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An eight-week-long upturn in European, Japanese, US and emerging stock markets
since March 10th has sparked a wave of optimistic commentaries in the financial
media, that the worst bear-market since the 1930's has finally come to a merciful
end, and the rocky road to recovery lies ahead. Since hitting a 12-year low
on March 6th, the key global benchmark - the S&P-500 Index has rebounded
by +34%%, while the KBW Index measuring 24-US-banks doubled off its lows.
The stunning rebound from March 6-20th was only the fifth-time since 1929
that the S&P-500 Index has run-up by more than +20% in 14-days or less.
The rebound has been dubbed the "Green Shoots" Rally, - signaling the
initial stages of a recovery in the battered global economy. Most importantly,
under heavy political pressure from the Fed and Congress, FASB altered rule
#157, to allow American bankers to value toxic assets, at their own discretionary
judgment.
The switch-back to "mark-to-make-believe" accounting is an expedient scheme
that allows the banking elite to conceal their losses, and use the same obscure
and discredited models to inflate their balance sheets. The recent spate of
better-than-expected earnings reports by US-banking giants, Goldman Sachs,
JP-Morgan, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo is a testament, not
to the strengthening of the real economy, but rather due to accounting gimmickry.


Barack Obama, elected by appealing to a popular rejection of the Bush administration's
economic policies, has become the new political lackey for the financial aristocracy.
His pick for US Treasury chief, Timothy Geithner, is continuing the same policies
as his mentors, former Goldman Sachs CEO's Henry Paulson and Robert Rubin.
Step by step, the Fed, the Treasury, Congress, and the White House have allocated
an unprecedented $12.9-trillion of taxpayer money and guarantees, to rescue
the nation's top financiers from their own greedy mistakes.
US Treasury chief Geithner was a leading architect of the bank bailouts during
the financial crisis, while forging close relationships with executives of
Wall Street's giant financial institutions. His actions, as a regulator and
bailout king often aligned with the industry's interests and desires. Wall
Street's share of all company profits in the S&P 500 reached a record 42%
in 2006, and with it, greater influence over corrupt politicians in Washington
from both political parties.


The Wall Street oligarchs are now utilizing trillions in US-taxpayer bailout
money and government guarantees, to bolster their balance sheets and generate
profits, and speculating in turbulent financial markets. Since March 6th, what's
evolved is a rising US-stock market and inflated bank profits, which in turn,
conjures-up hopes that banks will start lending again, to free-up capital for
new investment and spending.
Many investors are skeptical of the "Green-Shoots" rally, and prefer to call
it a "bear-market" suckers' rally, - one that is destined to fizzle-out and
unravel. Yet today's bargain hunters see a "once-in-a-lifetime" buying opportunity,
and are guided by the sagely advice of Sir John Templeton, "Bull-markets are
born in pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism, and die of euphoria."
Referring to the 1930's Great Depression, Warren Buffett pointed out that
the Dow Industrials hit bottom in July-1932. "Economic conditions continued
to deteriorate until Franklin Roosevelt became president in March-1933, but
by that time, the market had already climbed 30%. "While short-term stock-market
movements can't be foretold, the likelihood is the market will recover before
the economy, or general investor sentiment does, and if you wait for the robins,
spring will be over," he said.
IMF Issues Grim Forecast for 2009
On April 23rd, IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn sounded some strong words
of caution, which were ignored in the marketplace. "Despite some red lights
and green lights, our belief is the financial crisis is far from over. There
are still long months of economic distress in front of us," Kahn warned. The
IMF predicted on April 21st, that worldwide financial institutions could suffer
$4-trillion in losses from the global credit crisis. "Historically, wherever
recessions are preceded by financial crises they are more severe and longer
lasting," warned IMF Chief Economist Olivier Blanchard, "there would be no
rapid recovery from the current economic crisis."

The Group-of-Seven economies, which account for two-thirds of the world's
output, experienced an "unprecedented" -7.5% contraction in real GDP, on an
annualized basis, during the fourth quarter. The world's steel industry, a
key lynchpin in the auto and construction industries, is bracing for a sharp
-15% drop in demand, the biggest annual decline since World War II, as the
global economic downturn rips through the sector, lowering output to an estimated
1-billion tons. Demand for the steel is seen falling 36% in the United States
and 28% in Europe.
The IMF's "World Economic Outlook," released on April 21st, predicted negative
1.3% growth for the global economy this year, "Not since the 1930's has the
global economy undergone a collective contraction," the IMF said. The Euro-Zone's
economy is projected to contract -4.2%, Japan -6.2%, Russia -6%, and the Asian
tiger economies, Singapore -10%, and Taiwan -7.5%, the worst affected. China
and India are forecast to grow +6.5% and +4.5% respectively, but nevertheless,
a major slowdown in both countries, and likely to increase their jobless rates.
Wall Street's best month in nine-years
Yet despite these ominous warnings, all three major US-exchange indexes closed
sharply higher in April, with the Dow Jones Industrials surging towards the
8,500-level, led by the financial sector. April was Wall Street's best month
in nine-years -- offering a glimmer of hope that just maybe, the US-economy
is finally about to stabilize. Bolstering this view, pending sales of existing
US-homes rose +3.2% in March, and +2% in February, and starting to work-off
excess inventories, - a key to stabilization in the financial system and broader
economy.

On paper, US-stocks recouped $2.3-trillion in value since March 6th. The S&P-500's
gain of +18.7% in March-April was its best two-month rally since 1975. The
junk bond market gained a record +11% last month. In previous bear-markets
over the past 60-years, the S&P-500 Index has hit bottom an average of
four-months before the recession ended, and nine-months before unemployment
hit its peak.
The Dow Industrials' biggest one-day surge this year, occurred on March 23rd,
when US Treasury chief Geithner, unveiled a clever scheme to enable Wall Street's
elite banks to offload up to $1-trillion of their bad mortgage loans and other "toxic" assets
at inflated prices. The scheme involves the use of taxpayer funds to guarantee
large profits for hedge-funds, private-equity firms, and big insurance companies,
utilizing low-interest, non-recourse, government loans to purchase toxic securities
that are weighing down the balance sheets of the banks.
Geithner's scheme is designed to provide a windfall for the very same bankers
and investment firms which precipitated the deepest economic crisis since the
1930's, and the loss of 5-million US-jobs, by peddling high-risk, toxic investments
that generated extraordinary returns, - until the housing and debt bubbles
burst, - and sustained the multi-million-dollar bonuses of Wall Street CEO's
and traders.
Bernanke sees "Green-shoots" Sprouting in US-Economy
On March 15th, in his first television interview, Fed chief Ben "Bubbles" Bernanke
predicted that America's worst recession since the 1930's would likely end
this year before a recovery gathers steam in 2010. "The green shoots of
economic revival are already evident," Bernanke told CBS's program 60-Minutes. "Much
depends on fixing the banking system. We're working on it. I think we'll get
it stabilized, and see the recession coming to an end this year," he said.
"We'll see recovery beginning next year. And it will pick up steam over time." Asked
if the United States had escaped a repeat of the 1930's Great Depression, Bernanke
said: "I think we've averted that risk." A few days later, the Bernanke Fed
said it would buy $1.1-trillion of Treasury notes and MBS's, with money rolling-off
its electronic printing press. The massive cash infusion is channeled into
the coffers of the Wall Street Oligarchs, and is starting to flow into the
credit markets.

Six weeks later, the ISM's index of national factory activity, - a leading
indicator for the US-economy as a whole, jumped to 40.1 in April from 36.3
in March, a sign that "green shoots" are sprouting in the battered sector,
- even before Obama's $787-billion stimulus plan kicks-in. Most encouraging,
the ISM's index for New-Orders jumped 14% to 47.2 in April, the highest since
August 2008, from 41.2 in March, and the employment index rose to 34.4 in April,
from 28.1 in March.
In hindsight, the US-factory index began to stabilize two-months before the
S&P-500 bear-market hit its bottom. In other words, the sharp slide in
the global equity markets in January-Feb could have been the final-stage of
selling capitulation at the tail-end of a 17-month bear market. The post March
6th recovery rally is catching-up to the green-shoots sprouting in the factory
sector.
Nowadays, news that would have sent the stock market into a frenzied meltdown
just a few-months ago is now taken calmly in stride. Instead, traders search
for silver linings in reports with negative headlines. For example, US-gross
domestic product (GDP) plunged -6.1% on an annualized basis in the first quarter
of 2009, a far steeper decline than predicted. Following a -6.3% GDP-decline
in the last three months of 2008, it was the biggest six-month contraction
in 50-years.
But buried within the report, was information that US-business inventories
were whittled down by a whopping $103.7-billion in the first-quarter, which
is good news for the economy, because it suggests businesses have cut their
stockpile of unsold merchandise to levels that will soon encourage them to
start placing new orders, which in turn, would stimulate production and demand
for raw materials
"Green Shoots" Sprouting in Indian Economy
In the emerging world, India's factories are humming again for the first time
in five-months as new orders are building-up in the pipeline, pointing to a
tentative "Green-Shoots" recovery. India's purchasing managers' index (PMI),
based on a survey of 500-companies, rose to 53.3 in April from 49.5 in March,
climbing above the key threshold of 50 that separates expansion from contraction.
India's PMI has jumped to its highest in seven months after hitting a trough
of 44.3 in December. The new orders index rose to 54.9 from 49.5 in March.
Like other emerging markets, India was hurt by huge outflows of "hot money," from
last year, hammering its stock market into a rout and knocking the rupee 20%
lower against the dollar.Foreign investors sold $13-billion worth of Indian
shares in 2008, compared to a record influx of $17.4-billion in 2007. But since
March 6th, the pendulum has swung again, back in India's favor. Foreigners
bought $1.8-billion of Indian stocks in April and the rupee gained 2.3% against
the dollar.

The Bombay Sensex Index rebounded above the psychological 12,000-level for
the first time since early October, with all its components advancing. Bombay
has soared +51% since hitting a low of 8,047 on March 6th, and is up +26% this
year after slumping -52% in 2008. The benchmark jumped +17.5% in April, its
best monthly gain in 10-years, and the top performing Asian index last month.
India's $1.2-trillion economy expanded at an average 9% for four straight-years,
but it's vulnerable to outside influences in the global economy. Over the past
two-decades, successive governments have transformed the country into a cheap
labor platform, particularly for hi-tech information technology and related
business services. Major corporations from around the globe have exploited
its large supply of highly-trained, English-speaking graduates to cut business
service costs. Yet fully 70% of India's population of 1.1-billion survives
on less than $2 per day.
While many Indian analysts have said the Sensex recovery since early March
is a "bear-market" rally, some have switched their opinions, and now believe
this could be the start of a new bull-run. Shares in Indian banks were hit
by the global downturn, but are now attracting foreign investors on signs of
an economic recovery, with bad debts not as large as their American or European
peers.

India's inflation slowed
to an all-time low of 0.27% in April, giving the Bank of India room to cut
interest rates further to support a faltering economy. The RBI's key repo rate,
at which it lends to commercial banks, is pegged at a record low of 4.75% from
a peak of 9.0% last year. Accompanying the rate cuts, are three fiscal stimulus
plans involving tax and duty cuts, infrastructure spending, and other steps,
totaling $4-billion. Sectors such as steel, automobiles, and cement are already
showing renewed strength in the domestic market. Still, India's export-related
industries must wait for genuine recovery in the G-7 nations and other developed
markets.
Shanghai Red-chips are back in favor
In Beijing, the ruling Politburo is ordering the People's Bank of China (PBoC)
to massively inflate the M2 money supply, and removing lending restrictions
to revive the world's third-biggest economy. State-owned Chinese banks extended
4.58-trillion yuan ($670-billion) of new loans in Q'1, including loans to speculators
in Shanghai red-chips,andfueling the initial stages of a stock market recovery.
Shanghai red-chips have climbed above 2,500, from a low of 1,700 in November,
under a rising tide of liquidity injected by the PBoC.

Coupled with Beijing's 4-trillion yuan spending plan, the stimuli is the equivalent
of 32% of China's entire economic output per year. Most interesting, the Shanghai
rally began to gain momentum in the first-quarter, when Chinese industrial
firms earned a combined 219-billion yuan ($32-billion) in profits in the first
two-months of 2009, down -37% from a year earlier. The figure marked a sharp
slide from annual growth of +5% in the first 11-months of last year.
Thus, the Shanghai red-chip rally is inflating P/E ratio to risky levels,
due to a rising tide of liquidity. China's M2 money supply is exploding at
an annualized 25.5% clip, distorting market values. Chinese banks are funneling
yuan into the coffers of big trading firms, who in turn, are bidding-up red-chips.
Beijing's double-cylinder fiscal and monetary stimuli have been aggressive
and are already starting to pay dividends in the real economy, and base metals
markets.
Chinese factories gained further momentum April, adding to tentative evidence
that "green-shoots," are blossoming into a full fledged recovery. China's factory
PMI rose to 53.5 in April from 52.4 in March, reflecting strength in output
and new orders. It was the fifth-month in a row that China's PMI has improved
and the second straight month it's been above the 50-mark.
Brazil's currency Tracking Green Shoots
After dumping $43.7-billion worth of Brazilian bonds and stocks in the second
half of last year, "hot-money" is returning to Sao Paulo, home of Brazil's
Bovespa Index. Amid signs of sprouting "Green-Shoots" in the Chinese, Indian,
and US-economies, the Brazilian stock market is up +26% so far this year, after
tumbling a record 41% in 2008. Foreigners were net buyers of $1.5-billion of
Brazilian stocks last month, and Brazil's trade surplus doubled from a year
ago to $3.7-billion.
China has become the biggest customer of Brazilian exports in recent months,
surpassing the United States as the country's main trading partner for the
first time ever. Brazil is among the world's top commodity exporters and sales
abroad rose +4.3% in April to $12.3-billion. While exports were rising, Brazil's
imports fell 14% in April to $8.6-billion widening its overall trade surplus.
Asian steelmakers may lose their battle for a 40% cut in annual iron ore prices,
as firm spot prices and rebounding steel output in China, the world's top steelmaker,
puts iron-ore miners in a better position for contract talks. The world's top-three
miners of iron-ore, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, and Brazil's Vale, control two-third's
of global seaborne trade, and are already preparing for a recovery in China
with higher output targets. Iron-ore is Brazil's top export, shipping 23.5-tons
in April, followed by 5.7-million tons of soy, and 2-million tons of crude
oil.

Foreigners, including carry traders who leverage their bets in low-yielding
currencies, such as the Japanese yen and US-dollar, now accounting for 36%
of daily volume in Sao Paulo's capital markets. "Money has no motherland; financiers
are without patriotism and without decency; their sole object is gain," - Napoleon
Bonaparte. Brazil's central bank has cut its Selic rate to a record low of
10.25% to reinvigorate its economy, but yields are still much higher than in
G-7 nations.
Brazil's broadest measure of inflation, the IGP-M price index, fell to 0.15%
in April, which could allow the central bank to cut the Selic rate at its June
meeting, and ultimately to 9.25% by year-end. That won't deter "carry traders" who
are focusing on Brazil's crude oil, iron-ore, soy, and steel exports. Brazil's
currency, the real, has rebounded +14% to 47.2-US-cents since early March,
its highest level in six-months, on hopes for a rebound in commodity markets.
But on May 5th, the Brazilian central bank surprised the currency markets,
by soaking-up $3.4-billion of excess US-dollars, through a reverse currency
swap, aimed at slowing the real's advance. It was the first time the Bank of
Brazil arranged a reverse swap since late September, which could help bolster
its FX stash.
Gold whipsawed by Deflation risk in the Euro zone
There is a battle brewing within the European Central Bank, between two opposing
camps, with different views of the risk of a deflation-trap, which could spell
longer-term danger for the Euro-zone economy. Producer prices fell -0.7% in
March to stand -3.1% lower than a year ago, reinforcing expectations the ECB
would cut its repo rate by 25-basis points to 1% at its meeting on May 7th.
The main driver behind the annual fall in producer prices was a 7.3% drop in
energy costs.
"In the for-seeable future, the risk potential is to be seen on the side of
deflation rather than inflation," warned Bank of Austria's chief Ewald Nowotny
on May 5th. "The vicious cycle of deflation is not easy to overcome without
drastic conventional and non-conventional measures, which several governments
and central banks have adopted and continue to adopt," added Bank of Cyprus'
Athanasios Orphanides.
While central banks in England, Japan, and the US, have already started buying-up
bonds with newly-printed money to supplement near zero-percent interest rates,
ECB chief Jean-Claude Trichet has resisted "quantitative easing" (QE), and
will lay out his thoughts at the May 7th news conference. Resisting the hallucinogenic
drug of QE, are the Bundesbank's Juergen Stark and Axel Weber, who point to
historical evidence that pumping vast quantities of money into an economy leads
to hyper-inflation, from Germany in the 1920's to Argentina in the late 1980's.

A damaging downward price-cycle is still seen as unlikely, but there is danger
for the ECB in waiting too long to pull-out all the stops, if deflation takes
root. In Spain, the Euro zone's fourth largest economy, consumer prices fell
for the first-time since records began in 1962, and the jobless rate jumped
to a record 17.4-percent. Once the jobless rate spreads into the double-digits
throughout the Euro-zone, consumers could recoil, and the risk of a vicious
deflationary spiral jumps.
In the Euro-zone, gold prices have tumbled from a record high of 793-euros
/oz set in February, to around 675-euros today, in reaction to a strong rebound
in European banking shares. Austria's Nowotny said the "bulk of the banking
and financial crisis is over." The ECB's six rate cuts since October, totaling
300-basis points, coupled with liquidity injections in the interbank market,
have subdued financial market turmoil.
Still, gold traders want to see if the ECB decides to start printing money,
and expand its balance sheet through purchases of bonds or other assets. Although
the risk of deflation in the Euro-zone is weighing on the yellow metal, - the
prescription for fighting the disease - slashing interest rates to near zero-percent,
and printing money to buy long-term bonds, is buoying gold.
How long can the global "Green-shoots" rally last? Are P/E's artificially
inflated due to the hallucinogenic side-effects of QE? What's the long-term
implication for interest rates, foreign currencies, gold, and the US Treasury
bond market? The answers to these questions are included in the latest edition
of Global Money Trends.
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