We
are patiently awaiting the spine tingling ‘event’ that Alan
Greenspan is attempting to use in order to break the unparalleled,
bullish market psychology. Interest Rate hikes are yet to have the
desired effect, Crude Oil demand is continuing to decrease; commodities
such as aluminum and lumber are seeing price/demand begin to drop
precipitously.
The
Fed is looking to cool the speculative and grossly overextended
‘Housing Bubble’ with their primary short term tool, Nominal
Interest Rates. The Fed and US Government need bond inflows to assist in
the deluge of new issuance and refundings.
The
irony here is the ‘Financial Economy’ hinges upon cheap and
available credit. The risks compound as bets are increasingly levered in
order to simply maintain returns while spreads collapse. For all of the
symbiotic pabulum spread throughout the Financial Media and sideshow
channel cheerleaders the Fed has aligned, the moral hazards go right on
compounding, one atop another.
For
nearly three years the liquidity injections and intervention within the
Financial System have been unparalleled since Alan Greenspan assumed the
role as head Vampire.
The
repetition of semantically challenged pandering remains a farcical
message track. Somehow,
‘believing, suggesting and expecting’ are to be commended as the
deeply entrenched mess we have found ourselves within is to be avoided
like the avian bird flu.
That
the Fed ‘should’ or ‘likely’ remain upbeat is ‘apparently’
just peachy, although Fleece Street appears to have been looking for
signs of Aquaman at the punch bowl, he was a no show.
Believe
the Fed, as I have stated for some time, will continue raising rates.
Alan Greenspan has repeatedly suggested he would continue hiking rates
throughout 2005 at both high and low profile venues. I see no reason not
take him at his word. The monetary methods employed have been used time
and again. Near the tail end of the prior bubble in equities, the Fed
decided it was time to take away some of their Guyana punch.
The
present script suggests cooling the latest bubble, housing, with higher
nominal rates.
According
to the Financial Media, the Fed believes the long end of the Yield Curve
will catch on at a ‘measured pace,’ thereby removing the curve’s
inversion. No mention of the massive intervention ongoing in the Yield
Curve, none, nada, zero and zip.
CNBC
has lost a large percentage of its audience and with good reason, the
analysis is simply pathetic in my opinion, Hollywood Squares for bag
holding cheerleaders. Bill Gross ought to be ashamed to admit Fannie Mae
is his second largest holding behind US Treasury Debt. Come to think of
it, he ought to be nearly as ashamed for holding far too many of Uncle
Sam’s promise tickets. Shortly after the close Lawrence Kudlow’s
happy hour went ahead in typical pompon flagging style and begged the
question, ‘Interest Rates hikes coming to an end?’
And
so it goes, until it breaks, this speculative house of paper cards.
The
Fed is merely going to respond after they have, once again, gone too
far. They well know the long end of the Yield Curve is going to respond
to their failures. Monetizing too much DEBT, facilitating far too much
Bank Credit, forcing unwinds of speculative carry’s and a waning loss
of confidence is stressing the interdependent Financial Economy.
Fleece
Street wanted to hear the end of this rate cycle is in sight. Sir Alan
refused to stand and deliver. The DOW decided it would have a tantrum
and ended up down 99 on close.
Our
illustrious Chairman is going to attempt to flatten the Yield Curve as
he presently believes ‘this time it’s different’ with respect to
what this means. This, according to the Chairman, does not necessarily
suggest that ‘Recession’ is guaranteed. Of course, we can look
forward to further explanations that may contain words such as:
‘likely, should, apparently, believe, expect and suggest.’
I
sincerely doubt any of the Dotcom bubblers who were pricked by Alan find
any of the above too reassuring. Come to think of it, the former Enron
employee’s ‘expectations (likely) remain well contained.’
As
the 5 & 10 begin to reach parity, I suspect we witness a
simultaneous lift in rates across the Yield Curve from the 2's out to
the 10-30. Viola, the next conundrum awaits and it's ‘likely’ to
fail miserably.
Program
trading is increasingly taking hold of the broad markets, electronic
combatants now account for in excess of 76% of trading volumes. Yesterday’s
Securities Lending set a record @ $9.479 billion. The Morgans, Citi,
Merrill and Solomons are enjoying less than modest proposals with the
Fed’s Open Market Operations Desk.
The
Futures interventions that began in mid Summer 2002 as the Market was
experiencing serious selling, continue unabated to this day. The only
thing that’s changed is the scope and scale of these operations. Ben
Bernanke’s alarmist policy laid out the extraordinary measures the Fed
would take; including buying assets from private companies. All that was
needed was indication the United States Economy had fallen into a
condition that the general populous associated with the Great
Depression.
Bernanke
was referring to ‘deflation,’ or as the Fed prefers; a fall in the
general level of prices, and according to their metrics, the polar
opposite of inflation. According to Fed Governor inflation is too much
money chasing too few goods and deflation is too little money chasing
too many goods.
In my
opinion, it is the above is entirely inaccurate. Deflation/Inflation/Dis-Inflation
are merely vastly misunderstood structural phenomena that naturally
occur, Intervention in the ‘Business Cycle,’ another Fed induced
malignancy through Interest Rate manipulation, is simply that;
interference in Markets, that left to their own devices, would clear
supply and demand imbalances through Price/Value equilibrium.
To
suggest such horrific events are purely monetary phenomena is flawed.
‘Sustained
deflation can be highly destructive to a modern economy and should be
strongly resisted.’ Ben Bernanke.
Nothing
has been more destructive to the US Economy than the Federal Reserve,
nothing.