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Weekend Videos

Just got back to blogging late Friday evening. Had to entertain my relatives from Canada who are in. Like the Irish a couple of weeks ago, they shopped liked it was Christmas in July to take advantage of the weaker dollar. I know one thing for sure. Foreigners sure love our “strong dollar” policy…

“Oil Crisis”
Becky Quick
CNBC, July 18, 2008

From the CNBC website:

The House may vote on releasing oil from the strategic petroleum reserve, with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and CNBC’s Becky Quick.

You can view the 3 minute 18 second video here.

Note to Congress- there is no quick-fix for the energy crisis. I’m starting to consider donating funds to Jim Puplava’s proposed program, “No Congressman Left Behind.”

Apparently, it’s a non-issue now anyway, seeing that after oil prices suffered their biggest weekly drop ever, Yahoo! Finance asks tonight, “So is it time to declare the energy bubble popped?” By the way, the Associated Press is reporting that terrorists are trying to enter the United States with European Union passports. Good thing Congress wants to deplete oil stockpiles meant for a national emergency. Like a major terrorist attack, for example. If you think 9/11 was a one-off event, I have a bridge that spans the East River out in NYC that I can sell you for a really good price…

“Is government clueless about economy”
Jim Jubak
MSN Money, July 18, 2008

From the MSN Money website:

Washington is talking us into a deeper crisis. Neither the President nor Congress gets it: When you owe as much as the US does, keeping your overseas creditors happy is the most important thing, says Jim Jubak.

You can view the 4 minute 7 second video here.

Jubak said in the segment:

The U.S. is a debtor nation. And debtor nations need to remember one thing. You have got to keep your creditors happy. So the creditors, the people who hold all those treasury bonds, hold all those U.S. dollars, all over the world, are looking to see how credible the U.S. government is at this point. And if they think there’s some danger the dollar’s going to slide further, or the mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac aren’t going to hold up, you’re likely to see a big retreat from the dollar by those creditors, that will drive up U.S. interest rates, it will drive the dollar down further, and make the crisis even worse. The Treasury and the Fed get that. But it’s pretty clear that no one else in Washington really understands.

Jubak pointed out some really stupid things that American politicians are saying. This, in turn, isn’t convincing our creditors that we know what we’re doing when it comes to our economy. As a matter of fact, we’re doing such a great job that Jubak noted:

The Saudi government has gone into serious discussions about taking its currency off the dollar peg.

“Christmas In July”
The Dandy Warhols, “Little Drummer Boy” (1995)
YouTube Video Link

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How Irish Tourists Saved The U.S. Economy

“There’s someone I want you to meet this weekend,” my girlfriend told me in June. Her relatives were coming in from Ireland for a family reunion in Chicago. “He’s travelling with his wife and her sisters. Maybe you guys could hang out and talk some football [soccer].” I met Connor that Friday night at the Water Tower Place in Chicago (from what I could understand, he wasn’t married, yet he did travel with a young lady and her sisters). While the conversation revolved mostly around the “beautiful game” and my plans for the “Great Escape” the next day to watch some of Euro 2008, he happened to mention that since he’d been in United States, he and the “Walsh girls,” as they came to be known by reunion participants, had shopped, shopped, and shopped some more. It seemed that every time I asked about Connor’s whereabouts, “he and the Walsh girls went shopping” was the response I got. On Sunday, the reunion shifted to Arlington Park Racetrack for thoroughbred racing. I saw the Irishman at the start of the day after he had just won a race, but didn’t see him later on. More shopping, perhaps? In the days that followed, my girlfriend joked to her sister that the Walsh girls single-handedly saved the U.S. economy. She also mentioned that she felt bad for Connor, as did I, as he was forced to endure the seemingly-endless spending sprees at the Chicagoland malls. However, this remorse was short-lived when her sister informed her that Connor bought just as much stuff as the Walsh girls did.

Robin Sparkles, “Let’s Go To The Mall”
YouTube Video Link

Anyway, I read a blog post by CNN’s Jack Cafferty earlier today that reminded me of our “economic rescue” by these visiting tourists from the Emerald Isle. Cafferty provides commentary and insight for CNN’s political program “The Situation Room.” He wrote:

The U.S. dollar just isn’t what it used to be. In fact, the dollar has been declining in value for 6 years now against other major currencies.

And, if you look around, it’s hard not to see the signs: hordes of vacationing Europeans are picking up bargains in the U.S., while Americans traveling overseas are hit hard with sticker shock. Canadians now flock here for shopping bargains, instead of the opposite. A Belgian company is attempting a hostile takeover of Anheuser-Busch, the largest brewer in the U.S. If the takeover goes through, it might be the first of many foreign takeovers of American companies.

While everything made in the U.S. is so much cheaper to foreigners, Americans are paying more for imported goods, while most are also grappling with rising food and energy costs. Since oil is bought and sold in dollars, the devalued dollar makes gasoline that much more expensive for Americans.

Some even suggest the continued decline of the dollar could one day lead to it being replaced by the Euro as the so-called “primary reserve” currency. There are stores right here in New York that now accept euros as payment.

Meanwhile, the message from Washington doesn’t seem to change much. President Bush has often talked about his support for a “strong dollar”, just last week saying “We’re strong-dollar people in this administration.” Really, Mr. President? You have presided over the most precipitous drop in the value of our currency in our nation’s history.

Source:

“Concern about sharp decline of dollar?”
Jack Cafferty
CNNPolitics.com, July 2, 2008


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Canada Prepared For U.S. Recession

Tonight I came across an article in the National Post (Canada) entitled “Riding Out Global Gloom,” which claims that Canada is well-positioned to withstand a U.S. recession. According to Jacqueline Thorpe, the author of the piece:

The economic gloom deepened yesterday as the United Nations warned of the risk of worldwide recession, Goldman Sachs became the latest observer to forecast a U.S. contraction, shares of European retailers plummeted on fears a consumer retrenchment would cross the Atlantic, and safe-haven gold touched another record high of US$891.40 an ounce.

But amid the pessimism one economic stalwart stands out: Canada.

Ms. Thorpe referenced a Merrill Lynch forecast:

In an indication of just what this country has going for it, the same investment bank that said on Monday the United States was already in recession, predicted yesterday Canada would pull through with “the best relative performance … in modern times.”

David Wolf, Merrill Lynch’s Canadian analyst, forecast Canadian real GDP would trough at 1.3% year-over-year in the third quarter, down from 2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2007 and a nearby peak of 3.6% in the first quarter of 2006.

In the past, the Canadian economy fell victim to the same economic ills as its neighbor to the south:

In the 2001 U.S. recession by contrast, Canadian growth fell to just 0.7% from the cyclical peak of 5.9% in the fourth quarter of 1999. And history has been much less kind, with Canada suffering interminably during the early 1990s recession as the U.S. economy bounced back.

Indeed, in the six previous recessions of the past forty years, Canada has followed suit four times (1969-70 and 2001 being the exceptions), Mr. Wolf said. The average peak-to-trough drop in real GDP was 6.7 percentage points.

canada.jpg
The Joke’s On US
Courtesy of BustedTees.com

Why is Canada better off this time around? The Merrill Lynch analyst points out that the Canadian housing market is healthier than its neighbor’s, “as activity and prices are still rising and, crucially, owner’s equity, which could be tapped for spending, exceeding 70% as opposed to around 50% in the United States.” In addition, while employment and wage growth would probably slow, Canadian consumers are in better shape, with Wolf predicting 3.9% consumer spending growth in 2008. Avery Shenfeld, senior economist at CIBC World Markets, told the Post that:

We have higher levels of employment; we have rising wage rates, rising house prices, so our consumer sector has no reason to do anything but shop.

Shenfeld is forecasting 2.7% growth for Canada this year.

On the flip-side, the potential for flattening commodity prices may affect Canadian exports, as will the strong Canadian dollar. Yet, the loonie’s strength will keep import prices cheap for the Canadian consumer, and “will keep a lid on inflation, giving the Bank of Canada the wiggle room it needs to cut interest rates,” according to the Ontario-based publication. Merrill Lynch’s Wolf predicts that Canada will move to a current account deficit of $10 billion in 2009 from a $14 billion surplus in 2007 as imports surge.

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Gold: Barbarous Relic Or Investment Superstar? Part 2

In part one of a three-part series on gold, I noted that the price of the metal has risen significantly in the past year, despite all the arguments leveled against gold by its detractors. Meanwhile, the metal looks to be headed for its seventh straight annual gain. Gold bulls point to the following as having a significant impact on its price in 2007:

U.S. Dollar Weakness- The U.S. currency is down four out of the last five years, and has dropped almost 11% so far this year based on the Federal Reserve’s U.S. Trade-Weighted Major Currency Index. This autumn it’s been at its weakest against the euro since the European currency started trading in 1999, the lowest against the Canadian dollar since it was floated in 1950, and at a 26-year low versus the British pound. The end of the U.S. housing boom, the subprime mortgage crisis, and a credit crunch, in conjunction with forecasts for a slowing U.S. economy, have weighed down the U.S. currency. The increased threats from dollar diversification by countries holding large numbers of greenbacks in their foreign currency reserves, sovereign wealth funds looking to exchange their dollars for other assets, and more nations looking to decouple their currencies from the U.S. dollar have only made matters worse for the world’s reserve currency. Assuming the existence of a strategic inverse relationship between gold and the greenback, investors have poured money into the precious metal and related investment vehicles. Validating such actions have been forecasts by legendary investors such as Warren Buffett, Jim Rogers, and George Soros, who all predict that the U.S. dollar is going lower. Back on October 25, Buffett was quoted by CNBC as saying, “We are still negative on the dollar. We bought stocks in companies that are earning their money in other currencies.” On November 15, Rogers told Bloomberg that, “If you have dollars, I urge you to get out. That’s not a currency to own.” Finally, on June 2, AME Info reported that Soros said, “A slowdown in the United States will be transmitted to the rest of the world via a weaker dollar.”

Geopolitical Risk- The continuing stalemate between the West and Iran over its nuclear program, political instability in Pakistan, and Turkey’s spat with Iraq are just some of the more recent geopolitical risks that have driven the price of gold higher. The ever-present danger from Al-Qaeda should not be forgotten either. Consider the following warning from Michael Scheuer, a 22-year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), where for 6 years he was in charge of the search for Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. When asked by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty earlier this year if he expected more attacks on the United States or in the West on the scale of September 11, 2001, Scheuer’s response was:

Oh, I think greater than 9/11. I don’t think it will happen in Europe, but I do think it will happen in the United States. Bin Laden has been very clear that each of Al-Qaeda’s attacks on America will be greater than the last, and I think the only reason we haven’t seen an attack so far is that he doesn’t have that attack prepared. But when he does, he will use it. And try to get us out of the way, which of course is his main goal.

Stephen Walker, director of global mining research at RBC Capital Markets, said last week that increasing geopolitical risk, combined with combined with rising economic uncertainty, “should continue to provide incentives for investors to increase their exposure to gold as a safe haven.”

Supply and Demand- Last Friday, the Telegraph (UK) announced:

The era of ‘peak gold’ has arrived. Try as they might, miners cannot find enough ore at viable costs to replace their fast-depleting reserves, even if they dig miles into the centre of the earth.

The global mine supply of gold peaked in 2002, and has fallen every year since. Last year alone, the mine supply of gold fell 15%. Also in 2006, South Africa, the world’s single-largest gold producer, produced its lowest amount of gold since 1922 with overall output down 72% since its 1970 peak. It should be noted that no major new mine production is expected in the near-term either.

On the demand side, RBC Capital Markets noted last Wednesday that demand is rising as consumption increases in China, India, and the Middle East. On Thursday, a study by precious metals consultant GFMS Ltd. showed that global gold demand in the third quarter rose 19% year-on-year on the back of robust inflows into bullion investment funds and improved jewelry consumption. The report revealed that the increase in investment demand replaced jewelry buying as the major source of growth for the third quarter. Demand grew sharply in India, China, Turkey, and the Middle East, while it slowed in the United States.

Outside of U.S. dollar weakness, geopolitical risk, and supply/demand factors, gold bulls say that some of the drawbacks which Bloomberg’s Michael Sesit spelled out in part one are actually advantages to owning the precious metal. Critics of gold like to point out that it “doesn’t earn a return.” Michael J. Kosares, President and Founder of Centennial Precious Metals, Inc., argued in his book The ABCs of Gold Investing, that:

Those who criticize gold because it fails to offer a return do not really understand gold’s position as the fixed North Star of asset value around which all other assets rotate. Gold is a stand-alone asset. It relies on no individual or institution for value. Gold investors prefer it this way. In the ultimate sense, this is what money is and what money should be.

Another criticism directed at gold, said Sesit, is “the world’s biggest holders of gold, major central banks, aren’t overly eager to keep owning it.” If so, gold bulls ask why central banks hesitate to unload the metal. In 2006, net central bank sales amounted to just 319 tons, less than half of the 659 tons recorded in the previous year.

Love it or hate it, bulls and bears, gold is here to stay. In the final part of this series, I will talk about where this precious metal may go from here.

(Part 3 will be posted on Wednesday)

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