When
bad debts attack
Adrian Ash
Bullion Vault
17 Jul, 2007
Just how hard is it to beat
deflation - that horror of falling wages and prices?...
BEN BERNANKE has his helicopter ready. John Maynard
Keynes proposed burying old bottles in coal mines.
And the Japanese government
- how can the Ministry of Finance in Tokyo dish out enough free
money to put an end to deflation, that horror of falling prices
and wages?
"Envelopes containing
¥10,000 bills ($82) and well-wishing notes have been discovered
in municipal toilets across Japan," reports the Associated
Press, "baffling civil servants and triggering a nationwide
hunt."
Curious, don't you think? The
anonymous well-wisher has left money in men's rooms in 15 prefectures
in the last month. Each package of cash comes with a handwritten
note: "Please make use of this money for your self-enrichment."
After studying the handwriting,
the authorities are seeking an elderly gentleman or men - and
do we really need any more proof that this free money comes as
a gift from the Ministry of Finance (MoF)?
After a decade of falling incomes,
such desperate remedies might just start to appeal to any government.
As crazy reflation schemes go, it's no more bizarre than throwing
freshly-printed Dollars out of a chopper or burying old bottles
stuffed full of cash in disused mine shafts.
What's more, all the Japanese
"drops" have so far been made in government buildings.
But what a pity this scheme hasn't worked; according to a report
in Le Figaro, all the free cash has been handed straight
to the police! But that's the trouble with a genuine currency
slump. You can't even give money away when the whole country
is bent on destroying its value.
The Ministry of Finance in
Tokyo printed and spent $400 billion selling the Yen between
2000 and 2004. Since it gave up, the entire Nippon nation has
begun selling the Yen on margin. Forex account balances in Japan
have risen by nearly two-thirds from last summer to total ¥613
billion today - nearly $5 billion. "Leveraging typically
makes their positions 10 to 30 times larger," says the Financial
Times, and what the MoF struggled to achieve with $400 billion
of short sales, private investors are now doing with a quick
click of a mouse.
Total Yen sales by private
individuals in Japan outweighed the volume of professional betting
against the Yen recorded at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange by
the end of last month.
Mr. and Mrs.Watanabe's profits
from selling the Yen might just be a taste of the short-sale
gains yet to come - or so everyone thinks. And whether you're
game to join in the world's biggest ever "one-way bet"
or not, the Yen's ongoing decline at least shows just how debased
ALL currencies have become over the last three and a half
decades.
The collapse in Japan's interest
rates only served to put a ceiling at ¥84 per Dollar. Fresh
out of interest-rate fire-power by the end of 2001, the Bank
of Japan then had to actively sell Yen to cap its currency at
¥102 per Dollar in late 2004.
Put another way, destroying
the Yen by destroying its yield proved mighty tough with Bernanke
and Greenspan in charge at the Fed. And with $686bn in excess
foreign currency reserves now stacked up today, perhaps the only
route left to beating Japan's ten-year deflation really is to
leave banknotes in rest rooms - and advise the finders to "seek
self-enrichment" with gearing.
"If the Treasury were
to fill old bottles with banknotes," wrote John Maynard
Keynes - the brains behind the Bretton Woods exchange-rate system
- "[and then] bury them at suitable depths in disused coal
mines which are then filled up to the surface with town rubbish,
and leave it to private enterprise on well-tried principles of
laissez-faire to dig the notes up again (the right to do so being
obtained, of course by tendering for leases of the note-bearing
territory), there need be no more unemployment and with the help
of the repercussions, the real income of the community, and its
capital wealth also, would probably become a good deal greater
than it actually is."
Was Keynes joking? No more
than Ben Bernanke in his famous speech entitled Deflation:
Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here. Speaking
as the Tech Stock Crash leached into consumer spending in late
2002, the current Fed chairman tipped his hat to Milton Friedman's
idea of "money dropped from a helicopter" to stimulate
an ailing economy.
Bernanke's speech bears revisiting
now that US retail sales are tanking once more - driven this
time by the collapse in home sales and prices. He went on:
"Like gold, US Dollars
have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited
in supply. But the US government has a technology, called a printing
press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it
to produce as many US Dollars as it wishes at essentially no
cost. By increasing the number of US Dollars in circulation,
or even by credibly threatening to do so, the US government can
also reduce the value of a Dollar in terms of goods and services,
which is equivalent to raising the prices in Dollars of those
goods and services.
"We conclude that, under
a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate
higher spending and hence positive inflation."
Neither Friedman nor Keynes
got to put their reflationary plans into action, of course. To
date, Japan has failed with its make-work programs and free money
gifts, too. But Bernanke sat at Alan Greenspan's right hand while
the Fed Funds rate was slashed from 6.0% to 1.75% in 2001 - and
then cut again to an "emergency" rate of 1.0% by June
2003.
The Nasdaq turned higher...
home prices soared... and despite seventeen hikes in the official
cost of Dollars since then, there's also been a surge in that
"quantitative easing" known as trading on margin. According
to the latest NYSE data, margin debt - "a broad measure
of leverage" as the Wall Street Journal puts it - jumped
11% to $353 billion in May, up from below $318 billion in April.
And this is BEFORE the US slips into recession, and lenders
stop lending for fear of bad debts.
Just how much speculation will
the Great American public indulge in when rates slide again and
we're all urged to hold hands and gear up in the markets? Difference
is, the Japanese Yen began its slide from near all-time record
highs. The Dollar, in contrast, has already sunk to a near-three
decade low on its Trade-Weighted Index.
"The arrival of Japanese
households as major investors seems to have affected foreign-exchange
markets," said Bank of Tokyo board-member Kiyohiko Nishimura
during a speech in Washington earlier this month. "The gnomes
of Zurich were accused in their day of destabilizing markets.
The housewives of Tokyo are apparently acting to stabilize them."
Nishimura-san might just be
right - if by stabilize he means "destroy the Yen's purchasing
power." Which he does. Deflation in the classical sense
defines a shrinking supply of money; on the ground it means falling
asset prices, lower wages, and the loss of all pricing power
for business and industry.
Make the currency worth less,
therefore, and deflation is cured. Make it utterly worthless,
however, and the trouble will have only just started.
Priced against gold, there
could be a whole heap of ruin left in the Japanese Yen. Indeed,
the greatest achievement of Japan's near-zero interest rates
so far has been a bull market in gold for retail investors sick
of earning next-to-nothing on their cash.
In the economy, however, total
cash earnings for Japanese workers have barely risen over the
last 13 years. In May salaries slipped 0.1% from 12 months before.
The Cabinet Office said this week that Japanese consumer confidence
fell in June, the third monthly decline on the run, giving the
lowest score since Dec. '04.
This is what a real credit
crunch looks like, a gut-hollowing time after asset prices collapse
and near-zero interest rates can't cancel repeats of When Bad
Debts Attack on TV.
How to encourage fresh lending,
fresh spending and growth? You can make money free, but you can't
force banks to lend it. "Bank loans for start-ups still
require personal guarantors," notes Ken Worsley for JapanEconomyNews.com.
"In other words, a person needs to sign off and be liable
as an individual.
"Great risk management
for the banks, bad for start-ups and innovation. On September
29, 2006, the Prime Minister told the Diet that he would urge
banks to do away with this in order to encourage entrepreneurship,
but nothing has actually happened."
Now the world's largest economy
is settling down to its own version of When Bad Debts Attack
- with US home-owners, investment banks and retirement funds
all fighting to take the lead role.
Buy the Yen if you dare. Back
the Euro if you must. Bet against all currency values - and Buy Gold
- if you think the collapse of the Dollar can only cause trouble.
Adrian Ash
Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events - and must be verified elsewhere - should you choose to act on it.
Contact the author regarding this article.
website: www.bullionvault.com
email: adrian.ash@bullionvault.com
Adrian Ash runs the research desk at BullionVault, the world's #1 private investor gold service. Formerly head of editorial at Fleet Street Publications - London's top publisher of financial advice for private investors - he was City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning for four years, and is now a regular contributor to 321gold, FinancialSense, GoldSeek, Prudent Bear, SafeHaven and Whiskey & Gunpowder among many other leading investment websites. Adrian's views on the Gold Market have been sought by leading news organizations including the Financial Times, Bloomberg and Der Stern in Germany.
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