Questto intervento di john
Mauldin è circolato tempo fa ma non è stato letto da molti, in Italia poi…Ha il
pregio di dimostrare la stupidità della tesi della perdita di dominio del
dollaro che tanto va di moda nei luoghi comuni presenti sui mass media ufficiali
e naturalmente sulla publicistica di estrema sinistra.
Bisognerebbe avere la pazienza di leggerlo attentamente nei suoi passaggi
logici. Si abbandonerebbe così definitivamente la tesi che gli USA hanno fatto la “Guerra” all’Iraq per il loro dominio
(geopolitico?) economico
ante
March 29,
2003
Boneheads,
Iraq and the Artificial Dollar
by John Mauldin
The past two weeks
I have had so many people email me an article by one Geoffrey Heard of
Melbourne, Australia that I am going to comment on his nonsense. Because it is
so wrong and yet his arguments seem so seductive, it offers an excellent
opportunity for us to learn how world currency transactions really affect the
price of gold and oil and other commodities. Warning: I am taking off my gloves
in this letter. This is one of the more boneheaded pieces of conspiratorial
economic garbage that I have read in quite some time. I normally don't respond
to such ranting, but because it is seemingly being read and repeated in a lot of
places, it deserves some attention.
Basically, his
thesis is that the United States (and Bush) is invading Iraq to insure that they
will still stop selling their oil for euros. Bush and the American elitists he
represents are apparently afraid that all of OPEC will want to convert to euros.
To quote:
"In 1999, Iraq,
with the world's second-largest oil reserves, switched to trading its oil in
euros....Iran started thinking about switching too; Venezuela... Russia...The
greenback's grip on oil trading, and consequently on world trade in general, was
under serious threat. If America did not stamp on this immediately, this
economic brushfire could rapidly be fanned into a wildfire capable of consuming
the U.S.'s economy and its dominance of world trade."
"It is the biggest
grab for world power in modern times.... If America invades Iraq and takes over,
it will hurl the EU and its euro back into the sea and make America's position
as the dominant economic power in the world all but impregnable.... This debate
is not about whether America would suffer from losing the US dollar monopoly on
oil trading-that is a given-rather it is about exactly how hard the USA would be
hit. The smart money seems to be saying the impact would be in the range from
severe to catastrophic. The USA could collapse economically.... The key to it
all is the fiat currency for trading oil... Under an OPEC agreement, all oil has
been traded in US dollars since 1971 (after the dropping of the gold standard)
which makes the US dollar the de facto major international trading currency. If
other nations have to hoard dollars to buy oil, then they want to use that hoard
for other trading too. This fact gives America a huge trading advantage and
helps make it the dominant economy in the world."
Heard goes on to
write about other US offenses, making clear that he understands the reasons for
the vast conspiracy in which Bush and company are engaged. He clearly does not
like the current US policy and looks to blame any and all world problems on
Bush. Conspiracy Theorists of the World, Unite!
First, let's look
at his first thesis: if OPEC began to sell oil for euros, it would doom the
dollar and be a catastrophe for the US: "The USA could collapse economically."
You could make a
case that in 1971 the oil for dollars deal was good for the US, but it was not
some conspiracy or "deal." At the time, there was no other major currency with
enough scope and supply to function as a major trading currency. The euro did
not exist. The German mark and British pound did not simply have the supply of
currency necessary without stretching the currency
markets.
That was a period
in which central banks had some measure of short and medium term control over
the valuation of their currencies. By working together, they could establish a
price range between currencies.
Then came 1992. The
foreign currency markets had grown dramatically, and central banks were
struggling to control their currencies. George Soros and the legions of traders
who were investing/betting in the currency markets decided the pound, among
other currencies, was over-valued, and were shorting the British
pound.
Legend has it that
a reporter came to him and asked him what he was going to do because the Bank of
England was going to spend $30 billion pounds defending the value of the British
pound. Supposedly his answer was, "What are they going to do in the 30 minutes
after that?" $30 billion pounds was about 30 minutes of trading on the currency
exchanges at that time.
The point was that
central banks no longer had enough money to support a currency. To support a
currency you have to have foreign deposits in order to buy your own currency.
While the bank of England could print all the pounds they wanted to, they could
not manufacture dollars or marks or yen. Those currencies had to come from
actual trade surpluses, which England did not have at the
time.
Central
Banks Wave the White Flag
Within a few weeks, what I regard as one
of the more remarkable and important op-ed pieces of the last half century
appeared in the Wall Street Journal. It was an article by Walter Wriston,
chairman of CiticCorp and the ultimate insider: Council on Foreign Relations,
Tri-Lateral Commission and confidant of presidents and world
leaders.
In it, he basically
waved the white flag. We were in a brave new world where currencies were no
longer controlled by central bankers but by currency traders. I remember reading
it and recognizing the truth which it contained. I,
for one, was happy.
In essence, the
ability of central banks to manipulate their currencies for more than a short
time was gone. Even acting in concert, central banks do not have the real
ability to affect the markets for more than a few days. The most they can do is
threaten, which keeps short term traders nervous, but currency trades back up
like flood waters at a dam, eventually pouring
over.
Today, Chuck
Butler, currency trader at Everbank tells me the world currency markets trade
$1.2 trillion a day. That is almost one half a quadrillion dollars a year. To
provide some perspective, the entire US economy is "only" $12 trillion or
so.
The total value of
oil trades a day is a drop in the bucket compared to the currency markets. If
OPEC wanted to be in euros all they have to do is convert to euros. You could
price oil in terms of any currency, but those who sell must do something with
the dollars or yen or yuan or pesos they get. After the money is in an OPEC bank
account, they can do anything they want with it.
If OPEC decided
they wanted to price oil in euros, it would make no difference to the US price
in dollars. It is supply and demand, and currencies are extremely
liquid.
Heard writes "If
other nations have to hoard dollars to buy oil, then they want to use that hoard
for other trading too." In light of the liquidity in the currency markets, this
is a stupid statement. You could "hoard" any major currency (yen, pesos, euros,
pounds, won, renminbi, etc.) and when you want to convert it into dollars to buy
oil you can do so instantly and with almost no transaction cost. A country or
business will keep its reserves in whatever currency it thinks is the best at
the time and then convert for the sale. There is no "hoarding" of dollars,
unless that is the currency the various central banks or businesses want to
use.
As an example,
let's look at gold. Gold is in a great bull market, right? On July 1, 2001 gold
was 265, and today it is around $330. That is a $65 rise for about a 25%
gain.
On that same day,
the euro was $.8378 and today the euro is $1.07. The euro has risen almost 30%.
Which is the bigger bull market?
Furthermore, if you
live in Europe, there has been no gold bull market since July, 2001. Gold, in
terms of euros, is actually down slightly, depending on what day you look at
gold and currency prices. On July 1, 2001 you got 316 euros when you sold an
ounce of gold. Today you only get 299 (at $1.07).
The same applies to
oil. In the US, we have watched as oil prices go through the roof. Depending on
what period you use, oil is up only slightly in Europe. Is that because OPEC
loves the French? Of course not. It is entirely because the dollar has dropped
against the euro.
If oil were priced
in euros, the results would not be any different. The price would have risen in
the US and been almost flat in Europe. The reasons for the drop in the dollar
have nothing to do with Iraq or oil. We will discuss the real reasons a bit
later.
Look at it this
way: there is x amount of oil available for sale on any given day. It will go to
the highest bidder. If someone from Europe wants to buy oil, in reality he is
paying in euros. The conversion to dollars is transparent to him. In large
amounts, it costs almost nothing to convert to dollars or pounds or any
currency. Oil is no different than wheat or sugar or any other commodity. It is
supply and demand that determines the price, and the currency used for the
transaction has nothing to do with it, as long as it is
liquid.
To claim, as
Geoffrey Heard does, that the dollar would drop because of oil being priced in
euros is absurd and shows a complete lack of understanding of how the currency
markets work.
Further, to suggest
that "If America invades Iraq and takes over, it will hurl the EU and its euro
back into the sea" is equally absurd. What if America decided to invade
Australia to take over its wheat crop? Would that hurl Canada and its dollar
into the sea?
Heard's thesis is
based upon the presumption that the US wants to maintain a strong dollar, when
in fact the clear leaning, if not actual private preference, at both the
Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve is to allow the dollar to drop.
While the Bush administration gives lip service to a strong dollar, they have
also made it clear that they do not intend to intervene to support it. "Let the
market work" is the mantra. A falling dollar helps the Fed control
deflation.
A gradually falling
dollar works to our benefit by making our products cheaper on the world markets.
It allows US producers to compete with foreign companies for the American
consumer dollar. It helps stem the deflationary tide. And it helps lower the
trade deficit, as it makes imports more costly and helps our
exports.
Further, Heard's
thesis assumes the US is capable of controlling the value of a dollar. It is
not. The world currency markets are far bigger than the US Federal Reserve. The
only unilateral power a central bank has is the ability to destroy its currency
by printing too much of it.
Oh, I suppose the
Federal Reserve could reduce the money supply and the supply of dollars and
drive the dollar up. But classic economic theory says you can control the
quantity of a product (in this case the dollar) or the price, but not both.
Reducing the money supply would currently throw the US into a severe
deflationary recession and possibly lead to a world-wide depression. That is not
a policy that is likely to be pursued.
As the
Dollar Churns
With that as background, let's look for a
moment at some of the seismic changes which are happening in the world currency
markets. I am going to suggest to you that one event leads to another which
leads to another and the result is not what you are hearing in the mainstream
press.
The first thing to
notice is the huge US trade deficit, currently in excess of $500 billion. This
is now close to 5% of GDP, and as noted this time last year, in every case in
history when a country reaches a trade deficit of 5%, a serious currency
correction follows.
As long time
readers know, a 20-30% drop in the currency does not bother me. The US went
through such in the 1980's, and life seemed to go on just fine, thank
you.
The
Artificial Dollar
The dollar is artificially high. By
artificial, I mean the following things: first, the rest of the world, and
especially Asia, is hooked on selling products to the American consumer. If
prices were to rise 30%, we would buy less of their products and more of our
own. If they sell less, their unemployment rises and profits
drop.
For now, they are
willing to take dollars because it keeps their factories going. They convert
those dollars into local currency or other
currencies.
Secondly, there are
those who hold dollars because it is better than their local currency. Physical
dollars are desired in many Latin American and African countries, and other
parts of the developing world. The clear pattern is that the dollar is a better
value than the local currencies.
Could the euro
become as popular a currency? Sure, but then there would be two choices, not an
abandonment of the dollar. Will it be more popular than the dollar? In some
countries, yes, especially those closer to the Eurozone. But the primary driver
for such holdings is not to get the best performing currency, the euro or the
dollar, but to have a currency which is not their local currency, which their
local governments continually inflate and debase.
Third, it is
obvious that if we were not the reserve currency of the world, the dollar would
not be as high. The dollar would have less buying power. Foreigners look at that
buying power and are often jealous, seeing it is part of American
hegemony.
But it cuts both
ways. An artificially strong dollar has meant that our manufacturing base has
slowly been eroding as more and more jobs leave the US for cheaper production
climates. There is no free lunch.
As I noted one year
ago, Morgan Stanley projected that a 20% drop in the dollar against the euro
would knock 1% off of the GDP of Europe, and it looks like it is doing just
that, as it hurts their sales to us and makes their goods and services more
expensive to the rest of the world. If the dollar were to drop another 10% or go
to $1.25 you will hear screams and moans throughout Europe, as business would
have to compete against much cheaper production from not only Asia but from the
US.
A rise to US$1.25
euro means the price of products made in Europe would have risen 50% in terms of
dollars over a period of just a few years. This will give the US and Asia a huge
advantage in selling products and services to Europe and a major competitive
advantage in the rest of the world. If European businesses are already having
problems (and the statistics suggest they are) then this would be even more
devastating.
What could Europe
do? They could ask for an increase in tariffs, but this would start a trade war
which they would lose, and could possibly trigger a world-wide recession. It
would also contravene a lot of treaties they have worked very hard to get
signed, and also cause a major split within the European Union. This is not a
likely scenario.
The more likely
effort will be to get the Chinese to allow their currency to float against the
dollar. Today it is pegged to the dollar, which means a fixed amount of Chinese
currency always equal a dollar. If the "peg" is taken off, the Chinese currency
will rise, thus making their products more expensive and European (and US)
products relatively more competitive.
The rest of the
Asian Tiger countries will be able to let their currencies rise along with the
Chinese renminbi. None of these countries are against a stronger currency as
long as they to do not lose competitive advantage against each
other.
Foreign products
will cost US consumers more, we will buy less and will be able to sell more of
our products and the trade deficit goes down. (This whole process could
take a decade or longer.)
The
Competitive Currency Dance
Except. Except the Japanese get hurt in
the process. They are clearly fighting deflation, and a rise in the value of
their currency would be deflationary. They have government debt problems which
dwarf those of the US. Their banks are bleeding and are in a true crisis. Dennis
Gartman writes today that just the four largest banks are reporting losses
approaching $3 trillion yen, or over 20 billion dollars. Analysis of Japanese
business is bleak, and consumer demand there is decreasing as the population
ages rapidly.
Japan is the third
largest economy in the world. They have been a major source of lending in the
world, and a weak Japan is good for no one. Can Japan afford to let its currency
rise 20-30%? Can it keep it from happening without massive printing?
If Japan will not
let its currency rise, can the other Asian countries? For instance, if the
Korean won rose 20% against the yen that would make a Hyundai cost the same as a
Toyota. The price advantage goes away, and Korea suffers. The variations to the
currency dance are wide.
Until the rest of
the world and especially Asia can wean themselves from dependence upon the
American consumer, the dollar will remain artificially high. That is not to say
it will not continue its decline. It will. It is just that it will take longer
than it would without the artificial factors cited
above.
(By the way, that
also means that gold will increase in value as well. It means that the price of
oil will rise in terms of dollars over time.)
One last lesson we
can learn from Heard's piece: always be cautious when reading an essay from
someone with an obvious ax to grind, especially when it borders on the
conspiratorial. Such a writer has a single-minded purpose: to re-enforce his
basic prejudice. Just as all the world is a hammer to the man who only has a
hammer, all the problems of the world are the cause of whatever is the focus of
the writer's animosity.
Heard will dismiss
my writing as naive apologetic writings from an obvious proponent of American
hegemony (which by the way, I am not). But it will keep him from having to deal
with reality.
There may be good
reasons to oppose the war. But they should be arguments founded in reality and
philosophy and not conspiratorial hyper-ventilation or over-wrought emotions. I
am quite properly suspicious of governments and the motives of politicians. But
I do hope I let reality impinge on my analysis of their policies, either good or
bad.
A Quick
Look at the Economy
Housing starts are down. Initial
unemployment claims are down, although still high and lay-off announcements seem
to be falling off. Everything is slowing down, but nothing has stopped. The
euphoria that greeted the start of the war is now fading, as investors realize
it might be (gasp) weeks or months to mount and conclude one of the more
ambitious military ventures in history. Thus uncertainty sets back
in.
Charles Krauthammer
notes: "By Monday the media were in full quagmire mode. Good grief. If there had
been TV cameras not just at Normandy, but after Normandy, giving live coverage
of firefights at every French village on the Allies' march to Berlin, the
operation would have been judged a strategic miscalculation, if not a disaster.
The fact is that after a single week we find ourselves at the gates of Baghdad,
servicing the longest supply lines in American history, with combat losses
astonishingly low by any standard."
We face an enemy
which hangs a woman for waving at a coalition solider, shoots its own troops to
get them to march and die, surrenders and then opens fire, shoots women and
children who try to get food and water, hides behind women and in hospitals and
literally sets a young girl on fire with the kerosene she was trying to smuggle
to her home. This is not a climate where the Iraqi people feel free to welcome
us or for the average soldier to surrender.
Yes, this might
take longer, but the outcome is no less sure. However, the US economy seems once
again focused on the uncertainty. The longer this war goes on, the more concern
I have about an outright recession beginning later this
year.
It is quite
possible that oil will not come down as fast, even after Iraqi oil is back
online. Nigeria is becoming a major problem, and 800,000 barrels per day have
been pulled out of production, which is a huge number. Venezuela is still
problematic. The combination puts world oil supplies in jeopardy. If
it's not one thing it's another.
The US Senate has
cut the President's tax cut in half, and as long time readers know I believe the
stimulus from the tax cut will be needed to avoid or at least postpone a
recession later this year. Given the problems in the economy, which I will
address in detail in a future letter, this is not a good
omen.
Thus, with the
prospects for a longer war, an uncertain consumer, the "oil tax" from high oil
prices not going away any time soon and the smaller tax cut stimulus, this was
not a good week for the Muddle Through Economy. We will stay
tuned.
One final note
before I close: central banks no longer can control their currencies because of
the massive liquidity of the world currency markets. This is a good thing.
Further, any currency which does not have sufficient liquidity will be
automatically under-valued, because there is increased risk in holding the
currency. Liquidity, the ability to be able to sell on a seconds notice, helps
take away the risk premium associated with illiquid
investments.
Now some observers
are calling for controls on hedge funds which can "short" the market. Shorting,
they say, is one of the reasons for the bear market. "Hedge funds bad, bull
markets good" is the simplistic reasoning. Much of the whining is from companies
who cannot make a profit.
Hedge funds provide
liquidity, pure and simple. If you take away the ability to short a stock, you
will increase the risk premium on that stock because it will drive away
investors and liquidity. If you want to induce a stock market crash, and I mean
a real crash, not a slow drawn out secular bear market, then all you have to do
is reduce the ability to short in this market. It will dry up liquidity faster
than you can say 1987. If hedge funds cannot "hedge" their risks, they will
simply withdraw from the market. That will take away liquidity and drive up the
risk premium.
This may seem
counter-intuitive, but hedge funds did not create the bubble and are not
responsible for the bear. The writer we analyzed earlier decided falsely that
the US reason for starting the Iraqi war was because we wanted to maintain a
strong dollar. He looked for a reason to justify his beliefs about the US, and
found a conspiracy.
Those who suggest
that this bear market is the result of hedge funds who short stocks look for a
scapegoat to blame their own failures to properly manage risk and invest or to
manage their companies and make a profit.
The best antidote
to someone shorting your stock is to make a profit and increase them every year.
If you can't do that, then don't whine when your stock price goes
down.
Making
Progress
I did make some good progress this week on my book on investing in this
secular bear market. I am increasingly focused on finishing, and will probably
post a few chapters in the next few weeks, if my publisher gives me
permission.
Have a great week,
and I leave you with this thought which my wife sent me this morning. She has
noted that I have been griping a great deal of late about a few events in my
life which have caused a rise in my stomach acid levels, not to mentioned have
robbed me of a great deal of time. But we all have to learn to relax and trust
that God has things in control. I think it was my friend Richard Russell who
noted that being calm and relaxed about life was one of the best things for a
long and healthy life.
She sent me the
following quote: "We must offer ourselves to God like a clean, smooth canvas and
not worry ourselves about what God may choose to paint on it, but at each
moment, feel only the stroke of His brush."--Jean Pierre de
Caussade
Your not quite yet
a relaxed sainted analyst,