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IS THE
FED REALLY IN CONTROL
AS THE $ PLUMMETS AND GOLD VAULTS?
Excerpts
from GLOBAL WATCH:
THE GOLD FORECASTER
by Julian D.W.
Phillips
March 25, 2008
Since
last August we have watched as the sub-prime crisis turned into a credit
crunch and from there into a liquidity crisis. Like a cancer spreading
through the financial system it suddenly struck a vital organ, taking
the seemingly controllable cancer into one the doctors are fighting to
save lives. Not only has the sight of banks refusing to lend to banks
moved to a new level, major banking institutions are tumbling in the
face of its onslaught. With the weekend’s, Federal Reserve rate cut on
direct loans to commercial banks, by a quarter-point saying it will
allow primary dealers to borrow at the rate in exchange for a broad
range of investment-grade collateral the drama has had a gear shift
change. The Fed also extended the maximum term of discount-window loans
to 90 days from 30 days, but still has not accepted ownership of the
assets against payment, so leaving the debt crisis intact. In the same
weekend as it saw Bear Sterns collapse, it gave its hurried blessing to
the deal of J. P. Morgan Chase & Co. wherein J.P. Morgan Chase &
Co agreed to buy Bear Stearns for $2 a share after the shares had been
trading at $30 less than a month ago. It seems the vultures are having a
feast [even though they are now offering 10 a share]
Last
week we were all aware of the threats to the money system, but now the
Tsunami is hitting. Is the rescue a sign that the crisis has been
conquered? Not at all! Most now doubt that it has even been contained
with some thinking it has been engineered by the Fed to worsen. The
cancer that started last August has now spread to the consumer from the
blue collar worker through to executive level as they are changing from
their “live now, pay later” culture to one of “pay now and live as
best you can”. The checks eagerly awaited from the stimulus package
from President Bush in May are now more likely to fight the debt fires
than to go to more “living today”. As inflation begins to point to a
higher cost of living, as the oil price now points to a further doubling
to $200 and gold has vaulted the $1,000 level [although it then was
dumped all the way back to just above $900], an awareness is dawning on
all from the financial towers down to ground level that the empire of
debt on which the last decade of boom has grown is shrinking far faster
than thought possible. Since last August dubious mortgage debt to asset
backed commercial paper [made up of mortgages, credit card debt, car
loans and business loans] are finding it harder to stand as collateral
for finance. To counter this shrinking credit, the Fed alongside
European central banks, have pumped in billions of dollars worth of
Treasury Securities, in the hope of stopping the atrophy. Interest rates
were rapidly lowered and continue to be so with last week’s 0.75%
drop, in the hope of easing credit and giving dubious debt more
substance. Meanwhile the disease spread from “collateralized debt
obligations” to “structured investment vehicles,” a more senior
form of debt. But then, after a lull in which it was hoped the crisis
had been contained, in December it reappeared when it began to be seen
just how far the cancer had spread, as major world-class banks [from
Europe as well as the States] reported the billions lost in write-downs
of asset values on which their survival depends.
The
next step has been to move further to make these debt instruments more
palatable through acceptance of them by the Fed, the lender of last
resort [through the “Term Auction Facility].
Mr. Bernanke climbed aboard his helicopter expanding this program to
$100 billion a month in March, plus infusing another $100 billion into
the financial system through its open market operations and created
another $200 billion lending program to the big investment banks with
mortgage backed securities as collateral.
Certainly
unconvinced, the financial world still does not accept that these
instruments have been ‘saved’ by the Fed as they remain only
collateral for debt, not acceptable assets, yet. This remains a
foundation of the financial world and the banks, on which the U.S.$’
global empire stands. Once these assets are accepted as assets in
payment of debt, power will seep from the global banking empire.
Meanwhile the U.S. $’s value is descending at an accelerating pace
raising prices in the U.S. on everything. The oil price is holding high
at never-before-seen-levels, not because of a shortage, but because U.S.
and foreign nationals and institutions are fleeing from $ instruments
into assets such as oil in the sure knowledge that their value will rise
as those stemming from the $ will fall. Does the Fed have to competence
to stop this collapse? Was the 0.75% drop in interest rates and Fannie
Mae having another $200 billion to help in the mortgage industry
sufficient to turn the U.S. housing crisis around? No! It will take a
concerted action by all of the financial institutions, including the
Bush Administration and the change of several of their principles,
before an effective rescue can be mounted. And they are nowhere near
there yet. Indeed they are still reacting to events of around a month
ago.
And
now Bear Sterns, one of the largest and most aggressive financiers of
subprime mortgages has, in effect, collapsed. The task in front of the
monetary system, not just the Fed is to prevent a vital organ of the
monetary system from collapsing. The $30 billion credit line to
facilitate the takeover of Bear Sterns still does not change the debt
into a viable asset. To make the rate for borrowing from its discount
window cheaper at 3.25% still won’t cut it. All this has done is to
add an air of desperation to the picture. With the Fed’s taking over
the portfolio of Bear Sterns and controlling all major decisions is
getting close to turning debt into viable assets, but not obviously so.
The Fed is now teetering on the bring of credibility as a “Lender”
in a process very close to a nationalization of an institutions, such as
the British Government’s nationalization of Northern Rock, the British
bank.
The
final move to date is the most worrying. It is that it will make
available unlimited amounts of money to the 20 large primary
dealing investment banks in Treasuries that deal directly with the Fed.
The credibility of the system itself is now on the line with the value
of the $ now promised an unlimited level of devaluation. Such is a
catastrophic issuance of money. Meanwhile the attractiveness of
Treasuries is waning, as the term of such loans, preferred in the market
place, is shortening dramatically, a sure sign that a dangerous crisis
is unfolding. When debt becomes attractive only when it is so short-term
that it is deemed as almost cash, then the bank runs really begin. This
has been seen in other parts of the world when disaster has
struck.
The
crisis is as global as the $ is.
The run to gold is a sprint, despite the 10% pullback last week [in a
strange, straight-line fall?]. Across the world people are realizing
that a tsunami of capital is on the move, either disappearing or about
to move into new lands wreaking havoc in selected markets as we are
seeing today with most global equity market down 3% with much more to
come as the word ‘depression’ is now replacing ‘recession’ in
some quarters. The words “Exchange Controls” and “Protectionism”
will be the new dramas to be visited on a hapless world any time now.
Under such controls gold in Switzerland remains safe [Bullion Vault],
but will we be protected against the long reach of the
Authoritiesthrough you to Switzerland? It is better to be absolutely
sure that you will be safe against this reach. After all the first time
you will know what the new controls on capital will be they will have
been imposed. We believe they are not far off now [Subscribers, please
contact us for how to get this protection].
Meanwhile
the U.S. monetary system is still short of capital and is under pressure
to contract! Who’s next ? Has the $ stopped falling and gold rising?
“
..the U.S. monetary system is still short of capital and is under
pressure to contract!?”

© 2008 Julian D. W.
Phillips
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