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From Gold Forecaster - Global Watch 6th
November 2006.
A crisis postponed
So much has been written about the coming $ crisis, but the $ keeps holding
on, moving within a 5% band up and down, but not outside that band. Why doesn't
the crisis come?
The main reason is that it is a huge global currency subject to so many influences,
whether it be in demand by all nations across the globe to pay for oil, or
in demand by say Argentina to sell to meat to China. As the currency in which
86% of the globes transactions were denominated the actual intrinsic value
of the $ was not that pertinent. This value, so it is taught, should reflect
the entire Balance of Payments of the nation. And it usually does. However,
in the past a currency was allowed to go further and reflect not only the Trade
Balance but the real attractiveness of the nation as a place to put one's capital.
In the seventies Germany was remarkable with its economic strength forcing
it to revalue many times, it was in such demand. It had a surplus on its trade
balance as well as on its capital account. The main reason for either a devaluation
or a revaluation was to steady the global flow of capital across the world
leaving one nation facing a drain [e.g. the U.K. who imposed capital exchange
controls to slow this down] and another the inflow of capital.
Today we have a remarkable and different situation where the $ is the currency
of oil and the currency of global trade, not just the money of U.S. citizens.
On the home front the $ is the money of a country whose Balance of Payments
should be devaluing hugely, but is not, because the persistent practice by
nations receiving its currency is to re-invest these surpluses back into the
States, so balancing the Balance of Payments through new capital investments.
But this is not because the U.S. is considered the prime place for nations
to invest their capital as the U.S. is doing nothing whatsoever to rectify
the Trade deficit except complain about the behavior of other surplus nations
particularly China. The reason is to keep the $ strong so the capital outflow
can continue! So the expected $ crisis is averted time and time again!
The decline of the $
But there is a gentle and osmotic process underway, a lessening the role of
the U.S. $ in the global reserves. Alan Greenspan the ex-Federal Reserve
Chairman has confirmed that both private investors and central banks are
shifting away from the U.S. $ and toward the €.
On the date that the € was born, the switch of old now defunct European
currencies to the € resulted in European reserves in the € constituting
16% of the global reserves according to the I.M.F. Today, and mainly in the
last year, that percentage has risen to 25%. At that time the $ accounted for
76% of global reserves prior to 2005. Today it is reported that they account
for 65% of global reserves. The switching has begun led by Russia, but with
others beginning to follow.
In
line with Greenspan's comments, nations have begun to diversify, but sensitive
to the value of the $ on the global foreign exchanges, hoping they can retain
its value but lessen the content in reserves, a delicate and easily upset objective.
This again serves to postpone the $ crisis, at the same time exacerbating it
and ensuring it will be increasingly detrimental to the entire global monetary
system. The changes in the structure of global reserves will be slow it seems
on the surface, but at some point in this transition the pressure will be too
great and will precipitate a $ crisis of unseen proportions.
Protectionism & Capital Controls?
Greenspan put it this way from the U.S. perspective, "We'll get to the point
at some point that willingness to finance it will slow, and if you can't finance
it, it won't happen," Greenspan said of the broad trade measure. Greenspan
warned, however, that if the United States threw up barriers to isolate itself
from the pressures of globalization, "the adjustment process could be a little
bit more problematic." A little more problematic is a wonderful understatement.
Translated, this means Trade barriers rising against nations trading with the
States and the possible use of Capital Controls to prevent capital from leaving
the States. Will this be confined to the reserves of those nations against
whom barriers are erected? If so, these nations are rapidly getting to the
stage where they will be able to cope. As the U.S. role as a global
driver wanes, so will its ability to effect major trading partners wane with
it.
But the immediate market effect, the effect on the global monetary system
and the fear engendered in the stability of the global economy and its future
will be far more dramatic. The isolation that the U.S. may impose on itself
will allow the U.S. economy to boom tremendously as imports are replaced, but
the inflation rate will roar alongside this change. Of course retaliation to
such moves will find U.S. goods being replaced outside the States too, boosting
the remaining major nations but leaving minor nations to take most of the blows.
The Capital Tsunami.
Such protectionism and capital flows [that were such a threat in the seventies]
will be brought to a halt by restrictions, leaving some currencies to plummet
in value whilst other rise leaving a situation that can rupture international
trade. Central Bankers in the States [Geithner] put this in words that at
once interesting but obscure, when they say "And the forces that have
produced this constellation of capital flows and market conditions will evolve
in ways we cannot anticipate." A look at the seventies when such capital
flows cased exchange rate havoc removes this mysterious veil and shows that
such an evolution will prove traumatic to all across the world as
they try to contain the Tsunami of capital looking for a place of value.
The size of this capital Tsunami was commented on by the U.S. Central Banker
Geithner this way, "The dramatic increase in the foreign exchange reserves
of central banks, particularly in emerging markets, is helping complicate
how policy-makers adapt to the evolving global economy". We would suggest
that they would fare no better than did the Central Bankers in Europe in
the seventies and probably worse!
With this wave growing rapidly [China's official reserves will likely hit
$1 trillion this year, and some predict they will rise to $2 trillion by the
end of 2010] past crises pale into insignificance against those that lie ahead.
A phlegmatic Geithner said, "large official flows of capital in one direction
adds to the uncertainty over monetary policy, since they could mask underlying
fundamental conditions that would otherwise affect asset prices, such as the
sheer size of the U.S. fiscal and current account deficits. Monetary policy-makers
cannot ignore the international dimension. As economies become more open, external
developments inevitably affect price and output dynamics. The world may thus
be more complex and, in some respects the conduct of monetary policy may be
more challenging." Our comment on this is ‘Brace yourselves, lads!'
The full effect on the international financial system of vast foreign ownership
of U.S. government debt was not fully understood, he said.
Foreign central banks own more than a quarter of marketable Treasury debt.
[Next week] The importance of Marginal supply / demand
in the Currency, Oil & Gold Markets and what the Chinese are doing
and could do with their reserves.
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