The
World Financial System’s Achilles’ Heel
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
No Durable
Recovery
The dollar
fell to $1.42 per euro yesterday. Many believe it is the Achilles
heel of the entire world financial system and Warren Buffett
is among them.
The story goes,
Achilles was dipped in the river Styx and made invulnerable. But
his mother held him by his heel, leaving that part untouched by
the magic waters. Naturally, that is where a poison arrow got him.
The moral of
this story is that you have to go all the way. If you want your
baby to be invulnerable, put him all the way under the water
even
the heels. Or, maybe theres another point: that theres
always some place where youre vulnerable.
For the purpose
of todays tale, well take the second possibility. Try
as you may, you can never escape all risks.
All over the
world, consumer prices are falling. The world has too much capacity
too
many factories
and too many workers. Too many, that is, for
current demand. The “worlds mouth the USA
has gone on a diet. And if the United States reduces its intake,
that means the rest of the world especially China
must reduce its output. Otherwise, the whole thing will become unbalanced.
Yesterdays
news tells us that despite press reports of a recovery, the key
indicators of real economic growth are still falling. Almost one
out of ten mortgages are now delinquent. And the rate of foreclosures
is increasing faster than any time in the last 30 years. Housing
prices, meanwhile, fell 16% in the 2nd quarter, from a year earlier,
according to the National Association of Realtors.
Unemployment
claims went up last week. The sharp eyes of The Financial Times
see the link: Mounting joblessness fuels US housing crisis,
says its headline.
In the real
economy, people are cutting back
with the inevitable results
we discuss every day here. One major consequence of reduced demand
is too much supply. The factories built in China to supply products
to America during the bubble years now find they have no market.
Currently,
overcapacity and oversupply are causing prices to fall. Falling
prices mean rising currency values. Each unit of “money buys
more stuff. But there are many competing currencies, and they dont
all rise and fall together. Even in a world of deflation, some currencies
will deflate more than others.
The dollar
is, of course, the worlds main money. In a sense, the whole
world economy is under its heel. But it is a heel that has never
been dipped in the river Styx. It is now a heel that waits for an
arrow.
PIMCO is the
biggest manager of bond funds in the world. It says the greenback
is going to lose its status and lose its value.
Investors
should consider whether it makes sense to take advantage of any
periods of US dollar strength to diversify their currency exposure,
says its Emerging Markets Watch report. The massive amounts
of US dollar liquidity produced in response to the crisis
doom the currency.
Both China
and Russia are calling for a new global currency to replace the
dollar.
While
we have not yet reached the point where a new global reserve currency
will arise, we are clearly seeing a loss of status for the US dollar
as a store of value even in the absence of a single viable alternative,
continues the PIMCO report.
Meanwhile,
our old friend Jim Rogers says he is moving all his assets out of
dollars and buying Chinese yuan. And Warren Buffett warned this
week writing in The New York Times that greenback
emissions threaten the whole world econo-system.
But what does
it mean? What are the threats to you? What are the opportunities?
If you pay your bills and keep score in dollars, what does it matter
if the dollar loses value against the yuan? If prices are generally
falling, the dollar is actually getting stronger, isnt it?
So what if some other currencies are getting even stronger still?
Colleague Bill
Jenkins, at Master FX Options Trader puts in his two cents:
We lived
through a financial earthquake in 2008. The effects of it are still
being felt. Aftershocks may still be ahead. But predicting when
theyll strike is just as hard as predicting natural earthquakes.
We had a number of prognosticators for years telling us about what
would happen last year; its just that they didnt know
when. And that is the hard part of the life of a prophet.
And while
it is equally difficult to tell when the next economic tremors will
hit, we can look at the numbers and make some predictions as to
their cataclysmic effect.
Bill goes on
to say that he thinks the US is headed for another shockwave
which
will include another round of dollar buying even while the
“experts” are touting “green shoots” and a return to normalization.
The trouble
with the Achilles heel is that it is connected to the Achilles
tendon
which is connected to the leg muscles
which is
what keeps the whole thing moving forward. Cut the tendons and the
feet go flippety, floppety and you get nowhere.
Yesterday came
word that the US deficit for 2009 might come in lower than expected.
Instead of borrowing $1.8 trillion as anticipated, the feds might
only borrow $1.58 trillion. Well, that still leaves them about $680
billion short even if every dollar of trade deficit and every
dollar of domestic savings is applied to it. But definitely a step
in the right direction! This gap must be closed by quantitative
easing, or, in other words, by printing press money. So, holders
of old dollars are bound to wonder how much their savings will be
weakened by the addition of so many new ones.
Theyre
likely to wonder, too, how much those US Treasury notes will be
worth after this monetary inflation catches up to them. At some
point, they are likely to think twice about buying more of them
and
possibly even want to sell the ones they have already. Either way,
it could create a nasty financial whirlpool that sucks down the
entire world economy. As private investors reject US dollar credits,
the Fed would be forced to print up more money to buy them itself.
As the Fed buys more, private investors become more fearful that
this monetary inflation will lead to consumer price inflation; they
may panic and dump all dollar-denominated assets.
But if investors
drop the dollar, what do they take up in its place? Oil
maybe.
Oil is selling for $72 a barrel, even while the world is in a major
downturn. What makes it so expensive, if not the fear that the currency
in which it is quoted is more slippery than the black goo itself?
And gold? Yesterday,
gold lost $3. But is still trading in the mid-$900s not far
from its all-time high. And this at a time when consumer price inflation
is going down! In the US non-oil export prices are falling at a
5% rate. If people are buying gold as a hedge against inflation,
they must know something we dont. Consumer prices are falling
actual
CPI rates are negative in many countries already. Take out the effect
of speculation on oil and commodities, and deflation is probably
a fact of life almost everywhere. Gold buyers are not hedging against
an increase in the price of bread, in other words; theyre
hedging against a poison arrow directed at the dollar itself.
August
24,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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