,000 jobs lost
so far this year, economies abroad slowing, and hurting US-exports, most Americans
are blaming the incumbent President George W. Bush, and lurching into the arms
the 48-year old rookie Senator Barack Obama from Chicago.
The US stock market's swings this October have been the most volatile in history.
The CBoE's Volatility Index - the VIX, recognized as the barometer of investor
fear, vaulted to an unprecedented high of 81 last week, as the Dow Jones industrials
plunged to the 8,200-level. Until then, the VIX hadn't traded above the 48-level
for this entire decade. Irregardless of one's political persuasions, the October
meltdown in the Dow Jones Industrials was closely correlated with Obama's steadily
improving odds of winning the White House.
Wall Street is fearful of Social Democrats gaining a super-majority in Washington,
ready to unleash higher taxes and regulations on big business. Wall Street's
preferred candidate, John McCain, didn't even mention during the debates, his
proposals to cut the capital gains tax rate in-half to 7.5%, and increase deductible
capital losses to $15,000 from $3,000 for 2008 and 2009, in order to help investors
ride out the bear market. McCain also wants to lower the US corporate tax rate
by 10% to 25%, but he forgot to articulate these policies during the debates.

One hopeful sign for the McCain campaign has been signs of stabilization in
the Dow Jones Industrials since October 10th, amid indications that frozen
credit markets are thawing-out. G-20 governments have moved to restore trust
between lenders and borrowers, with $3.2-trillion in loan guarantees and capital
injections last week, and in response, the 3-month London Inter-bank Offered
Rate, Libor fell by 76-basis points to 4.06% today, from as high as 4.82% last
week.
JP Morgan Chase lent-out between $10 billion and $15 billion in short-term
funds to overseas peers at interest rates ranging from 3% to 4.5%, and not
long after that, Citigroup and other US-banks followed suit, for the first
time since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in mid-September. A sharp slide
in US$ Libor rates can help bring down mortgage rates, and minimize further
losses in the housing market.
Generally speaking, the stock market tends to bottom about 4-5 months before
the end of a recession, and when economic conditions are widely expected to
get substantially worse, and investors have given-up on any hope that the economy
will improve in the foreseeable future. While short-term movements can be misleading,
the stock market usually recovers before the economy or general investor sentiment
turns upward. For McCain's campaign, any late market recovery could narrow
the gap, but might come too late.

The Arab oil kingdoms were working behind the scenes to engineer a sharp slide
in oil prices ahead of the US-elections, in order to cushion the slide in global
stock markets, and boost the odds of a McCain victory in November. So far,
Riyadh is still pumping 700,000 bpd above its official quota target, but started
to reduce its oil output in September to 9.55 million bpd, from 9.70 million
bpd in August. Riyadh greased the skids under the crude oil market, which has
plunged $75 per barrel, since catapulting to a record high of $147.27 on July
11th.
However, gut-wrenching declines in the stock market, the collapse of Wall
Street titans, massive government rescue operations for banks, and big job
losses, have trumped what otherwise have been good news - gasoline prices in
Ohio fell to $2.80 last week, down 4-cents from a year ago. The Saudis did
their part to help the Republican ticket by driving gasoline prices lower.
But now, faced with the prospect of an Obama-Biden White House, combined with
far-left leaning Democrats in Congress, the Arab oil kingdoms have decided
to hedge their bets, by moving closer to Russian kingpin Vladimir Putin, Iran's
chief military supplier.
The Kremlin Seeks closer Ties with OPEC
OPEC Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri visits Moscow this week to explore
deeper ties with the Kremlin, in setting world oil prices. Russia relies on
energy exports for 50% of its budget revenues, and the Kremlin is disturbed
by the historic plunge in oil prices since mid-July. The price of Russia's
Ural Blend crude oil has plunged to $65 /barrel, and Moscow is basing this
year's budget on an average oil price of $70 per barrel. As military and social
spending rises next year, Moscow will need an average of $95 per barrel for
Urals crude in order to balance its budget.
On October 20th, OPEC chief Chakib Khelil called on non-OPEC producer to join
the cartel with a concerted reduction in global supply. "There is a need for
the contribution of oil producers like Russia, Norway and Mexico. Those countries
benefit from the repercussions of OPEC decisions on prices. It would be good
for OPEC, and for them, to contribute to production cuts to help stabilize
sagging prices. A price between $70 and $90 should help everyone," Khelil said,
speaking ahead of an emergency meeting of OPEC on October 24th in Vienna.
Russia, Norway, and Mexico haven't cooperated with OPEC since 2001, when they
lowered oil output by a combined 450,000 bpd. Russian Energy Minister Sergei
Shmatko said OPEC's al-Badri would meet with senior Kremlin leaders this week, "We
will discuss the situation on the market. For us, the main thing is the format
for co-operation," Shmatko said. OPEC is signaling a production cutback of
more than one-million barrels per day, starting on Nov 1st, and is trying to
get Putin's assurance that Russia will not try to fill the vacuum in OPEC's
export markets.

Cooperation agreements between Moscow and OPEC were quickly forthcoming. Russia's
natural gas giant Gazprom agreed with Iran and Qatar to form a "big natural
gas troika" and that it should become a permanent body holding regular meetings. "There
is a demand to form this gas OPEC and there is a consensus to set up gas OPEC," said
Iran's Oil Minister Gholamhossein Nozari. Russia, Iran and Qatar are ranked
the first, second and third biggest holders of natural gas reserves in the
world and together boast more than half of the global total.
The meeting with OPEC also comes at a time when the Kremlin is suffering from
its biggest setback since the 1998 debt crisis. Russia's stock market has collapsed
by 70% from its peak in May, while its Urals blend crude oil has plunged by
50-percent. The Kremlin's war with Georgia, its bellicose rhetoric with Poland,
threats to cut-off energy supplies to Western Europe, Putin's threat to dismantle
coal miner Mechel MTL.n, and a depositor run on two retail banks, have all
conspired to burst the world's last remaining stock market bubble.
Mr Putin's power in Russia has rested on his claim to have steered the country
out of chaos of a tangle of debt defaults and a run on the rouble. Four years
of high oil prices have left Moscow with no foreign debt and with more than
$530 billion in foreign currency reserves. But, as foreign investors have been
saying for years, Russia hasn't reinvest oil profits back into the industry,
and production is now stagnant, while Mr Putin has failed to diversify the
economy away from energy.
Vladimir Putin boasted on October 20th, that Russia was well prepared to survive
the global financial crisis while the West had been caught off guard. "Russia's
economy is well prepared for lengthy external shocks. We did not allow ourselves
to be caught unawares by the financial crisis. American, European, British
structures, despite all the differences in how their systems are organized
and how they work, were caught unaware." On October 18th Russian finance minister
Alexei Kudrin indicated that the central bank will buy shares in Russian companies,
mainly in state companies such as Gazprom and would sell them at a profit later
on.
Moscow has already spent $67 billion of its foreign currency stash that it
accumulated from high oil and natural gas prices, to prop-up its banking system
and the Russian rouble, which is under speculative attack. Only a few months
ago, the Kremlin was talking about pricing its oil in roubles and making the
rouble a regional reserve currency, - a status closer to that of the euro and
the dollar.

But that was before Russian tanks rolled into Georgia, the Russian stock market
crashed 70%, and the price of Urals blend oil fell by half. Since the five-day
war with Georgia, the rouble has lost 12% of its value against the dollar,
and the central bank has been selling $600 million a day from its $530 billion
FX stash, and the total cost of defending the rouble so far has reached $50
billion.
Moscow has pledged up to $200 billion from its reserves to help companies
refinance foreign debts, and guarantee subordinated loans issued by banks.
Putin also pledged $7.7 billion of budget funds to widen the remit of the Deposit
Insurance Agency, to guarantee retail bank deposits. But the Kremlin's bailout
plans also enable it to create near monopoly control over the Russian banking
industry.
Indeed, the turmoil in Western stock markets could strengthen those in the
Kremlin who argue that capitalism is too risky. In that case, the advantage
will go to those, such as Mr Putin, who favor more control over key industries
and the stock markets. And if America's electorate moves to the far-left in
this election, the door would be open for Putin to draw the powerful Arab oil
kingdoms in the Persian Gulf, into an alliance with the "Axis of Oil" - Iran,
Russia, and Venezuela.
On
October 19th, Senator Joe Biden, guaranteed that if elected, Barrack Obama
would be tested by an international crisis within his first six-months in power. "Mark
my words. It will not be six months before the world tests Barack Obama like
they did John Kennedy. Watch, we're gonna have an international crisis, a generated
crisis, to test the mettle of this guy."
"I can give you several scenarios from where it might originate," Biden said,
mentioning the Middle East and Russia as high possibilities. The "Axis of Oil" -
Iran, Russia, and Venezuela is waiting for Obama - Biden to oust the Neo-cons,
and might soon rattle hot spots in Central Asia and the Middle East, to jack-up
sagging oil prices.
Can McCain Repeat Netanyahu's Magic Trick?
Though he is the longest serving politician in Israel, and a seasoned world
figure, Shimon Peres 85, never managed to win outright an election for public
office. His most embarrassing defeat happened 12-years ago, when Peres squandered
a 17-point lead in the opinion polls, even with the full backing of the Israeli
leftist media elite, in the 1996 race for prime minister. Instead, right winger
Benjamin Netanyahu pulled-off an improbable victory, ousting Peres, the head
of the Socialist Labor Party, by fewer than 30,000 votes, or a margin of less
than 1 percent.
Left-wing exit polls suggested Peres would win, but as the actual votes were
tallied past mid-night, in a race "too-close-to-call," many Israelis "went
to sleep with Peres, but woke up with Netanyahu." Peres' wit and elegance makes
him a favorite at the Congress of the Socialist International, an association
of democratic socialist parties, but those qualities made little impression
on Israeli voters.
Shimon
Peres is an old hand in Israel at both elections and losing, and learned a
few hard lessons in politics along the way, - "first, Israelis lie to the pollsters,
just for the fun of it," Second, the Holy Land is a place where miracles do
happen, and thirdly, and as Peres is fond of saying, "Opinion polls are
like perfume, sweet to smell, but bitter to taste."
Arizona's John McCain can only pray the same holds true on November 4th.
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