Thursday, February 4, 2010

The World Aroud US Today!

After what was a rash of new issues in the month of January, the pace seems to have slowed down sufficiently as market pundits take stock of the rather ambiguous nature of the global theatre from a political & economic viewpoint.



Currently trying to make an accurate assessment of the global environment is like trying to tickle a trout in a fast moving stream into your frying pan, you need real expertise and need to have done it previously. I don't know much about tickling trout; but certainly will try to at least make an assessment of the global market environment*



Last week we saw Bernanke reconfirmed; but not without dissent and one of the narrowest margins since voting for the position of Lord Incumbent of the Creature from Jekyll Island began. Talking of dissent we also had Kansas City Fed President Hoenig doing just that after the Creatures’ two day meeting where they maintained their lower for longer language. Hoenig’s singular dissent however had the whole market in a tizzy as shorts ramped up, longs tried to close out, steepeners became flatteners and once again everyone jumped on the wagon of higher rates around the corner. This week however Australia surprised the market, having started to raise rates last year, consensus from pretty much all economists was for a 25bp hike and a given event. It didn’t happen and one can only imagine that the IMF admonishments to the EU and the US of the possibility of rate hikes too soon derailing whatever recovery might be on the way being heard all the way down under.



This brings us to Canada where a relatively rosy picture exists (its relative after all). Canada while not having to deal with all the issues that plagued the US market and real economy did have "stuff" to deal with. While on the whole our economy and banks look in better shape and our housing market continues to climb, nonetheless our Finance Minister saw fit to throw some cold water on any over enthusiasm that was building on our economic outlook. There seems a pattern emerging; but no evident clarity.

What is evident is that the US deficit continues to grow and President Obama and his administration have an awful lot of work to do to right the US economy and by implication the world economy and require Chinese cooperation. With the recent US arm sales to Taiwan and the impending meeting of President Obama with the Dalai Lama, I suspect that those actions do very little for betterment of relationships with one’s biggest creditor, at a time when you are increasing your debt load (where is Handsome Hank Paulson, China expert extraordinaire when one needs him?).

"If the U.S. leader chooses this time to meet the Dalai Lama, that would damage trust and cooperation between our two countries, and how would that help the United States surmount the current economic crisis?"

Zhu Weiqun, vice minister of the United Front Work Department of China's ruling Communist Party, [Reuters]

The sequitur is then the implications for & the state of the greenback. Surprisingly despite competitive devaluation, it seems at all times that its untouchable as the worlds reserve currency, and despite Moody’s warnings about the US AAA ratings potentially being in jeopardy, the question that's is there for all to ask, what is the alternative?

***Moody's warns US of credit rating fears
By Michael Mackenzie in New York and Gillian Tett in London Published: February 3 2010 19:53

Moody's Investors Service fired off a warning on Wednesday that the triple A sovereign credit rating of the US would come under pressure unless economic growth was more robust than expected or tougher actions were taken to tackle the country's budget deficit ****[ft.com]

A rather good question indeed when one considers the state of the other major currencies.

Europe is in deep doodoo with the problems of the porcine acronymed members ran by the Belgian Emperor Van Rompuy. The “PIGS” as they are affectionately referenced (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Spain) are struggling with Greece as the evident example and problem child du jour, with concerns galore as they try and reduce their deficit as percentage of GDP from its current 12.7% to the inside 3% that’s required from the EU stability pact. It puts the whole EU in a pickle and begs who will blink first in the EU/Greece stand-off. With the wage freezes and cuts that the Greek PM has announced as he tries to bring the deficits in line, I can only imagine that the Greeks, who are well known for taking to the streets in spates of unrest, will do exactly that. What of the UK, where neither party is loved, bankers are hated and the economy continues to struggle and Cool Britannia is no longer?

So the status quo will likely continue for the foreseeable future; but lest we get too comfortable, there is a change taking place in the global paradigm and its implications for all that is currently deemed status quo.