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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Forex Weekly Outlook: October 4-8

A very busy week awaits forex traders, with rate decisions in the UK, Europe, Japan and Australia, and many employment figures. The American Non-Farm Payrolls closes the week in the monthly circus.

The theme in the past week continued to be a weaker dollar. Not all currencies enjoyed this equally – the Aussie and the Euro are the big winners, while the British Pound and the loonie are only enjoying small gains. This week, it’ll be around the NFP. Let’s start:

US Pending Home Sales: Monday, 14:00. The amount of homes that are still waiting the final closure of a deal recovered last month with a 5.2% after terrible months beforehand. This housing sector figure will probably continue recovering, with a more modest rise this time – 2.6%.Japanese rate decision: Tuesday morning. After the big intervention in the yen, Japanese policymakers meet again to discuss the state of the export-oriented economy, that is still suffering from the strong currency. No change in the rates is expected. The focus will be on any comments about further interventions – comments directed to forex.Australian rate decision: Tuesday, 3:30. After 4 pauses in rate hikes, there are some expectations that the RBA will resume rate hikes once again, especially as employment is strong. On the other hand, there’s still a lot of uncertainty about the situation in the US and the value of the China’s yuan – Australia’s main trade partner. Any result will rock the Aussie. It’s also important to watch the accompanying statement for hints about future policy.US ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI: Tuesday, 14:00. Last month, the purchasing managers’ index for the services sector was released after the Non-Farm Payrolls. This time, we’ll get an early indication. Last month’s figure disappointed with a drop from 54.3 to 51.5 points, still above the critical 50 point mark, still indicating economic expansion. We’ll probably see a a slightly better number now – 52.2 points. A drop under 50 will be bad for the dollar.US ADP Non-Farm Employment Change: Wednesday, 12:15. This report totally missed on the result of the Non-Farm Payrolls – it showed a drop in private sector jobs while the actual number in the NFP was positive for this sector. Nevertheless, the publication always triggers lots of action in currency markets. After a drop of 10K last month, a nice rise is expected now – 22K.Australian Employment data: Thursday, 00:30. After one month of mixed results, Australia returned to post excellent job figures – a gain of over 30K jobs, and a drop in the unemployment rate to 5.1%. This time, a smaller gain is expected in the employment change figure, 20K, and the unemployment rate will probably remain unchanged.British rate decision: Thursday, 11:00. British inflation refuses to slide back into the 1-3% target, and there’s still one member of the MPC, Andrew Sentance, that pledges a rate hike. The other members aren’t convinced, and even talk about more pound printing, so the rate will probably remain unchanged at 0.50%. The focus will be on the accompanying statement – will it be optimistic or pessimistic regarding the recovery?European rate decision: Thursday, 11:45. The president of the ECB sees inflation gradually rising in the Euro-zone, but unemployment is still high. The gap between the different European countries is widening. The result will probably be another month of an unchanged rate at 1%. Any comment about the state of the economies and especially about the debt issues, now in Ireland, will move the markets.US Unemployment Claims: Thursday, 12:30. The last job-related indicator before the Non-Farm Payrolls is unlikely to supply a real clue – this weekly indicator moves in quite a narrow range for quite some time. A rise above 500K will be dollar negative, while a dive under 430K will be positive. An unchanged number of 453K is predicted now.Canadian employment data: Friday, 11:00. Canada enjoyed an nice gain in jobs last month, 35K, but the unemployment rate ticked up once again to 8.1%, showing that the recovery is still slow. A much smaller gain in jobs will probably be seen now, 11K, and the unemployment rate is likely to tick back down to 8%.US Non-Farm Payrolls: Friday, 12:30. The king of forex was finally better than expected last month – a loss of only 54,000 exceeded expectations and showed that the situation isn’t as devastating as earlier thought. This release is the final release that consists of an impact from the decennial census. The number of people employed by the census dropped from 83K to around 9K. So, this is the last time that the private sector payrolls will be of high importance. The unemployment rate will probably remain around the same levels and will continue to have a smaller impact. Headline NFP is expected to remain almost unchanged with a minor gain of 3K, while the unemployment rate is likely to rise to 9.7%.

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About the author: Yohay Elam

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Saturday, October 23, 2010

3 Reasons the Dollar Is About to Rally: A Contrarian Case for the Greenback

Everyone hates the US Dollar - again.

The Fed is openly signaling to the markets that it is not going to stand by the buck. The current headline article at Bloomberg.com pertains to New York Fed president William Dudley's statements that inflation is too low, and unemployment is too high, for the Fed to stand by and watch as a passive observer. Get ready for more unconventional easing measures.

Which means the poor dollar is going to get thrown out the window as the Fed revs up the printing presses at full speed. There's no hope for the greenback!

Or is there? I feel like somebody's gotta stand up for the greenback. I also think there are some key points that the mainstream financial media is ignoring in presenting this one-way trade.

So, here's a three-fold contrarian case for the dollar.

1. Contrary to Popular Belief, the Dollar's Trend is UP

But don't just take it from me - look at the chart (click to enlarge):



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Friday, October 22, 2010

Twists and Turns of Chinese Currency Management

The following news item from Reuters on Saturday (October 2nd) shows some remarkable cunning in an era when accusations are being hurled around about currency manipulation, and especially the Chinese version of it. This version, which is multi-faceted, and includes-- to the annoyance of the Japanese central bank-- the enthusiasm that the PBOC has for buying the yen whenever the BOJ tries to make it cheaper. The current visit by the Chinese Premier to Greece is now providing an opportunity for further magnanimity which could result in a stronger euro, which may not be exactly what Monsieur Trichet has in mind.

(Reuters) - China offered on Saturday to buy Greek government bonds when the country returns to markets, in a show of support for the country whose debt burden pushed the euro zone into crisis and required an international bailout.

Premier Wen Jiabao made the offer at the start of a two-day visit to Greece, his first stop on a tour of Europe, and also said he wanted to boost shipping and trade ties with Athens, underscoring Beijing's use of economic strength to win friends.

"With its foreign exchange reserve, China has already bought and is holding Greek bonds and will keep a positive stance in participating and buying bonds that Greece will issue," Wen said, speaking through an interpreter.

"China will undertake a great effort to support euro zone countries and Greece to overcome the crisis."

The last quote is particularly revealing as it achieves at least three objectives for the world's second largest economy:

1. It is a recognition by the Chinese authorities that in a fragile and totally inter-connected financial system, a serious crisis for the basket case EZ economies would be especially harmful to China, which has vast holdings of euros and the government bonds of the Eurozone constituent states.

2. The support of China for the sovereign credits of Greece, and quite likely the other PIIGS economies, will help to further bolster the euro against the yuan. This can only be good for Chinese exporters.

3. Furthermore it could have the effect of diverting attention away from the current antagonism between Washington and Beijing over the artificially low rate of exchange between the US currency and the yuan. Ironically by supporting the Eurozone financial system, and indirectly the euro, it will become harder for the ECB and the Federal Reserve to condemn the Chinese actions, which can only be considered as making a positive contribution from the perspective of helping to avert systemic anxieties.

In the post-2008 meltdown era, the trend towards a more altruistic form of "capitalism", some would even say outright socialization of the global financial system, China appears to be taking a leadership role in recognizing its dependency on the continued solvency of its less dynamic trading partners by rewarding them with pledges of further financial support. In so doing, the Chinese authorities will continue to find even more reasons to continue their policy of "currency management". Perversely, policy makers in the US and Eurozone may not appreciate such altruism.

Disclosure: No positions

About the author: Clive Corcoran

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Thursday, October 21, 2010

Commodity Bulls Should Be Grateful to the Fed

Commentators claim that commodity prices have recently risen because of the expectation that the Fed seems about open the money taps much further. Until unemployment diminishes and credit supply recovers, the real economy will not be able to absorb a lot of additionally created liquidity. Therefore, this extra money will largely flow to the financial markets.

In the past years, investors have increasingly regarded commodities as a normal part of a properly diversified portfolio. So if more money becomes available to the financial markets this will not just put upward pressure on stocks but also on commodity prices. The RJ/CRB index breaching resistance at 284 confirms this. Many analysts anticipate an additional upswing. They base this on a looser monetary policy by the worlds’ biggest central banks (with the ECB the notably exeption) and consistently high economic growth on the emerging markets in Asia and South America.

However, from a non-USD investor perspective I could equally explain the rise since June in the RJ/CRB index based on dollar weakness (see also the chart). One could argue that the expectation of further quantitative easing by the Fed has depressed the dollar, which “automatically” drives up commodity prices (always quoted in USD).



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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Why a Trade War With China Is Bad News and Thoughts on U.S. Financials and Oil

We're in the home stretch of 2010. The favorite, Weak Recovery, is ahead by a nose. QE2 and Falling Dollar are right behind. Toxic Asset and Solid Earnings have been unable to mount a charge.

But two horses -- Man 'o Trade War and Europe's Problem -- are moving on the outside and could decide the race.

There are so many conflicting catalysts, sometimes it seems as though you have to pick your horse, place your bet and see what happens.

I'm sure plenty of Congress-persons are pretty proud of themselves for moving a bill that would label China currency manipulators through the House.

But let's not kid ourselves: this particular strategy for standing up to China is both reckless and hypocritical.

It's reckless because it demands action from China on the yuan.

It's hypocritical because we don't act when the ECB intervened in the currency market to weaken the euro. And we don't cry when Bernanke buys Treasuries to lower interest rates and the U.S. dollar.

(OK, so maybe some investors aren't happy with the Fed, but stocks have certainly responded to the Fed.)

I'm no apologist for China. There are serious trade issues with China - Like intellectual property and patent piracy. Then there's the playing field in China that overtly favors state-run enterprises. And the recent move by China to restrict exports of rare earth elements is a WTO violation.

These are the angles from which we should be attacking the China fair trade issue. Congress is pandering to its constituents when it plays the currency manipulator card.

Does anyone really believe a stronger yuan is the cure-all for the U.S. manufacturing sector? And does anyone think a trade war with China is anything other than the single fastest way to return to recession and push the unemployment rate to 15%?

The real fix is for Americans to take care of business at home. And it would probably be wise to make it more difficult for companies to move operations to China.

Ultimately, a trade war would hurt China worse than the U.S. anyway. China does not have the mature consumer market that the U.S. does. If its export economy dried up, it would be absolutely devastating for China.

Alright, I've spoken my mind on China for today. Let's get back to the stock market...

I said Thursday that we should be expecting a pretty sharp move lower for stocks on either the last day of the third quarter (Thursday) or the first day of Q4 (Friday).

I'm sure we could consider the 200-point swing from highs to lows on Thursday a pretty sharp drop. (Though I will say I was pretty impressed with the rebound.)

And the reason for the declines has nothing to do with the economic data that came out. It had everything to do with the institutional investors.

Mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds and the rest of the institutional crowd have not been making a lot of money this year. Massive investor redemptions aside, volatility has made profits difficult. So after a nice rally to end the quarter, it should be no surprise that funds wanted to lock in some gains. They pretty much had to.

And I don't think they're done. I expect we'll see a strong rally in the next day or two. The Fed is giving the green light to buy stocks and most institutions will not fight the Fed.

Interesting note from the financials: they led the rally in early September, then lagged the rest of the month. But Thursday, the financials showed relative strength.

It would be fitting for financial stocks to resume a leadership position, especially if this rally is to continue.

Keep an eye on Citigroup (NYSE:C). The Treasury just finished selling around 1.5 billion shares. It will take a break until Citigroup reports earnings on October 18. That could give the stock some upside.

I suggested a position in Citi ahead of last quarter's earnings. The stock ran from $3.80 to as high as $4.50 on July 13, three days before it reported. A similar 18% run would push it to $4.60 over the next two weeks.

Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) also made a nice run ahead of earnings.

Speaking of earnings, just a reminder that 3Q reports start a week from today with Alcoa (NYSE: AA). My Wyatt Investment Research colleague Jason Cimpl, thinks yesterday's surprisingly strong Chicago PMI regional manufacturing survey bodes well for a good earnings report from Alcoa.

Finally, I'd be remiss if I didn't note the huge jump for oil prices Thursday. Oil closed just below $80 a barrel, but spent most of the day above that level. Oil is now at a 7-week high.

Oil is an excellent gauge of economic growth expectations. Despite a seemingly conflicting message from stocks, oil's message is pretty clear cut.

About the author: Ian Wyatt

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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Oil Riding High on Optimism

by Conley Turner

By the close of the week the breakout of crude oil from the upper band of its trading range was in full effect. The move occurred in the wake of a slew of favorable economic data and an overall positive shift in market sentiment.

The American Petroleum Institute (API) released data on Tuesday indicating a drawdown in crude oil supplies in the previous week. On the heels of that was a similar report from the more closely watched Energy Information Administration (EIA) which also showed a decline in crude stocks. The EIA stated that crude-oil inventories declined by half a million barrels for the week ended September 24th. Likewise, gasoline supplies registered a 3.5 million barrel decrease as did diesel and other distillates. These reports together point to an eventual uptick in energy demand as economic activity appears to be increasing.

The U.S.Commerce Department also released some favorable data during the week. Gross domestic product, which is the broadest measure of the country's economic activity, was shown to have grown at a pace of 1.7 percent in the period according to the government agency. While this is by no means robust, it was still superior to the market expectation of a 1.6 percent rate of growth. The Department also released by at the end of the week showing that U.S. personal income increased by 0.5 percent and personal spending by 0.4 percent in the month of August.

Continuing along this positive thread for oil prices was a separate report showing that as one of the world's most prolific consumer of crude, manufacturing in China saw an upswing in the September. That country's government affiliated China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing indicated that it's Purchasing managers' index rose to 53.8 in September from 51.7 in August. A number above 50 conveys a pickup in manufacturing activity and by extension, the potential for an increase in oil consumption.

Also, while always lurking in the background, a geopolitical flare up occurred on Friday which had an impact on the price of oil. A series of explosions in Nigeria's Capital evoked some nervousness among oil traders and investors about the resurgence of violence against that country's oil infrastructure. Militants in the delta region of Nigeria had dramatically scaled back the frequency of their attacks in recent months after the implementation of a government sponsored initiative aimed at addressing their grievances. However, dissatisfaction has begun to set in and fears are emerging about a new round of violence. This is an important development as Nigeria is a member of OPEC and among the top three oil suppliers to the U.S., ahead of Saudi Arabia.

Along with these factors is the fact the dollar index continued its slide against a basket of other international currencies including the euro. By week's end, the index had swooned to its lowest level in approximately eight months. The price of crude oil is inversely related to value of the dollar and as such, a cheaper dollar makes the commodity more attractive to holders of other currencies. To this end, the euro ended the quarter with the best quarterly gain in eight years.

The specter of quantitative easing is also having an impact on crude oil prices. In the most recent FOMC meeting on September 21, the governing body conveyed that the option of expanding monetary policy in the U.S. would be exercised should the economy start to falter. Such this actually occur, the action will result in the number dollars in circulation increasing significantly thereby causing a rally in dollar-denominated commodities such as oil. Crude oil has risen by about $9 higher since that FOMC statement.

It is clear that market participants are focusing on the positives about the economy and by and large discounting the negatives. The news flow in recent days has been rather optimistic and investors have been demonstrating their enthusiasm by putting money to work. As a direct result of this, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index recorded its best September performance since 1939 and that momentum remains in place.

Similarly, the price of oil has risen by approximately 10 percent during the month with about half of that gain occurring in the past week alone. Now that crude has broken out of its trading range, the clearing of this hurdle coupled with the momentum could see the commodity easily surpass the $82.97 per barrel level attained at the start of August.

About the author: Wall Street Strategies

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Monday, October 18, 2010

Things Will Unravel Faster Than You Think

By my analysis, we are not yet on the final path to recovery, and there are one or more financial 'breaks' coming in the future. Underlying structural weaknesses have not been resolved, and the kick-the-can-down-the-road plan is going to encounter a hard wall in the not-too-distant future. When the next moment of discontinuity finally arrives, events will unfold much more rapidly than most people expect.

My work centers on figuring out which macro trends are in play and then helping people to adjust accordingly. Based on trends in fiscal and monetary policy, I began advising accumulation of gold and silver in 2003 and 2004. I shorted homebuilder stocks beginning in 2006 and ending in 2008. These were not ‘great' calls; they were simply spotting trends in play, one beginning and one certain to end, and then taking appropriate actions based on those trends.

We happen to live in a non-linear world; a core concept of the Crash Course. But far too many people expect events to unfold in a more or less orderly manner, with plenty of time to adjust along the way. In other words, linearly. The world does not always cooperate, and my concern rests on the observation that we still face the convergence of multiple trends, each of which alone has the power to permanently transform our economic landscape and standards of living.

Three such trends (out of the many I track) that will shape our immediate future are:

Peak OilSovereign insolvencyCurrency debasement

Individually, these worry me quite a bit; collectively, they have my full attention.

History suggests that instead of a nice smooth line heading either up or down, markets have a pronounced habit of jolting rather suddenly into a new orbit, either higher or lower. Social moods are steady for long periods, and then they shift. This is what we should train ourselves to expect.

No smooth lines between points A and B; instead, long periods of quiet, followed by short bursts of reformation and volatility. Periods of market equilibrium, followed by Minsky moments. In the language of the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, we live in a system governed by the rules of "punctuated equilibrium."

Complex Systems

Our economy is a complex system. The key feature of such systems is that they are inherently unpredictable with respect to the timing and severity of specific events. For the uninitiated, they can look enormously fragile and prone to flying apart at any minute; for the seasoned observer, there is an appreciation that the immense inertia of the economic system will almost always delay and dampen the eventual adjustments.

Like everybody else, I have no idea exactly what’s going to happen, or precisely when. Anybody who says they do know should be greeted with a furrowed brow and a frown of suspicion. As my long-time readers know, I prefer to assess the risks and then take steps to mitigate those risks based on likelihood and impact.

Which means that although we cannot predict the size (exactly how much) or the timing (precisely when) of economic shifts or world-changing events, we can certainly understand the risks and the dimensions of whatmight happen. Just as we cannot predict when an avalanche will release from steep slope, or even where or how big it will be, we can readily predict that constant snowfall coupled with the right temperature conditions will lead to an avalanche sooner or later, and more likely in this gully than that one. Given certain conditions, we might expect one that is larger or smaller than normal. Although we don't know exactly when or how much, we do know that when snow accumulates, so do the risks of more frequent and/or larger avalanches.

Such is the nature of complex systems. While inherently unpredictable, they can still be described. The most important description of any complex system is that it owes its order and complexity to the constant flow of energy through it. Complex systems require inputs. This is one way in which we can understand them.

Given this view, one easy "prediction" is that an economy without increasing energy flows running through it will stagnate. To take this further, an economy that is being starved of energy becomes simpler in the process -- meaning fewer jobs, less items produced, and a reduced capacity to support extraneous functions.

Accepting "What Is"

The most important part of this story is getting our minds to accept reality without our passionate beliefs interfering. By ‘beliefs’ I mean statements like these:

“Things always get better and are never as bad as they seem.”“If Peak Oil were ‘real,’ I would be hearing about it from my trusted sources.”“Dwelling on the negative is self-fulfilling.”

While each of these things might be true, they also might be false and therefore misleading, especially during periods of transition. Our job is to remain as dispassionate and logical as possible.

Let's now examine more closely the three main events that are converging -- Peak Oil, sovereign insolvency, and currency debasement -- using as much logic as we can muster.

Peak Oil

Peak Oil is now a matter of open inquiry and debate at the highest levels of industry and government. Recent reports by Lloyd's of London, the US Department of Defense, the UK industry taskforce on Peak Oil, Honda (HMC), and the German military are evidence of this. But when I say “debate,” I am not referring to disagreement over whether or not Peak Oil is real, only when it will finally arrive. The emerging consensus is that oil demand will outstrip supplies “soon,” within the next five years and maybe as soon as two. So the correct questions are no longer, "Is Peak Oil real?" and "Are governments aware?” but instead, "When will demand outstrip supply?" and “What implications does this have for me?”

It doesn't really matter when the actual peak arrives; we can leave that to the ivory-tower types and those with a bent for analytical precision. What matters is when we hit “peak exports.” My expectation is that once it becomes fashionable among nation-states to finally admit that Peak Oil is real and here to stay, one or more exporters will withhold some or all of their product "for future generations" or some other rationale (such as, "get a higher price"), which will rather suddenly create a price spiral the likes of which we have not yet seen.

What matters is an equal mixture of actual oil availability and market perception. As soon as the scarcity meme gets going, things will change very rapidly.

In short, it is time to accept that Peak Oil is real - and plan accordingly.

Sovereign Insolvency

Once we accept the imminent arrival of Peak Oil, then the issue of sovereign insolvency jumps into the limelight. Why? Because the hopes and dreams of the architects of the financial rescue entirely rest upon the assumption that economic growth will resume. Without additional supplies of oil, such growth will not be possible; in fact, we’ll be doing really, really well if we can prevent the economy from backsliding.

Virtually every single OECD country, due to outlandish pension and entitlement programs, has total debt and liability loads that Arnaud Mares (of Morgan Stanley) pointed out have resulted in a negative net worth for the governments of Germany, France, Portugal, the US, the UK, Spain, Ireland, and Greece. And not by just a little bit, but exceptionally so, ranging from more than 450% of GDP in the case of Germany on the 'low' end to well over 1,500% of GDP for Greece.

Such shortfalls cannot possibly be funded out of anything other than a very, very bright economic future. Something on the order of Industrial Age 2.0, fueled by some amazing new source of wealth. Logically, how likely is that? Even if we could magically remove the overhang of debt, what new technologies are on the horizon that could offer the prospect of a brand new economic revival of this magnitude? None that I am aware of.

In the US, the largest capital market and borrower, even the most optimistic budget estimates foresee another decade of crushing deficits that will grow the official deficit by some $9 trillion and the real (i.e., “accrual” or “unofficial”) deficit by perhaps another $20 to $30 trillion, once we account for growth in liabilities. This is, without question, an unsustainable trend.

It’s time to admit the obvious: Debts of these sorts cannot be serviced, now or in the future. Expanding them further with fingers firmly crossed in hopes of an enormous economic boom that will bail out the system is a fool’s game. It is little different than doubling down after receiving a bad hand in poker.

The unpleasant implication of various governments going deeper into debt is that a string of sovereign defaults lies in the future. Due to their interconnected borrowings and lendings, one may topple the next like dominoes.

However, it is when we consider the impact of the widespread realization of Peak Oil on the story of growth that the whole idea of sovereign insolvency really assumes a much higher level of probability. More on that later.

For now we should accept that there's almost no chance of growing out from under these mountains of debts and other obligations. We must move our attention to the shape, timing, and the severity of the aftermath of the economic wreckage that will result from a series of sovereign defaults.

Currency Wars

We could trot out a lot of charts here, examine much of history, and make a very solid case that once a country breaches the 300% debt/liability to GDP ratio, there's no recovery, only a future containing some form of default (printing or outright).

In a recent post to my enrolled members, I wrote:

The currency wars have begun, and the implications to world stability and wealth could not be more profound. Fortunately, all of my long-time enrolled members are prepared for this outcome, which we've been predicting here for some time.

When pressed, the most predictable decision in all of history is to print, print, print. So I can't take credit for a 'prediction' that was just slightly bolder than 'predicting' which way a dropped anvil will travel; down or up?

The only problem is, widespread currency debasements will further destabilize an already rickety global financial system where tens of trillions of fiat dollars flow daily on the currency exchanges.

You can be nearly certain that every single country is seeking a path to a weaker relative currency. The problem is obvious: Everybody cannot simultaneously have a weaker currency. Nor can everybody have a positive trade balance.

If a country or government cannot grow its way out from under its obligations, then printing (a.k.a. currency debasement) takes on additional allure. It is the "easy way out" and has lots of political support in the home country. Besides the fact that it has already started, we should consider a global program of currency debasement to be a guaranteed feature of our economic future.

Conclusion (to Part I)

Three unsustainable trends or events have been identified here. They are not independent, but they are interlocked to a very high degree. At present I can find no support for the idea that the economy can expand like it has in the past without increasing energy flows, especially oil. All of the indications point to Peak Oil, or at least "peak exports," happening within five years.

At that point, it will become widely recognized that most sovereign debts and liabilities will not be able to be serviced by the miracle of economic growth. Pressures to ease the pain of the resulting financial turmoil and economic stagnation will grow, and currency debasement will prove to be the preferred policy tool of choice.

Instead of unfolding in a nice, linear, straightforward manner, these colliding events will happen quite rapidly and chaotically.

By mentally accepting that this proposition is not only possible, but probable, we are free to make different choices and take actions that can preserve and protect our wealth and mitigate our risks.

What changes in our actions and investment stances are prudent if we assume that Peak Oil, sovereign insolvency, and currency debasement are 'locks' for the future?

I explore these questions in greater depth in Part II of this report (enrollment required).

Disclosure: Long gold & silver

About the author: Chris Martenson

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Don't Fear China's Political Rise

China is marching around the world at breakneck speed buying everything they can. That is not an exaggeration. They obviously believe in themselves and their own growth. I think the best way to put it is this, they are putting their money where their mouths are. If they didn’t believe in their own growth, they wouldn’t be making these monumental investments in raw materials and land.

Many people fear a China stretching its arms out all over the world, not because they are gobbling up natural resource assets, but because they are afraid of what China may do politically abroad. First off, and I have written about this extensively on this blog, any nation which attains a higher level of economic activity naturally grasps for more clout politically on the international stage. With that as well comes a larger military, most often in the form of the navy, or the ability to project power around the world.

China has just begun to build its navy, and they are doing it quickly. I wrote a post on this a few months back. But the bigger question on everyone’s mind is, what will China do politically in the countries where it now holds major investments and economic sway? Will they be benign? Will they build an empire as the British did? Will they prop up dictators as the US did? Will they attempt to spread some kind of fundamental values system?

This is a tremendously difficult question to answer, and a very very very important one. The United States is broke and will slowly withdraw from being the underwriter of global security over the next 20 years. There is great fear that there will be no one there to step up and fill that vacuum. Globalization and Chinese growth do not work without global security.

Here’s my view. China has thus far been extremely, and I mean to an uncanny degree, hands off in the politics of foreign nations which it has large investments in. I believe they will continue to act in that fashion in the near term. My fear is this. What happens when global security breaks down, will they step up to the plate and get involved? I believe they will. It’s not a matter of if, but when. And what type of military power will they be? Will they install hard line dictators who are able to calm everything down with an iron fist? Or will they attempt to do nation building? The cynic inside me believes that all modern superpowers will perish in Afghanistan, China may be next in about 70-80 years. I don’t think China is interested in nation building, I don’t believe they care to export their values, I think they have enough to worry about being as large as they are. They will be extremely pragmatic, installing hard line rulers who will, for the lack of a better phrase, calm shit down at all costs.

So should you fear China’s march around the world for assets in a political sense, no. I don’t think they are interested in anything else but their own growth and anything which would distract them from that takes a back seat. Look for them to be pragmatic, ruthless, and scared of their own people.

About the author: Leigh Drogen

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Saturday, October 16, 2010

China-Biotics: Refuting Citron Research's Claims

On Tuesday, Citron research published another article on China-Biotics (CHBT). Most of it was a rerun of old points that have already been refuted. There was a new allegation, however, claiming that CHBT does not have the cash it shows on its SEC filings. Citron alleged the company does not have the cash because otherwise it would have reported higher interest income on its June 30, 2010 quarterly financials than the $87,876 it reported.

I feel sorry for those who sold on the news, because there was nothing there.

I called the company to find out what kind of interest they were getting on their bank balances. The answer is they receive basically nothing on their dollar deposits, which the reader will know is normal in this interest rate environment. Keep in mind that the $75 million the company raised last year in its secondary offering is still kept offshore and held in USD. The company receives the PRC set rate of 0.36% on its RMB deposits.

Here is a link to the rates HSBC pays on offshore premium banking dollar deposits.

Here, here and here are links to the rates several banks operating in the PRC pay on RMB deposits. The rates on RMB deposits are set by the government, which is why all are quoting the same rates. Savings deposits receive 0.36%, 3 month time deposits receive 1.71%, 6 month time deposits receive 1.98%, and 12 month time deposits receive 2.25%.

Before you grab your calculator, here is the interest calculation. The interest reported adds up.

click to enlarge



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Friday, October 15, 2010

Market Uncertainty Is Holding Us Back

While conflicting market signals continue to cloud the macro picture, we do feel that the recent data goes some way towards undermining the case for a “double dip”.

Conflicting economic indicators, along with market signals that could easily be characterized as schizophrenic, make it tough to take a firm stand on whether the glass right now is really half full or half empty. While Derastone has a long-term positive outlook, we are using this time period only to add risk at the bottom of current ranges, pending a clear indication that trading ranges have been broken. It may be that the price levels of the major asset classes (credit markets, commodities) which appear to be influencing equities, will lead the change in perceived fundamentals.

The positive side continues to be the same, with Emerging Markets

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Thursday, October 14, 2010

Chinese 'Manipulate' Their Currency to Our Advantage

Politicians just can't leave well enough alone. Once again we hear the drumbeat of concern over the alleged fact that China has "manipulated" its currency—by keeping it too weak—and how that harms the U.S. economy. Yet nothing could be further from the truth.

To begin with, the Chinese yuan has appreciated by 23% since China's central bank first decided to peg the yuan to the dollar at the beginning of 1994—almost seventeen years ago. The Chinese economy has had plenty of time to adjust to its current currency regime, and if that weren't enough, the currency has appreciated significantly in the interim. Moreover, the Chinese have recently committed to allowing the yuan to appreciate even further, as suggested in the above chart.

Leaving aside the issue of whether they have kept the yuan artificially weak or not, China's monetary policy (which is driven by pegging its exchange rate) has been successful at delivering relatively low and stable inflation: since 1996, in fact, Chinese inflation has been substantially similar to that of the U.S (actually, it has been a bit lower—2% vs. 2.5% per year). This fact alone is almost proof that they haven't been keeping the currency artificially weak. (I'm leaving out 1994-95 since inflation in those years was temporarily boosted due to the 50% devaluation of the yuan that preceded its being pegged to the dollar.) In other words, our price level has risen about the same as the Chinese price level for the past 15 years. If the yuan had been chronically undervalued during that time, then Chinese inflation would most likely have been higher.



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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Investing in the New Silk Road

By Tony D’Altorio

History buffs will recall the Silk Road as the lucrative trade routes that crisscrossed Asia in the past. It connected merchants in China to India, the Middle East, eastern Africa and the Roman Empire. These days, there is a new Silk Road emerging in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. And according to the World Trade Organization, it generated some $2.8 trillion in trade in 2008.

The WTO also estimates that trade between emerging markets rose an annual average of 18% from 2000 to 2008. The same can’t be said for trade between such countries and their advanced counterparts.

In other words, this new silk road bypasses the United States and other developed economies.

Investing in China: The Center of the Trading Universe

Investors can most fully get a piece of the action by skirting developed countries altogether and focusing on investing in China, which is once again, the center of the trading universe.

Last year, China overtook the U.S. to become Brazil’s largest trading partner. And the Asian giant will likely emerge as Brazil’s biggest direct investor this year as well. Investment came in at only $92 million in 2009 but should exceed $10 billion this year, thanks to a string of mining, steel, construction equipment and electricity transmission deals.

That kind of interaction helped Brazil to record China-style growth rates of nearly 9% for the first half of 2010. Those two growing economic ties have become symbolic of the ongoing global economic shift over the past decade.

Slowly but surely, China is becoming the anchor for a new cycle of self-sustaining economic development between Asia and the rest of the developing world. Even while it sucks in raw materials from outside emerging economies, China is also investing in infrastructure and industry in such places.

Together with its low-priced and increasingly sophisticated manufacturing companies, its low-cost financing terms have helped make such deals possible. China has focused successfully in Africa for years and now is rolling out this type of investment elsewhere as part of a long-term strategy.

Uncertain about the long-term economic prospects of the developed world, China wants to reduce its dependency there. And fellow emerging markets offer a sound solution so far.

Many other developing economies have the same concerns, so they don’t mind accepting what China offers.

The New Silk Road

Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist at RBS and author of the book The New Silk Road, says: “It is the start of a new cycle. China has companies that are willing to invest, they have products that are good enough, and they are backed by abundant liquidity in the country’s financial system.”

China has birthed companies that make internationally desirable capital goods. They offer developing countries new trains, power stations, machinery and telecommunications equipment at prices well below those of their multinational competitors.

And right behind them are Chinese banks to finance any such expenditures.

Take Brazilian mining giant Vale ADR (NYSE: VALE), which recently announced a $1.23 billion loan with two such banks to finance 12 huge cargo ships from a Chinese shipyard. The purpose: to transport iron ore between the two countries.

China knows exactly what it’s doing with such deals too. Its financial system has begun recycling its vast holdings of U.S. dollars into its trading partners in order to stimulate demand for Chinese goods.

The results show in China’s trade statistics, with the biggest increases coming from other emerging economies. Trade with ASEAN nations rose by nearly 55% in the first half of 2010 and by more than 60% with Brazil alone.

On the downside, all of this will likely increase competition between developed world multinationals and state-backed Chinese companies. And that could easily fuel accusations that Chinese businesses aren’t playing on a level field.

In fact, General Electric (NYSE: GE) has already started. After all, it used to dominate such sectors as power equipment and railways, areas that Chinese companies are taking over.

Silk Road Investments

The emerging markets now have strong trade connections. And that means the developing world has some protection against any more turmoil from the developed world.

The new Silk Road may not necessarily be one to easy riches but it’s important nonetheless. Fortunately, it isn’t that difficult to get involved.

Investors can buy broad-based ETFs such as:

SPDR S&P China (NYSE: GXC)iShares MSCI Brazil Index (NYSE: EWZ)WisdomTree India Earnings (NYSE: EPI).

There are also some relatively new emerging market sector ETFs from EGShares. And GlobalX Funds offers more of the same for Brazil consumer and financial sectors, and China consumer, financial, technology and industrial sectors, among others.

Any one of them gives a tantalizing taste of the wealth emerging nations have to offer.

Disclosure: Investment U expressly forbids its writers from having a financial interest in any security they recommend to our subscribers. All employees and agents of Investment U (and affiliated companies) must wait 24 hours after an initial trade recommendation is published on online - or 72 hours after a direct mail publication is sent - before acting on that recommendation.

Disclaimer: The Oxford Club LLC/Investment U and Stansberry & Associates Investment Research are separate companies, and entirely distinct. Their only common thread is a shared parent company, Agora Inc. Agora Inc. was named in the suit by the SEC and was exonerated by the court, and thus dropped from the case. Stansberry & Associates was found civilly liable for a matter that dealt with one writer's report on a company. The action was not a criminal matter.

About the author: Investment U

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Hearings Reveal Currency Bill Too Weak

On September 15, the House Ways and Means Committee held hearings about Chinese currency manipulations. The committee was remarkably united. One representative after another took shots at China’s trade manipulations.

They were almost all agreed that something had to be done, that President Obama’s policy was failing, that Secretary Geithner was not helping, and that China was not playing by the international rules. But they were not united about Rep. Tim Ryan’s bipartisan Currency Exchange Rate Reform Act (HR 2378) designed to end the manipulations that put American goods at a competitive disadvantage in U.S. and world markets.

If China were to really stop manipulating its currency, it would have to balance trade, which would result in more American exports to China as well as fewer American imports from China. But the opposition to Ryan’s bill claimed that the bill would hurt American exporters.

For example, Rep. Dave Camp (Republican from Michigan) perceptively pointed out that China is increasingly turning to socialism as a way to keep out American products. He said: “We cannot lose sight of more fundamental problems with China's economy that affect our trade balance, including the increasingly blatant and disturbing increase in the economic dominance of state-owned enterprises and the proliferation of non-tariff barriers preventing U.S. companies from exporting to China." In short, he didn’t see the bill doing anything to counteract China’s increasing barriers to American products.

Similarly, two state representatives from Kansas and Nebraska claimed that the bill could hurt American agricultural exports to China. Rep. Dave Reichert of Washington, a state with Boeing (BA) and many other big exporters, didn’t express an opinion, but he wanted to know, “What would be the effect on increasing US exports in China?”

Why is there any question about a bill designed to stop currency manipulations? After all, if Ryan's bill worked as designed, trade would balance. American exporters would gain, not just American companies that compete with imports.

Unfortunately, the Currency Exchange Rate Reform Act is not tough enough. Instead of a hard-striking across-the-board tariff on Chinese products, the bill provides for industry-by-industry countervailing tariffs to be phased in over time by the Commerce Department, giving China time to fight the tariffs with its own tit-for-tat tariffs accompanied by WTO suits.

The bill completely misses the innovation of our scaled tariff proposal, that the tariff rate be adjusted quarterly in order to take in as U.S. government revenue half of our trade deficit with China. China would want to import Boeing (BA) aircraft and Kansas wheat, in order to lower our tariff rate on their computers and windmills.

Ryan's bill is well-intentioned, but it is too tepid. The same is true of Senator Schumer’s bipartisan Currency Exchange Rate Oversight Reform Bill (S. 3134). The time has come for a strong enough bill to balance trade, not just help those American companies that complete with imports.

With just the few significant changes that we noted in our written testimony to the committee, Ryan's bill or Schumer's bill could take the profit out of currency manipulation, help balance the federal budget, reduce American imports, increase American exports, and resume America’s economic growth.

Disclosure: I own Chinese yuan through CYB

About the author: Howard Richman

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Monday, October 11, 2010

Merck Initiates 'Substantive' Relationship With China's BGI

Merck (NYSE: MRK) has signed a letter of intent with BGI (formerly the Beijing Genomics Institute) that will “initiate and develop a working relationship,” according to the press release. However, citing anonymous sources, Bio-IT World says this innocuous wording greatly understates the depth of the collaboration, which it calls “substantive, wide-ranging and long-term.”

Bio-IT World says the agreement is “the most significant partnership announced so far between China’s BGI and a major pharmaceutical company.” It notes that BGI is working diligently to attract customers to its new next-generation sequencing facility in Hong Kong and its bioinformatics center in Shenzhen. The magazine says BGI offers “unparalleled” services.

Merck and BGI said they will use the “massive output of genomic information” to explore areas of mutual interest in healthcare research and discovery. They intend to collaborate on biomarker discovery, target validation and drug development, and they will formulate specific projects.

As part of the agreement, the two companies will establish offices near the other to facilitate their research.

BGI is in discussions with several other big pharma companies, according to Alex Wong, chief of BGI’s Hong Kong operation.

Bio-IT World will publish an article later this month on BGI Hong Kong, and that is, presumably, the basis for their inside sources in the company.

Disclosure: none.

About the author: ChinaBio Today

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Sunday, October 10, 2010

China's CNOOC Poised for Growth

Not to beat a dead horse, but we’re still impressed with China’s control over its fast growing economy. While the Chinese GDP down-throttled to single digits in the second quarter of the year, recent data points to a reacceleration. Among recently released figures, Chinese imports in August were exceptionally impressive. Imports grew by 35.2 percent during the month over the year earlier period, a vast improvement over July’s 22.7 percent growth, and easily outpacing expectations of 27.5 percent. The remarkable import number goes part in parcel with strong retail sales and industrial production reports as well. China’s economic strength is also evident in commodity and energy prices. Even with the largest economies in the world, the U.S. and Europe, struggling to make strides in their recoveries, the most economically sensitive resources are pointing higher. Case in point is copper which is holding steady just below $3.50 a pound. Another is crude oil, while pulling back a tad over the last couple days, remains above $75 a barrel. As the developed economies recover (be it with or without more government intervention), and the developing world continues to pursue energy intensive infrastructure projects, worldwide oil demand will continue to move higher. Most easy to reach oil supplies have been or are close to, exhausted, and the world’s turning more towards deepwater deposits to satisfy its oil thirst. It’s not surprising to see the better capitalized oil companies going after the rights to such deposits – many of which are located off the coast of Brazil.

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Saturday, October 9, 2010

Why Asian Currency Interventions Will Create Sub-Optimal Economic Growth

Yesterday in The Economist, there was an interesting article arguing in favor of currency interventions: Monetary Policy: Beggar, then Sneakily Enrich, Thy Neighbor.

The basic thrust of the author’s position is that Asian currency interventions will create inflationary pressures, which would allow world economies to slowly escape recession. Currency interventions are also favorably compared to eliminating the gold standard during the Great Depression.

Unfortunately, the author might be missing the underlying reason why the elimination of the gold standard allowed for economic recovery in the Depression. Instead, the currency interventions might be better compared to the disastrous Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in the United States.

It wasn’t merely that the elimination of the gold standard created inflation. The underlying issue was that the gold standard created arbitrary and inflexible monetary policy during the Depression. By doing this, it prevented market forces from operating and money supply was artificially suppressed. As money supply was distorted, the market was deterred from reaching an optimal growth result.

There were only two ways to fix the imbalance: (a) discover a large amount of new gold deposits and mine them or (b) eliminate the gold standard. As gold is a scarce good and world population was rapidly rising in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, (a) was becoming an increasingly difficult proposition. For this reason, elimination of the gold standard was the only real solution. And it worked magnificently, as every economy that eliminated the gold standard was able to greatly ease the Depression. In fact, China, which was on the silver standard, was almost able to miss the Depression entirely.

The current situation has a lot of parallels, unfortunately. Mercantilistic currency interventions artificially constrain money supply, just like the gold standard did during the Depression. More importantly, the interventions fuel large trade imbalances.

It's not simply a matter of "creating inflation" in one nation --- the issue runs much deeper than that. By not allowing market forces to operate, some nations run massive current account surpluses (e.g. Japan, China) while others run massive current account deficits (e.g. US, UK, Spain).

Essentially, we're cheating the free market. It doesn't matter if an American or Spanish firm can more efficiently manufacture widgets than a Japanese or Chinese firm --- by intervening in the currency markets, it is arbitrarily dictated that the Japanese or Chinese firm wins out. However, the issue with this is that it produces inefficiencies. It might even be creating negative growth because more efficient firms are being pushed out of the market in favor of more inefficient firms.

On the other side of the equation, the currency interventions are actively harming Asian consumers. While these interventions can help create GDP growth, they do so at the expense of Asian wage-workers. Wealth is redistributed primarily to two groups: (a) American consumers and (b) the owners of capital of Chinese and/or Japanese exporters.

Or in other words, these currency interventions create over-consumption in the US and under-consumption in East Asia. Equilibrium is not allowed to occur and sub-optimal growth (or even economic contraction) results as economic efficiencies are destroyed.

Just to make things worse, the constant tug of war between market forces and the interventions creates greater economic instability that produces huge bubbles and busts. While Alan Greenspan and Congress should be given some credit for helping to create the housing bubble in the US, Chinese currency policy also deserves its share of the blame, as the constant currency interventions artificially lowered interest rates in America, helping provide more fuel to the housing boom.

It's worth noting that in spite of Chinese and Japanese currency interventions, both nations have eventually run into a brick wall where they have deprived their consumers of so much of their 'earnings', that they simply cannot afford it any more. This is happening in China right now, as Chinese workers are forced to demand greater compensation in order to deal with rising costs-of-living It also appeared to occur in Japan in the mid-80’s before the Plaza Accord, as Japanese economic growth had been waning after a nearly three-decade long boom.

For these reasons, the currency interventions might be more like the Smoot-Hawley Tariff than the elimination of the gold standard. Smoot-Hawley attempted to fix global trade imbalances by promoting trade barriers that created more imbalances. Inevitably, European nations retaliated against the United States and the tariff only exacerbated the crisis.

While currency interventions have a different economic effect, the end result is the same: economic efficiencies are deterred and sub-optimal growth becomes more likely. Until the international currency system is reformed and these mercantilistic trade wars in Asia are eliminated, we may continue to see a poor worldwide economic environment.

Disclosure: No positions in any currencies or national ETFs.

About the author: H.J. Huneycutt

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Friday, October 8, 2010

Geithner's Decision on China

So, the Obama administration is going to toughen up on China, is it? I find this hard to believe. Let’s take a look at the trade picture to figure out the motivations behind this most recent move by the administration. According to the Census Bureau:

Total exports of $153.3 billion and imports of $196.1 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $42.8 billion in July, down from $49.8 billion in June, revised.

Also, take into consideration that our trade deficit with China alone decreased only slightly to $25.92 billion in July from $26.15 billion in June. This amounts to basically no change at all. According to the Calculated Risk Blog, there are also some stormy clouds on the trade horizon. This data is from LA Port, which can claim about 40% of the United States’ container port traffic. According to Calculated Risk, loaded inbound traffic increased 24% in August year over year while outbound traffic is down 2.6% over the same time period. Imports have recovered, but exports are still 17% off from two years ago. Exports may have peaked a couple months ago, while imports have continued to rise. This means that the deficit most likely increased in August.

This is the last thing politicians will want to hear heading into the heat of elections. So, with the intervention by Japan yesterday, upcoming elections and the unfortunate current/future state of American exports, it seems like now is the perfect time for Geithner to make a stand. I’ve written about China relations before, and nothing has changed to make me believe Geithner will actually be able to pull off anything more than an empty threat. There are several reasons for this.

Despite the cry of economists across the world (including myself) to garner multilateral support for such a measure, this is still going to be a US versus China issue when Geithner speaks. If China was going to listen to the things we have to say, they would have done so long ago. Mr. Geithner is apparently going to say:

We are concerned, as are many of China’s trading partners, that the pace of appreciation

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Thursday, October 7, 2010

U.S. / China Trade Imbalance: A Triumph of Hope Over Experience

Between 2005 and 2008 the Chinese yuan appreciated by a bit over 20%. Then when the recession got bad in late 2008, the yuan was (wisely) re-pegged to the dollar. Now Fred Bergsten calls for another round of yuan appreciation:

C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a leading research organization here, told House lawmakers on Wednesday that a similar increase over the next two to three years would create about 500,000 jobs. He said it would reduce China’s current account surplus by $350 billion to $500 billion, and the American current account deficit by $50 billion to $120 billion.

The United States should seek to mobilize the European Union and countries like Brazil, Russia and India to press China to realign the renminbi, and should seek W.T.O. authorization to impose restrictions on Chinese imports if it does not do so, Mr. Bergsten said.

I’m not opposed to modest yuan appreciation, and indeed I think it will gradually occur over the next three years. But I am opposed to a trade war, which is utter madness in a world struggling to recover from the Great Recession. Here’s what I don’t understand however. Between 2004 and 2008 the Chinese CA surplus rose from about $70 billion to about $430 billion (click on chart to enlarge). Why does Bergsten now expect “a similar

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Bohai Pharma Doubles Portfolio Products

Bohai Pharmaceuticals Group (BOPH.OB), a TCM pharmaceutical company, said it has added five marketed products to its portfolio so far this year, bringing its total to ten. Bohai holds the rights to produce another 14 TCM formulations in China.

Three of the newly introduced products are prescription drugs, while the remaining two are OTC medicines. The new products will complement Bohai's flagship offerings, Tongbi Capsules and Tablets and Lung Nourishing Cream, which were added to the National Drug Reimbursement list in late 2009.

Tongbi Capsules provided 22% of the company’s revenues in 2009, Tongbi Tablets another 16%, and Lung Nourishing Cream supplied 26%.

In the first nine months of Bohai’s fiscal year (ends June 30, 2010), revenues climbed 29% to $45 million. Net income was $7.75 million, a 25% increase.

Bohai became listed on the OTC Exchange through a reverse merger in early 2010. At the time of the transaction, it also completed a private placement of $12 million ($9.7 million net to the company). Currently, Botai is offering 20.3 million shares for selling shareholders.

Disclosure: none.

About the author: ChinaBio Today

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

China: Recovery Consolidating but Slower Growth Ahead

Rising labor costs, a slowing recovery in the advanced economies, and expected reductions in China’s dependence on external demand will probably slow China’s growth to 7–8 percent in the years ahead. A significant slowdown, as feared for the United States, is unlikely, however. If domestic economic rebalancing—now recognized by top leaders in Beijing as absolutely necessary—accompanies this slowdown, it will be a good thing for China and for the rest of the world.

Overheating Largely Contained

China’s efforts to reduce overheating and control a potentially dangerous housing bubble have been largely successful so far. Although consumer price index (CPI) inflation, driven by food prices, grew in August, producer price inflation fell. In light of a probable decline in food prices later this year, the government’s 3 percent CPI inflation target for 2010 looks achievable.



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Monday, October 4, 2010

Will China's LED Investments Burn Out?

The Chinese government has created an environment for big growth in LED manufacturing, but according to officials from MIT they are now concerned that aggressive investment could overheat the industry. Much of the profit in the LED industry is in the chip production, but China’s focus has been primarily on the packaging side, which is far less profitable. The government has been supportive in helping to expand the LED chip manufacturing business by offering subsidies designed to bring investment from Taiwan and the US.

Taiwan based LED companies are pointing out though that LED chip production requires high level technologies and lots of experience in order to do it right and that a massive capacity ramp won’t necessarily translate to quality that will meet industry standards. Not to mention, prices will drop-- considerably eating into the margins of many small to mid tier LED manufacturers.

What we will undoubtedly see in the LED industry is something very similar to the solar industry, where China based companies scrambled to increase capacity and go public leading to oversupply and a big drop in LED prices and their respective stock prices (should they go public). As of now there is only one publicly traded China based LED company on a US exchange and that is China Intelligent Lighting (CIL), so I don’t think there is a big concern yet, but as soon as we begin to see a few China based LED companies go public, it’s time to start thinking mini bubble in the LED space.

Disclosure: No positions

About the author: Tate Dwinnell

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

WuXi PharmaTech Subsidiary Wins ISO Environmental Certification

WuXi PharmaTech (NYSE: WX) received ISO 14001 certification for its manufacturing subsidiary, Shanghai SynTheAll Pharmaceuticals Co. Ltd. (STA). The award certifies that STA adheres to the highest standards of environmental practice in matters such as wastewater management, air emissions, and organic waste disposal.

STA was inspected by SGS Group, an inspection, verification, testing, and certification company. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is the world's largest developer and publisher of International Standards.

"As STA is now certified by SGS Group for ISO 9001 for quality management as well as for ISO 14001 for environmental management, we are confident that STA will pass environmental health and safety audits from our customers and government agencies,” said Dr. Weimin Chang, Vice President of Operations and General Manager of STA. “The staff at STA considers environment protection to be a social responsibility. We spare no effort to save energy, cut emissions, and implement practices for sustainable development while providing our customers with the highest quality of service."

Disclosure: none.

About the author: ChinaBio Today

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Saturday, October 2, 2010

Notes From Hong Kong: HSI Rises From a 5-Week Low

The Hang Seng Index appears to have resumed its upward move after dropping for 5 weeks as concerns about the global and Chinese economies abate. Banks and property stocks did well, boosted by the auction of a luxury residential site which brought in 26% more than what analysts estimated. The plot set a per-square-foot record for the Kowloon Peninsula of HK$16,587, according to real estate broker Midland Holdings Ltd.

Volumes have significantly improved in the past 4 days and are back at levels last seen in April-May. Bullishness will be supported by New York's Friday's close and move the index above the 21000 level.

INDICES 1 week 4 weeks YTD Hang Seng Index 1.8% -3.3% -4.1% HS China Enterprises 3.3% -3.2% -8.0% FTSE/Xinhua A50 1.0% -1.2% -24.2% Shanghai Composite 1.7% -0.1% -19.0% CSI 300 2.2% 1.9% -18.0% US ETFs EWH 1.8% -0.1% 2.3% FXI 2.5% -2.4% -5.1% PGJ 3.1% -1.7% -1.8%

The mood has changed following the release of new data from China showing that the economy is still doing well. On Wednesday, China Federation of Purchasing and Logistics disclosed that the Purchasing Manager Index rose to 51.7 in August from 51.2 in July, the first rise in the index following three months of decline. The improvement was confirmed by the HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index which rose to 51.9 from 49.4, rebounding into expansionary territory after readings in July indicated the first contraction in activity in 16 months. On Friday, another positive view of the economy came from the HSBC Composite Output Index which rose to 54.6 in August, from 52.6 in the previous month, indicating a solid improvement in private sector business conditions.

While the Shanghai indices were up, financials did not do so well, as the group was down this week. On Friday the China Securities Journal said that loans with potentially high credit risk increased at four of China's five biggest banks during the second quarter from the preceding three months. On Wednesday, Ping An Insurance, China's second-largest life insurer, disclosed plans to increase its stake and acquire majority control in Shenzhen Development Bank for 29.1 billion yuan ($4.3 billion).

With all interim results out for the major Chinese banks, the China Business News wrote last week that China's 16 listed banks reported combined net income of RMB 343.4 billion in the first half of 2010, representing an increase of more than 30% year-on-year. In a separate report, the 21st Century Business Herald wrote, citing interim results among 15 listed Chinese banks, that 11 banks saw an increase in net interest spread compared with the same period of last year, while four reported narrowing spreads. Of the "Big Four" banks, China Construction Bank was the only one to report a year-on-year reduction in net interest spread over the period.

SECTORS – CHINA 1 week 4 weeks YTD CSI300 Energy 1.3% 0.1% -28.9% CSI300 Materials 4.6% 7.4% -19.0% CSI300 Industrials 2.8% 3.3% -10.6% CSI300 Cons. Discretionary 4.9% 9.9% -5.2% CSI300 Cons. Staples 6.0% 6.5% 0.5% CSI300 Healthcare 2.7% 4.8% 10.9% CSI300 Financials -0.1% -2.8% -26.3% CSI300 Technology 3.8% 3.3% 11.3% CSI300 Telecom 5.1% 2.3% -22.4% CSI300 Utilities -0.8% -3.2% -18.3% SECTORS – HONG KONG 1 week 4 weeks YTD HS Financials 2.1% -5.1% -8.7% HS Utilities 0.6% -0.1% 10.4% HS Property 1.9% -2.5% -2.4% HS Commerce & Industry 1.6% -1.6% 0.1%

Interim results from FXI constituents:

China Pacific Insurance: On August 29, Bloomberg writes:

"China Pacific Insurance,the nation’s third-biggest insurer, said profit rose in the first half as premiums expanded and the company curbed costs. Net income climbed to 4.02 billion yuan ($591 million), or 0.47 yuan a share, from 2.41 billion yuan a year earlier, the company said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange.

China Communications Construction: On August 31, Dow Jones writes: "China Communications Construction Co. (1800.HK) reported Tuesday its first-half net profit rose 32% from a year earlier as Beijing's economic stimulus measures spurred infrastructure development. The infrastructure construction and port machinery manufacturer said its net profit for the six months ended June 30 totaled CNY4.0 billion, up from CNY3.03 billion. Revenue rose 24% to CNY120.15 billion from CNY96.84 billion."

FTSE Xinhua A50 is a market capitalization weighted index comprising the 50 largest “A” (domestic) shares listed in China. In Hong Kong the ETF 2823:HK tracks the index; in the US, FXI tracks a sister index including only the 25 largest mainland companies listed in Hong Kong. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index covers 40 “H” shares issued by mainland companies listed in Hong Kong. In Hong Kong the ETF 2828:HK tracks the index. The Hang Seng Index currently covers the 43 largest Hong Kong listed companies by capitalization. These HK listed companies include a number of mainland Chinese companies. In Hong Kong the ETF 2800:HK tracks the index. In the US, EWH tracks the MSCI Hong Kong Index which is substantially different from the Hang Seng Index.

Disclosure: Long FT/Xinhua A 50

About the author: L. Desjardins

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Friday, October 1, 2010

Six Reasons to Buy Ambow Education

Located in China, Ambow Education Holding Ltd. (NYSE: AMBO) is a leading national provider of educational and career enhancement services, offering high-quality, individualized services and products. Despite its weak performance in August, I believe AMBO is a well-undervalued stock for the following reasons:

1) China overtook Japan as the world’s second-largest economy during the second quarter of 2010 in terms of gross domestic product (GDP), and that is expected to grow to over $20 trillion by 2014. According to IDC, total spending in China’s education market was $236.3 billion in 2008 and is projected to grow by approximately $604.1 billion by 2013. Because of the growth in the rapid economy and disposable household income, people in China are increasingly willing to invest in higher and professional education as it may lead to better career opportunities and enhanced earning power.

2) AMBO started its business with a clear mindset on focusing on the education training market. In the past ten years, AMBO has adhered to its goals and addressed two critical demands in China’s education market: the desire for students to be admitted into top secondary and post-secondary schools (Better Schools) and the desire for graduates of those schools to obtain more attractive jobs (Better Jobs).

“Better Schools” refers to the K-12 programs and tutoring services with a standards-based curriculum that enables students to improve their academic results and educational opportunities. According to IDC and CCID, AMBO is the largest ZhongKao and GaoKao after-school tutoring provider in China both in 2008 and 2009. Both administered in China, “ZhongKao” refers to high school entrance exams while “GaoKao” refers to university entrance exams. Like graduates from Ivy League schools in the United States, graduates from top universities in China may have a better chance to obtain quality jobs.

“Better Jobs” refers to the career enhancement services programs that facilitate post-secondary students in obtaining more attractive employment. They are offered through AMBO’s career enhancement regional service hubs, which are strategically located in key economic centers across China.

According to IDC and CCD, AMBO was the largest IT career enhancement training provider in China both in 2008 and 2009. Some key partnerships include Cisco Systems, Inc., Skillsoft Asia Pacific and McGraw-Hill Education.

3) Perhaps the biggest competitor for AMBO in China is New Oriental (EDU). However, New Oriental only focuses on English and other foreign language training and providing consulting services to help students through the application and admission process for overseas educational institutions. Unlike New Oriental, AMBO focuses on targeted markets within the educational and career enhancement services market. Moreover, none of AMBO’s competitors can compete with its broad spectrum of programs, services and products.

4) AMBO has experienced substantial growth in net revenues and profitability in recent years. Its revenues grew from RMB 318.9 million in 2007 to RMB 902.0 million (USD $132.1 million) in 2009 at a CAGR of 68% over the last two years. Its net income grew from RMB 34.2 million in 2007 to RMB 138.0 million (US $20.2 million) in 2009 at a CAGR of 101% over last two years. In addition to organic growth, AMBO switched to new product sales in May 2008. Under this new business model, AMBO has no obligation to students or schools and has phased out its previous model of providing services to students of schools and centers that are not directly operated by AMBO. Under this new product sales model that alters sales to distributors, less net revenue per sale may be recognized, but higher gross margins are expected.

5) AMBO has built its Ambow brand and increased awareness of its products and services in a capital efficient way. AMBO has received numerous awards from notable organizations in China and is consistently ranked as one of China’s top ten education brands by industry leaders such as the China Daily Media Group, Tencent and Sohu.com. On August 11th, 2010, BusinessWeek announced its “50 Green Companies in China” award and AMBO was the only company from the education industry, while the other recipients included Intel (China), Coca-Cola (China), Shell (China), Ford Motor (China), Sony (China), etc. In my opinion it is remarkable to see that the education sector can also be green (i.e. low carbon).

“We believe that Green has become one of the key concepts in the development of AMBO’s educational systems over the last three years. Our intelligent system, which combines the learning engine and robust content, along with the use of IT management system has proved to be a good way to improve the efficiency of our educational services and consistent with Low-Carbon Economy,” said Yisi Gu, AMBO’s Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer (CTO).

6) The joint bookrunners for AMBO are J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Goldman Sachs (Asia) L.L.C. There used to be a quiet period after IPOs, and a Chinese wall rule prevented analysts working at those firms from speaking or writing reports for twenty-five business days from the listing. Once the period ends, more analysts will begin to add coverage for this stock and that will be an optimistic sign for AMBO.

AMBO currently has a P/E

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

New Energy Systems: Hidden Gem With Strong Foundations for Growth

As a value investor, I am always looking for companies with great fundamentals and growth potential. By running my daily screen, a long candidate has attracted my eyes.

It is New Energy Systems Group (Amex: NEWN). NEWN is a leading provider of lithium-ion batteries for portable electronic devices in China with headquarters in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, which is China's first—and arguably one of the most successful—Special Economic Zones. This company has recently been uplisted to Amex from OTCBB and trades in the range of $6-7.

In recent years, the global output of lithium-ion batteries has soared more than 50% annually and the demand is expected to maintain its upward momentum till 2018. At present, the global supply of Li-ion batteries is monopolized by three giants in Asia, i.e. China, Japan and South Korea, and all three have a total market share surpassing 95%.

The first use of lithium batteries was in laptops, but now they are widely used in cell phones, video machines, digital cameras, MP3 players, hybrid cars and other electronic products. The batteries are becoming more environment-friendly with a longer life, smaller size and lighter weight. Chinese Li-ion battery manufacturers are not only seizing market share for Li-ion batteries for portable products like 3G mobiles and laptops from South Korea and Japanese competitors, but also are actively developing the Li-ion battery market for electric cars and E-bicycles.

In China, the fastest-growing auto market in the world, the development of Li-ion batteries has become a core part of the development of hybrid cars. The Chinese government has recently handed out policy incentives to encourage more electric cars on the road and the demand for Li-ion batteries will increase. Investments into companies in the battery business will reward investors generously. In fact, this is already reflected in the Shanghai A-share market. Most Chinese battery companies listed in the A-share market have advanced more than 20% since August 1, 2010, with an incredible 100% net income increase in the first six months of 2010.

Products from NEWN now support iPhones, iPads (AAPL), Blackberrys (RIMM) and all major-brand cell phones, laptops, digital cameras, MP3s, etc. Currently, NEWN only operates at around 50% of manufacturing capacity and has begun to expand internationally. On August 26th, 2010, NEWN announced its plan to launch MeePower™, a new brand of advanced battery backup systems expected to be available to distributors in the U.S. beginning in the fall of 2010. MeePower generates 4–7 times more power than an original OEM battery’s capacity and can recharge the OEM battery more quickly and last longer.

In the past, the company only dealt in the low-margin battery shell & cap and battery-distribution businesses. But acquisitions in 2009 transformed NEWN into a rapidly-growing, high-margin, integrated manufacturer with an established brand name.

The first acquisition was of Anytone, a manufacturer and seller of lithium-ion battery finished products and was acquired by NEWN with both stock shares and cash payments. The acquisition not only enhances NEWN’s ability to rapidly innovate with quick-turn capabilities, over 30 patents and deep R&D capabilities, but also broadens product offering and allows NEWN to touch end-user customers.

Another acquisition was with NewPower, a China-based manufacturer of lithium-ion batteries. NewPower has extensive manufacturing expertise and capabilities. It only operates at 50% of production capacity and can triple its production with minimal additional capital expenditures. Both acquisitions are strategically important to vertical integration and increase profitability of the existing battery distribution business with added margins by internally sourcing lithium-ion batteries.

Although the company’s cash positions are influenced by its payments for the acquisitions, NEWN still shows strong second-quarter earnings. The company’s revenue has increased 335.2% to

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Additional China-Biotics Due Diligence for Your Consideration

I appreciate well reasoned opposing viewpoints, however the recent detractors of CHBT discredit themselves with their reports. I would have been more inclined to take their articles seriously had they not thrown in spurious points in an attempt to bolster their argument. To anyone with an understanding of China-Biotics it is plain to see that these articles are not an honest attempt to present a reasoned bear argument on the stock. Rather, it is merely an attempt to spread fear, uncertainty and doubt.



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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

China Backpedals on the Yuan

Last week we drew attention to the strange behaviour of Chinese officials, who pushed the yuan downward against the dollar while their trading partners were calling for the Chinese currency's appreciation. This shift occurs as China is clearly trying to diversify its investments, as exemplified by the hike in its allocation in government debt from the zone: Y1.7 trillion in Japan in the first seven months of 2010, up from just Y255.7bn for all of 2005, and $2.11bn in South Korea. At the same time, China has reduced its investments in US debt by $8.95bn to $844bn. (La Chine diversifie ses réserves de change; The Real Drivers of Diversification in China’s FX Reserves). This also surely explains a big part of the yen's strength vis-à-vis the dollar and the euro. On the basis of the latest statistics published in the China Securities Journal, this is the current breakdown of currency reserves: dollar 65%, euro 26%, pound sterling 5%, yen 3%. The main reason (in their eyes) for these changes in currency reserve allocations is the fear, as expressed on numerous occasions since 2008, but more and more clearly in recent weeks, that the dollar will lose its status as the world's reserve currency (too much of the Fed's QE?), leading to a significant decline in its value. PBOC governor, Ms Hu Xiaolian, has made the latest pronouncement in this vein: “My view is that the Yuan doesn’t have a key role to play in rebalancing bilateral trade between the U.S. and China. I don’t think excessive argument and criticism on this issue will help”. (WSJ 1 Sep 2010) "Once a reserve currency's value becomes unstable, there will be quite large depreciation risks for assets. A diversified international currency system will be more conducive to international economic and financial stability.” (China Finance, 6 Sep 2010). In reality, you can already read the same views in Ms Xialian's speech of 15 July before the PBOC: “Three Characteristics of the Managed Floating Exchange Rate Regime.” However, the yuan's recent depreciation vis-à-vis the dollar hardly went unnoticed in the United States where it sparked an immediate reaction from Robert Hormats, under secretary of State for economic, energy and agricultural affairs: ‘U.S. Official Warns of Backlash Against China’. “A lack of action by the Chinese to address U.S. concerns about currency issues and intellectual-property protections could encourage a more protectionist agenda on Capitol Hill.” "We're likely to see some legislation offered that would be adverse to Chinese interests if more steps aren't taken.” All this in an already tense context, as Larry Summers (Director of the National Economic Council) and Thomas Donilan (Deputy National Security Advisor) travel to China to discuss all these highly sensitive issues. They will not only talk about the yuan, but also about China's anger at US involvement in the South China Sea and US concerns about Iran. ‘Bumpy months ahead for U.S. and China’ So surprise, the yuan's controlled depreciation last week has abruptly moved upward, just in time for Mr Summers' visit. Here is an updated graph comparing the yen and the dollar. Yuan and yen vs the US dollar China back-pedals a bit…

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Monday, September 27, 2010

Private Equity Firms Settling Into China

I have been closely following the growth of private equity in China because I believe it is one of the most important and exciting new markets for the industry. As the country opens up more and more to financial institutions by easing typically stringent regulations, the potential for buyout firms operating in China is huge. This is why you see many firms moving into China even though they may not begin doing large deals for a few years still. It's about getting your foot in the door and setting up offices in the country before your competition.

There are still major obstacles to working in China but the prospects are bright and many firms believe it is worth navigating complicated (and sometimes unfair) regulations. The government is working to make the country more receptive to private equity firms, with actions like this week's announcement that China will allow insurers to invest up to 5% of their total assets in private equity. These types of initiatives are key in developing private equity activity in China.

Yuan-Denominated Funds Dominate

Although there have been some promising private equity funds in China, the industry still lacks the credibility that it has gained in other parts of the world. It is encouraging that private equity firms have started opening funds in the Chinese yuan currency. Having a fund denominated in the local currency has helped these buyout firms attract local investors, which is a key step to working in the country successfully.

David Rubenstein told the audience at a WSJ China Financial Markets Conference, "“For any of the large private-equity firms in the West to be a real player in China, you probably should have a

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Sunday, September 26, 2010

China Sky One Drops on Trimmed Guidance

China Sky One Medical (NSDQ: CSKI) reduced its guidance for 2010, blaming the shortfall on the loss of several major distributors. The company said the distributors ended their relationship with China Sky One after they discovered their business information was disclosed in SEC filings. This led to increased scrutiny in China, which was enough for them to stop doing business with China Sky One.

In actual numbers, China Sky One now expects revenues to drop from a forecasted $162 million to around $131 million, a decline of 19%. Net income is now predicted to come in 30% below the previous $40 million at about $28 million. Both sets of numbers exclude the impact of derivative warrant liabilities.

China Sky One says it will replace the distributors with new ones, but the process will take time and will increase the company’s Selling and Marketing costs in 2010.

The news sent the price of China Sky One shares lower by 29% to a 52-week low. It was trading at $6.90, down $2.79 in mid-session. The stock has traded in a range between $6.85 and $25.45 over the past 12 months. China Sky One’s market capitalization now stands at $116 million.

Disclosure: none.

About the author: ChinaBio Today

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Saturday, September 25, 2010

Geithner's Decision on China

So, the Obama administration is going to toughen up on China, is it? I find this hard to believe. Let’s take a look at the trade picture to figure out the motivations behind this most recent move by the administration. According to the Census Bureau:

Total exports of $153.3 billion and imports of $196.1 billion resulted in a goods and services deficit of $42.8 billion in July, down from $49.8 billion in June, revised.

Also, take into consideration that our trade deficit with China alone decreased only slightly to $25.92 billion in July from $26.15 billion in June. This amounts to basically no change at all. According to the Calculated Risk Blog, there are also some stormy clouds on the trade horizon. This data is from LA Port, which can claim about 40% of the United States’ container port traffic. According to Calculated Risk, loaded inbound traffic increased 24% in August year over year while outbound traffic is down 2.6% over the same time period. Imports have recovered, but exports are still 17% off from two years ago. Exports may have peaked a couple months ago, while imports have continued to rise. This means that the deficit most likely increased in August.

This is the last thing politicians will want to hear heading into the heat of elections. So, with the intervention by Japan yesterday, upcoming elections and the unfortunate current/future state of American exports, it seems like now is the perfect time for Geithner to make a stand. I’ve written about China relations before, and nothing has changed to make me believe Geithner will actually be able to pull off anything more than an empty threat. There are several reasons for this.

Despite the cry of economists across the world (including myself) to garner multilateral support for such a measure, this is still going to be a US versus China issue when Geithner speaks. If China was going to listen to the things we have to say, they would have done so long ago. Mr. Geithner is apparently going to say:

We are concerned, as are many of China’s trading partners, that the pace of appreciation

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Greece: Sounding Very Lehman-ish

If you recall the early stages of the financial crisis there was one glaring trend from the various bank CEO’s and CFO’s – they just couldn’t wait to get on TV with their slogan:

“We are well capitalized.”

Of course, that turned out to be a lie as it’s now clear that most banks in the USA were woefully undercapitalized. Yesterday, Greece’s finance minister was out with similar comments:

Restructuring is not going to happen. There are much broader implications for the eurozone should Greece have to restructure its debt. People fail to see the costs to both Greece and the eurozone of a restructuring: the cost to its citizens, the cost to its access to markets. If Greece restructures, why on earth would people invest in other peripheral economies? It would be a fundamental break to the unity of the eurozone.

In other words, “we are well capitalized”. That’s all well and good, but actions speak louder than words. The truth is that austerity is not working in Greece. They have failed to realize the crucial flaw in the Greek austerity plan: the private sector and public sector can’t save at the same time. They’re essentially hoping that they can get more blood to the heart by cutting off both arms. That’s just not how it works. Cutting off both arms simply exacerbates the problems. Slowly, but surely, you bleed out.

Their continued funding woes are obvious. According to the bailout facility Greece continues to increase their reliance on the ECB. ECB funding now represents 20% of total Greek banking assets. The following two charts from Goldman Sachs show Greece’s (and the entire periphery’s) increasing reliance on the kindness of strangers.



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Thursday, September 23, 2010

The Problem With Japan's Fight to Curb Yen's Rise

Japan has "Declared War" on a free market

"We will continue to take decisive action if needed" to curb the yen's rise, Prime Minister Naoto Kan said at a meeting of business leaders. His comments came a day after Japan intervened in the currency market by selling yen and buying dollars for the first time since 2004.

Uh huh. It didn't work in 2004 and it didn't work the other times you tried it either.

Of course the bigger issue is that if it does work, you risk collapsing your bond market.

See, JGBs return nothing. Therefore, the only reason to buy them is to use them as collateral for a carry trade, or to earn your return via currency appreciation rather than coupon.

But both playing the carry and the currency appreciation argument only work if, surprise-surprise, the currency appreciates.

Yes, it is true that most of Japan's debt is held internally. But anyone who thinks that the Japanese firms and individuals aren't playing this the same way has rocks in their head. They most-certainly are.

Wednesday night the Japanese Automakers were bleating that they needed the yen north of 90 (that is, weaker by another 5% or more!) in order to "be profitable." So now we have a focused target for speculative attack - and you can bet that bet will be pressed by international players with plenty of money.

Has anyone figured out the damage if someone who's geared 10:1 or more takes a 5% loss on each leg of their trade?

The fundamental problem is that you can't have a sustainable economy that relies on foreign capital flows - whether it be an import/export imbalance or "hot money" flying around "helping" you. All of these things build in instabilities in the economy.

Japan has been playing this game for more than 15 years, with the outcome being a monstrous accumulated debt, now well north of GDP. They have failed to exit their deflationary depression, having chosen instead to paper over it. But now the birdcage liners are turning into a monstrous problem - if there is any sort of upward move in JGB yields the roll on those bonds will destroy the Japanese federal budget.

They didn't paint themselves into a corner, they bricked themselves into a room with no doors! All choices here are bad ones, and some were foreclosed years ago - like withdrawing the stimulus and forcing those who had hidden losses to eat them. Anything that normalizes yields instantaneously detonates the government's funding model - thus, the increasingly-shrill screaming coming from both idiots like Noda and the Japanese corporate interests - both of which are screaming "I have a bomb! I'll use it! I'll kill you!"

About the author: Karl Denninger

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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

U.S. / China Trade Imbalance: A Triumph of Hope Over Experience

Between 2005 and 2008 the Chinese yuan appreciated by a bit over 20%. Then when the recession got bad in late 2008, the yuan was (wisely) re-pegged to the dollar. Now Fred Bergsten calls for another round of yuan appreciation:

C. Fred Bergsten, director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a leading research organization here, told House lawmakers on Wednesday that a similar increase over the next two to three years would create about 500,000 jobs. He said it would reduce China’s current account surplus by $350 billion to $500 billion, and the American current account deficit by $50 billion to $120 billion.

The United States should seek to mobilize the European Union and countries like Brazil, Russia and India to press China to realign the renminbi, and should seek W.T.O. authorization to impose restrictions on Chinese imports if it does not do so, Mr. Bergsten said.

I’m not opposed to modest yuan appreciation, and indeed I think it will gradually occur over the next three years. But I am opposed to a trade war, which is utter madness in a world struggling to recover from the Great Recession. Here’s what I don’t understand however. Between 2004 and 2008 the Chinese CA surplus rose from about $70 billion to about $430 billion (click on chart to enlarge). Why does Bergsten now expect “a similar

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