Friday Rant

I came across this article last night, 32 Reasons Why The Stock Market Will Jump This Year.

While its written as a serious prediction, I personally feel its more like a christmas wish list or a list of finalist answers at the Miss World Beauty Pagent!. Here are some of the gems

#1. Housing and Auto-manufacturing weakness will subside
Based on what? Major layoffs in both industries?

#5. Unemployment with stay at record lows.
Hmm…with the massive layoffs in Housing and Auto-manufacturing, you really think so?

#7. Inflation will continue to decelerate, with CPI averaging around 2.0%.
Hmm…ever since the minimum wage was jacked up, small business around where I live jacked up the price of everything along with it. That doesn’t sound like low inflation to me. Anyone who thinks that CPI is an accurate measure of inflation makes way too much money to begin with. Once you take out all the factors that cause inflation, of course you’ll be left with 2%. What a doofus.

#11. The US Dollar will firmer up and even maybe become stronger
With almost all the worlds major currencies strengthening against the USD how is this going to happen? Oh yeah, Bank of Japan is enforcing a weak Yen policy. And of course the USD will strengthen against the Iraqi Dinar! And with China owning a Trillion USD do you think a strong Dollar is actually in our interest????

#12. The U.S. budget deficit, which is currently 1.5% of GDP, well below the 40-year average of 2.3% of GDP, will continue to trend lower as healthy economic activity continues to boost tax receipts substantially more than estimates.
Uh…isn’t the US GDP is currently mainly comprised of government spending? Thats not really a show of healthy economic activity. Although it is true that the tax receipts are up more than estimated.

#15. The mania for commodities will completely end.
Yeah Right!!! All those millions of people in India and China who can now afford to buy a car and a decent place to live will choose to buy plastic go-karts and tents instead of regular cars and houses that use steel & copper. Is he completely blind to the global industrialization thats taking place? Every year China adds to its electricity generating capacity by the same amount as the entire UK. This electricity comes from coal and is used to make more cars and power more houses. The dude’s smoking crack now.

#16. Oil falls to $35 to $40 per barrel and eventually $20-$25.
#19. Gas prices will drop below $4/mcf.
#20. Gold will drop below $550 per ounce
This was written on the 1st of Feb 2007 when Oil was around $50/barrel. Its since gone up to nearly $60 and is probably on its way up. Corn has quadrupled to over $4/bushel making ethanol almost as expensive as gasoline now. Similarly Gold is also up to $665. I actually bought some GLD (the gold ETF) 2 days ago and I’m already up 7%. I predict its going to $800 in 2 years.

#17. Peace in the Middle East.
HAHAHA.

Some of the points are actually valid, but the ones I’ve mentioned are pretty stupid. Like I’ve said before, I’ve taken exactly opposite bets in my stock investing, so of course my views are out of line with the authors.

What do you think?

Bad Day For The Dollar – Great For Retailers!

Today was black friday and atleast in San Diego it seemed like everyone was out shopping like its going out of style. The local best buy had great deals on TVs.  A buddy picked up 2 flat screens. One 32″ LCD HDTV for $475 [after a $400 discount] & another Plasma 47″ HDTV for $1000 [after a $700 discount]. Of course they only had about a dozen of these that sold out immediately but luckily we had friends camping out at various stores so with a few well placed phone calls he was able to get in on the action!

He tried to pursuade me to get one too, but I’m really happy with my 19″ regular TV! However I did buy a very nice laptop from Costco for under a $1000. The good thing about Costco is that if you aren’t satisfied you can return your purchase at any time. Apparently people have been abusing the system so for laptops the cutoff is 6 months.

Anyway, today was a particularly bad day for the dollar. It was down against most major currencies including the Euro, Yen, Swiss Franc, Aussie & NZ Dollar and Indian Rupee. Just in time to make my vacation to south east asia just a tad more expensive!

Like I’ve been harping on before, I think the easiest way to get out of the multi-trillion dollar debt is for the Feds to inflate the value out of the dollar. This will provide the necessary “soft” landing for real estate. And by soft I mean a 20-40% price drop on the coasts, as opposed to a 50-60% drop. I belive its a trend that will continue for the next year or so. This will likely result in commodity inflation while the economy experiences deflation in terms of manufactured products, squeezing margins, profitability and wages. Not a good sign. [of course, this is just my opinion and could be wrong]

Gold was also uptoday to $637 and Silver is up to nearly $13.50. Finally my gold & silver coins are coming back up in value. I bought a lot of old goin coins & a few new ones for almost the bullion price. I think my average price is around $668/oz. Not bad considering a few of them are roughly 100 years ago and 2 of them are in the 200 year range! My belief is that once gold starts its upward trend again, coins will again become collectibles and will outpace the intrinsic value of the metal content.

Looks like the Indian Rupee is getting stronger

Not only is the Australian dollar strengthening against the US dollar, it looks like everything except the Canadian loonie is too!

Excerpt from today’s daily pfenning…

Ashish Advani, the Head of Corporate FX here at EverBank, pointed out yesterday that India had split their two interest rates yesterday. Here is what Ashish pointed out to us after the rate announcement:

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) managed to completely surprise markets by raising repurchase rate (rate at which market borrows from RBI in a liquidity deficit situation) by 25 basis points to 7.25% while leaving the benchmark reverse repo rate unchanged. We were expecting a hike in both repo as well as reverse repo rate by 25 basis points each.

Why has RBI done this?

To balance out the risks of global deceleration with the risk of demand side inflationary pressures thawing domestic growth. With the global growth environment turning more uncertain and US economy showing signs of deceleration, the risk remains that excessive monetary tightening domestically could impact domestic growth. However, with domestic price pressures rising RBI cannot afford to sit on the sidelines and let inflation go beyond the tolerance band of 5-5.5%. RBI clearly recognizes the risk that India could be entering the overheating zone and asset price inflation too could hurt the real sector. Hence the RBI chooses to signal potential for higher rates by raising the repo rate but should growth outlook reverse dramatically impact on domestic economy is marginal. Also another signal, in our assessment is, should banks face tight liquidity conditions, the overall borrowing costs increases, thus the cost of money goes up in a situation of banks over extending credit.

Thanks to Ashish for bringing us all up to date on this unusual move by the Indian Central bank. This partial increase in the interest rates have caused the Indian Rupee to rally, increasing by almost .4% yesterday.

Dollar May Weaken

I regularly read the ‘Daily Pfenning’ by Charles Butler of Everbank.com.

Today’s issue was especially bearish on the dollar.

The Yen finally started to move back up hitting a one month high over the weekend on speculation the Bank of Japan report tomorrow will show an improved economic outlook. The BOJ will make their rate announcement tomorrow before releasing a semi-annual report that will outline the bank’s forecasts for prices and the economy. Any hint at higher rates before year end should propel the yen back toward 110.

Other Asian currencies gained last week also, with the Thai baht rising to a seven-year high. Thailand’s central bank raised its growth estimate for next year to between 4.5 percent and 5.5 percent from a previous forecast of between 4 and 5.3%. It also lifted its prediction for export growth this year. While the gains in the Singapore $ were met with possible intervention by their central bank, the Bank of Thailand governor said the central bank would let the markets do their job in stemming the rise. So it looks like we have a green light for further increases in the baht.

The Australian dollar also had a good week with several reports showing the Asia-Pacific regions growth is picking up. Retail sales rose .5 percent after climbing .3% in August, and building approvals started to rise again. Australia’s economy added more than 200,000 new jobs in the past five months, sending the unemployment rate to a 30-year low. Things continue to look up for the Australian dollar, a currency which continues to be one of our favorite.

Finally, India’s central bank will likely raise interest rates for a fourth time this year as record economic expansion and loans growth stoke inflation. Expect a quarter point increase in interest rates tomorrow, which should strengthen the rupee. Many reports are now expecting the Rupee to strengthen to 44 by year end.

As previously mentioned, I bought some Australian Dollars and a Japanese REIT. A strengthening of the Yen will boost the value of my REIT, which buys apartment buildings in downtown Toyko.

I’m willing to share the info on the Japanese REIT with anyone who makes 10 posts on The Weekend Investor. Talk about a shameless plug!!!!

Gold was also up today. Its not too late to buy some and hedge against the devaluing dollar!

Why the Dollar Will Collapse!

A few days ago I posted an article on why the dollar hasn’t collapsed. Robert Kiyosaki has a good counter-argument on why he thinks it will.


The Last Days of the Dollar

by Robert Kiyosaki

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

In 1966, I was traveling the Pacific aboard a freighter. I was 19 years old at the time and attending the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point, N.Y.

As part of my academy education, I spent a year as a student officer on freighters, passenger liners, oil tankers, and even tugboats. It was a great way to see and study the world.

An Instructive Exchange

One of the earliest lessons I learned at sea was about currency exchange rates. Even though currency valuation was not a subject taught at the Merchant Marine academy, my ship constantly traveled from one country to the next, so my education in what is today called FX — or foreign exchange — began.

Back then, the formal exchange rate in the banks was 360 Japanese yen to one U.S. dollar. On the black market in Hong Kong, I could get 366 yen to the dollar.

This made me aware of the games banks and countries play with their currencies: In 1966, the six-yen difference told me that Japan was buying more from Hong Kong, which is why yen was cheaper in the then-British colony.

A six-yen difference might not seem like much, but for a student earning just $105 a month every little bit counts. So I would wait for my ship to stop in Hong Kong and then trade U.S. dollars for yen. Then I would travel back to Japan and go shopping with the yen. Although the money I saved wasn’t substantial, the lessons it offered in currency exchange were priceless.

The End of the Golden Age

It was pretty easy to understand foreign exchange back in the mid-‘60s, since much of the world was following the Bretton Woods Agreement. Enacted in 1944, this agreement made the U.S. dollar the global medium of exchange.

Because the U.S. dollar was pegged to gold, figuring exchange rates was a cinch. If we purchased too much from Japan, then the Japanese could ask us for gold. If we had less gold, we had less money.

In 1971, President Richard Nixon changed everything by removing the U.S. dollar from the gold standard. Suddenly, the dollar was still the world’s currency, but now it was backed by nothing. The United States was free to print as much money as it wanted, and the world went along.

Because of this change, understanding foreign exchange became a bit more complex. Today, to understand the world of currency, you need to think a little differently — essentially because things don’t make sense.

For example, today, the United States is perceived to be the richest country in the world. In reality, though, we’re the biggest debtor nation in the world. And who are we indebted to? What many consider to be a Third World country: China.

For Richer and Poorer

The irony is that many Americans think we’re rich and China is poor. Exactly the opposite is true. This is because the removal of gold’s backing from paper money has created a virtual explosion in credit and liquidity. The sheer amount of liquidity around the globe is incalculable.

This excess funny money causes people to feel rich and almost everything to be more expensive. Today, stocks, real estate, automobiles, and gasoline become more expensive as the dollar becomes cheaper.

While some people do become richer in this system, funny money actually punishes working people who save money. It devalues the value of your work and your savings, even though you may feel wealthier.

In overly simplistic terms, China and many countries in the world today lend us billions of dollars to buy their goods. They send us products like computers, televisions, cars, candies, and wines, and we send them funny money in return.

Since they can’t spend those dollars at home, they simply lend them back to us so we’ll buy more of their products. That would be like me going to my local grocery store and asking them for a loan so I could buy their tomatoes. A logical person would say, “That makes no sense.” Yet it’s exactly what happened after 1971, and to many highly educated people — bankers and politicians, for instance — it somehow does make sense.

An Uneven Trade

You can find current smaller examples of such financial insanity. For example, many people refinance their homes to pay off their credit cards. This makes no sense; you and I know that someday that debt will have to be paid.

Yet getting deeper into debt does make sense as long as you can repay your lender with cheaper dollars, and as long as your lender is willing to take those cheaper, less-valuable dollars. To use my earlier analogy, it would be like buying an orange for $1 on credit and then paying him back for it a year later with 80 cents. As long as the grocer is happy with this arrangement, things are fine.

In real-world terms, one of the reasons the U.S. dollar only buys approximately 110 yen instead of 360 yen today is because the Japanese allowed us to continually devalue the dollar — that is, to pay our debts with cheaper dollars.

Over the years, the yen got stronger and the dollar got weaker simply because we, as a nation, printed more and more money, all the while consuming more and producing less. Japan would lend us money and we would buy their products. Japan’s economy boomed, and so did ours.

Game Over?

The problem today is that China isn’t willing to play the game the way the Japanese did. If we drop the purchasing power of the dollar, the Chinese, by pegging their currency to the dollar, also drop the value of their currency. The United States then pays back its debt with a cheaper dollar.

The irony is that we accuse China of playing games with their money. It’s more honest to say that China just isn’t willing to play the game we want to play.

But an even bigger problem is looming: It seems like the rest of the world is less willing to play our money game. That’s why the European Union introduced the Euro. If China creates an Asian equivalent of the Euro (which, admittedly, is a long shot) then the U.S. dollar could be in real trouble.

If the oil-producing nations stop accepting the dollar and switch to gold or the Euro, things will definitely get sticky. The world might be tipped into a global recession and possibly even a depression.

For now, though, this funny money game continues. How long will it last? I don’t know. I do know that throughout history, all paper money has eventually come back to its true value, which is zero. That’s when the game truly ends, and a whole new cycle of pass the buck begins.

Why the Dollar Hasn’t Already Collapsed

MSNBC has a good explanation on why the dollar is still holding up against the other currencies. Even though I’m bearish on the dollar for the next few years, its still a good read. I think the dollar will slide against a majority of foreign currencies including the yen and given that the Japanese real estate market has been flat for 15 years and only just picked up I think its a good time to get into the Japanese REIT market. But thats another post.

COMMENTARY
By John W. Schoen
Senior Producer
MSNBC

As the U.S. keeps adding billions to its trade deficit, and the government churns out billions more in Treasury debt, several readers are getting a little nervous about the value of the dollar. Just how come it’s not falling?

What I’d really like to know is why the dollar isn’t falling even faster: Given our status as the world’s greatest debtor nation, what is holding it up? And … why are people still pricing oil in dollars, rather than moving to a currency issued by a more solvent country, e.g. the yen, yuan or euro?
C. P. — Houston, Texas

There are certainly plenty of economists out there who will tell you that the dollar is headed for a fall. If the rest of the world stops buying our IOUs, the Treasury Department would have to keep raising interest rates until it could find buyers. That could, in theory, throw the U.S. economy into tailspin.

But for all its vulnerability, the U.S. dollar is still the most powerful currency in the world. And one big reason is that the U.S. economy is still the largest and most resilient in the world.

China, though it is growing more rapidly than either Europe or the U.S., logged $8.9 trillion in 2005 GDP. But China only recently began to gently unhook the yuan’s “peg” to the dollar — it remains to be seen what will happen when that currency tries to stand on its own two feet. And while the Chinese economy is growing rapidly, it’s not at all clear how long such rapid growth is sustainable. If they have a recession over there, it’s going to be a doozy.

Globalization no doubt puts added strains on the greenback. But we’ve seen this movie before. In the mid-1980s, the great Asian economy was Japan. As its economy surged, the value of the dollar against the yen was cut in half from March 1985 to March 1988.

The yen surge touched off a wave of hand-wringing on U.S. editorial pages amid fears that the days of the American economic supremacy were numbered and the dollar would be knocked off its perch as the global currency of choice. With all those swollen yen, Japanese buyers began snapping up U.S. real estate. When Mitsubishi bought Manhattan’s iconic Rockefeller Center in 1990, it seemed to some that the worst fears of the dollar’s twilight were being confirmed.

Five years later, with Japan’s economy in shambles, Mitsubishi couldn’t make its payments and basically turned over the keys to the holder of the mortgage. Today, Japan is finally digging itself out of a depression that’s gone on for more than a decade.

True, a U.S. trade deficit now running at an annual rate of $776 billion, on track for a fifth straight record year, is troubling. But you can also view that trade deficit as a huge vote of confidence by the rest of the world — which is still willing to take our Treasury bills in payment for its goods. No one places near that much faith in the economies of Japan, Europe or China.

It’s also why oil traders still want to be paid in dollars when they sell their barrels. The surge in oil prices is a big reason the dollar has take a beating — and the trade deficit has swollen. And anything that pumps up inflation hurts the dollar because it erodes the purchasing power of every one in your pocket. But the recent slump in oil prices should help the dollar perk up.

U.S. gross domestic product — which is basically the value of all goods and services produced here — came to about $12.4 trillion in 2005, according to the CIA Factbook. (To arrive at that GDP number, you add up all spending by consumers, investors and government agencies — then add the value of exports and subtract the value of imports.) That represents about a fifth of the total worldwide. So one out of every five dollars in global economic value is created in the United States.

Total GDP for Europe was roughly the same ($12.2 trillion). But though it relies on a common currency, the European economy is nowhere near as unified as the U.S. — thanks to the 25 separate economic policies pursued by its member countries. And, as anyone who has tried to sell a product across Europe has learned the hard way, marketing in 20 different languages at once can get expensive.

Syria to promote Petro Euros

I just read online that Syria just announced that it would start charging for its oil in euros instead of the tradition dollar. In researching this topic i found a very interesting article. Don’t know if its conspiracy theory or not, but its interesting reading nonetheless.

The Proposed Iranian Oil Bourse
here’s an excerpt.

The Proposed Iranian Oil Bourse
by Krassimir Petrov

I. Economics of Empires

A nation-state taxes its own citizens, while an empire taxes other nation-states. The history of empires, from Greek and Roman, to Ottoman and British, teaches that the economic foundation of every single empire is the taxation of other nations. The imperial ability to tax has always rested on a better and stronger economy, and as a consequence, a better and stronger military. One part of the subject taxes went to improve the living standards of the empire; the other part went to strengthen the military dominance necessary to enforce the collection of those taxes.

Historically, taxing the subject state has been in various forms—usually gold and silver, where those were considered money, but also slaves, soldiers, crops, cattle, or other agricultural and natural resources, whatever economic goods the empire demanded and the subject-state could deliver. Historically, imperial taxation has always been direct: the subject state handed over the economic goods directly to the empire.

For the first time in history, in the twentieth century, America was able to tax the world indirectly, through inflation. It did not enforce the direct payment of taxes like all of its predecessor empires did, but distributed instead its own fiat currency, the U.S. Dollar, to other nations in exchange for goods with the intended consequence of inflating and devaluing those dollars and paying back later each dollar with less economic goods—the difference capturing the U.S. imperial tax. Here is how this happened.

Early in the 20th century, the U.S. economy began to dominate the world economy. The U.S. dollar was tied to gold, so that the value of the dollar neither increased, nor decreased, but remained the same amount of gold. The Great Depression, with its preceding inflation from 1921 to 1929 and its subsequent ballooning government deficits, had substantially increased the amount of currency in circulation, and thus rendered the backing of U.S. dollars by gold impossible. This led Roosevelt to decouple the dollar from gold in 1932. Up to this point, the U.S. may have well dominated the world economy, but from an economic point of view, it was not an empire. The fixed value of the dollar did not allow the Americans to extract economic benefits from other countries by supplying them with dollars convertible to gold.