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Each month, the US Treasury publishes its International Capital account, (TIC)
which foreign currency traders and bond dealers use to gauge the flows of money
from around the world, into and out-of the US-capital markets. The demand for
a nation's bonds and stocks, combined with international trade flows for goods
and services, plus behind the scenes intervention by central banks, all act
in concert to influence the foreign exchange market which handles $4-trillion
per day.
A surplus in TIC inflows is generally seen as a positive for the US-dollar,
because it signals that foreigners are willing to increase their holdings of
US-securities, displaying greater confidence in the currency. On the other
hand, a TIC deficit is generally interpreted as bearish for the US-dollar,
because it means that foreign inflows into the US aren't sufficient enough
to fund government borrowing.
The release of the TIC report often sparks a flurry of trading activity in
the foreign exchange market, due to speculators seeking to earn a fast profit.
However, the initial knee-jerk reaction to the news headlines, can be very
misleading, and often isn't long-lasting. For instance, the US-Dollar Index,
measured against a basket of six-currencies, defied conventional logic in February,
by climbing +2.7% higher, even in the face of a net outflow of $91-billion
in the TIC account.
Instead, large off-shore traders are influencing exchange rates, and their
betting patterns are difficult to discern on the G-20's radar screens. The
finance ministers of the "Group-of-20" (G-20) recognize the growing threat
to their control over the currency markets, and are calling for increased regulation
of hedge-funds and shadow-bankers, insisting on full disclosure of their locations
and other information to assess the risks they pose to the manipulations of
the major central banks.

The United States is dangerously reliant upon the whims of foreign investors,
to help finance its $2-trillion budget deficit this year, and prevent a surge
in long-term interest rates, which could have a devastating impact on the US-economy.
If bond or currency traders detect that big investors in US-government bonds,
- such as China, Japan, OPEC, Russia, and Brazil, have ceased to buy US Treasury
debt, or worse yet, are becoming net sellers, it could spark a sharp slide
in US-Treasury notes, sending yields sharply higher, and ignite a free-fall
in the US-dollar.
Last week, the US Treasury tried to reassure bond and currency traders, that
foreign investors haven't abandoned the American debt markets, despite the
avalanche of new debt that is swamping the market. The US Treasury claims that
China and Japan were net buyers of a combined $48.5-billion of Treasuries in
March, and that Moscow was a net buyer of $8.3-billion. Yet the reliability
and accuracy of the TIC report should be viewed with a grain of salt, and a
healthy dose of suspicion, - perhaps, the figures were conjured-up under the
guise of "mark-to-make-believe" accounting.
White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers defended the size of the US
Treasury debt outstanding, reaching $11.2-trillion in April, saying US-dollar
holders would suffer much more if full-scale deflation sets in and the US-economy
collapses. A Treasury spokeswoman declared, "The US Treasury market remains
the deepest and most liquid market in the world." White House spin-artist Robert
Gibbs added, "There's no safer investment in the world than in the United States."
But President Barack Obama's stimulus program could have a destabilizing effect
on the US-economy. No one is asking who will purchase the $1-trillion of US
Treasuries to be offered to the market by September. Once that colossal amount
of paper is bought, who will purchase another $5-trillion of Treasury paper
over the next four-years, as the US-government plunges deeper into insolvency.
The Federal Reserve would be forced to print (monetize) vast quantities of
US-dollars to pay the principal and interest on the national debt that is not
covered by tax revenue.

The US-dollar's surprising strength since last July was largely attributed
to "de-leveraging" and "risk-aversion," which are references to the unwinding
of "carry trades," in the foreign exchange market. On April 6th, famed hedge-fund
trader George Soros remarked, "The US-dollar is not strong because people want
to hold the dollar, but it's strong because people have debt in dollars."
The enormous fortunes of Wall Street's aristocracy were built-up on the leveraging
of debt, including "carry-trades," in order to buy exotic securities built
around sub-prime mortgages, and other instruments of financial speculation.
But when the global commodity and stock markets began to meltdown following
the collapse of Lehman Brothers, carry-traders began massive de-leveraging,
- the selling risky assets and buying US-dollars and Japanese-yen, to pay-down
margin loans.
There was also a stunning contraction in the US-trade deficit, narrowing from
$62.5-billion in August to $26-billion in February, its lowest level in nine-years,
bolstering the greenback. The US current account deficit, which had increased
for five straight years, fell to $673-billion in 2008 from $731-billion in
2007. The deficit equaled 4.7% of the overall US-economy last year, down from
5.3% in 2007.
But the US-dollar's "risk-aversion" rally came to an abrupt end on March 18th,
when the Federal Reserve shocked the markets by announcing that it would unleash
its nuclear weapon, - "Quantitative Easing," (QE) by printing $1.1-trillion
US-dollars off its electronic printing press, to monetize US T-Notes and mortgage
backed securities, in an all-out effort to prevent a deflationary spiral in
the US-economy, which in turn, could lead to widespread defaults on debt and
bankruptcies.
By pumping vast quantities of US-dollars into the global money markets, -
easily outstripping the money printing operations in England, the Euro-zone,
Japan, and Switzerland, the Fed has headed-off the prospect of deflation. Instead,
the Fed has reawakened the "Commodity Super Cycle," led by the kingpin crude-oil
market, which if feeding-off a weaker dollar, and ultra-low interest rates
worldwide, climbing above $62 per barrel today, from as low as $35 in January.

The Fed has pumped $1-trillion into the banking system since July, increasing
the monetary base to a record $1.87-trillion, while pegging the fed funds rate
near zero-percent. Super-easy money, beloved by Fed chief Ben "Bubbles" Bernanke,
US Treasury chief Tim "Turbo-tax" Geithner, corrupt Washington politicians
and Wall Street Oligarchs, is a traditional recipe for an asset bubble. While
the rapid expansion of the US-monetary base is buoying the gold market above
$900 /oz, other G-20 central banks are also letting the inflation-genie out
of its bottle, providing the yellow metal with a huge advantage over government
toilet paper.
"Our actions have succeeded in pulling the financial markets and the economy
from the edge of the abyss, beating back deflationary pressures, and set the
stage for a recovery," declared Dallas Fed chief Richard Fisher on April 15th.
Fisher argues the US-economy's low capacity utilization rate, near 69%, would
keep inflationary pressures under wraps. "It is doubtful that inflation will
raise its ugly head until employment picks-up and capacity utilization tightens," he
said.
Higher inflation down the road means the Fed must at some point, break its
addiction to easy-money, and dismantle the QE framework, which has flooded
the money markets with hundreds of billions of dollars. "Nobody I know on the
FOMC wants to maintain our current posture for any longer and to any greater
degree than is minimally necessary to restore the efficacy of the credit markets
and buttress economic recovery without inflationary consequences," Fisher said.
The FOMC "can ill afford to be perceived as monetizing that debt, lest we
come to be viewed as an agent of inflation, rather than an independent guardian
against future inflation," the Fed's propaganda artist said. Typically however,
Fed officials continue to keep the printing presses rolling at full-speed,
long after inflation has already reared its ugly head, and hyper-inflationary
psychology becomes deeply embedded within the minds of commodity traders and
the public at large.

Already, "green-shoots" of inflation are sprouting forth in the commodities
market. Base metals, energy, grains, and fertilizer are charging higher, spurred
along by China's great sucking sound, as Beijing pursues a major effort to
stockpile raw materials, with prices hovering near multi-year lows. Beijing
is spending 4-trillion yuan on infrastructure, to bring its roads, ports, airports,
power-generation capacity and other infrastructure systems up to speed.
The Baltic Dry Index, a measure of shipping costs for commodities, rose to
a seven-month high of 2,645, in London on strong Chinese demand for iron ore,
coal, and grains. Crude oil rose above $60 a barrel after China increased crude
imports by 14% in April to 3.9-million barrels a day. Soybeans rose to $11.65
/bushel, as US-stockpiles are dwindling to a five-year low of 130-million bushels,
the USDA said.
China imported 57-tons of iron-ore in April, up +33% from a year ago, setting
a record for a third month. China's State Reserves Bureau SRB may have imported
300,000-tons of refined copper in the first quarter of this year. Most base
metals will experience "severe" supply constraints in coming years as a lack
of investment and exploration prevents miners from meeting demand when the
global economy recovers, Ernst & Young warned on May 12th. "When that happens,
expect metal prices to set new record highs."

In this case, the revival of the "Commodity Super Cycle," is also getting
charged-up by Beijing's printing press, where the ruling elite are expanding
the Chinese M2 money supply at a blistering +26% annualized clip, far above
the +14.8% rate seen last November. Chinese banks have extended 5.2-trillion
yuan ($750-billion) of new loans in the first four-months of this year, and
much of the freshly printed yuan has been funneled into the Shanghai stock
market.
"Significant changes in the growth rate of money supply, even small ones,
impact the financial markets first. Then, they impact changes in the real economy,
usually in six to nine-months, but in a range of three to 18-months. The leads
are long and variable, though the more inflation a society has experienced,
history shows, the shorter the time lead will be between a change in money
supply growth and the subsequent change in inflation," according to the late
economist Milton Friedman.
Capitalizing on the still privileged position of the US dollar, the American
ruling class is funding bailouts of the Wall Street Oligarchs through the sale
of massive volumes of debt on world markets. The Fed's policy of printing vast
quantities of money, in part to finance the Treasury's debthas an inflationary
lag-effect that has generated an extremely nervous reaction from other powers,
most noticeably China, which has over $1 trillion in dollar-denominated bonds.
These assets would plunge in value in the event of a major upswing in inflationary
pressures.

The latest TIC report claims that China, the largest holder of US-Treasury
securities, increased its holdings of US-Treasury bonds by $23.7-billion in
the month of March to a record $767.9-billion. Yet the US-Treasury's figures
are at odds with stark warnings issued by top Chinese monetary officials on
March 25th. Zhou Xiaochuan, chief of the Chinese central bank is calling for
a new international currency to replace the US-dollar. Li Xiangyang of the
government-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences called the Fed's radical
QE policy "irresponsible," and asked for "specific measures on the part of
the US to insure the value of Chinese holdings."
Earlier, on March 13th, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao held a news conference
to send a blunt message to Washington. "We have lent a massive amount of capital
to the United States. Of course we are concerned about the safety of our assets.
To be honest, I am a little bit worried," said Wen. Furthermore, China's trade
surpluses are shrinking compared with a year ago, less than half compared with
a year ago, leaving Beijing with fewer dollars to re-invest in the Treasury
market.
It's a vast stretch of imagination to believe the TIC reports are accurate,
and not the configurations of "mark-to-make-believe" accounting. Yet China
is caught in a bind. If it tries to lighten-up on its US-bond portfolio, it
could trigger a global stampede to dump US-debt securities and shoot itself
in the foot. Still, it's highly possible that the US-Treasury is doctoring-up
the TIC data, in order to prevent an imminent collapse of the debt bubble,
which could send interest rates sharply higher.

Very few analysts, if any at all, have questioned the accuracy of the TIC
data. The most glaring red-flag is the US Treasury's claim that the Kremlin
boosted it holdings of US Treasury debt by $30-billion from August 2008, until
March 2009, to a record $138-billion. Yet over the same time span, the Kremlin
sold $221-billion US-dollars from its foreign currency stash, in a heroic defense
of the Russian rouble from the whims of speculators, and massive capital flight
from the Russian markets.
Furthermore,the US-dollar's share of Russia's FX stash fell to 41.5% from
47.0 last year, according to Bank Rossii. Russia, along with China, has raised
the idea of replacing the US-dollar as global reserve currency, as the Fed
tries to massively inflate its way out of the recession and bailout Wall Street
Oligarchs. By any stretch of the imagination, it's impossible to believe the
accuracy of the US Treasury's TIC report, claiming that Moscow increased its
exposure to US-bonds.

Brazil and China are working towards directly exchanging their own currencies
in trade transactions rather than using the US-dollar as an intermediary, according
to Brazil's central bank and aides to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil's
president. "What we are talking about now is Brazil paying for Chinese goods
with reals and China paying for Brazilian goods with renminbi." The move follows
other challenges by Beijing to the status of the dollar as the world's leading
reserve currency, such as currency swaps with Argentina and Indonesia.
The other key players in the US-dollar, the Arab oil kingdoms, are sticking
with their archaic dollar pegs, and still demanding US-dollars in exchange
for their oil. No wonder US-president Barack Obama decided to bow before Saudi
king Abdullah on April 2nd, at the G-20 meeting in London, - a friendly gesture,
but also sending an ominous signal of the US-dollar's precarious position.
On May 20th, Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said his army tested a
missile that could hit Israel and US-military bases in the Persian Gulf; coming
a day after Iran's supreme leader the Ayatollah Khamenei accused the Americans
of promoting terrorism. "The Sejil-2 missile, which has an advanced technology,
was launched today, and it landed exactly on target," Ahmadinejad said. That
target was the crude oil pits in London and New York, - lifting Iran's foreign
exchange income, and the value of its gold reserves in one quick-blow.
Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar said Sejil has "great destructive
power" and that mass production of the missile had started, rattling the nerves
of the neighboring Arab oil monarchies. The Obama team was unmoved however,
- and still seeks "vigorous" diplomacy with Tehran's mullahs.
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