Posts Tagged ‘Fannie Mae’

When You Need Gold

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

There aren’t many times to favor Gold Investment over buying productive assets…

THEY FOUGHT the correction, but the correction won, writes Bill Bonner in his Daily Reckoning.

We refer to Bernanke, Summers, Obama, Geithner, Krugman – the whole lot of them. They added three trillion dollars to US debt in the last two years. In two more years the debt will be at 100% of GDP. Add in the debts they’ve guaranteed…from Fannie Mae, for example, and state and local debt implicitly backed by the feds…and you’re already at 150% of GDP.

Worse than Greece, in other words. And what do we get for it? A recovery? A healthy economy? A gold medal?

We’ll take the gold medal, thank you. It’s the only one that’s real.

The stock market was ready for a little bounce Tuesday. So that’s what it did…a little bounce – the Dow up 123. Gold kept climbing, however – up to a new record high above $1,250 an ounce.

If you had asked us 10 years ago which we’d rather have – stocks or gold – we would have said gold. Ask us now. Same answer.

Gold.

There aren’t many times when it makes sense to favor Gold Investment over productive investments. But this is one of those times.

Why? Because the world’s monetary system is heading for a crackup. And because the people running it have no idea what they are doing. Here’s Bloomberg:

Pimco’s Crescenzi Sees ‘Endpoint’ in Devaluations

June 8 (Bloomberg) – Nations have reached a "Keynesian endpoint" as exhausted balance sheets leave policy makers with few options to bolster economic growth, according to Anthony Crescenzi, an investor at Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s largest bond-fund manager.

"Time, devaluations, and debt restructurings might be the only way out for many nations," Crescenzi wrote in an e-mailed note titled ‘Keynesian Endpoint’ that referenced the Great Depression era economist John Maynard Keynes. Debt-fueled spending programs aimed at combating the global financial crisis of 2008 are among policy tools now "being seen as a magic elixir that has morphed into poison."

The Obama administration forecast a $1.6 trillion budget deficit, the most ever, in the current fiscal year that began Oct. 1.

You can fight a correction. You can delay it. You can distort it. You can make it bigger and nastier. But you can’t beat it. Eventually, mistakes have to be corrected…one way or another.

Usually, the mistakes take the shape of bad investments or bad loans. You can pretend that they’re still worth what you have in them. You can bail out the lenders and/or the investors. You can default and inflate. But somehow, someone, sometime is going to take a loss.

That’s when you need gold. Every other asset could have bad debt behind it…in it…or standing so close beside it that a blow-up would be damaging.

The correction that began in ‘07 was needed to address all the bad debt built up in the bubble years. The feds tried to stop it. Since they didn’t have any money they had to fight it by borrowing more money – that is, by increasing the level of debt!

We knew that wasn’t going to work.

And now, there’s bad private debt…and bad public sector debt too. And now we’re approaching a Keynesian "endpoint" when lenders are growing wary. They’ve already cut off Greece. They’ve warned the rest of Europe. And when they stop lending…then, all your props fall down…along with the economy…and the markets too.

Looking to make a solid Gold Investment today…?

Source:When You Need Gold

First GM, Now the US

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

What ailed GM now ails the United States, only on a truly vast scale…

IT’S NOT EASY being financially illiterate, writes Porter Stansberry, publisher of the Daily Wealth email.

Over three years ago, I began researching and writing about the impossible debt problems faced by several of America’s largest and most trusted enterprises: General Motors, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac. The hate mail came into my office by the truckload. I can sum up the sentiment as, "Porter…you’re brain dead. You’re un-American. You’ve lost your mind."

I wasn’t digging up hidden, insider facts. I simply performed a basic analysis of each of these companies’ ability to take in cash, viewed against its ability to pay out cash to its creditors. The only possible future for all three was bankruptcy. As you know, each of these stalwarts went under…while their stooge managers collected enormous salaries, smiled in front of the cameras, and told you everything was fine.

I tell you this story because I’m getting hate mail again…but my prediction of a US government bankruptcy is much more serious…and the ramifications are much larger.

Simply put, just like GM, the US government has taken on ridiculous debts that it cannot pay back. But then the million-Dollar question arises: If Porter is right, what do I do with my money?

Stocks are trading at big multiples to earnings. High-quality names and low-quality names are just too expensive right now to be bought safely. Volatility in the market has almost disappeared: Stocks have gone nowhere but up for nearly a year. Isn’t that a sign I must be wrong about all of these financial problems?

Not at all. The huge run-up in equities we’ve seen over the last year is merely proof our central bank is still powerful. The stock market rebound that’s lifted shares in the United States started the same week the Federal Reserve began its $2 trillion program of "quantitative easing" – which simply means printing up money and buying debts with it.

The Fed’s program is scheduled to end this month. That’s when we’ll have our first real test of the true appetite for risk. I bet we see a big correction in the stock market at exactly the same time.

So the first thing to do is stay cautious of the stock market. Stick with stocks that can greatly increase earnings during an inflationary period and/or have a large and safe dividend stream to protect you against a bear market.

Next, one of my favorite trades here is a wager that Gold Prices continue to outperform US long-dated Treasuries (TLT) – which you can see in the chart below:

Over the last six months, we’ve seen gold, measured here by the SPDR Gold ETF proxy, outperform long-dated US Treasuries by roughly 15%.

I expect this trend to continue and accelerate over the next six months as the Fed stops supporting the US Treasury market. Stay long gold, and stay long its hard-money cousin, silver.

Third, learn how to short stocks. Learn how to profit as stocks fall. You can find good explanations of short selling in any standard stock market or trading guide. When short selling, focus on companies that are frauds, overly indebted, or obsolete (for the "indebted" and "obsolete" columns, I like newspapers).

What most people don’t understand about a period of increasing inflation is that even though growth in the money supply will increase earnings, matching increases to interest rates force equity valuations lower. And in the race between valuations and earnings, valuation almost always wins.

It’s hard to make money in stocks (on the long side) if the market’s overall earnings multiple falls in half. If stocks go from trading at 20 times earnings to trading at 10 times earnings (which is what I expect will happen), your stocks will have to double their earnings for you to merely break even, outside of what you’re paid in dividends. So short sellers will have a tailwind at their backs.

As the great Richard Russell reminds us, "In a bear market, he who loses least, wins." I agree with Russell. It’s hard to make money when markets fall. And while I can’t guarantee sticking only with the safest stocks, betting on higher interest rates, owning gold and silver, and short selling stocks will make you rich, I can guarantee you’ll be much better off than someone who ignores my advice…like the shareholders of GM did in 2008.

Ready to Buy Gold and Buy Silver today? Make it simple, safe and cost-effective at BullionVault

Source:First GM, Now the US

US Impact on Gold

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Just how do the US economy and US policies affect Gold Prices…?

TO JUDGE HOW the United States, its currency and its economics affect Gold Prices, we must first ask ourselves what prompts investors large and small to go out and Buy Gold for their portfolios, says Julian Phillips of the Gold Forecaster.

Is gold moved by a single piece of news that is seen on television or one piece of US economic news? No, the average Gold Investor has accumulated reasons over time, which convinces him that it is wise to hold gold. But the real truth is that the gold market is global and affected by a vast number of investors each with his own reasons for Buying Gold from Mongolia to Manhattan.

And at this moment in time, it is the non-US investor that is driving the Gold Price.

We all tend to believe that the most visible news will be the most influential on the Gold Price, particularly when reporters and commentators shout it out. Recently how many times have you seen talk of the Fed pulling back on Quantitative Easing and raising interest rates as a reason for selling gold? The current picture of the Fed’s Balance Sheet is a broad gauge of its lending to the financial system. Its liabilities rose to $2.274 trillion this from $2.216 last week. This shows that Quantitative Easing is rising still.

The rise was primarily due to a jump in agency mortgage-backed securities, issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which grew in the Fed’s portfolio to $968.59 billion from $908.74bn last week. Given its support of the housing markets, Fed interest rates are unlikely to rise for some time. As far as gold goes, interest rates affect the exchange rate, which affects gold.

A ‘real’ US recovery, in contrast, would have a bad affect on the Gold Price. Is a real recovery in the US on the way now? We revert to a statement we made after the credit-crunch first hit in 2007, where we said firmly that the Fed would not do anything until consumer confidence was visible and the housing market was recovering visibly too. We maintain this position. This is not the case yet.

With such an altered consumer landscape now, where savings are on the screen, debt-repayment a priority, making sure that one is not bitten twice, where businesses nurse cash-flow so as to be able to retain a good ‘acid’ (liquidity) ratio, the time for such moves by the Fed is still a way off. They are as aware of the dangers to ‘confidence’ as we all are of ‘tightening’ too early. They have to wait for a good recovery, one where employment of non-service staff is growing visibly.

That day is still far off. Will that be bad for the Gold Price? One of the earliest signals that the recovery is strong will come from the consumer. He will spend more on needs first. Wisely, he goes to the cheaper end of the market, usually meaning imports from China. At the moment imports from China are dropping slightly, but should rise if the recovery gains solid traction. Imports from the East are the first beneficiaries of a US recovery.

Now look at oil imports. The oil price is strong but nowhere near as strong as at its peak. At this level, prices are sustainable, indicating consumer acceptance and a slight advance into wants spending. The rise in the US trade deficit in November was assisted by higher oil prices. Since then oil prices have stabilized not fallen, so the Trade deficit oil component should stabilize until oil takes off again.

It is tragic that overall, the US Trade deficit is perhaps the best signal of the arrival of a ‘real’ recovery in the States. As the US economy regains its health, its Trade Deficit keeps rising. As it rises, the flood of Dollars adds velocity to a falling Dollar. This leads to an increase in Dollar surpluses held by foreigners, already glutted with them, now looking for ways to spend or diversify from them.

Result? US economic health equals a falling $ and worried creditors of the US! A falling Dollar in the eyes of the US investor means a rising Gold Price.

In November, the US trade deficit widened by 9.7% to $36.4 billion, which is partly accounted for by higher oil prices. Exports rose for the seventh straight month, but imports rose at a faster pace in November. The government also revised the deficit in October to $33.2 billion from $32.9 billion. As a result the deficit for the year now totals $340.6 billion, down from $654.1 billion in the same period last year and $720 billion the year before. Overall, there is little evidence in these numbers that points to any vigor in the ‘recovery’.

So it is right that the Fed continues to hold back. Consequently we have at least part of the reason why the Dollar has held and rallied of late, and the Gold Price has been consolidating.

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Source:US Impact on Gold

Emergency Orders & Exchange Controls

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

You can’t keep a good market down. Nor a bad market up…

ON 18 SEPTEMBER 2008 – three days after the collapse of Lehman Bros. – US regulator the Securities & Exchange Commission issued what it called an "emergency order" banning the short-selling of 799 financial stocks.

The order, running for 10 business days, came amid of flurry of short-selling restrictions – first demanding that all stock sold short be delivered to the buyer within 3 days, and then that all current open shorts be closed – made under emergency powers granted by the Depression-era Securities Exchange Act of 1934. It came two months after a separate ban on selling short the stock of Lehmans, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and 16 other securities firms.

Some success that proved.

"Unbridled short selling is contributing to the recent, sudden price declines in the securities of financial institutions, unrelated to true price valuation," said SEC chairman Christopher Cox the next day, announcing the new defense of 799 ailing firms’ capital base.

"The Commission is committed to using every weapon in its arsenal to combat market manipulation that threatens investors and capital markets."

News that "market manipulation" was over, along with the forced rush to cover existing shorts, saw the sector jump more than 12% higher in one day as priced by the SPDR Financial Select ETF (XLF). You can see that day’s jump in trading volume on the chart below, too.

Without the selfish hedge-fund black hats knocking perfectly sound companies lower, America’s finest financial firms could get back to making money rather than hemorrhaging risk capital at the NYSE. Or so the logic (or what passed for logic) ran in Washington.

Yet by the time the Sept. order expired at midnight 2nd October, US financial stocks were back where they’d started before the SEC invoked this power. Two days later, they’d sunk to a fresh six-year low. By the end of Oct. they had fallen a further 21%…and were on their way to a loss of more than two-thirds by the following March – and all this with the anti "naked shorts" regulations still firmly in place.

Glancing back from the comparative calm of late autumn 2009, you might think that short-selling was perhaps contained by the order. The plunge was worse after it lapsed, after all, and the market didn’t quite get to zero. But even when extended for four months or more elsewhere, similar bans around the world met with similar success.

The UK’s Financial Services Authority lifted its short-selling ban – begun the same day as the SEC’s order (and just as the Bank of England was pumping £61.6 billion, then $110bn, into the two largest failed banks) – on 16th Jan. 2009, by which time Britain’s banking stocks had lost a further 61% of their value. Greece didn’t get round to lifting its short-selling ban until 1st June 2009. Nor did South Korea. Australia was a week earlier, but by then the ASX-200 Financial index stood lower by one-fifth from just after the Lehman’s collapse, albeit turning higher from the 34% drop to March ‘09.

The financial authorities in Vietnam, meantime, have been facing a different kind of problem – and chosen to meet it with a different kind of exchange control, too. The results to date, however, look equally equivocal.

Vietnamese consumers, suffering cost-price inflation of 25% by June 2008, were exchanging capital in the form of Dong into gold. Indeed, the world’s largest market for investment gold bars outside the West during the first quarter of last year, Vietnam had already imported 60 tonnes of gold – paid for by a net outflow of $1.8 billion – during the first five months of the year. That was twice the pace-by-volume set in early 2007.

So the communist authorities, rather than addressing the plight of the Dong – which had already slipped further in the black market, despite an outright devaluation of the regime’s US-Dollar peg two weeks before – opted instead to ban gold imports altogether. Because if Buying Gold was how people were choosing to defend themselves, then just like US funds short-selling the lamest financial stocks, they must in fact be part of the problem. Right?

Doubling import duties on gold to 1% in May 2008 hadn’t helped. An outright ban remained to be tried. But the upshot? Seventeen months later – and with domestic gold owners blamed for profiteering as new would-be buyers sought refuge in gold – the ban was lifted at last. By early Nov. ‘09, however, Vietnamese gold prices stood some 42% higher, thanks both to the rising international price but more especially to the lack of inflows of metal.

The Dong, in short, had lost ground to the Dollar but sunk versus gold. And all along, Vietnam’s appetite for new metal was part-sated regardless. The GFMS consultancy reckons than 30% of gold imports to Thailand found their way across the border during the second-half of 2008.

Even with new gold now flowing into the country, gold still trades above 27.58 million Viet Dong per tael – south-east Asia’s variable "street dealing" unit, equal to 1.2 troy ounces in Vietnam. That puts the domestic cost of gold roughly $52 an ounce higher than international spot pricing according to figures from Vietnam Gold Market News…which is down from the $150 premium achieved just before Hanoi relented, but still a marked premium for Vietnam’s capitalist-communist citizenry.

"Taking advantage of unstable international Gold Prices and peoples’ concern that prices will rise further, local speculators have [still] pushed prices to a very high level," as central bank governor Nguyen Van Giau said when he lifted the import restriction two weeks ago.

Aimed at "stabilizing the gold market and preventing speculation", the central bank’s statement in fact helped send the Vietnamese Dong to a 16-month low on the currency market, down 6.4% on 1-year forward contracts, thereby pushing local gold prices higher again!

Since then, and with the currency still falling, Hanoi’s foreign currency reserves have now shrunk by one quarter to $16.5 billion from the start of this year. Fighting to defend its Dollar-peg in the market – by buying up Dong with overseas money – the government admitted that it’s target trade deficit for 2009 was already seven-eighths spent with another two months to go. So this week, it opted to raise interest rates – the obvious route to stemming a currency run – but not until December. It’s also devalued the Dong yet again, down 5.44% from Thursday morning per Dollar, but still only playing catch-up with the black market exchange rate once again.

Commercial banks are meantime banned from trading in Dollars if the Dong moves 3% or more away from its target exchange rate. Quotas also remain in place for importing gold, with licenses for 10 tonnes issued this week according to Reuters. Some 6.8 tonnes of bullion have already been imported, the state TV station reported today, since the import ban was lifted a fortnight ago.

"These imports will have an impact on the local gold market," reckons Van Giau. But then he also says the latest Dong devaluation and interest-rate hike – from 7% to 8% –represent a "solution to strongly intervene." Whereas HSBC’s chief Asian economist, Robert Prior-Wandesforde, sees Vietnamese interest rates rising further to 11% by year-end, while GFMS analyst Rhona O’Connell notes how "The change in the Vietnamese government’s policy over gold imports [in fact] illustrates that demand remains strong at grass roots level."

Oh sure – government policy helped stem the last global bull market in gold. Raising the margin requirement on US Gold Futures took the heat out of the metal’s parabolic surge of late-Jan. 1980, coinciding with what then proved a 28-year record at $850 an ounce. But unlike blaming short-sellers for the collapse of the banks, it was only by addressing the true fundamentals that the authorities could hope to reverse the flight into gold.

Double-digit returns offered to cash-in-the-bank killed the need to defend savings with metal. And this time around, not even import bans could take the heat out of Vietnamese hoarding.

Source:Emergency Orders & Exchange Controls