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AS THE
CREDIT CRUNCH WORSENS IT WILL SEND THE GOLD PRICE UP THE $ DOWN
Excerpts
from GLOBAL WATCH:
THE GOLD FORECASTER
by Julian D.W.
Phillips
December 14, 2007
Why are the banks
hurting so much?
In the U.K.
banks have asked top U.K. corporate clients not to draw on lending
facilities to which they are entitled in order to preserve their balance
sheets as they approach the financial year-end. The banks are urging
some of their biggest clients not to draw on standby credit facilities
as the sub-prime crisis and squeeze on interbank lending have affected
banks' ability to fund themselves. The problems started with the closure
of the commercial paper market as a means of cheap funding for companies
in the summer. Banks have to provide standby financing of up to 100% to
backstop commercial paper programs. With banks struggling for their
sources of financing through the interbank market, drawdowns are having
a direct effect on their balance sheets. Several bankers have said
Citigroup is one of those most affected and that the bank was asking
some clients not to use standby facilities, which are part of the normal
relationship banking arrangements made between banks and companies. By
the end of the summer, the principal problem facing banks was not U.S.
sub-prime or collateralized debt obligation exposure but the drawing
down of standby loans and bi-laterals. In some cases banks are
seeking to avoid further balance sheet capital pressure by asking
clients not to use their standby facilities.
Standby
financing is typically for 364 days and when un-drawn has a zero risk
weighting. When it is drawn, the risk weighting goes to 100%. This makes
the sums involved significant. If a company is unable to tap the markets
for commercial paper to the tune of, say, Pounds 4 billion (€5.6
billion), banks may have to provide that amount in standby financing.
Tightening credit can
and does spawn inflation.
And the
problem is snowballing as institutions from State government level right
through the banking system are tightening credit. This is an alarm
signal in itself, for inflation is at its most dangerous, once it
drives money supply to fill the gaps caused by tightening credit.
This was the principal trigger for the hyperinflation in Germany’s
Weimar Republic after the first World War until August 1923.
So how do
things look as we move forward into the deep of winter? Fed Chairman Ben
Bernanke and Vice Chairman Donald Kohn acknowledged the threat to
spending from reduced access to credit had moved from the ‘roughly
balanced’ October assessment for growth and inflation risks, to the
point where expectations for the Fed to lower interest rates again on
December 11th are strong. The outlook has been “importantly
affected over the past month by renewed turbulence in financial
markets,'' Bernanke said, “Officials must judge whether the outlook for
the economy or the balance of risks has shifted materially. Uncertainty
surrounding the outlook is even greater than usual, requiring the Fed to
be exceptionally alert and flexible. The combination of higher gas
prices, the weak housing market, tighter credit conditions, and declines
in stock prices seem likely to create some headwinds for the consumer in
the months ahead.'' Federal funds futures show traders see a 100% chance
of a reduction in the benchmark rate next month, with a 30% probability
of a half-point move. The resurgence in credit concerns is spawning
safe-haven buying of gold was evident in the behavior of credit spreads
in and out of the U.S. One-month
LIBOR
remained 75 basis points over Fed funds;
given that the historical spread of LIBOR to Fed funds is flat or even
negative, this indicates not only a reluctance by banks to lend, even to
each other, but also a general rise in the search for a safe haven.
European and U.K. lending rates have risen, indicating a similar flight
from risk in the global economy. Meanwhile, investors continued to move
into U.S. Treasuries, with yields on U.S. government securities
retreating back to very near recent lows. Persistently high interbank
rates are a clear sign that investors and financial institutions are
unhappy, very unhappy.
Carry Traders increasing
velocity.
“Carry
Trade” traders have to find interest arbitrage opportunities [borrow
cheap in one market – lend expensive in another] or they don’t make
money. So they have to be accepted as a fact of life in today’s global
money systems, constantly placing pressure on such differentials. They
are very quick to act and cause an increase in the dealing ‘spreads”,
which affect the cost of the operation making profits that little bit
more difficult to achieve. If they act as one, on an opportunity they
have sufficient clout to affect a stock and market badly. They,
alongside the new Soros-like speculators, give height and weight to
Capital Tsunami flows, which is fine so long as the markets can bear it.
But they will bring to light any weaknesses in the global money systems
and exploit them. They have the punch to make nations impose Capital and
Exchange Controls.
Official Actions
We have run
a constant story on the dangers of Capital and Exchange Controls, which
are the consequence of markets buckling under such pressures. We
constantly keep our eyes open for signs of “Official” intervention to
stop the holes showing up in the system in the face of the huge weight
of money swamping this way and that in the system, or where a lack of it
makes new holes. When watching out for these, we see that local mortgage
companies fall into the global market, with ideas in the States being
copied in other countries and other countries investing in local
mortgage companies through the American banking inspired Structured
Investment Vehicles. And these investments vehicles are hurting the
global banking system [excluding China it seems] by plummeting in price,
giving us signals that “Official” intervention is happening or about to
happen. Here are some of the latest signals and actions: -
Ø
While the Fed is set to slow release $20
billion next week, $20 billion the week, with more to come in the new
year, the fact that all depository banks in America can draw from it
anonymously is designed to reach into all the corners of the U.S.
banking system and is a key feature to the ‘rescue’ plan. All U.S. banks
can now use the “Term Auction Facility”, which allows them to hand in a
much wider set of investments as collateral to raise money, including
mortgage securities.
Ø
Across the Atlantic, the Bank of England has
to date injected Pounds 20 billion it is also selling liquidity against
even housing and credit card debt at rates far lower then 6.5%.
Ø
The E.C.B. is releasing €13.6 billion.
Ø
The Swiss National Bank is releasing $4
billion.
Ø
In the U.K., the British government is
passing a law to permit the nationalization of Northern Rock, which was
the 8th largest bank in Britain but one that has succumbed to
a ‘run’ after suffering from an overdose of sub-prime related
securities. This shows that the government/Bank of England are the
“lenders of last resort”. However, few depositors and even fewer traders
are inclined to wait on the painful process of government support to
protect their money. So we experience “runs” on banks of this caliber,
when it is discovered that their assets base comes under pressure.
Ø
In the States the government is trying to
have mortgages potentially in default, because they are about to be hit
with the full impact of market interest rates, frozen for 5 years. Very
noble and proper too! But the market wants to see the small print before
they accept these moves are really going to be capable of shoring up
credit markets. Until then the pressure remains on granting credit,
resulting in a drying up of liquidity. But you may well ask, why is the
problem so great? The answer lies in the balance sheet of the banks.
Consequences
What this
means in essence is that we will see dropping interest rates, liquidity
being pumped into the system and inflation taking off. The ‘carry’
traders will position themselves [as they are now doing] to borrow the $
and lend into higher interest rate currencies [the € even] to get their
returns, as the $ drops down to give capital gains on the transactions.
It will be like a red rag to a bull. This renews pressure on the
exchange rate level of the $ and precipitates competitive devaluations
in other currencies so importing U.S. inflation. As long as the problems
persist matters will get worse for the $ in particular and gold will
rise.
The effect on gold?
As this
happens, expect to see gold rise faster than currencies fall, as more
and more people want the protection gold offers.
If the
government’s efforts to support the banking and credit systems are not
successful [really convincing] the pressures on the banks and credit
systems will grow worse and this time will expose the real losses being
made, across the globe, exacerbating the whole banking situation in the
global money system. The attraction of gold will then be irresistible!
Shortly in our pages,
we will be covering just how “Marginal Supply” and “Syndications” have
also contributed to the instability and uncertainty has and will
contribute to making gold attractive, short, medium and long-term.

© 2007 Julian D. W.
Phillips
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