Central Bankers declare War
on Global Inflation
By Gary Dorsch
Editor Global Money Trends magazine
Jun 14. 2006
For the past four years, the big-3 central banks were the world's
"serial bubble blowers," flooding the world with cheap
money via historically low interest rates, in order to pump up
stock markets and real estate values. However, with global economic
growth running at 5% in the first half of 2006, the most robust
multi-year expansion since the 1970's, there were serious side
effects of surging energy and commodity prices, that are now
feeding into consumer inflation.
Bank of England chief Mervyn King admitted on June 12th, "During
the fastest 3-year period of world economic growth for a generation,
monetary policy around the world may simply have been too accommodative."
However, in order to correct the imbalance, a tighter global
liquidity environment is required. "After a period of robust
world economic growth, we approach a bumpier stretch of the road.
A rebalancing of global demand is desirable, but the way ahead
may not be smooth," King said.
Recent signals that a concerted tightening campaign by the big-3
central banks and smaller mid-tier banks is underway have spooked
the commodity and stock markets around the globe since May 11th.
There is a growing realization that higher interest rates are
on the horizon to combat gold and the "Commodity Super Cycle",
even at the expense of slower economic growth and sharply lower
stock markets.
On June 5th, the Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke shocked the
global markets, when he identified inflation as the biggest threat
to the US economy, despite clear signs of weakening US employment
growth. The new Fed chief is distraught over his reputation as
a super-dove, and wants to earn his inflation fighting credentials,
and strongly hinted at a 0.25% rate hike to 5.25% on June 29th.
"The Fed will be vigilant
to insure that the recent pattern of elevated monthly core inflation
readings is not sustained. We must continue to resist any tendency
for increases in energy and commodity prices to become permanently
embedded in core inflation," Bernanke declared. "These
are unwelcome developments. The medium term outlook for inflation
will receive particular scrutiny," he warned.
Since peaking at a 25-year high of 365.42 on May 11th, the Reuter's
Commodity index (CRB), has been sliding alongside weakening global
stock markets, which might be heralding the beginning of a global
economic slowdown, and weaker demand for commodities. The Reuter's
CRB index has retreated by 9%, led by a 12% slide in the MSCI
World stock market index, on fears of tighter global liquidity.
On June 10th, US Treasury Secretary John Snow, backed up Bernanke's
tough talk against inflation giving the Fed a green light to
act appropriately with another rate hike. "We have seen
inflation picking up a bit but not at an alarming rate, it is
important central bank governors take note of that," Snow
told a news conference following a Group of Eight finance ministers'
meeting.
Soon after, mid-tier central bankers caught the global commodity
and stock markets off guard with a barrage of higher interest
rates. Central bankers from Denmark, India, South Africa, and
South Korea, Thailand, and Turkey, hiked their overnight loan
rates last week, to keep pace with the European Central Bank's
third rate hike since December, and the Fed's strong hint of
a US rate hike for June 29th.
The Swiss National Bank is sure to follow in the footsteps of
the ECB, and is expected to lift its Libor target rate by 0.25%
to 1.50% this week. Only the dovish Bank of England was the lone
hold-out, looking more foolish each passing day, with its M4
money supply exploding at an annualized +12.4 percent.
The huge global liquidity injections since the bursting of the
high-tech bubble fueled gold and the "Commodity Super Cycle"
to 25-year highs. This is the most important lesson that central
bankers are suddenly beginning to recognize. Especially, Japan's
financial warlords, who over the past few years were the biggest
suppliers of global liquidity, with the European Central Bank
running a close second.
But for the first time in five
years, Japanese short term Libor rates are moving away from zero
percent, with the Bank of Japan draining 26 trillion yen out
of the Tokyo money markets. The BOJ will probably lift its overnight
loan rate above zero percent in July, for the first time in almost
six years. "There is no change to our view that interest
rates should be normalized as the overall economy returns to
a normal state," Deputy Governor Kazumasa Iwata said June
8th.
If the Bank of Japan raises rates this year, it would also be
the first time since 2000 that the big-3 central banks have tightened
liquidity in tandem. The last time Japan raised its overnight
loan rate in August 2000, it pushed Japan into a economic recession.
"A major difference with 2000 is that in Japan's private
sector, both companies and financial institutions have cleaned
up the problems they had with their balance sheets," said
BOJ chief Toshiko Fukui said on May 31st.
Hind-sight is the best sight, but it's interesting to note, that
the peak in global commodity and stock markets coincided with
a G-10 central banker communiqué from Basel, Switzerland,
calling for very special attention to prevent strong economic
growth from turning inflationary. Traders are accustomed to such
empty rhetoric, and few believed the G-10 would be true to its
word.
Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB chief and spokesman for the G-10
group of central bankers said on May 8th, "It is not the
time for complacency if we want this global growth to be sustainable.
We have to be careful to see that this period of global growth
does not end up in inflation." The hawkish comments came
as the MSCI World Index eclipsed its previous record highs reached
during the 2000 tech bubble.
"Global economic growth remains strong and steady. There
are elements there that call for very special attention, especially
in terms of inflationary risks. We all concluded what was very
important to prevent the second round effect because once they
are there, it is too late," Trichet warned on May 8th.
But global traders have routinely
ignored Trichet's empty rhetoric about his self-proclaimed vigilance
against inflation for the past few years, and instead focused
on the explosive growth of the Euro zone's M3 money supply, which
is 8.8% higher than a year ago. The ECB says a 4.5% growth rate
for M3 is consistent with low inflation. The Euro zone's consumer
price index is 2.5% higher than a year ago, and has hovered above
the ECB's 2% target for the past four years.
Thus, it comes as a shock, that Trichet, the Boy who cried wolf
on dozens of occasions in the past, might actually mean what
he says this time around. "There is a connection between
the wealth effects and domestic demand that could trigger inflationary
pressure," Trichet admitted on June 5th, adding that central
bankers need to take the "excessive dynamism in asset prices
into account."
Rodrigo Rato, the IMF's managing director, said on May 24th,
that higher interest rates are healthy for the global economy.
"US rates need to accommodate a more neutral stance. Monetary
stimulus, if it is sustained over a long period of time, will
create very difficult monetary and inflationary consequences,
so it's healthy that monetary stimulus is reduced and that monetary
policy move to more neutral levels. Of course, that has consequences
for interest rates and people should be aware."
Global
Stock markets suffer under de-facto Gold standard
Working within the context of a de-facto gold standard, only
a global stock market meltdown could convince a deeply skeptical
gold market, that the G-10 central banks are serious about combating
inflation and deflating the "Commodity Super Cycle".
Central bankers must refrain from their reflexive instinct to
rescue plunging stock markets with super easy money, in order
to slowdown the global economy and weaken demand for super-stars,
such as crude oil, copper gold, silver, and zinc.
Japan's Nikkei-225 stock index suffered its biggest one-day percentage
fall in two years on June 13th, tumbling 4.1%, or 614 points
to 14,218, its lowest close since November 16th, 2005. The plunge
wiped out 16.56 trillion yen ($145 billion) in market value from
the Tokyo Stock Exchange's first section, an amount nearly equal
to Malaysia's GDP. Decliners swamped advancers by a ratio of
about 10 to 1. The Nikkei-225 has now tumbled about 20% since
April 7th, when hit a 6-year high.
A stiff 20% decline in the
value of Nikkei-225 stocks, was the price the Bank of Japan had
to pay, in order to knock the Japanese gold price 18% off its
18-year high of 80,000 yen to around 65.600-yen on June 13th.
BOJ chief Fukui has drained close to 26 trillion yen ($220 billion)
out of the Tokyo money markets since March 9th, and appears to
still be on course to hike the overnight loan rate in July.
Fukui brushed off accusations that the BOJ's dismantling of its
ultra easy monetary policy in March had triggered the latest
meltdown in global stock markets. "Markets are becoming
slightly worried whether economic growth can be sustained while
capping inflation, with oil prices rising. Because of concerns
over inflation, central banks around the world are adjusting
their loose monetary policies very carefully. Investors are rushing
to adjust their positions, mainly in stocks," he said.
However, Japan's financial warlords are not about to let their
beloved Nikkei-255 go down too far, without some type of intervention
down the road. "So far, they have not had a strong impact
on economic fundamentals at home and abroad. There is always
the possibility that the market will move irregularly at any
given time. When that happens, there is risk of it having a strong
impact on the real economy. We would like to keep a close eye
on what effect market moves will have on the real economy,"
Fukui told the Japanese parliament on June 13th.
European
stock market meltdown cools off Gold market
European central bankers played down risks from tumbling stock
markets on June 9th, as a needed pull-back from frothy heights
and not a sign of bad economic times ahead. ECB deputy Lucas
Papademos remained calm as the EuroStoxx-600 skidded 12.7% to
a seven-month low. "At present, despite increased market
volatility and signs of a potential slowdown in the US economy,
the baseline scenario is that global growth, outside theEeuro
area, will remain robust at rates above 5 percent," he said.
His colleague, Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell, was similarly sanguine
about the EuroStoxx-600 meltdown. "It has to be seen in
the context of strong gains in values, and some correction to
that. I think it's a re-evaluation of risks." Austrian central
banker Klaus Liebscher, sought to calm stock markets, which have
fallen sharply with talk of an end to the 3-year bull run. "From
time to time, a correction is something that is necessary, this
is a normal development and one should not over-exaggerate this
development," Liebscher said.
European central bankers have
received a favorable rate of return for the EuroStoxx-600 meltdown.
In return for a 12.7% decline in the EuroStoxx-600 index, the
ECB was rewarded with a larger 19.6% drop in the price of gold
to 453 Euros per ounce. The BOJ suffered a 20% loss of the Nikkei
in return for a 18% drop in gold, a negative rate of return for
keeping its overnight loan rate at zero percent, while the ECB
pegs its repo rate at a higher 2.75%.
The ECB will continue to raise interest rates if inflation risks
persist and economic growth in the Euro zone is close to potential,
said Belgium central banker Guy Quaden on June 12th. "If
the risks for inflation persist, if economic activity in the
Euro area remains close to, or above the growth potential, we
will continue to withdraw the monetary accommodation which is
still included in our current rate. I am in favor of gradual
moves, based on new data on inflation and activity," he
said.
Futures traders in Frankfurt
have been already discounting an eventual hike in the ECB's repo
rate to 3.25% for the past 3-months. The ECB is tightening liquidity
in baby steps, spreading out its rate hikes every three months,
so the next rate hike to 3.00%, would probably follow by September.
However, while this go-slow approach might be necessary to keep
the Euro from appreciating against the US dollar, it is inadequate
to contain the explosive growth of the M3 money supply.
Federal
Reserve Scores Points in battle against Inflation
While the Bank of Japan and the ECB are in the earliest stages
of their tightening campaigns, the Federal Reserve is nearing
the end game of its rate hike campaign. The hawkish Cleveland
Fed chief Sandra Pianalto said on June 12th, that a 5% fed funds
rate is close to the elusive neutral rate.
"The core CPI has increased at an annualized rate of more
than 3% during the past three months. This inflation picture,
if sustained, exceeds my comfort level. However, there is a time
lag between monetary policy actions and their ultimate effect
on inflation. I think the current 5% federal funds rate is near
a point that is consistent with a gradual improvement in the
inflation outlook," Pianalto said.
With the highest interest rate
among the big-3 central banks, the Federal Reserve paid the smallest
price to knock gold and inflation expectations lower. Since the
Fed hiked the fed funds rate to 5.00% on May 10th, the big-daddy
Dow Jones Industrials lost 7% of its value, while gold plunged
by a whopping 22% to roughly $562 per ounce on June 13th. That
has strengthened the DJI to gold ratio from a low of 15.9 ounces
of gold to as high as 19.1 ounces of gold over the past four
weeks.
The Fed is signaling one more rate hike to 5.25% during this
tightening campaign, and won't rescue the US stock market with
an easier money policy anytime soon. "Obviously we watch
the stock market for signals. But I don't take any important
policy decisions from the recent movements in equity markets
over the last few weeks, said Atlanta Fed chief Jack Guynn on
June 7th.
Bank of
Korea joins the battle against the "Commodity Super Cycle"
Bank of Korea chief Lee Seong-tae has joined the big-3 central
banks in the battle against global inflation, and indicated on
June 12th, that the central bank will tighten its monetary policy
again to absorb liquidity, after a quarter-point rate hike to
4.25% last week. "The environment for the central bank's
monetary policy is changing drastically in line with changing
economic conditions both at home and abroad."
Lee said that low inflation became a global trend since the beginning
of the 2000's, forcing the central bank to alter its view on
monetary policy and price stability. "If we approach prices
with the same old monetary policy stance, it could cause excess
liquidity. While effectively coping with economic conditions,
we are going to run our monetary policy in a way to preemptively
react to inflationary pressure," he said.
The Kospi index was one of
the world's top performers in 2005, gaining 54%, helped along
by the story of booming exports to China. The Korean Kospi index
was awash with hot money from abroad, and foreigners owning nearly
40% of outstanding shares. The BOK believes that this ample liquidity
is allowing financial firms to expand their housing loans and
raising home and land prices. Mindful of this, Lee said that
the bank will closely monitor movements of real estate prices,
and strongly hinted at tighter money conditions ahead.
South Korea's economy expanded a faster-than-expected 1.3% in
the first quarter, as exports climbed to a record and consumer
spending increased. From a year earlier, the economy expanded
6.2%, the fastest in three years. But hot money is exiting for
safer havens, and South Korea's Kospi index was swept 18.4% lower
by global contagion to 1,204, its lowest close in seven months.
A global economic slowdown and a tighter BOK policy is putting
the squeeze on Korean blue-chips.
The Rise
and Fall of the UAE-Dubai Share Index
In the battle against inflation
and the "Commodity Super Cycle", G-10 central banks
aim to engineer a soft landing for the global economy. The meltdown
in global stock markets in the past month however, does go a
long way to proving that blue chips were inflated beyond fundamental
valuations, much like commodities and real estate. But in engineering
a global economic slowdown, G-10 central bankers hope to avoid
the experience of the Persian Gulf stock markets.
Shares across the Persian Gulf region have crashed over the past
six months, as burned retail investors bailed out, long before
the recent tremors in other emerging markets. Markets in the
Gulf region climbed an average of 92% in 2005 on soaring oil
prices but have tumbled in 2006 on fears of overvaluation, making
them among the worst-performing markets in the world. Dubai's
bourse is down 54% this year, while the Saudi market lost half
its value or $400 billion since late February.
Trading on Gulf markets is
limited largely to residents, with governments restricting foreign
ownership of stocks, eliminating a key safety net for domestic
investors. A downturn in other emerging markets would normally
lead to more cash coming back home to the Gulf, but so far, the
local bourses have not received a bounce.
Yet traders got the good news they were betting on in 2005, on
June 12th, when the United Arab Emirates said its gross domestic
product in current prices rose 26.4% in 2005 to 485 billion dirhams
($132 billion), mainly due to a rise in oil revenue. The UAE's
trade surplus rose 61.4% over the year to 163 billion dirhams
with crude oil making up 38% of the country's total exports.
"Oil revenue still plays an important role in the country's
economy in general. The big rise in oil prices had a positive
impact on the GDP growth," the UAE economics ministry. The
increase in oil revenue produced the Gulf country's first state
budget surplus in two decades of 38.2 billion dirhams compared
to a deficit of 1.5 billion dirhams in 2004," it said.
The oil sector's contribution to GDP stood at 35.7% of the total,
after the oil price average rose 49.6% to $54 a barrel in 2005.
The UAE produced an average of 2.46 million barrels per day of
oil in 2005 compared to 2.35 million bpd in 2004. Non-oil sectors'
contribution to GDP was up 18.6% to 312 billion dirhams. But
the UAE's stellar economic performance in 2005, apparently did
not live up to the hefty expectations of Dubai's main share bourse
as it entered into 2006.
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Mr Dorsch worked on the trading floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for nine years as the chief Financial Futures Analyst for three clearing firms, Oppenheimer Rouse Futures Inc, GH Miller and Company, and a commodity fund at the LNS Financial Group. As a transactional broker for Charles Schwab's Global Investment Services department, Mr Dorsch handled thousands of customer trades in 45 stock exchanges around the world, including Australia, Canada, Japan, Hong Kong, the Euro zone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico, and New Zealand, and Canadian oil trusts, ADRs and Exchange Traded Funds.
He wrote a weekly newsletter from 2000 thru September 2005 called,"Foreign Currency Trends" for Charles Schwab's Global Investment department, featuring inter-market technical analysis, to understand the dynamic inter relationships between the foreign exchange, global bond and stock markets, and key industrial commodities.
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