Jump to content



Photo

Pay attention to China - Paul van Eeden


  • Please log in to reply
5 replies to this topic

#1 Russ

Russ

    Member

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 7,200 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 11:41 AM

04/03/07 Pay attention to China As usual, the market is over-thinking and over-analyzing the US Federal Reserve Open Market Committee Statement released in March where the Fed conveyed its decision to keep the overnight interest rate steady at 5.25%. It appeared that the Fed’s hawkish tone towards inflation was easing and even though the Fed expects the economy to continue to expand at a moderate pace over coming quarters, one has to wonder how much of the change in the Fed’s tone is due to the current problems in the real estate sector. While the dollar exchange rate showed little reaction to the Fed’s statement, the equity markets in the US rallied, as did gold. That both gold and equities had the same response is to be expected: if the Fed is less likely than before to raise interest rates it may be more inclined to lower interest rates in the event economic activity takes a bigger hit from the real estate sector. Lower interest rates are good for stocks, lowering the borrowing costs of corporations and making bonds (which compete with stocks for capital) less attractive. Lower interest rates are also positive for the gold price since lower interest rates would most likely cause the dollar exchange rate to weaken, thereby increasing the gold price in US dollars. But by Friday the market had changed its mind. According to interviews by Wall Street Journal journalists the market now thinks that Wednesday’s Statement was not a move towards a dovish stance, but merely a move towards neutrality. In response to the change in sentiment the dollar rallied and the gold price fell. As I said, I think people over-analyze these things. Short term fluctuations in the market are due to fickle emotional reactions by investors to new information, and are impossible to predict with any kind of consistency. On the other hand, longer term events that are based on fundamental changes or inconsistencies are far easier to predict even though the timing of such events is equally impossible to predict. Along those lines, a comment by the People’s Bank of China’s Governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, regarding that country’s more than one trillion dollars’ worth of foreign reserves, is far more important than what the Fed said this week. Zhou was quoted as saying: “... many people say that foreign exchange reserves in China are large enough. We do not intend to go further and accumulate reserves.” China’s vast and rapidly growing foreign exchange reserves accumulate because China does not sell the surplus US dollars that it receives from its trade surplus with the United States into foreign exchange markets, but buys US debt with them instead. Under normal circumstances China would have sold its surplus US dollars and not accumulated such a vast foreign exchange reserve; however, the United States’ trade deficit is so large that if China, Japan and Europe were to sell their trade dollars into foreign exchange markets the dollar exchange rate would collapse. Last year the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) determined that the dollar had to fall by 35% to 50% in order to balance the US current account gap. My calculations of the dollar’s over-valuation based on the gold price also suggest that the dollar has to fall by about 35%. China does not have to sell any of its existing dollar reserves to precipitate a decline in the dollar -- all it has to do is stop accumulating dollars. The current US trade deficit with that country alone is running over $20 billion per month, and that is not an insignificant amount. If China stopped accumulating foreign reserves those dollars would be sold and I expect that when that happens, the dollar will fall. Other Asian countries that helped prop up the dollar by accumulating foreign reserves may follow China and start selling their surplus trade dollars as well. The ramifications are that there will subsequently be less demand for US Treasuries and agency debt. That will push US interest rates higher regardless of what the Fed says, and higher interest rates will be detrimental to US economic growth and US equities. One would expect that higher US interest rates would be positive for the dollar, but with surplus trade dollars hitting foreign exchange markets we can expect to see the dollar fall in tandem with rising interest rates. A falling US dollar in the face of rising US interest rates is the key event that I am waiting for to indicate that a significant and sustainable rise in the gold price is occurring. Until then the gold price should continue to creep upwards as a result of fiat money inflation. www.paulvaneeden.com Paul van Eeden
"Nulla tenaci invia est via" - Latin for "For the tenacious, no road is impossible".
"In order to master the markets, you must first master yourself" ... JP Morgan
"Most people lose money because they cannot admit they are wrong"... Martin Armstrong



http://marketvisions.blogspot.com/

#2 greenie

greenie

    Member

  • Traders-Talk ~
  • 3,184 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:12 PM

Yes, the Chinese already started mass selling, and it is very clear from pnfwave's inverted chart, as well as NAV's technical analysis based on 5-minute and 15-minute momentum charts. Even fundamentals look bleak, and sentiment does not work anyway. I see no reason to be bullish on treasury bonds any more. US President is going to declare bankruptcy anytime now. All hope is lost :angry: :cry: :cry:
It is not the doing that is difficult, but the knowing


It's the illiquidity, stupid !

#3 selecto

selecto

    Member

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 6,871 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:13 PM

And of course the administration now breaks out its favorite tool - the hammmer - and starts imposing duties, and threatening WTO action. That's going to cheer them up about the dollar.

Edited by selecto, 06 April 2007 - 12:15 PM.


#4 Russ

Russ

    Member

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 7,200 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:23 PM

Uncle Sam may have finally met his match in the Dragon...which has now awoken after a multi-century sleep.

And of course the administration now breaks out its favorite tool - the hammmer - and starts imposing duties, and threatening WTO action.
That's going to cheer them up about the dollar.


"Nulla tenaci invia est via" - Latin for "For the tenacious, no road is impossible".
"In order to master the markets, you must first master yourself" ... JP Morgan
"Most people lose money because they cannot admit they are wrong"... Martin Armstrong



http://marketvisions.blogspot.com/

#5 arbman

arbman

    Quant

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 19,504 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:23 PM

The real threat is still from the JPY though, not China, the composition of the foreign holdings reveals...

#6 Russ

Russ

    Member

  • Traders-Talk User
  • 7,200 posts

Posted 06 April 2007 - 12:58 PM

Just a few more trillion to conquer the middle east please. :D

US President is going to declare bankruptcy anytime now. All hope is lost :angry: :cry: :cry:


"Nulla tenaci invia est via" - Latin for "For the tenacious, no road is impossible".
"In order to master the markets, you must first master yourself" ... JP Morgan
"Most people lose money because they cannot admit they are wrong"... Martin Armstrong



http://marketvisions.blogspot.com/