Dear CIGAs,
I respect Yra Harris as one of the best intellects in the financial
business. He is a man who has the knowledge both of markets as well as
the most complex fundamentals so that he would make the best choice of
the next Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
You know that I have been telling you that the euro will this year
outperform the US dollar in a significant way. Yra is his own man and
never reflects another’s opinion so I have zero influence on this.
Please review the quoted item.
Notes From Underground: Kuroda Sings Karaoke … “We Didn’t Start The Fire”
"As my readers as well aware, bond rates and yield curves are very
important indicators for understanding all aspects of foreign
currencies, commodities and all financial assets … now even more so. And
a word of caution to ECB President Mario Draghi: The German elections
cannot come soon enough. If Europe holds firm to its present policy, it
will be the recipient of major capital inflows and the euro may be
driven much higher on a relative basis, unless there is a major
political debacle."
Yes, the U.S. and Canadian unemployment data were well below
market expectations. Nonfarm payrolls in the U.S. were half of the
consensus number and under the 110,000 NFP that we wanted to see so as
to test the resolve of the recent equity market rally. Not only were the
jobs created numbers weak–manufacturing actually lost jobs–but the
important average hourly earnings were flat (0.2% increase expected) so
there is no growth in consumer spending potential. As poor as the data
release was, by day’s end the SPOO and DOW rallied well off the lows
made early in the day. The impact from poor economic fundamentals was
not strong enough to overcome the continued release of central bank
liquidity into the global economy.
The Canadian employment data was also a disappointment as more
than 50,000 full-time jobs were lost when the market had been expecting a
slight increase. The poor Canadian data was a total reversal of the
previous month’s surprising strong growth numbers and thus we caution
that one month a trend doth not make, especially as the later-morning
release of the Canadian PMI Ivey report was much stronger than
anticipated. With no convincing picture of stronger economic activity it
is important to analyze the full impact from the Japanese decision to
dynamically increase its monetary stimulus program.
***BACK To the front on the Japanese declaration of war on the
European Central Bank. The G-7 has maintained that domestic policy
objectives of quantitative easing are a net positive for the world, the
only problem is if a central bank ramps up it quantitative easing by
PURCHASING BONDS AND ASSETS OF OTHER COUNTRIES. THIS WOULD BE A POLICY
THAT WOULD CROSS THE LINES OF ACCEPTABLE. This is also the stance taken
by Chairman Bernanke in his speech that I have previously cited, given
in London on March 25, 2013. Bernanke said: “Again, the distinction
between monetary policies aimed at domestic objectives and
trade-diverting exchange rate devaluations or other protectionist
measures is critical.” It seems that the new Japanese policy obscures
those distinctions. How?
This is the critical point that must be understood for the impact
of the BOJ‘s recent decision. THE RAMPING UP OF THE BOJ BOND BUYING, ITS
EFFORTS TO RAPIDLY INCREASE MONEY SUPPLY, AND THE DESIRE TO CREATE 2%
INFLATION MEANS THAT JAPANESE INVESTORS AND LARGE INSTITUTIONS WOULD BE
CRAZY NOT TO UNLOAD THEIR MASSIVE HOLDINGS OF LONG-TERM BONDS TO THE
MOST READY BUYER … THE BOJ. By unloading bonds to the BOJ the Japanese
investor will be forced to either by the Nikkei or search for higher
yielding bonds in foreign destinations. Yes, the BOJ will not directly
be purchasing foreign assets in contravention of the G-7 agreement but
its policy of FINANCIAL REPRESSION of Japanese citizens will force
insurance companies and private citizens to undertake such purchases.
The action in the European debt markets on Thursday and Friday was
certainly evidence of the impact of BOJ policy. The yields on 10-year
notes all across Europe is indicative of the search for yield. French
bond rates have fallen 25 BASIS POINTS since the Japanese announcement,
as have the bonds of Belgium, Austria,Italy and Ireland. It will be
difficult to comfortably short the debt of any highly rated sovereign
now that the Japanese private investor is on the search for higher
yielding instruments to replace long-held JGBs. The average Japanese
investor could comfortably own domestic bonds at very low yields as long
as prices remained steady or were in a deflationary mode. The BOJ just
ended the security of that investment strategy. In a globalized world of
FREE CAPITAL FLOWS IT IS DIFFICULT TO HALT POLICY OUTCOMES AT THE
BORDER.
As my readers as well aware, bond rates and yield curves are very
important indicators for understanding all aspects of foreign
currencies, commodities and all financial assets … now even more so. And
a word of caution to ECB President Mario Draghi: The German elections
cannot come soon enough. If Europe holds firm to its present policy, it
will be the recipient of major capital inflows and the euro may be
driven much higher on a relative basis, unless there is a major
political debacle. As Kuroda was heard singing :
Click here to read the full article…
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