EU Bites the Hand that Feeds It: Gazprom Will Bite Back

By OilPrice.com

Gazprom has Europe’s natural gas market in a stranglehold and Europe is attempting to fight back, first with a raid last year on the Russian giant’s offices and then with a probe launched earlier this week against its allegedly illicit efforts to control the EU’s natural gas supplies.

The bottom line is that the same natural gas revolution in the US, which was enabled by hydraulic fracturing (fracking), is now threatening to loosen Gazprom’s noose on the EU, and Gazprom simply won’t have it.

To head off a potential natural gas revolution in the EU, Gazprom is pulling out all the stops, and EU officials say that the company has been illegally throwing obstacles in the way of European gas diversification.

Poland’s situation is a case in point. Last year, a US Department of Energy report estimated Poland’s shale gas reserves at 171 trillion cubic feet. Gazprom got nervous. In March this year, the Polish Geological Institute suddenly felt compelled to contradict that report, saying reserves were only around 24.8 trillion cubic feet. In June, Exxon announced it would pull out of its shale gas projects in Poland. Investors started getting cold feet and shares began to drop. Chevron and ConocoPhillips are plodding along with their shale gas operations, for now.

Still, 24.8 trillion cubic feet is no paltry volume and enough to ensure that Gazprom remains nervous. And then there is Ukraine, which also has sizable shale gas reserves and where the Russian noose is even tighter.

Right now, the only thing keeping the shale gas revolution from hitting Europe as it has in the US is technology: the shale reserves in Europe are on land that is more inaccessible, there is a lack of necessary infrastructure and fracking equipment, and protests against the environmental impact of fracking are more serious. But the biggest problem is Gazprom.

EU governments are both desperate to break the Russian stranglehold by developing shale gas reserves and wary of going up against a gas giant on whom they depend for supplies. It’s a tough position and the outcome will depend on how the EU hedges its bets: Can it develop enough shale gas reserves quickly enough to take on Gazprom?

Poland is still a long way off from being able to fully develop its shale gas reserves. It will take time to conduct the necessary environmental impact studies and infrastructure would require a major overhaul.

The EU publics are divided between those who fear fracking and those who fear Gazprom and so far, the former fear is trumping the latter. France and Bulgaria have both banned fracking under pressure from the public, but Poland is marching on, its officials relentlessly insisting that fracking is safe.

Earlier this week, Germany’s Environmental Ministry urged a ban on fracking near drinking water reservoirs and mineral springs and called for environmental impact studies from developers, prompting concerns that Germany will tighten fracking regulations. Germany has massive natural gas potential, but environmental concerns are keeping a tight rein on development for now.

The end victory for Gazprom would come in the form of a European Commission ruling banning fracking-a ruling which would be applied to all EU countries, including Poland which has shown more political will to stand up to the Gazprom boogey man than others.

In the meantime, the EU is investigating Gazprom’s actions in eight countries-Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic. In Bulgaria, where fracking has been banned, Gazprom is the only supplier of gas. It is also the sole supplier to the Baltic states and Slovenia. It supplies over 80% of gas needs to Poland and Hungary, and nearly 70% of the Czech Republic’s.

It has strengthened its grip on Europe further due to the fact that it owns the one-way gas pipelines into the region and forces buyers into long-term contracts in which prices are tied to oil.

The EU has tried numerous tactics to loosen the Gazprom grip, including the implementation of new energy policies designed to separate supply from delivery and by seeking new pipelines that could deliver gas from elsewhere. While the EU’s alternative pipeline dreams have largely failed so far, it is eyeing developments now in Northern Iraq, where Turkey is courting the Kurds to build a new pipeline that could eventually deliver gas to EU markets. But this is a long way, and possibly a war, off.

Having failed so far in the area of alternative suppliers, the EU is now moving the front lines of the battle to the legal field, targeting unfair competition, which it stands a better, but still only minimal, chance of changing the rules of the game. The probe into Gazprom is looking at three things: Gazprom’s attempts to hinder the free flow of gas across the EU; its purposeful blocking of diversification efforts; unfair pricing and contractual arrangements.

Specifically, the EU says Gazprom has implemented a strategy to segment national markets by preventing gas exports and limiting delivery options, as well as by obligating buyers to use Gazprom infrastructure. Most significantly to the consumer, Gazprom’s pricing policies, which fix gas prices to oil prices, mean that European consumers see no benefit from the natural gas revolution in the US, which has increased global supplies and reduced prices on the open market.

Will the EU be able to actually levy fines for unfair competition and unravel the monopoly? Not unless it plays as dirty as Gazprom, which will simply cut off supplies and the circulation of those European countries that used to be in its back yard. Eastern and Central Europe will be the ones to pay the price for the European Union’s battle.

Let’s not pretend that energy companies are clean and that governments aren’t using them to forward nefarious geopolitical objectives (US multinationals in Northern Iraq, for instance). The point is not to paint Gazprom as the ultimate evil in energy. This is about Europe, and the EU’s “Mommy Dearest” struggle with Gazprom, which is undoubtedly playing an underhanded energy-politics game worthy of the most sinister of accolades.

One would not be surprised to discover that Gazprom has gone environmental and has had a hand in shaping the environmental concerns of the EU publics. As such, it is highly convenient that Gazprom has recently come under very public attack by our leading international environmental group. Everyone plays dirty, any means to an end.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/Europe/Europe-Has-Had-Enough-But-Can-It-Stand-Up-to-Gazprom.html
By. Jen Alic of Oilprice.com

 

Central Bank News Link List – Sept 14, 2012: Fed easing risks serious side effects for Asia

By Central Bank News

Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

“Inflation Risks Higher” After Fed Launches QE3, Analysts See Gold Hitting $1850-$1900

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 14 September 2012, 08:00 EDT

WHOLESALE MARKET gold bullion prices held above $1770 an ounce for most of Friday morning’s London trading, near their six-month highs hit after the US Federal Reserve announced a third round of quantitative easing (QE3) yesterday, leading to warnings that the risk of inflation has risen.

“After the move [gold bullion] had, not just yesterday, but over the last two or three weeks I think it would be natural to look for a period of consolidation,” says Credit Suisse analyst Tom Kendall in London.

“But certainly going into the back end of this year, I would be looking for gold to be getting towards at least the $1850 level.”

Silver bullion traded around $34.70 an ounce this morning, also close to new six-month highs, as stocks, commodities and the Euro all moved higher after Fed policymakers voted 11-1 in favor of new asset purchases.

“Silver is poised to test the next resistance level at $35.4,” one trader in Shanghai tells newswire Reuters.

“The recent rally, which has lifted silver by about 25% over the past month, is suppressing short-term physical demand”

The Fed announced Thursday that it will purchase $40 billion of mortgage-backed securities per month, and will continue such purchases until the outlook for the labor market improves “substantially”.

In addition, the Fed will continue its policy aimed at lowering longer-term US Treasury bond yields, known as Operation Twist, due to run until December. The Fed will also continue its policy of reinvesting principal payments on currently-held mortgage-backed securities back into this asset class.

In its statement, the Federal Open Market Committee said that the combined effect of its actions would amount to around $85 billion of asset purchases per month until the end of 2012.

“This is a Main Street policy, because what we’re about here is trying to get jobs going,” Fed chairman Ben Bernanke told a press conference following the announcement.

“We’re trying to create more employment. We’re trying to meet our maximum employment mandate, so that’s the objective.”

“[Bernanke will] fight and fight until he sees a real improvement in the economy,” says Ethan Harris, New York-based co-head of global economics at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

“He’s not going to let his critics stop him. He believes quantitative easing can help the economy and the Fed can avoid inflation, so he’ll just keep at it until there’s a real turn in the economy.”

The latest nonfarm payroll data suggest the US economy added 96,000 jobs in August, below the 150,000-200,000 Bernanke estimated in April is needed to meet Fed unemployment projections.

The US unemployment rate meantime has remained above 8% since February 2009.

“There is not a specific number we have in mind [for unemployment],” Bernanke told reporters.

“But what we’ve seen in the last six months isn’t it.”

In addition to announcing asset purchases, Fed policymakers extended their guidance for near-zero interest rates to at least mid-2015, beyond the previous guidance of late 2014.
US Treasury bond prices fell overnight for bonds with maturities of three years or more, pushing longer-dated yields higher.

“[The Fed’s decision to leave] purchases open-ended and extending their guidance means a steeper yield curve, as there is more inflation risk,” says Societe Generale trader Sean Murphy in New York.

“The need to come out with the operation at all is alerting everyone that there is a long road in this recovery and there are still many things that need to be addressed.”

“Controlling the fire of inflation once it is roaring is a difficult task,” warns Congressman Kevin Brady, a Republican from Texas and vice chair of the Joint Economic Committee.

“The Fed is overly confident about its ability to pick the right time to withdraw all this stimulus.”
Economist Paul Krugman however says that it’s “good to see the Fed moving, finally”.

Writing in his New York Times column, Krugman adds that “the Fed seems to be trying to ‘credibly promise to be irresponsible'” as a way of raising inflation expectations, something Krugman advocated the Bank of Japan do back in the 1990s.

“As [Bernanke] himself said,” adds Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse and a former New York Fed economist, the Fed has built up a lot of capital with respect to inflation credibility…the point of having capital is, from time to time, to spend it.”

“Should the Fed expand its balance sheet by a further $1.3 trillion,” says Standard Bank strategist Walter de Wet, “it would lift our fair value estimate for gold to around $1900. As a result, even from current levels of gold at $1770, we still see substantial upside for the metal.”

Here in Europe meantime, Spain would be “daft” to ask for a bailout on top of the €100 billion it has already agreed to fund banking sector restructuring, according to German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.

“I’m not in the camp that says ‘take the money,'” Schaeuble said in an interview Thursday.

“I’m one of those who says we should do everything possible to convince the markets that…speculation against Spain is without any basis in reality.”

“Our desire and intention,” said Spain’s budget minister Cristobal Montoro yesterday, “is to return again to being a reliable partner in Europe that doesn’t ask for anything.”

On the currency markets, the Euro rallied above $1.31 against the Dollar for the first time since early May this morning. Despite this strengthening, Euro gold bullion prices set a record high at Friday morning’s London Fix above €1359 per ounce, before drifting lower towards lunchtime.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

 

Fed Announces QE3 With $40 Billion Monthly Purchases

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – After a two-day meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee resolved to undertake a quantitative easing program, which involve open-ended purchases of mortgage debt worth $40 billion as the Fed aims to expanding its holdings of long term securities to boost economic growth and salvage the labor market. Federal Reserve Chairman said in a press conference after the meeting that the Fed is focusing on sustained improvement in the labor market. The move sent stocks high, with benchmark indexes rising to 2007 levels. The price of gold increased as Fed indicated it would continue buying assets. Bernanke’s move has been opposed by many republican politicians who have claimed that the policies will damage the economy.

The FOMC will also hold interest rates close to zero for longer that its previous forecast of late 2014. It extended this to mid-2015 in a statement where it indicated that accommodative monetary stance is appropriate for the economy to recover and the labor market to improve. Unemployment rate, which has been above 8 percent since 2008, has been termed as a “grave concern” and is seen as the main reason the Fed has moved to make a third round of asset purchases. The move has boosted global equity, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbing by 1.6 percent to 1,459.99 at the end of trading in New York yesterday. Crude oil climbed by 1.3 percent to 98.31 per barrel as gold appreciated to a price last seen in February.

Julia Coronado, who is a former Fed Economist and currently the chief economist at BNP Paribas said that the announcement marks a significant shift in the FOMC policy. She added that it is an aggressive commitment to succeed in the Federal Reserve’s mandate. Fed’s commitment to improved labor market was evident in the statement where Bernanke said that the open-ended purchases would continue until a considerable improvement in the labor market was realized.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
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Pro Football Plays Defense Against Deflation

Downside pressure on prices has only begun

By Elliott Wave International

You’ve heard (and probably used) the phrase, “I’d rather watch the game on television.”

It’s what a sports fan says if he doesn’t want to face traffic jams, inadequate parking, overpriced tickets, noisy crowds, and possibly a poor view of the game.

These days, however, something else is keeping professional football fans at home: deflation.

Since the economic slowdown that started in 2007, fewer people are willing to fork over money to attend games. In turn, NFL teams are forced to play defense with ticket prices.

A Sept. 10 Yahoo Finance article points out that “10 teams lowered ticket prices this year,” and that, “average ticket prices to attend [an Atlanta] Falcons home game are down 8.1% this season. This is the biggest drop among the 30 NFL cities.”

Overall, NFL attendance has dropped 4.5% since 2007.

The article goes on to say: “It’s telling us that the overall economy still isn’t as strong as it was back in 2007 … . It’s also telling us that the upper-end consumer is still retrenching, they’re still pulling back. They haven’t felt the burst of either better employment numbers or better income and they’re actually attending fewer games.”

A weak economy leading to lower game attendance leading to lower ticket prices is a “domino effect” — and it says plenty about how deflation works in the larger economy.

The psychological aspect of deflation and depression cannot be overstated. When the social mood trend changes from optimism to pessimism, creditors, debtors, producers and consumers change their primary orientation from expansion to conservation. As creditors become more conservative, they slow their lending. As debtors and potential debtors become more conservative, they borrow less or not at all. As producers become more conservative, they reduce expansion plans. As consumers become more conservative, they save more and spend less. These behaviors reduce the “velocity” of money, i.e., the speed with which it circulates to make purchases, thus putting downside pressure on prices. [emphasis added] These forces reverse the former trend.

Conquer the Crash, second edition, p. 91

Even so, many observers say the economy is past due for a recovery. They promote this view despite the evidence, which points to the new deflationary trend.

Most economists are unwilling to abandon the growth consensus, but the reality of an economic contraction is starting to become unmistakable.

The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, August 2012

Learn Why Deflation Is the Biggest Threat to Your Money Right Now

Discover Robert Prechter’s views on the unfolding deflationary trend by reading the 90-page report, The Guide to Understanding Deflation. This guide will help you understand the signs of deflation and allow you to prepare for what’s to come.

Plan and prepare for your financial future. Download your FREE 90-Page Deflation eBook now. >>

This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline Pro Football Plays Defense Against Deflation. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.

 

EUR/USD: Euro Benefits; Dollar Suffers from Fed Easing

Article by AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions

The Euro pared gains versus the US dollar in the previous European trading session prior to the announcement of the Federal Reserve to engage in another round of monetary easing to trigger economic growth in the US. Meanwhile, economic institutes reduced their respective outlooks for the Euro Zone’s largest economy, citing the impact of the debt crisis. In today’s European trades, the single currency is anticipated to rise versus the Greenback on the Fed’s announcement of QE3.

Yesterday, the Fed announced that it would buy 40 Billion Dollars of mortgage debt per month and would continue to purchase until unemployment in the US shows a marked improvement. At a press conference, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said: “We’re looking for ongoing, sustained improvement in the labor market. There’s not a specific number we have in mind. What we’ve seen in the last six months isn’t it.” The new round of aggressive monetary stimulus to promote job creation and bring back confidence to the US economy, is seen to weaken the Greenback against its peers.

For the shared currency, the German court’s decision that the European Stability Mechanism, the Euro Zone bailout fund, is not violating German law, is expected to continue to support it, clearing a major obstacle for the European leaders to extend financial aid to troubled Euro Zone economies. Today, the Eurogroup officials are slated to meet to discuss whether Spain should seek for financial help after the European Central Bank announced that it would purchase government bonds in unlimited quantities to drive down borrowing costs. Indications of progress are seen to support the shared currency. As such, a long position for the EUR/USD pair is suggested in today’s European exchanges.

For more news, analysis, technical charts and candlestick analysis, visit AlgosysFx

 

Dollar Sees Mixed Reaction to FOMC Statement

Source: ForexYard

The dollar saw a mixed reaction against its main currency rivals yesterday, following the Fed’s decision to expand its bond buying program. Even though the move was widely anticipated, the market still saw substantial volatility, with the USD/JPY jumping 50 pips and the EUR/USD gaining more than 90 pips in the minutes following the decision. Today, US news is once again forecasted to impact the marketplace. Traders will want to pay close attention to the Retail Sales and Core Retail Sales figures, both set to be released at 12:30 GMT. Any better than expected news could help the greenback against the JPY and EUR.

Economic News

USD – US Data Set to Generate Volatility Today

The dollar was able to bounce back from a seven-month low against the Japanese yen during evening trading yesterday, following the announcement that the Fed was expanding its bond buying program. The USD/JPY jumped some 50 pips following the decision to reach 77.73. A minor downward correction followed, and brought the pair to the 77.60 level. Against the Swiss franc, the dollar fell more than 50 pips following the announcement to trade as low as 0.9364. An upward correction brought the greenback back to the 0.9390 level during evening trading.

Turning to today, dollar traders will want to pay attention to another batch of potentially significant US news. Most importantly, the Retail Sales and Core Retail Sales figures, both scheduled to be released at 12:30 GMT, have the potential to generate volatility for the greenback. In addition, the Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment indicator at 13:55 could result in the greenback reversing yesterday’s gains against the JPY if it comes in below the expected 74.1.

EUR – Euro Sees Gains Following Fed Announcement

The euro advanced against its safe-haven currency rivals during evening trading yesterday, following the Fed’s decision to initiate a new round of quantitative easing to boost the US economic recovery. The widely expected move resulted in the EUR/USD gaining more than 90 pips to reach 1.2961, a fresh four-month high. The pair experienced a slight downward correction before finding stability at the 1.2930 level. Against the Japanese yen, the euro advanced more than 70 pips following the news to peak at 100.33.

Today, whether the euro will be able to maintain its bullish trend is largely dependent on a batch of US news set to be released throughout the day. Any disappointing data could result in the common-currency extending its recent gains against the greenback. That being said, if the US indicators come in above their forecasted levels, demand for the greenback could go up, which would result in the euro possibly giving up some of yesterday’s gains.

Gold – Gold at Fresh 6-Month High

The price of gold reached a fresh six-month high yesterday, following a decision by the US Federal Reserve to initiate a new round of quantitative easing which resulted in risk taking in the marketplace. The precious metal gained more than $40 an ounce following the decision and was trading above the $1760 level by the evening session.

As we close out the week, gold traders will want to continue monitoring economic indicators out of the US. If the Retail Sales, Core Retail Sales or Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment figures come in above their forecasted levels, the dollar may be able to see gains during afternoon trading, which could result in gold reversing its current upward trend.

Crude Oil – Risk Taking Boosts Demand for Crude Oil

The price of crude oil shot up by more than $1.50 a barrel during evening trading yesterday, as a move by the Fed to stimulate economic growth in the US led to risk taking in the marketplace. Crude reached as high as $98.32 a barrel, a four-month high after the Fed announced they were initiating a new round of quantitative easing.

Turning to today, oil may be able to extend its recent gains before markets close for the weekend if a batch of US news comes in above their forecasted levels. Any better than expected news may signal to investors that demand for oil in the US will increase. Oil typically sees gains when demand in the US, the world’s leading consumer country, increases.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The Bollinger Bands on the weekly chart are narrowing, signaling that this pair could see a price shift in the near future. Furthermore, the Williams Percent Range on the same chart has crossed over into overbought territory, while the Slow Stochastic on the daily chart has formed a bearish cross. Going short may be the wise choice for this pair.

GBP/USD

The daily chart’s Relative Strength Index has drifted into overbought territory, signaling that a downward correction could occur in the near future. This theory is supported by the Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart, which is currently at the -10 level. Opening short positions may be the smart move for this pair.

USD/JPY

A bullish cross appears to be forming on the daily chart’s Slow Stochastic, indicating that an upward correction could occur in the near future. Additionally, the weekly chart’s Williams Percent Range has crossed into the oversold region. Traders may want to open long positions for this pair.

USD/CHF

The Relative Strength Index on the daily chart is currently in oversold territory, indicating that an upward correction could occur in the near future. Furthermore, the Slow Stochastic on the same chart has formed a bullish cross. Opening long positions may be the smart choice for this pair.

The Wild Card

AUD/NZD

The Relative Strength Index on the daily chart has crossed into oversold territory, signaling that this pair could see upward movement in the near future. This theory is supported by the Slow Stochastic on the same chart, which has formed a bullish cross. Forex traders may want to open long positions for this pair.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

Market Review 14.9.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

The euro extended its upward movement against the US dollar in overnight trading, as investors continued shifting their funds to riskier assets following the Fed’s decision to initiate a new round of quantitative easing. Since the Fed’s decision was announced, the EUR/USD has advanced close to 150 pips, and is currently trading at the 1.3040 level. Gold was also able to take advantage of risk taking in the marketplace, and has been able to gain more than $40 an ounce since yesterday evening. The precious metal is currently trading above $1770 an ounce, a six-month high.

Main News for Today

US Core CPI- 12:30 GMT
• The indicator is forecasted to come in slightly higher than last month’s
• If true, the dollar could recoup some of yesterday’s losses against the euro

US Retail Sales/Core Retail Sales- 12:30 GMT
• Both indicators are forecasted to come in at 0.7%, slightly below last month’s 0.8%
• If the expectations turn out to be true, the dollar could see additional losses against its main currency rivals before markets close for the weekend

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

What the Central Banks Are Doing to Your Money

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Our first thought this morning was, ‘So when will QE4 start?’

It’s an irrelevant question, because QE3 (otherwise known as money printing) is now an ongoing program by the US Federal Reserve. QE3 will be ‘QE Forever’.

The old saying is that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting a different result.

We can now reveal a new saying: the definition of criminal insanity is doing variations of the same thing and expecting a different result.

But there’s something more important than that. In today’s Money Morning we’ll show you exactly why these inflationary policies are bad news for you, and how it has a devastating impact on your wealth…

So, what exactly is the US Fed up to?

Before this, the Fed has bought short-dated treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. It did this over a fixed timeframe.

The policy failed. It didn’t have a positive economic impact (unemployment is still high), although it did achieve one of their goals in reducing interest rates.

Unperturbed, the Fed varied the plan. This time it shifted from owning short-dated bonds to owning long-dated bonds. Again, it achieved the goal of reducing long-term interest rates…but it did nothing to fix the economy (unemployment is still high).

So now, after those policies failed, the Fed has varied the plan again. It plans on printing USD$40 billion per month to buy American mortgage debt. Plus it now says it will keep interest rates low ‘at least through mid-2015.’

In other words, by that time the US economy will be just three years away from completing a lost decade…a lost decade central banks and governments told you wouldn’t happen because they would do everything to prevent it from happening.

Of course, they’ve done exactly the opposite. The intervention ensured a lost decade. We warned of that nearly two years ago when we wrote, ‘Welcome to America’s Lost Decade’.

And just three months ago we warned that this current bear market ‘Could Last Another 18 Years…Just Like Japan’s’.

Both predictions have just edged closer to reality.

We won’t go into the details of the Fed’s latest madcap plan. We’re sure you’ll get to read about the nuts and bolts of it in the mainstream press here, here, here, and elsewhere.

Our role isn’t to spew up the same news you can read about anywhere else. Our role is to distil the news and give you the key bits of info that are important to you.

And in our view, there are few things more important to you than the value of money and the impact it has on your wealth…

The Hidden Danger of Inflation

Inflationary monetary policies are perhaps the greatest threat to wealth there is.

The reason it’s such a threat is because in the short-term it appears to help your wealth. As the money supply goes up, it filters through the economy, credit expands, and asset prices tend to rise.

You get higher house prices and higher share prices.

For those who own houses and shares, that’s great news. The problem is for those who don’t yet own those assets. The assets become more expensive. And gradually they become unaffordable for people unless they use credit.

This creates an upward spiral in prices. Prices rise so people start to panic. They fear that if they don’t buy now then they’ll never be able to afford it. So they borrow as much as they can. This naturally pushes prices up further.

That takes the market to the next phase of hysteria. That’s where prices have risen over such a long period that buyers and owners believe prices can never fall…because prices have always gone up.

This creates what Austrian School economists call malinvestments. In simple terms, these are investments that people wouldn’t otherwise make in a normal market.

But eventually these malinvestments go bad, and it has a terrible knock-on effect through the economy.

No-one wants to buy the assets at high prices, and lenders don’t want to lend money for people to buy these assets because they believe the price could fall further. If that happens it would make it tough for borrowers to repay the loans.

But aside from those fancy economic terms, inflationary policies have a further negative impact on your wealth. And that is on the value of the money in your pocket…

What if the Numbers Changed on Your Money?

The reason inflation is bad for your wealth is because it’s hard to see the impact on a day-to-day basis.

Sure, you know that things are more expensive today than they were 20 years ago. But it’s harder to gauge the change in prices over shorter periods.

It’s a bit like when you look at someone day after day, and don’t notice that they’ve aged. But look at a photo of someone from five years ago and compare it to how they look today and it’s pretty easy to see the change.

That’s the problem you get when you try to value money. You can’t see the devaluation on a daily basis.

When the central bank prints money, it devalues your money. But you can’t see that devaluation. After all, the $5 in your wallet or purse still has $5 printed on it, regardless of how much the central bank prints.

But what changes is the purchasing power of the $5.

Because the face value of money doesn’t change, the price of goods has to change in order to factor in the devaluation of the currency.

That’s why the central bankers love printing money. It’s much harder for you to see the devaluation.

But imagine if it didn’t work like that. Imagine if the numbers on the money in your wallet did change to take into account central bank money printing and devaluation.

‘Your $5 is Now $4.97′

Imagine if four times a year the central bank held a news conference. Each time it would instruct you to change the value on the bank notes in your pocket:

‘the little pink notes that used to be $5 are now $4.97; the blue notes that used to be $10 are now $9.95; the red notes that used to be $20 are now $19.89; the yellow notes that used to be $50 are now $49.73; and the green notes that used to be $100 are now $99.47.’

Can you imagine the uproar? You’ve worked for this money. You expected the $20 you worked for last month to still be worth $20 this month…but it’s not, it can now only buy you $19.89 of goods.

But that’s just one quarter’s change. It gets worse over time. For instance, if you had put a $5 note in a jar five years ago when we first published Money Morning, and every quarter you wrote the new value on it, that $5 note would only be worth $4.44 today.

That’s nearly a 12% devaluation of your money in just five years. You can see this on the chart below:

Data Source: Reserve Bank of Australia

If the face value of the money in your pocket changed on a daily or monthly basis, we can guarantee people wouldn’t stand for it.

That’s part of the reason why central bankers and governments don’t like gold as a currency, because the value is in the consumers’ pocket, rather than in the central bankers’ computer.

So the task we’ll set for you today is this: get hold of a $5 note. Stick a piece of paper to one side of it and in small writing, note the following in the top left-hand corner: ‘May 2007 – $5′. Then, immediately beneath it write ‘July 2012 – $4.4369′.

Each quarter, when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) releases the latest monetary aggregates, we’ll publish the new value (purchasing power) of that $5 note here in Money Morning.

As you can see from the chart above, in most cases it will involve the devaluation of the note. In only six quarters during the past five years the RBA has contracted the money supply.

Granted, doing this may not achieve much. But it will show you exactly how central bankers the world over are intent on destroying your wealth…that includes the central bankers at the RBA.

Cheers,
Kris

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Germany Says ‘Yes’ – but the Euro’s Not Safe Yet

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The German constitutional court made its decision. And the eurozone breathed a sigh of relief.

The bottom line is that the European Stability Mechanism (ESM – or the big bail-out fund, as we call it) does not go against Germany’s ‘basic law’. This means the ESM can finally go ahead.

Any further increase in its value will have to be agreed by the German parliament, but this is as much a face saving measure as anything else.

On the face of it, this seems a victory for the euro. It suggests that Germans at all levels will do anything to try to save it. Indeed, the court mentioned that it took into account fears that any delay would entail ‘massive consequences for some member states’.

It also suggests that however tough politicians talk, neither the ‘peripheral’ nations nor the countries of northern Europe have the courage to pull the plug on each other.

All of this may be true. And certainly, the chances of full-blown eurozone quantitative easing (QE) are now much higher.

However, that doesn’t explain the rally in the value of the euro. While this might be down to relief that the currency has been saved from break-up, QE certainly won’t be good for its value in the long run.

So while we still like Italian, Spanish (and for the bold, even Greek) shares, we think the currency could be in for a fall.

Money Printing Will Weaken the Euro

There are two main reasons for the European Central Bank (ECB) to engage in QE.

The first is to ease the fiscal crisis in various nations by using the central bank’s ability to print money (electronically) to buy debt.

Bond buying by the ECB will push down the yields on bonds, and therefore the cost of government borrowing. We’ve seen this happen in the US and the UK.

The second reason to do QE is a little more controversial: it’s to stimulate demand in the economy by putting money in the pockets of firms and households via banks and pension funds.

We can’t be sure that QE actually does this very well. Britain’s economy, for one, doesn’t seem to have benefited much from this aspect of QE. However, there’s one thing we can say – and that’s that QE hits the value of the currency.

That makes sense – if you print more money, then all else being equal, the value of that money is going to fall.

The Euro Could Still Break Up

Capital Economics also thinks that the risks of a euro breakup haven’t gone away. It thinks that the ESM and ECB have roughly €800bn in funds to buy bonds.

While this certainly looks impressive, it would only cover Spain and Italy’s financing needs for the next two years. It also leaves nothing for any of the other highly indebted countries.

They also point out that agreeing an aid package, the precondition for any more QE, will take time. Already, Madrid is refusing to make any more concessions on budget cuts. Indeed, the Spanish PM has pledged that he will not cut state pensions further, a key demand.

While this could be a bluff, it shows that it may take longer for the ECB to start buying bonds than many people think. The longer the gap, the higher bond yields could start to rise.

And while Angela Merkel’s government has won a legal victory, it still has to fight a political battle. Indeed, the case has led to a surge in German anti-euro sentiment. Polls now suggest that a majority of Germans want to bring back their old currency.

The large number of experts and academics who backed the challenge also show that opposition to bailouts is spreading to policymakers. Even though a euro exit would make German exports dearer, some business leaders have called for a return to the deutschemark.

The matter may come to a head sooner than later. One theory doing the rounds is that the talk of bond buying is only designed to buy time.

The FT claims that the US has asked Brussels to delay any tough action until after the US elections, to prevent it affecting the outcome. While this is only a rumour, the International Monetary Fund’s report on Greek progress will now come out in November, rather than this month.

Whatever the ECB and Germany decide, the euro is likely to fall. Money printing on the scale necessary to kick start growth and bring debt down will be inflationary.

On the other hand, while a breakup of the euro will cure many of the imbalances, it will also make assets such as gold attractive (partly because any countries leaving the euro would likely end up printing their new currencies anyway). Either way, gold still looks like a useful insurance to be holding in your portfolio.

By Matthew Partridge
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in MoneyWeek

From the Archives…

Outright Money Transactions – Why ‘Free’ Money Costs You More
07-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Spanish Banks are in BIG Trouble
06-09-2012 – Bengt Saelensminde

With Iron Ore Prices Falling Will Fortescue ‘Break the Buck’?
05-09-2012 – Kris Sayce

Brace Your Portfolio for a Hard Landing in China
04-09-2012 – John Stepek

Australian Resources Boom Curse…or Industrial Renaissance?
03-09-2012 – Nick Hubble


Germany Says ‘Yes’ – but the Euro’s Not Safe Yet