|
PETRODOLLAR
& IRAN & IRAQ
by Jim Willie CB
April 19, 2007
Home:
Golden Jackass website
Subscribe:
Hat Trick
Letter
Jim
Willie CB is the editor of the “HAT TRICK LETTER”
For specific detailed analysis of the Gold, USDollar, Treasury bonds,
and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and Fed monetary policy, see instructions for subscription to my
newsletter research reports, which include stock recommendations
positioned to rise in the commodity bull market.
The focus on
gold and the USDollar alone lacks a crucial factor in maintaining the
world currency reserve on its fragile pedestal. The PetroDollar is a
term used to describe the close relationship between the USDollar and
the crude oil export business dominated by Saudi Arabia, manifested in
the superstructure of the global banking system. So one could say the
oil world provides the pool from which the US$ exchange rate valuation
is applied and enforced. The gold community pays far too little
attention to crude oil factors in my opinion, but Adam Hamilton does
indeed. Gold investors love to point to Iran war tensions as a factor to
lift the gold price, but they might overlook how the associated
earthquakes in banking shift the very ground under the world currency
reserve.
Iran has begun
to sell its oil in euro currency transactions, already to China, and
next to Japan. The gold market should rejoice, when they are actually
not paying attention to this grand development. Petro sales outside the
US$ realm represent the first of several tectonic shifts in global
banking. Direct impact is assured to gold, once the certain changes are
realized to bank systems. Imagine Japan changing the emphasis of their
entire FOREX reserves management because they purchase a large block of
crude oil from Iran, and pay in euros. How much more Persian Gulf oil
will China purchase? How much will their future bills be due in euro
terms? This article contains a capsule summary taken from the energy
section of the April Hat Trick Letter, with a finale based in dark
humor.
As a preface,
the Gulf Arab currency talks ended with little progress in Medina Saudi
Arabia. The meeting was to work toward a monetary union plan by its
deadline of 2010. Governor of the United Arab Emirates central bank Al-Suweidi
cast doubt in January that the six key Persian Gulf oil producers could
hammer out any currency exchange rate regime as preparation for a single
currency. The group wishes to clinch a deal like what the European Union
has in place. My gut says such a unified currency would help defend the
USDollar and its unofficial oil standard, by means of a single
controllable device. The USGovt and bankers might require this device in
order to exert strong influence on the increasingly independent
sheikdoms scrambling to prevent massive losses in the foreign reserves.

Great strain
has come when Persian Gulf nations, friendly sheikdoms, decide to
diversify their vast FOREX holdings away from US$-based securities. When
Qatar last autumn announced some minor diversification of their national
FOREX savings account, the US Military ordered a pullout of several
thousand troops. There lies evidence of a connection, the quid pro quo
in the protection game to fortify the sheiks in power, as they each sit
atop national treasures. When South Korea in 2005 twice suggested
similar diversification of their FOREX account, suddenly US Military
exercises were conducted off their shore, visible from the office
buildings. Anyone who misses the linkage between foreign reserves held
in US$-based securities and US Military support for the global banking
system is at best in need of broader exposure, and at worst ignorant,
compromised, or deceived. The USDollar is backed by many forces and
factors, including a powerful military on an increasing basis. For four
years running, the military has had a prominent presence in the center
of the Middle East, inside Iraq.
THE PETRODOLLAR
BACKGROUND
The history of
the PetroDollar could be described as a syndicate contract between the
United States and Saudi Arabia to subsidize the USDollar, to prop up the
Western banking system, to enable the Arab royals (sheiks & emirs)
to continue to claim their national treasures as their private property.
Without the contract, the United States would not be able to perpetuate
the privilege abused by the USGovt and Wall Street, whereby money is
printed at will, private entities benefit routinely, trillion dollar
budgets are hammered out, and no process exists either for foreign
participation or approval. Bear in mind that the Saudi economy has among
the highest national debt per capita among prominent nations, and has a
pathetic per capita income among its citizens. The Saudi royals have
cornered their national treasure, invested broadly across the world in
private accounts, in a manner which seems totally beyond simple
reproach.
The USGovt
requirse three extremely important concessions from the Saudi Royal
family. They stand as cornerstones
to the PetroDollar system (if not defacto standard):
- The
Saudis must honor oil sales only in US$ transactions from their vast
production fields across the kingdom.
- They must
recycle their vast ill-gotten wealth (due to its private nature) in
New York and London banks, so as to support the US$-based banking
system, and thus enable the funding of vast loan portfolios for
Western usage.
- They must
purchase vast military weaponry in order to secure their grip of
power and to keep stability in the hostile Persian Gulf region.
An aside, to
drive home the point of corruption among Saudi royal families. The dirty
little secret in Saudi business life is what is called
‘appropriation’ among the citizens. The royals are attempting to
halt the practice, but that is like Wall Street attempting to eliminate
insider information used for profitable gain. Royal underlings extort
independent business owners into selling their businesses for 10% of
value, under threat of imprisonment on trumped up charges like tax
evasion, sexual misconduct, or other serious crimes.
The basis of
the PetroDollar contract is that the Saudis keep firm its foundation,
that being a strong link between the USDollar and oil sales. A
better description is that OPEC members, led in particular by the
Saudis, have subsidized the USDollar since 1971 when Nixon broke the
Bretton Woods Accord for the gold backed USDollar. That is why in my
work, the name PetroDollar Standard has been used, despite the lack of
any formal standard. It is a de facto standard. Such a link between oil
and US$ serves as a fait accompli for entire national banking systems
being US$-based in their foundations. The PetroDollar basis for banking
is not well understood nor publicized. That is because its vulnerability
is so huge, and US institutions take it for granted. Foreign nations
discuss the concept, while US circles do not.
If the
PetroDollar prop were to be removed, entire national banking systems
like the Japanese or Korean or German would shift, which would come as a
delivered shock wave to the USTreasury Bond complex.
The USTBond system is the active working manifestation of the USDollar,
the world reserve currency. Large blocks of FOREX reserves held in
US$-based securities would undergo change if the system changed, all
harmful to the USDollar. Nowhere has the vulnerable condition of the
PetroDollar been more pronounced than in the year 2000 when Saddam
Hussein demanded payment for oil in euro currency. Probably near the top
in reasons why Iraq was annexed and its oil reserves commandeered, his
euro-based oil sales remain near the bottom in stated reasons in the
subservient US press & media, if mentioned at all. That issue has
returned to the forefront, with Iran.
ENTER THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN
Iran has, with
some measure of hesitation if not trepidation, traveled down the same
path as Saddam. Back in the summer of 2005, Tehran leaders indicated
their intention to create an Iranian Oil Exchange by September of that
same year on the Isle of Kish. For various reasons, they delayed. Back
then my sources informed me that fear of connection with European and
London banks was a deep concern. Once integrated, the Western banks
could inflict damage by formal bank seizures or blockage in some manner.
Tehran officials also were fearful of computer viruses injected by
probing Westerners. Iranian leaders are not so much kooks as thieves,
who like their Saudi counterparts, raid their national treasures. In
Tehran the practice is more akin to ‘skimming’ from operations
whereas in Riyadh it is outright plunder of wealth.
On
March 28-th, The International
Herald Tribune provided an update on Iranian oil finances, with of
course little or no coverage inside the US press. To do so would have
put forth a secondary motive for pressure aimed at Iran by the United
States. Their national affairs have been reported frequently, mainly
nuclear in nature. Little focus has been given to tangents aligned with
the oil business and banking systems tied to the PetroDollar itself. The
IHT piece said “‘More than 50%
of Iran’s oil income is paid in other currencies. We are reducing the
dollar share and asking clients to pay in other currencies,’ Sheibany
said. Sheibany said that almost all of Iran’s European clients and
some of its Asian customers have accepted making payments in non-dollar
currencies.” This is the first public admission, or boasting, made
by an Iranian official on non-US$ oil sales. This is highly significant,
and could be construed as a realistic cause for war by those who choose
to think without the usage of red state prisms or blue state prisms.
Iranian oil
sales attack the fragile global banking system extended from the Western
dominated financial world. There
are only two important props to the United States Govt and Economy,
according to William Engdahl: ownership of the US$ world reserve
currency, and command of the US Military. This was conveyed at the
Munich Gold conference last November in a brief private conversation. He
is a brilliant man who has specialized in the political, financial, and
military aspects of the oil wars, with particular emphasis on the United
States versus Russia. See his website which concerns itself with
Geopolitics & Geoeconomics (click here).
Japan and
China have been pushed into a corner by Iran. Of course, neither nation
wishes to anger the United States. The precedent is important for
payment in oil in euro transactions, much like a crack in the dike. If
Chinese leaders were to push for all their oil imports to be purchased
in euro terms, then the USGovt and its USDollar and its USTBonds have a
big problem indeed. Japan continues to pay for oil sales from Iran in
USDollars. Tokyo leaders are dragging their feet. Tehran leaders want
euros for their oil sales, but to date do not demand euros, that is
clear. Nippon Oil Corp, a major Japanese refiner, along with other
purchasers from Japan, received ‘inquiries’ from Iran to pay for oil
sales in euros. It seems like Tehran wants Japanese firms to
‘volunteer’ to pay in euros.
To further
complicate the matter, the USGovt has pressured Japan not to purchase
Iranian oil. The cited reason was ‘doing business with terrorist
states’ or something to that effect. Consequently, more Iranian oil
has been purchased by China and South Korea. In the process Japan has
been left vulnerable. Watch both Japan and China in this tug of war, the
former subservient, the latter unruly. Details on these several relevant
points are provided in the April report.
Something is
worth stressing related to the Shanghai Coop Org cited at the end of the
outlined points. The SCO has the potential muscle of OPEC for new energy
supply but also the potential military power of NATO on the security
side. Obstructing, undermining, and interfering with the SCO formation and
cooperation might be an integral motive for the USGovt and US Military
as it engages Iran on its embryonic nuclear program. SCO is a very
big problem, also never mentioned in the US press.
Mixed into the
dangerous bubbling cauldron is Israel, which has been openly threatened
by Iran’s leader Ahmadinejad (aka My Dinner Jacket) in a manner to
whip up emotion regularly. Mullahs are bad business men, who do not
think or plan beyond the next few months, hence do not invest prudently
in future oil production. Their refinery business leaks enormous amounts
of oil and end product, as much as Iranian leaders leak blather as
though addressed to school pep rallies.
This is a cat
& mouse game, but a deadly one. A
crack in the PetroDollar foundation coincides with US Military pressure
put upon Iran for its ‘nuclear ambitions’ when the true motive might
be to avert fracture of the PetroDollar system. This is otherwise
known as a protection racket coming unglued (see next section).
FLASHBACK TO
APRIL 2005 (FULL CIRCLE 360)
What is
described on the periphery of the PetroDollar foundation is a protection
racket. Financial support is provided, or money is outright extracted,
from one wealth center or source (here the Saudis with USTBond support),
in return for prevention of their ouster from corrupt rule and access to
a national treasure. Check out my past public article “PetroDollar & Protection Racket” (click here)
from April 2005, which is still highly relevant today. Since the time of
that written article, Norway has moved to sell oil in euro transactions
in the Brent Crude market. The PetroDollar superstructure, so labeled
since it includes not only transactions but also banking systems, is as
shaky and weak now as the US Economy and banking system is vulnerable to
the housing and mortgage crisis underway. That is not a coincidence in
my view.
This article
has resulted in more reader comments and kudos from fellow analysts than
any other article penned by me, bar none. It hit a nerve. Here, two
years late, the PetroDollar factor serves as the crosshairs for weapons
aimed. The target is not Iraq but rather Iran. In
fact the forces described are more relevant today than when written,
since the Iraq War is going so badly, military forces are stretched
fatigued recycled, more questions arise on accurate intelligence
information (falsified or politically steered), and another war is seen
as an additional morass and larger disaster potentially.
Taken as
excerpts from the 2005 article, several quoted points made are:
-
What
we have is a system for purchasing minerals and resources, totally
bound in US$ denomination pricing and transaction settlements. The
most visible element is energy trade, whose supplies clearly make
for the largest bill payments.
-
The
PetroDollar system is the practical commercial flipside, the visible
evidence to the USDollar as world currency reserve in central banks.
The financial effect is for banking systems across the globe to
accumulate reserves in US$-based assets. What began as a checking
account for oil payments has morphed into a gigantic bloated beast
of a dangerous financial pyramid whose foundation has corroded and
weakened as the USDollar bear market progresses.
-
The
EuroDollar was created for many purposes. One was to facilitate
payment for energy supplies in US$ terms, without the necessary step
to convert trade surpluses back to DeutscheMarks or Swiss francs or
British pound sterling. A EuroDollar is a US$ held in European
banks, not converted to local currency units, and serves as a
buttress to support the PetroDollar system.
-
The
world is ‘obliged’ to sop up and purchase all the debts we
generate, whether they approve or not of our policies, behavior,
tendency, or justification for military actions. Almost without
enforced discipline, the US system has evolved with unchecked abuse
on a massive scale.
-
US
federal debt, mortgage debt, and indirectly household debt are all
absorbed by Asia. Exporters are somewhat bound to buy our US
Treasury debt in order to continue selling in our market. Foreign
central banks have few alternatives to sock away $20 to $30 billion
per month, each month, every month.
-
Asia
feels obliged to continue, in order to keep their industries and
work force busy (avoid unemployment), and to prevent their banking
systems from imploding. They cannot abandon support for the USDollar,
and demonstrate that support with frequent central bank
interventions.
-
The
PetroDollar system is under new attack. Russia and fringe nations of
OPEC are responsible for dissension. Their motive is
self-preservation. Rather, they desire a stable or rising currency.
If a nation can manage to trade a host of commodities (like oil,
natural gas, copper, iron, cotton, coffee) in euro denomination,
that national economy would be far less subject to the distress of
systemic rising prices.
-
The
Iraq War [had] numerous grounds for its justification, surely the
weapons of mass destruction among them (although not taken seriously
by me here). Also, stemming the sale of Iraqi crude oil in euro
denomination was another motive, which in my view was far more
important even in March 2003, just as important two years later now.
The PetroDollar system is that important to defend.
-
OPEC
refuses to confront the USA, since it owns no military and is quite
dependent upon the USA for its protection. They sell us oil; we
protect their leadership (see Kuwait and Saudi Arabia and Qatar).
-
The
new Shanghai Cooperative Group represents a potential supply network
which will have member nations of China, India, Russia, former
Soviet Republics, and Iran as its core. Energy (crude oil &
natural gas), industrial metals, and more are to be bought and sold
by this new network, outside OPEC and its gaggle of disunity and
diverse puppet strings held by Washington DC. The COOP is a direct
answer to the corrupted OPEC cartel, which seems overly influenced
by US leaders.
-
Pricing
oil in euros helps nations to reduce domestic price inflation within
their own economies, and to add to incoming revenue from oil sales.
Removal of the PetroDollar system [would] have a magnificent effect
on the crude oil price or the USDollar exchange rate or US Treasury
yields. An effect on currencys and bonds as a secondary effect. Then
we might see a gold effect. An acceleration down with USDollar could
trigger a world bank crisis.
ENERGY TIDBITS, BROAD IMPLICATIONS
The stability
of the PetroDollar depends heavily on keeping the confidence of the
Persian Gulf oil producers. JPMorgan activities emanating from the Bank
of Baghdad cannot be dismissed. Effectively, after JPMorgan was
chosen to run the Iraqi Central Bank, they began issuing letters of
credit using Iraqi oil assets to collateralize the loans. What
exactly is this powerful bank and derivative book (mis)manager doing
with the entrusted Letters of Credit on payments for Iraqi oil? When my
writing expressed distrust of US Administrators and their integrity in
managing the Iraqi oil, the response was hate email. My distrust was
justified. The advent of a large
new phenomenon in crude oil futures contracts coincides with the arrival
of JPM and the US presence in Iraq. See the data for evidence and
oily fingerprints. Details are provided in the April report, where some
fine sleuth detective work by Rob Kirby is cited.
When explaining
the crude oil price, politics and war account for most variation, not
economics bound by supply & demand.
It might be
- the prospects of Iran War,
or the military barrage probe on Beirut in summer 2006
- the grand scale of US
Military sale of crude oil & diesel in late summer 2006
- the Goldman Sachs
Commodity Index adjustment of the gasoline weight just three months
before the US Midterm Elections
- the State of the (dis)Union
message related to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
- the total relaxation of
pressure on Iran during those same Midterm Elections
- the latest pressure on
Iran.
An
analysis is given. The greatest dynamics for the crude oil price changes
emanate from decisions by the White House, the Pentagon, and offices at
JPMorgan & Goldman Sachs. Arguments to the contrary seem very
secondary and immaterial, much like noise.
HATS OFF
Lastly,
hats off to Peter Schiff during
a CNBC interview opposite clownish Ned Reilly on Monday afternoon. It
was worth a loud laugh and a captured quote by Peter. The US stock
markets are hitting new highs in true Weimar fashion. Pundits and
anchors suspect something has gone awry, since the European euro and
British sterling currency are pounding away at new highs. The US
S&P500 index is not doing well at all in euro and sterling terms
over the last 3 or 4 years. Peter made a point that the higher stock
prices are offset by a weaker US$ exchange rate and diminished purchase
power within the USEconomy. That has been precisely my point for a
couple years also. The S&P has maintained constant value, even if
higher price. Schiff delivered a quote worth saving on the office wall.
Pardon me if not word for word, as I was busy making myself an egg
omelet, with onions and red peppers and olives and cheese. My prices for
food have dropped by 30% since arrival in Costa Rica. Oh yes, fresh
luscious cantaloupes for 80 cents, or a half dozen bananas for 20 cents.
Pura Vida! Peter said:
“The Dow [and
US stocks generally] cannot even compete in price with a carton of eggs
in the United States, which is up 30% just last year.”
The
challenge for the Dept of Treasury and US Federal Reserve is that in
order to defend the USDollar, they must keep numerous fingers well
placed in the dikes for the gold market, the oil market, the housing
& mortgage market, the China trade war, the hedge fund mushroom, the
credit derivative market, and the foreign central bank revolt. The
USTreasury market is surrounded by several bands of hostile barbarians.
The latest bizarre news has that Freddie Mac will purchase $20 billion
in acidic bonds. Do taxpayers get stuck with the bill? Do their bond
investors bear the risk? The watch word is desperation.
USGOVT OFFICIALS DON’T GOT ENOUGH FINGERS TO PLUG THE DIKES. There are
simply too many digits to the debt and money growth (pun intended)!!!

©
2007 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Subscribe:
Hat Trick
Letter
Use the above link to subscribe to the paid
research reports, which include coverage of several smallcap companies
positioned to rise like a cantilever during the ongoing panicky attempt
to sustain an unsustainable system burdened by numerous imbalances
aggravated by global village forces. An historically unprecedented mess
has been created by heretical central bankers and charlatan economic
advisors, whose interference has irreversibly altered and damaged the
world financial system. Analysis features Gold, Crude Oil, USDollar,
Treasury bonds, and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and US
Federal Reserve monetary policy. A tad of relevant geopolitics is
covered as well. Articles in this series are promotional, an unabashed
gesture to induce readers to subscribe.
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials. Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
For personal questions about subscriptions, contact him
at “JimWillieCB@aol.com”
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense. |