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"And
when he opened the third seal, I heard the third living creature saying,
Come. And I saw, and behold, a black horse; and he that sat thereon had
a balance in his hand. And I heard as it were a voice in the
midst of the four living creatures saying, A measure of wheat
for a shilling, and three measures of barley for a shilling;
and the oil and the wine hurt thou not,"
Introduction
Sir
Alan decided to raise short term interest rates via the Fed Funds Rate
by raising it 25 basis points or .25% to 3.75%. There has occurred much
discussion in the media regarding the reasoning behind Greenspan’s
decision. Some attribute it to the fact that he is worried about the
housing market overheating, as in a bubble that is getting steaming to
the point of bursting. This scenario rationalizes that higher interest
rates will slow down the booming housing market, which it may very well
do – or not.
Others
believe that the Chairman raised rates because he is worried about the
myriad of bubbles in the United States today: the dollar bubble; the
credit bubble; the debt bubble; the real estate bubble; the bond market
bubble, and other various asset class bubbles. The rationalization
behind raising rates for this scenario has to do with the same basic
premise as above, however, it extends over a much wider group of markets
and hence more of the economy as well.
Then
there is the classic timed tested inflation scenario that prices are
going up and will continue to go up – which they are, unless interest
rates go up instead, acting as a braking mechanism of rising prices and
economic activity in general.
When
all is said and done, and hypothecated upon, what it all comes down to
is that Mr. Greenspan is trying to ease the runaway train into the
station without crashing it, stalling it, or causing any untoward damage
– to the train, the passengers, and the surrounding pedestrians. It is
not an enviable task, but rule from atop was never meant to be enviable,
nor easy. If you don’t like the heat, you don’t go in the kitchen.
The maestro is definitely in the kitchen; and the heat is rising.
The Conundrum
It
appears that Sir Alan has a bit of a conundrum on his hands. He is stuck
between a rock and a hard place so to say: damned if he does, and damned
if he doesn’t – damned if you will. Here’s why.
The
Fed Chairman wants to keep the U.S. dollar from collapsing against
foreign currencies, as if this was to occur, the Chinese and Japanese
would curtail their subsidization of the U.S. bond market, a.k.a. the
U.S. debt market. Presently they account for over 40% of the purchases
of our debt market, so if they say goodbye, it really could be goodbye
– for us. Recently, however, Great Britain has stepped up to the plate
as a heavy buyer of our debt, but they too could provide the kiss of
death if the dollar was to take a plunge. Interesting times to say the
least.
Greenspan
hopes and prays that by fine tuning interest rates he can provide
support for the dollar and keep foreign interests – interested in
buying our debt. However, the Fed Chairman also knows that if he raises
interest rates too much or too fast he will sink the housing market; and
that he does not want to do. It has been the sea of liquidity provided
by Greenspan and company that has kept the economy going via the housing
market. If the housing market bubble bursts – the economy will be in
dire straights. End of game.
Or in
his own words from the recent Fed minutes:
“Rather,
monetary policy accommodation, coupled with robust underlying growth in
productivity, is providing ongoing support to economic activity. Higher
energy and other costs have the potential to add to inflation pressures.
However, core inflation has been relatively low in recent months and
longer-term inflation expectations remain well contained, but pressures
on inflation have stayed elevated.”
“The
Committee perceives that, with appropriate monetary policy action, the
upside and downside risks to the attainment of both sustainable growth
and price stability should be kept roughly equal. With underlying
inflation expected to be contained, the Committee believes that policy
accommodation can be removed at a pace that is likely to be measured.”
So
you can see the conundrum he is in: both “core inflation and
longer-term inflation expectations have remained well contained, but
pressures on inflation have stayed elevated.” That’s one job I
wouldn’t want to have – walking a tightrope over a pit of lions is
easier work if you can get it. I’m not sure if you have to be a
juggler or a balancing expert to qualify for the job. Being a master
magi couldn’t hurt, however.
But On The Other Hand
But
as we have said, Sir Alan doesn’t want to pop the housing bubble,
which means that he must offset rising interest rates. Now how does he
pull that one out of his hat – he just creates lots of money and
credit through prestidigitation. How do we know that the Chairman is
saying one thing while doing another? Take a look at the money supply
chart below in comparison to the federal funds rate chart, which do you
think is rising faster?
The
broadest U.S. money supply measure is M-3, as shown in the chart below.
It was up $32.4 billion in the latest week. In the last 3 months, M-3
has been up $216 billion, which equates to an annualized rate of almost
a trillion dollars a year. And that’s just the money supply. In paper
fiat land credit is just as good as money. We will place a chart of the
Fed Funds Rate side by side for a quick comparison. Basically look for
the steepest ascent of the little blue lines.

Unfortunately,
it does appear that the money supply is rising a bit steeper for a wee
bit longer than the Fed Funds Rate has been. Lots of catching up to do,
if such is the intent.
Doug
Noland, who is as good as it gets about credit and debt reporting, had
this to say about the candy suckers being given away in paper fiat land
last week:
“Bank
Credit rose $14.4 billion last week. Year-to-date, Bank Credit has
expanded $622.9 billion, or 13.3% annualized (up 10.4% from a year
earlier). Securities Credit declined $10.8 billion during the week, with
a year-to-date gain of $156.8 billion (11.8% ann.). Loans & Leases
have expanded at a 14.3% pace so far during 2005, with Commercial &
Industrial (C&I) Loans up an annualized 16.9%. For the week, C&I
loans added $0.8 billion, and Real Estate loans gained $7.7 billion.
Real Estate loans have expanded at a 15.9% rate during the first 36
weeks of 2005 to $2.822 Trillion. Real Estate loans were up $371
billion, or 15.1%, over the past 52 weeks. For the week, Consumer loans
increased $2.3 billion, while Securities loans gained $5.8 billion.
Other loans rose $8.4 billion.
Total
Commercial Paper jumped $10.8 billion last week to $1.61 Trillion. Total
CP has expanded $196 billion y-t-d, a rate of 19.5% (up 20% over the
past 52 weeks). Financial CP rose $10.9 billion last week to $1.465
Trillion, with a y-t-d gain of $181.1 billion, or 19.8% annualized, and
up 21% from a year earlier. Non-financial CP dipped $0.1 billion to
$144.4 billion.” [Doug Noland Courtesy of Credit
Bubble Bulletin - Sept. 16]
For
a pretty picture to go with the above stated credit growth, Doug Noland
offered this on his site:

Courtesy of Doug Noland, Credit
Bubble Bulletin - Sept. 16
Seems
that the undertaker, as Ayn Rand used to affectionately call the
Greenman, is adding some more punch to the bowl, and by the use of
various concoctions, making for a strange brew that Madam Rue would be
honored to serve. It would appear he doesn’t want the partiers to go
home just yet, before he satiates their thirst.
But
alas, you know what happens when you indulge too much in the fruit of
the vine – you end up making love to the toilet bowl as opposed to a
loved one – plus you feel like what goes down the bowl. So much for
over-indulgence. Perhaps we need a new 12 step program for credit
addiction – especially for Sir Alan, as he does seem to be the enabler
supreme for all things fiat or make believe – a true master magi.
What To Do?
So
what’s a poor soul to do? Try to reduce debt. Try to cut back on
spending. Try to save if possible. Live below one’s means. Write down
your present state of affairs, in front of you, so you can see in black
and white where you are, and where you are headed.
Formulate
a budget so you know exactly what you spend versus what your income is.
Talk things over with family or friends that you can trust. But have
a plan – short, intermediate, and long term plan. Set goals that
are achievable. As you reach them you will gain self-confidence to try
for even higher heights.
Once
you can reduce debt and begin to save, then it’s time to put the
savings to work, to add to your income and wealth. Go easy at first if
you are not experienced. Do not try for homeruns. He who is steady and
grounded wins in this game. Blazing stars just fizzle out into the night
sky. And most of all – be prepared for the unexpected – expect
the unexpected, and you will not get blindsided. Forewarned is
forearmed.
Gold
When
you are in a position to consider such, consider gold. Gold is honest
money. It is not some paper credit or debt, which is nothing but a
promise to pay, an i.o.u. Gold is real money and can be used to directly
pay off debt; it has no liabilities or strings attached. It is immediate
payment for any transaction undertaken. Gold is no mans debt. Gold is
the Sovereign
of Sovereigns,
when
gold speaks all lips are silent. As
the venerable Richard Russell, sage of the markets said the other night:
“But
what of gold? Why is real money surging at this time? Gold is rocketing
higher because gold is pure wealth. Gold represents wealth with no debt
against it. Gold represents wealth outside the system. Gold needs no
central bank, no government, no man or group of men -- to tell us that
it's wealth. Gold stands alone in that regard. There's nothing else like
it with the possible exception of gem quality diamonds, rubies, emeralds
or sapphires.” [Dow Theory Letter – Richard Russell]
For
those interested in reading about the history of gold as Honest Money we
offer the following as pretty good reads on the subject:
Honest
Money, GOLD:
Sovereign of Sovereigns , Silver
IS Money.
Gold’s
power and secret is that is no man’s liability, it is no man’s
promise or obligation to pay – it is payment, and has been so for 5000
years. Paper fiat as floated today has been around for a couple of
hundred years, and that is even arguable, but another story for another
time.
The
big lie is that money and debt can be one and the same. They can’t.
You can not pay a promise to pay with another paper promise to pay. That
is not payment. That is just rolling over the debt. Promises for more
promises – to pay. Debt transference. Nothing more, and a whole lot
less.
When
debt is allowed to circulate as the currency – as debt-money – there
is hell to be paid. The day of reckoning, the weighing in the balance,
keeps getting pushed off farther into the future; but make no mistake
about it, the day of atonement will come – if not by us, then by our
children, and their children, which isn’t the best of legacies to
leave your loved ones. Leave them some gold instead.
As
a picture is worth a 1000 words we will now provide a picture of total
America Debt (which is on the books, as there is another like amount not
on the books, what the magi’s call off-budget or unfunded
liabilities), and a picture of the loss of the purchasing power of the
United States Dollar Bill, known as a Federal Reserve Note or promise to
pay – a debt instrument.

Courtesy of Michael Hodges, The Grandfather Economic Reports

Chart courtesy from Sharelynx at www.sharelynx.net
Confidence
The
above state of affairs is what has led to a bit of a falling out of
confidence among CFO’s in America. How do we know? Take a look at the
chart below. Seems they are aware of the rising debt levels, higher
costs, and the loss of 95% of our currencies purchasing power – maybe
that’s why they are chief financial officers:

Courtesy of Duke University
All
of which adds up to a kind of queasy feeling in the pit of one’s
stomach – like we’re involved in some con-fi-dence game of
sorts. Here you take my debt and I’ll trade you it for mine. Let’s
rob Peter so we can make believe to pay Paul. It just doesn’t work
like that folks – and I don’t care what they tell you – if they do
– they speak with forked tongue, as the Indians can attest by the
terrorist attacks they were subjected to a few hundred years ago in the
land of milk and honey.
Be
not deceived, they do not want you to know the Truth. The Truth is that
Gold Is Honest Money. Debt is a four letter word of evil as presently
peddled about. There is nothing wrong with debt – if it is debt
created by the loaning of Honest Money, had by honest work, owned by
those that earned it, and then lend it, by honest dealings with honest
interest rates. Honest.
But
when our money is paper fiat debt-money, it is dishonest money, and can
only facilitate wealth transference from the many to the elite few. We
The People need to stand up and reclaim our constitutional freedoms –
our self-dignity and unalienable rights. Honest.
Power
to the people, as it was the people that gave birth to the Constitution;
it was the people that gave birth to our Country; it was the people that
gave birth to the government. It was and Is about – the people.
We
The People are Sovereign
Gold
is the Sovereign of Sovereigns – remember it well.

© 2005 Douglas V. Gnazzo
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