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ON
CURRENCY & CROSS SIGNALS
by Jim Willie CB
Editor, Hat
Trick Letter
November 15, 2007
In
the last several weeks, tremendous movement and change has occurred in
foreign currencies. Almost all foreign currencies have made multi-year
highs against the crippled USDollar. The United States suffers from
wretched finances and a banking system teetering on seizures. In
progress is the gradual dismantling of large tinkertoy structures within
its vast network of bond risk management. Its entire business of
structured finance is under siege and revaluation. The banking &
bond woes cannot be blamed on just the subprime mortgages, those
mispriced collections of slime used in considerable export to those very
friendly parties who supply the necessary $2.1 billion in daily US
capital. No, the USDollar can be identified as a ‘subprime currency’
slowly enduring recognition as such. The buck is badly mispriced,
offering a yield under half of the true price inflation rate of 10.4%,
falsely rated as ‘AAA’ under coercion, supported by broad
statistical lies, exported widely to foreign institutions, and wrecking
havoc in economies who peg their currencies to the US$. How shallow can
any denial be?
As
one peruses the various currencies and their exchange rates, multi-year
highs can be seen across the spectrum. Two key currencies stand out in
prominence, the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen. Furthermore, two key
crosses are significant in their own right. The cross of the swissy with
the euro, and the cross of the euro with the yen each delivers a
powerful message of profound change.
The
November Hat Trick Letter covers the currency chess game, but also the
most powerful currency on the planet, the Canadian Dollar. Goldman Sachs
shot it down after extended gains to the 110 level. Soon outgoing central banker David Dodge made some defensive
painful comments in mid-October when the loonie had reached the 103.5
level following boastful commentary of deserved loonie strength. With
John Thain appointed as the new CEO at Merrill Lynch, the parade
continues of former GSax executives taking control of powerful Western
financial organizations. See the US Dept of Treasury, US Dept of Energy,
World Bank, the Bank of Canada, the central bank of Italy, and now
Merrill Lynch. Maybe Goldman Sachs should take control of all regulatory
bodies and debt rating agencies and indexed funds and currency controls
and financial news media?
SWISS FRANC STEPS
FORWARD
In
the last couple months, much attention has come to the euro. It hit 147,
after being 110 in the summer of 2003 when the late great Kurt Richebächer
sipped coffee on his veranda with me, discussing how euro warrants were
the centerpiece to his estate. He wanted to bequeath to his children
large sums based on designed bets against the USDollar. The European
Union economy has a juggernaut within it, Germany, whose export business
per capita exceeds even that of Japan, a little known fact passed from
Dr Kurt. The Euro Central Bank feels behind the curve with an official
4.0% interest rate, now stuck due to the US problem. The Swiss franc is
the real story on the currency front in Europe though. It soon will
register a multi-decade high.
Some
crucial comments are warranted on the Swiss, from a geopolitical
standpoint. As a preface, former USFed Chairman Alan Greenspan took a
paycheck from the Swiss bankers. Its size is unknown, so one must wonder
if it was indeed larger than his US-based paycheck. A suspicious
person (it pays to be suspicious these days) might regard Greenspan as
having worked a second hidden agenda, to restore banking power back to
Switzerland after sixty years. The Swiss quietly resent the
Americans, who after World War II wrested banking power as the spoils
from war. They see the US bankers and economists and politicians and war
machine as having essentially destroyed the global banking system. The
Swiss want power to return to central Europe. Recall that the owners of
the US Federal Reserve are reported to reside in both Switzerland and
London, in more control of US monetary policy (if not political leaders)
than people realize. One signal of power restored to Switzerland can be
interpreted as the Swiss franc making decade highs, in order to confirm
prominence in its quintessential power center, banking. Notice the
increase in trading volume in the last 18 months.

SWISS-EURO
CROSS REVERSES
During
the brief correction in midweek last week, a very important event
occurred. The Swiss franc hardly budged, not correcting much at all.
Many regard the swissy as a currency-based insurance policy in the
volatile FOREX trading pits. The swissy often is overlooked in the
central bank interventions, where the USDollar, euro, and yen dominate.
This Monday when the euro, pound sterling, Canadian dollar fell by well
over 100 basis points each, the swissy remained steady. We probably have
seen yet another one-day USDollar bounce. The beleaguered buck suffered
multiple slow bleed down days in the last couple weeks, but only one
fleeting day with a powerful corrective bounce upward. In the last
month, the Swiss franc has reversed its position relative to the euro
currency. While the euro has risen, the swissy has risen more. As
the euro has corrected very moderately, the swissy has not corrected
much at all. The call is early, but the long two-year slide for the
Swiss franc relative to the euro appears to have halted. Two weeks ago,
a powerful reversal occurred, one in continuation. The ratio swept past
the 20-week moving average easily. Let’s see if the ratio moves past
the 50-wk MA. Let’s also see if the 20-wk MA crosses above the 50-wk
MA to flash a strong bullish signal. The Swiss franc might be working to
take back its position of prominence, where for over a century it stood
firm as the true primary investment currency.

Both
the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen are important to monitor during
these crisis times. Europe is taking a lead role in currency
adjustment, setting the euro as a defacto dual standard for a world
reserve currency. They feel pain for that lead role, as ECB head
Trichet calls the adjustment brutal. Asia is taking a lead role in
currency management, setting the pathway for diversification away from
the USDollar AND for the management of Sovereign Wealth Fund. The SWFs
are rendered controversial by the secrecy and confrontational positions
to energy and mineral dominance. The US Congress mulls over options to
regulate foreign billion$ in a truly laughable toothless display of
helpless weakness. They want more disclosure like with Norway’s SWF.
In the background is the Persian Gulf group of nations, threatening to
loosen their tight peg with the USDollar, but succumbing to US
pressures. They possess no military. However, back to the yen and its
cross.
JAPANESE
YEN REFLECTS ITS CARRY TRADE
The
most watched currency cross in the last several months, for its
indication on global speculative finance, has been the euro over the
Japanese yen ratio. Both currencies are rising, but the yen is rising
faster. The 91.5 level is crucially important from a technical
standpoint. The correction in August 2005 (to hit the 20-week moving
average) and in the May 2006 spike when the Bank of Japan began its
ultra slow motion interest rate hike sequence, these set the resistance
levels which are soon to be broken. Notice the crossover of the
20-wk MA above the 50-wk MA in September, a siren call warning in the
currency world. In fact, the powerful reversal since June-July 2007 from
the 80-81 level coincides with a gradual unwind of the grandest carry
trade phenomenon in the history of the modern world. The Yen Carry Trade
profits from borrowing cheap Japanese yen and investing in higher
yielding USTreasury Bonds, with a currency risk inherent. It is
unwinding. The impact not only to speculative investment, but to
baseline structural investment, is enormous and given little emphasis.
The correlation between the S&P500 stock index in the US and the
Japanese yen is strong. The linkage has been apparent to me for over a
year. The implication is that the Yen Carry Trade might govern the US
stock market. Its unwind governs the selloff in the largest among US
stocks. The November Hat Trick Letter provides further crystal clear, if
not shocking evidence of linkage.

EURO-YEN CROSS BREAKS
DOWN
With
little tested history, the euro is the product of an amalgam of
currencies in loose association from a European continent attempting to
unify once again. Some call the euro-yen cross the most important
currency related signal to monitor appetite for risk. The yen is a
suppressed currency, kept down with US blessing and brute force. The yen
appears to be awakening after a decade or more of slumber. In my view,
the emergence of China makes the yen awakening unavoidable. China has
become the most important focal point in Asia, so Tokyo had better
acknowledge this change, and show respect with a bow. The Bank of Japan
has continued its hawkish tone, threatening to hike interest rates, but
holding back. They show deference to the USFed. The double top failure
in this euro-yen cross indicates clearly that the Japanese yen currency
is to continue its rise. In the process, the global finance system
will be forced to endure shock waves. The Yen Carry Trade is
unwinding at the same time that the US financial structure of risk
management is being dismantled. These two corners of the globe are
extraordinarily important. By contrast, Europe seems quiet, staid, and
boring, with a task of leading in the currency adjustment process. Soon
the yen will share that burden.

A powerfully
important dynamic requires attention.
The entire commodity investment bull market, precious metals, energy,
and base metals, depends on continued easy money from Japan AND a yen
currency which does not continue to rise.
The yen is rising from the weakness of the USDollar, a shaky US banking
system resisting seizures, and the likelihood of further USFed rate
cuts, more than from the prospect of a series of BOJ rate hikes. The
USDollar weakness is profound enough to jeopardize financial investment
flow of Japanese funds for the commodity bull market itself. And that
bull market trend is leveraged by USDollar weakness. Talk about a
paradox!!!
On November
13, the Bank of Japan held steady on interest rates, keeping their
official cost of money at the insane 0.5% rate. Their credibility is not
as firm as the Euro Central Bank. BOJ Governor Fukui voted to hold
steady on interest rates, citing a reduced economic growth estimate, a
construction downturn, export risk from the US housing & mortgage
problems, and hardship to small businesses from higher energy costs. The
combined effects of higher energy costs, US woes, rising yen currency,
and Japanese stock market breakdown enable the BOJ to salute the US
Federal Reserve and hold steady. More details are in my November report.
Do other people grow uncomfortable when the two leading Japanese names
are Fukui ad Fukuda? Do such names pass the political correct test? Japanese
Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda refused to dismiss the possibility of formal
interventions so as to keep the yen currency from rising too much too
fast. The Nikkei stock index in Japan is showing distress.
CONCLUSION
The
November Hat Trick Letter contains a frightening list of relevant
important quotes regarding the developing dire situation with the
USDollar. In focus is the US$ as world reserve currency, the global
banking system stability, foreign accumulation of reserves, lost
sovereignty of US policy, imminent breakdown of the PetroDollar
standard, and palpable US vulnerability. In the last few years those
leaders subjugated under USDollar policy dictated to them have been
actively resisting, if not revolting. The fall of the USDollar from
grace amounts to a tectonic shift in the global hierarchy. This time,
the US currency is on the clear defensive. A description of hegemony
(abused dominance) applies. Recent chapters center on the ascendance of
China and India, growing confidence in the European common currency,
record American deficits, the challenge by London over New York as a
financial center, the ongoing housing recession in the US, the mortgage
banking debacle, the export of mortgage bond fraud, and the gradual
seizure of the US banking system. Prominent economists are raising the
specter that the USDollar status as the world reserve currency is no
longer dominant. For the first time, Treasury Secy Paulson has been on
the defensive in the face of stated concerns of the USDollar role as a
reserve currency, as in during G7 Meeting of finance ministers.
The
falling USDollar is a hidden mechanism for importing price inflation.
The tremendous money supply growth guarantees the continued falling
exchange rates for the USDollar versus other currencies. As the
USEconomy finds increasing obstacles and backfires to exporting its
inflation, the end result will be more price inflation within the United
States as it cannot escape so easily. Refer to the reaction by
foreigners to bond fraud in subprime mortgages, and refer to trade
sanctions planned against China. The growth in US$ money supply is
shocking, reminiscent of Weimar Times in pre-WW2 Germany. The M3 annual
growth of US$ money supply is at a 36-year high, running at 14.7% and
adding pressure to the USDollar. A global currency war is underway.
Foreign central banks will ramp up their own money supply growth rates
so as to defend themselves and prevent their currencies from rapid
appreciation. The round robin game to undermine currencies is
precisely what lifts the gold price to the heavens. Eventually,
people will call into question the value of paper.

©
2007 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
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