Interest Rates
and Oil
Steve Saville
December 5, 2003
Extracted
from commentary posted at www.speculative-investor.com on 30th
November 2003:
We expect the
Fed to hike short-term interest rates aggressively during 2004;
not as part of a well thought-out plan or because Fed Chairman
Alan Greenspan is not politically astute (he is most definitely
a political animal), but rather because the bond market will
force the Fed's hand. In a nut-shell, we think the Fed governors
mean what they say when they talk about leaving the Fed Funds
Rate near its current low levels for the foreseeable future and
we are well aware that the Fed will not want to hike rates during
the months leading up to the November-2004 Presidential election.
However, once long-term interest rates begin to move sharply
higher in response to growing inflation fears the Fed will have
no choice other than to hike short-term rates with some urgency
in order to rein-in the inflation fears. Not to do so, in such
a situation, would invite a collapse in the value of the dollar
and all dollar-denominated debt.
In other words, our forecast of a substantially higher Fed Funds
Rate by this time next year is inextricably linked to our forecast
of a large decline in bond prices (a large rise in long-term
interest rates) over the next 6-12 months. In the absence of
a large fall in long-term bond prices, though, the Fed will have
the freedom to do whatever it wants with short-term rates. And
Fed representatives have made it crystal clear that what they
want is for short-term rates to remain near multi-decade lows
over the coming year.
The upshot of the above is that if something happens to prevent
long-term US interest rates from rising then the Fed will almost
certainly NOT hike short-term rates. The question is; what could
prevent long-term rates from rising or even cause them to fall?
As discussed in previous commentaries, the Fed could not prevent
long-term rates from rising by directly intervening in the market
(for example, by buying bonds). Such an action on the part of
the Fed in an environment in which inflation fears were already
rising would be counter-productive because it would heighten
the inflation fears.
In fact, the only forces that would appear to be capable of holding-down
long-term US interest rates are forces over which the Fed has
no direct control.
Foreign central bank buying of US bonds is probably the most
obvious and also the most benign (from a short-term US perspective)
of these forces. In their efforts to prevent their currencies
from appreciating against the US$ some foreign central banks
have made enormous purchases of US bonds over the past year,
thus helping to perpetuate the 'low-inflation illusion' and the
low interest rate environment in the US. However, while it is
reasonable to assume that foreign central banks will continue
to provide significant support to US bond prices during periods
of US$ weakness it is doubtful that they could stem the tide
in an environment in which inflation fears were rising at a rapid
rate. In particular, the buying of US bonds by foreign central
banks would likely be insufficient to prevent long-term US interest
rates from rising if private investors, as a group, began to
reduce their exposure to dollar-denominated debt (over the past
year non-US private investors have continued to increase their
combined exposure to US debt securities, albeit at a slower rate
than in previous years).
So, foreign central banks are likely to play a part in supporting
US bond prices over the coming year but in isolation we don't
think they represent a major threat to our forecast for a substantial
rise in US interest rates.
We think the biggest risk to our current interest rate forecast
revolves around the relationship between oil and bonds discussed
in our 24th November commentary. Just to recap; in the aforementioned
commentary we showed, with the help of the below chart, that
the US T-Bond price has followed the oil price with remarkable
consistency over the past 2 years, a relationship that makes
some sense if we assume that the oil price has been driven primarily
by geopolitics over this period. This suggests that an upheaval
somewhere in the world that threatens to disrupt the oil supply
has the potential to cause capital to come flooding into US Government
debt.
As well as
giving a substantial boost to US bond prices an oil-supply shock
would prompt a sharp sell-off in the US stock market and in non-energy
commodities. Therefore, even if such a supply shock turned out
to be short-lived it would effectively remove any pressure on
the Fed to hike short-term interest rates. In other words, in
such an environment Greenspan and Co. would be able to follow-through
on their promise to leave the Fed Funds Rate at multi-decade
lows for the next year, although we doubt that an oil-related
crisis is something that is currently at the forefront of their
minds.
By the way, an oil crisis would not necessarily originate in
the Middle East. For example, a substantial portion of the oil
imported by the US comes from Venezuela, so a problem in Venezuela
could turn out to be the catalyst for such a crisis.
At this stage our forecast is for the oil price to experience
a normal bull-market correction to the low-20s over the next
several months so we are obviously not anticipating an oil crisis.
However, we don't know what is going to happen in the future
and if the situation starts to evolve in a way that does not
mesh with our expectations then it will be important to revise
our expectations. After all, we don't make forecasts for the
sake of making forecasts. Our goal is to make money and any forecasts
we make along the way are just roadmaps that are always subject
to change as the facts change and/or as more evidence becomes
available.
Below is a weekly chart of oil futures. A weekly close above
$32.50 in the nearest futures contract would warn us that an
oil crisis might be brewing and prompt us to re-assess our interest
rate forecasts.
Steve Saville
email: sas888_hk@yahoo.com
Hong Kong
Regular financial market forecasts
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