Category Archives: Interest Rates

Quick update on Dollar, Gold, Indian Rupee and Oil

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Dear Investor

I thought to represent quick update on major assets as volatility and price movements in last few days have accelerated.

Dollar:

I have been writing and updating you about dollar’s fall and that will push bullion prices up.

Yesterday, Dollar breached very important support and I have no doubt that Dollar index will go down to around 75 level in very short period.

Euro went up to 1.33 level. Euro should easily climb past 1.37 level in short period.

Gold:

With dollar’s fall, Gold should definitely zoom past $1350 level in coming weeks. Hence, hold your Gold portfolio and can add more even at this level.

Oil:
I recommended Oil investments to my core clients(subscribers) last week. As dollar goes down, Oil will zoom up very soon.
Reasons;
A. For most of the exploration companies, cost of production hovers around $70-75. Hence, downside is very minimum.
B. Research on Peak Oil theory suggest that we reached to peak oil level early to mid of 2000s and since then oil reserve is on decline.
C. As dollar is falling incessantly, Oil price has to adjust higher just to maintain the fair price level.
D. Normally, in winter demand of oil increases and reaches to peak in December. In west, winter is about to start.

Rupee:

With fall in dollar, rupee will zoom past all previous low levels, and will reach to Rs. 36-38 level in mid term.
Check your mail inbox tomorrow for detailed article on, why rupee will strengthen to 36-38 level?

Regards,
Dhaval
Investment Academy | Baroda | 098255 28815
Blog: Http://investmentacademy.wordpress.com

India Interest Rate Scenario Part -I

Standard

If you are thinking Interest Rates(IR) would not go up? Think twice.

All major inflationary forces acting like windstorm swiping the world and pouring debt(currency printing ) across the world first to bail out corporate than to taxpayers and now to nations and in last stage probably to entire world seems like windstorm & rainstorm are converging to category 5 Hurricane Katrina.

India Interest Rate Scenario

Why do I believe IR would go up?

1. Massive inflation across the sectors and categories in India. High prices of Oil.

2. Massive Govt. Spending

3. Gargantuan liabilities of Govt, which requires Govt to borrow 30% of GDP every year thus pumping enormous money supply in the economy, which coupled with Fractional Reserve Banking multiplies and floods the economy with cheap currency.

This ends in currency loosing purchasing power and inflation swiping the nation.

4. Monsoon effect. We had worst monsoon post 1972 in 2009. Met dept forecasts normal monsoon in 2010. But, it still remains worry.

Inflation


Look closely at above chart. In year 2000 interest rates had reached to as high as 15.5% in India. Yes, not corporate or multinational, this was the rate of borrowing for Banks from RBI.

On 10th July, 2000, Interest rate was mere 7% and on 9th Aug 2000, in less than a month, it climbed full 8.5%…..yes whopping 8.5% in less than a month to 15.5%.

We will examine causes later. But, keep in mind that when things get worse, central bank has to resort to use this last and final tool of jacking up rates as fast as possible to rein in the situation.

Chart also demonstrates very clearly that interest rates have completely bottomed out now and ready to march upwards.

Question is not only, how high rates would go? But how hasty would it go up?

Inflation

To answer both of these questions, let us review RBI’s annual policy statement for 2010-11 published on 19th April.

RBI governor looked much concerned about Inflation and got reflected at every other line of policy statement.

Here are some excerpts

“ Though inflation has started rising in several EMEs, India is a significant outlier with inflation rates much higher than in other EMEs.

Going forward, three major uncertainties cloud the outlook for inflation. First, the prospects of the monsoon in 2010-11 are not yet clear. Second, crude prices continue to be volatile. Third, there is evidence of demand side pressures building up. ”

Here, In very soft and polite language Governor Dr. D. Subbarao expressed his concerns.

Govt Borrowing

These concerns have erupted from below chart!!!!!

Look, How hastily Inflation has gone up? It has doubled in less than a year.

Here, Mr. Subbarao explained causes of concerning inflation…

“Clearly, WPI inflation is no longer driven by supply side factors alone. The contribution of non-food items to overall WPI inflation, which was negative at (-) 0.4 per cent in November 2009 rose sharply to 53.3 per cent by March 2010. Consumer price index (CPI) based measures of inflation were in the range of 14.9-16.9 per cent in January/February 2010. Thus, inflationary pressures have accentuated since the Third Quarter Review in January 2010. What was initially a process driven by food prices has now become more generalised. ”

But, think twice, Is inflation only worry? Heck no.

Govt Borrowing

The biggest worry is Govt. Borrowing program. RBI Governor has not shied away to express his resentment on massive govt borrowing program.

Finance Ministry is to borrow 36% more this year form market compared to last year. If I put it into figure, Govt is set to borrow Rs. 3,89,300 crore and add borrowing by state govts…..

Put together, RBI has to facilitate borrowing of close to Rs. 5,97,414 crore without affecting interest rates in year 2010!!!!?????11.gif11.gif11.gif

In current Fiscal, combined expenditure of the centre and states pegged at Rs. 18,92,880 crore.

Govt is set to borrow Rs. 5,97,414 crore from markets and would spend Rs. 3,30,389 crore, from expected fiscal revenue, towards paying interest on earlier borrowings. Remeber, only interest not principal.

Put together, Rs. 9,27,803 crore will be spent in the economy, which is either borrowed money or goes towards repaying interest .

It is colossal 50% of budgeted expenditure, funds which Govt does not own and has to repay with Interests.

This insane spending places India in very high Budget Deficit category of nations with Gross Budget Deficit at close to 11.5%

Data is taken from RBI. Click to view in detail.

https://investmentacademy.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/current-statistics.pdf

Those, who want to know our Govt’s Fiscal situation, refer to my Fiscal Disaster article. Link: https://investmentacademy.wordpress.com/2010/01/28/fiscal-disaster/

Meanwhile, Total Liabilities of the Centre and States [ includes internal and external debt, small savings schemes and provident fund liabilities] has reached to close to Rs. 50,00,000 crore. Yes, you read it right, FIFTY LACS CRORE. Close to 90% of GDP.

And, this does not include off balance sheet liabilities.

RBI Statement on Govt Borrowing program

“ Historically, fiscal deficits have been financed by a combination of market borrowings and other sources. However, in 2009-10 and 2010-11, reliance on market borrowings for financing the fiscal deficit increased in relative terms. The large market borrowing in 2009-10 was facilitated by

the unwinding of MSS securities and OMO purchases, as a result of which fresh issuance of securities constituted 63.0 per cent of the total budgeted market borrowings.

However in 2010-11, almost the entire budgeted borrowings will be funded by fresh issuance of securities. Therefore, notwithstanding the lower budgeted net borrowings, fresh issuance of securities in 2010-11 will be Rs.3,42,300 crore, higher than the corresponding figure of Rs.2,51,000 crore last year. The large government borrowing in 2009-10 was also facilitated by sluggish private credit demand and comfortable liquidity conditions. However, going forward, private credit demand is expected to pick up further.

Meanwhile, inflationary pressures have also made it imperative for the Reserve Bank to absorb surplus liquidity from the system. Thus, managing the borrowings of the Government during 2010-11 will be a bigger challenge than it was last year.”

Have these concerns started reflecting in Bond Market?

Yes, look at the below chart.

Dotcom bubble crisis in year 2000 swung the rates high close to 12% and later in year 2001, after 9/11, central banks of the world slashed the rates to jump start the economy.

Similar instance was seen in year 2008, first rates went up sharply and later dived to halt the economic decline.

Wouldn’t this time situation be similar and rates would remain at bottom for longer period?

NO, because never ever in History, Debts and Liabilities of the nations have reached to patently unpayable level.

Instance: US has accumulated Public Debt to the tune of $ 127.8 tn. Yes, you read it right. It is 10 times of GDP. Situaltion is either simiar and in some cases even worst than US in Europe.

Official National Debt

What is different this time, that is driving interest rates high??

1. Accumulation of gargantuan debt and liabilities by Govts, which is becoming patently unpayable even 10 yrs down the line

2. Massive borrowing by central Govts across the world

3. Massive money printing by central banks across the world.

Instance:

For US central bank, It took 100 years to expand the monetary base to $850bn and in last short 18 months, it climbed to $2.1 trn. i.e Fed created new money worth $1.25 trn out of thin air, more than 250% new money to what it was 18 months before

That’s an irresponsible, irrational and insane increase of 2.5 times in just 18 months — and you must not underestimate its sweeping historical significance.

There is no historical precedence to compare such a massive printing.

Same and probably worse is the situation across the Europe.

Last year, Budget deficits of European nations zoomed past 10%, which is considered as red mark.

Debt to GDP

Of late, you have been frequently listening about debt to GDP ratio.

What money managers and creditors closely look at is Debt to GDP ratio of nation to decide the risk of lending.

Ratio includes 2 factors. Debt and GDP.

In 2008, GDP did not fall much as effects were yet to be felt in real economy. But, to stem the fall, Govt spent heck lot of money in 2008, mostly assuming that if GDP remains stable, this debt is payable.

But, in 2009, real economies dived miserably. US decline -2.4% to Russia as high as -7.90%.

Country Real GDP % est 2009
US -2.4
Euro Zone -4.0
Germany -5.0
France -2.1
England -4.3
Russia -7.90
Japan -5.70
India +6.50
China +8.70
World – 1.0

When GDP fell, Debt to GDP ratio got ugly.

Example: say country’s Debt was Rs. 70 and GDP was Rs. 100. Hence, Debt to GDP ratio comes at 70%, fine.

Now, GDP falls by 5%, so 95 and Debt remains at same level that will drive Debt to GDP ratio higher at 74%.

And, what if next year again GDP falls by 5%, and debt increases by 5%, that drives ratio to 81%.

10% increase in Debt to GDP ratio in 2 years and do not forget, Govt has to keep paying interest on debt which it has been piling up since decades to gather.

This is what precisely happening with Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain.

These nations GDP has been falling since last 2 years, official unemployment rate has reached as high 20% to 25%, banks are in huge losses due to their sub prime exposure and participation in interest rate derivatives.

Put all these factors combined with inflation, creditors are scared to lend money to these nations because their repaying capacity is becoming dismal.

I have also presented table for you of G-20’s Debt to GDP ratio.

Look at G-20 situation

Above data is upto April 2009. Govts have piled up huge debts after that. That means, ratios are more uglier than it looks into table.

Some Market Reactions:

Warning from Finance Secretary

Bond yields near 18-month high on inflation concern

4 May 2010, 0201 hrs IST,ET Bureau

The benchmark 10-year bonds declined, pushing yields to near an 18-month peak, after finance secretary Ashok Chawla said inflation at current levels is high.

The yield rose as in vestors also speculated there will be fewer trades in the existing note after the central bank on April 30 sold a new 10-year bond, according to Devendra Das, a debt trader at Development Credit Bank. Chawla said inflation, which at current levels is not “socially, economically or politically acceptable,” may cool by the end of 2010

Corporates are busy raising money before rate hikes

Corporates hit Bond Street ahead of rate hikes

3 May 2010, 0447 hrs IST,ET Bureau

MUMBAI: A host of state-owned and private corporates are expected to raise funds through fresh debt offerings in the coming days as they try to make

the best of the recent fall in bond yields, ahead of a possible interest rate hike. Dealers say IDFC, HDFC, Exim Bank, Power Finance Corporation, RIL and IRFC are some of the companies that may hit the bond street as early as next week. For close to a month before the April monetary policy review, there were hardly any large issuances.

This flurry of issuances comes in the backdrop of events in Europe hurting appetite for debt of emerging market economies like India. Companies have so far countered this by selling their bonds in the local market. For instance, HDFC, Reliance Power and Utilities, L&T Infra, Nabard, Shriram City Union Finance, SAIL, BPCL and IFCI are some of the companies that have raised around Rs 6,000 crore in the past ten days. This trend could gain steam in May, dealers said.

Hence, It does not leave any doubt that Interest Rates across the world are set to go up.

Global Perspective

You may think why rates would go up in India? Broadly, it looks developed nations problem. We are still growing at healthy 7-8%. Growth in GDP nos must help us to contain the contagion.

Answer is Why Indian market tumbled in 2008? Housing crisis had not originated in India neither our banks were exposed to sub prime or derivatives.

We tumbled along with world markets because we are part of Globalised world. Decoupling is a mere assumption far from reality.

Our markets fell more than rest of the world in 2008, RBI also joined race to reduce benchmark banking rates with central banks of the world , our markets recovered in 2009 along with world markets.

None of the last 2 years events exhibits that we can sing a solo economic tune.

And, do not forget out own garguntunan liabilities, that has reached 90% of GDP.

For world, borrowing is getting costlier and same will reflect in our bond prices, too, soon.

Hence, be prepared.

Regards

Dhaval Shah

Blog: Http://investmentacademy.wordpress.com

India Interest Rate Scenario Part -I

Standard

If you are thinking Interest Rates(IR) would not go up? Think twice.

All major inflationary forces acting like windstorm swiping the world and pouring debt(currency printing ) across the world first to bail out corporate than to taxpayers and now to nations and in last stage probably to entire world seems like windstorm & rainstorm are converging to category 5 Hurricane Katrina.

India Interest Rate Scenario

Why do I believe IR would go up?

1. Massive inflation across the sectors and categories in India. High prices of Oil.

2. Massive Govt. Spending

3. Gargantuan liabilities of Govt, which requires Govt to borrow 30% of GDP every year thus pumping enormous money supply in the economy, which coupled with Fractional Reserve Banking multiplies and floods the economy with cheap currency.

This ends in currency loosing purchasing power and inflation swiping the nation.

4. Monsoon effect. We had worst monsoon post 1972 in 2009. Met dept forecasts normal monsoon in 2010. But, it still remains worry.

Inflation


Look closely at above chart. In year 2000 interest rates had reached to as high as 15.5% in India. Yes, not corporate or multinational, this was the rate of borrowing for Banks from RBI.

On 10th July, 2000, Interest rate was mere 7% and on 9th Aug 2000, in less than a month, it climbed full 8.5%…..yes whopping 8.5% in less than a month to 15.5%.

We will examine causes later. But, keep in mind that when things get worse, central bank has to resort to use this last and final tool of jacking up rates as fast as possible to rein in the situation.

Chart also demonstrates very clearly that interest rates have completely bottomed out now and ready to march upwards.

Question is not only, how high rates would go? But how hasty would it go up?

Inflation

To answer both of these questions, let us review RBI’s annual policy statement for 2010-11 published on 19th April.

RBI governor looked much concerned about Inflation and got reflected at every other line of policy statement.

Here are some excerpts

“ Though inflation has started rising in several EMEs, India is a significant outlier with inflation rates much higher than in other EMEs.

Going forward, three major uncertainties cloud the outlook for inflation. First, the prospects of the monsoon in 2010-11 are not yet clear. Second, crude prices continue to be volatile. Third, there is evidence of demand side pressures building up. ”

Here, In very soft and polite language Governor Dr. D. Subbarao expressed his concerns.

Govt Borrowing

These concerns have erupted from below chart!!!!!

Look, How hastily Inflation has gone up? It has doubled in less than a year.

Here, Mr. Subbarao explained causes of concerning inflation…

“Clearly, WPI inflation is no longer driven by supply side factors alone. The contribution of non-food items to overall WPI inflation, which was negative at (-) 0.4 per cent in November 2009 rose sharply to 53.3 per cent by March 2010. Consumer price index (CPI) based measures of inflation were in the range of 14.9-16.9 per cent in January/February 2010. Thus, inflationary pressures have accentuated since the Third Quarter Review in January 2010. What was initially a process driven by food prices has now become more generalised. ”

But, think twice, Is inflation only worry? Heck no.

Govt Borrowing

The biggest worry is Govt. Borrowing program. RBI Governor has not shied away to express his resentment on massive govt borrowing program.

Finance Ministry is to borrow 36% more this year form market compared to last year. If I put it into figure, Govt is set to borrow Rs. 3,89,300 crore and add borrowing by state govts…..

Put together, RBI has to facilitate borrowing of close to Rs. 5,97,414 crore without affecting interest rates in year 2010!!!!?????11.gif11.gif11.gif

In current Fiscal, combined expenditure of the centre and states pegged at Rs. 18,92,880 crore.

Govt is set to borrow Rs. 5,97,414 crore from markets and would spend Rs. 3,30,389 crore, from expected fiscal revenue, towards paying interest on earlier borrowings. Remeber, only interest not principal.

Put together, Rs. 9,27,803 crore will be spent in the economy, which is either borrowed money or goes towards repaying interest .

It is colossal 50% of budgeted expenditure, funds which Govt does not own and has to repay with Interests.

This insane spending places India in very high Budget Deficit category of nations with Gross Budget Deficit at close to 11.5%

Data is taken from RBI. Click to view in detail.

https://investmentacademy.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/current-statistics.pdf

Those, who want to know our Govt’s Fiscal situation, refer to my Fiscal Disaster article. Link: https://investmentacademy.wordpress.com/2010/01/28/fiscal-disaster/

Meanwhile, Total Liabilities of the Centre and States [ includes internal and external debt, small savings schemes and provident fund liabilities] has reached to close to Rs. 50,00,000 crore. Yes, you read it right, FIFTY LACS CRORE. Close to 90% of GDP.

And, this does not include off balance sheet liabilities.

RBI Statement on Govt Borrowing program

“ Historically, fiscal deficits have been financed by a combination of market borrowings and other sources. However, in 2009-10 and 2010-11, reliance on market borrowings for financing the fiscal deficit increased in relative terms. The large market borrowing in 2009-10 was facilitated by

the unwinding of MSS securities and OMO purchases, as a result of which fresh issuance of securities constituted 63.0 per cent of the total budgeted market borrowings.

However in 2010-11, almost the entire budgeted borrowings will be funded by fresh issuance of securities. Therefore, notwithstanding the lower budgeted net borrowings, fresh issuance of securities in 2010-11 will be Rs.3,42,300 crore, higher than the corresponding figure of Rs.2,51,000 crore last year. The large government borrowing in 2009-10 was also facilitated by sluggish private credit demand and comfortable liquidity conditions. However, going forward, private credit demand is expected to pick up further.

Meanwhile, inflationary pressures have also made it imperative for the Reserve Bank to absorb surplus liquidity from the system. Thus, managing the borrowings of the Government during 2010-11 will be a bigger challenge than it was last year.”

Have these concerns started reflecting in Bond Market?

Yes, look at the below chart.

Dotcom bubble crisis in year 2000 swung the rates high close to 12% and later in year 2001, after 9/11, central banks of the world slashed the rates to jump start the economy.

Similar instance was seen in year 2008, first rates went up sharply and later dived to halt the economic decline.

Wouldn’t this time situation be similar and rates would remain at bottom for longer period?

NO, because never ever in History, Debts and Liabilities of the nations have reached to patently unpayable level.

Instance: US has accumulated Public Debt to the tune of $ 127.8 tn. Yes, you read it right. It is 10 times of GDP. Situaltion is either simiar and in some cases even worst than US in Europe.

Official National Debt

What is different this time, that is driving interest rates high??

1. Accumulation of gargantuan debt and liabilities by Govts, which is becoming patently unpayable even 10 yrs down the line

2. Massive borrowing by central Govts across the world

3. Massive money printing by central banks across the world.

Instance:

For US central bank, It took 100 years to expand the monetary base to $850bn and in last short 18 months, it climbed to $2.1 trn. i.e Fed created new money worth $1.25 trn out of thin air, more than 250% new money to what it was 18 months before

That’s an irresponsible, irrational and insane increase of 2.5 times in just 18 months — and you must not underestimate its sweeping historical significance.

There is no historical precedence to compare such a massive printing.

Same and probably worse is the situation across the Europe.

Last year, Budget deficits of European nations zoomed past 10%, which is considered as red mark.

Debt to GDP

Of late, you have been frequently listening about debt to GDP ratio.

What money managers and creditors closely look at is Debt to GDP ratio of nation to decide the risk of lending.

Ratio includes 2 factors. Debt and GDP.

In 2008, GDP did not fall much as effects were yet to be felt in real economy. But, to stem the fall, Govt spent heck lot of money in 2008, mostly assuming that if GDP remains stable, this debt is payable.

But, in 2009, real economies dived miserably. US decline -2.4% to Russia as high as -7.90%.

Country Real GDP % est 2009
US -2.4
Euro Zone -4.0
Germany -5.0
France -2.1
England -4.3
Russia -7.90
Japan -5.70
India +6.50
China +8.70
World – 1.0

When GDP fell, Debt to GDP ratio got ugly.

Example: say country’s Debt was Rs. 70 and GDP was Rs. 100. Hence, Debt to GDP ratio comes at 70%, fine.

Now, GDP falls by 5%, so 95 and Debt remains at same level that will drive Debt to GDP ratio higher at 74%.

And, what if next year again GDP falls by 5%, and debt increases by 5%, that drives ratio to 81%.

10% increase in Debt to GDP ratio in 2 years and do not forget, Govt has to keep paying interest on debt which it has been piling up since decades to gather.

This is what precisely happening with Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Spain.

These nations GDP has been falling since last 2 years, official unemployment rate has reached as high 20% to 25%, banks are in huge losses due to their sub prime exposure and participation in interest rate derivatives.

Put all these factors combined with inflation, creditors are scared to lend money to these nations because their repaying capacity is becoming dismal.

I have also presented table for you of G-20’s Debt to GDP ratio.

Look at G-20 situation

Above data is upto April 2009. Govts have piled up huge debts after that. That means, ratios are more uglier than it looks into table.

Some Market Reactions:

Warning from Finance Secretary

Bond yields near 18-month high on inflation concern

4 May 2010, 0201 hrs IST,ET Bureau

The benchmark 10-year bonds declined, pushing yields to near an 18-month peak, after finance secretary Ashok Chawla said inflation at current levels is high.

The yield rose as in vestors also speculated there will be fewer trades in the existing note after the central bank on April 30 sold a new 10-year bond, according to Devendra Das, a debt trader at Development Credit Bank. Chawla said inflation, which at current levels is not “socially, economically or politically acceptable,” may cool by the end of 2010

Corporates are busy raising money before rate hikes

Corporates hit Bond Street ahead of rate hikes

3 May 2010, 0447 hrs IST,ET Bureau

MUMBAI: A host of state-owned and private corporates are expected to raise funds through fresh debt offerings in the coming days as they try to make

the best of the recent fall in bond yields, ahead of a possible interest rate hike. Dealers say IDFC, HDFC, Exim Bank, Power Finance Corporation, RIL and IRFC are some of the companies that may hit the bond street as early as next week. For close to a month before the April monetary policy review, there were hardly any large issuances.

This flurry of issuances comes in the backdrop of events in Europe hurting appetite for debt of emerging market economies like India. Companies have so far countered this by selling their bonds in the local market. For instance, HDFC, Reliance Power and Utilities, L&T Infra, Nabard, Shriram City Union Finance, SAIL, BPCL and IFCI are some of the companies that have raised around Rs 6,000 crore in the past ten days. This trend could gain steam in May, dealers said.

Hence, It does not leave any doubt that Interest Rates across the world are set to go up.

Global Perspective

You may think why rates would go up in India? Broadly, it looks developed nations problem. We are still growing at healthy 7-8%. Growth in GDP nos must help us to contain the contagion.

Answer is Why Indian market tumbled in 2008? Housing crisis had not originated in India neither our banks were exposed to sub prime or derivatives.

We tumbled along with world markets because we are part of Globalised world. Decoupling is a mere assumption far from reality.

Our markets fell more than rest of the world in 2008, RBI also joined race to reduce benchmark banking rates with central banks of the world , our markets recovered in 2009 along with world markets.

None of the last 2 years events exhibits that we can sing a solo economic tune.

And, do not forget out own garguntunan liabilities, that has reached 90% of GDP.

For world, borrowing is getting costlier and same will reflect in our bond prices, too, soon.

Hence, be prepared.

Regards

Dhaval Shah

Investment Academy | Baroda | 098255 28815
Blog: Http://investmentacademy.wordpress.com

World Interest Rates scenario Part I – Elephant in the Room

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Dear Investor

I am presenting an article of one of my favourite author – Mike Larson, who was among first to predict the Housing Real Estate burst in US.

He has broadly presented scenario for European and US bond markets and interest rates. Quite interesting to read ……..

I will write on Indian bond market and its likely effects on Interest rates tomorrow.

Financial Ebola Sweeps Through Global Bond Markets:

What does the end of the bond market world look like? Something like this …

Bond Market Armagenddon Strikes Greece

The chart above shows the yield on the benchmark 2-year note in Greece. Just a few short months ago, Greek sovereign yields were hovering around 2.1 percent. On Wednesday, they shot up as high as 18.9 percent!

Translation? The cost of borrowing for the Greek government — not some subprime mortgage customer or deadbeat credit card holder — shot up almost NINE-FOLD in the span of six months.

During this same time, the price of Greece’s 6 percent 10-year notes due July 19, 2019 plunged from 112.4 to 68.1. That’s a loss of more than 39 percent. Not on some dot-bomb stock … not even on a high-yield, or “junk” piece of paper …

… but on a sovereign government bond!

Folks, THAT is bond market Armageddon. And it’s playing out now. Right on the trading screen of every investor around the world.

Think Greece Is Alone? Think Again!

Worse, the pain isn’t confined to Greece …

Portugal’s benchmark 2-year note yield just blew out to 4.82 percent from 1.58 percent. That’s a tripling in interest rates in less than a month.

Ireland? Its 2-year yield rocketed to 3.83 percent from 1.62 percent in 23 days.

Even bigger European economies, like Spain, are getting whacked. Yields there recently shot up to 2.08 percent from 1.36 percent.

S&P has cut the debt ratings of several EU members.
S&P has cut the debt ratings of several EU members.

Standard & Poor’s has taken the hatchet to its sovereign debt ratings in response. The agency cut its Spanish debt rating to AA just a day after slashing its Portuguese debt rating by two notches to A-. It also cut its Greek debt rating by three notches to BB+, “junk” territory.

Bottom line: A virulent sovereign debt contagion is spreading like wildfire throughout the euro zone. In the short run, that will likely get the Germans to back down on their bailout opposition.

They’ve been holding up a package that would give Greece up to $60 billion in aid from richer European Union nations and the International Monetary Fund. The crisis may temporarily take a breather if the package gets approved.

But here’s the thing: If the Greeks get bailed out, who’s next? And where the heck is all the bailout money going to come from? Policymakers may need to cough up almost $800 billion to “save” everyone, according to economists at firms such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.

The problem is that nobody has that kind of money laying around! So it’ll have to be borrowed. And if it has to be borrowed … from a European bond market that’s already falling apart at the seams … what’s likely to happen? Even more selling, which would drive bond prices down and interest rates up!

Coming Soon to a Bond Market Near You: Financial “Ebola!”

So far, this is predominately a problem for continental Europe. Our Treasury prices actually rose a bit during the worst of the European debt selling.

But I believe it is woefully ignorant, provincial, and arrogant for us to assume something similar can’t or won’t happen here.

The way politicians are burning through our money, interest rates are sure to skyrocket.
The way politicians are burning through our money, interest rates are sure to skyrocket.

Even the Secretary General of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development likened the crisis to the “Ebola” virus, saying “it’s threatening the stability of the financial system.”

When you think it through logically, you can’t help but ask: Why wouldn’t the Grim Reaper eventually come knocking at OUR door?

After all, OUR deficits are out of control! OUR debt level is through the roof! OUR politicians are burying their heads in the sand, just assuming they’ll be able to keep funding their profligacy at rock-bottom rates forever. Those are precisely the same problems that built up in Greece for months on end.

Then one day, the lid blew!

Think about it:

  • Our total debt load is set to double to $18.6 trillion over the next decade,
  • Weekly benchmark Treasury auctions have surged from $20 billion to $30 billion to more than $120 billion,
  • And we’re dumping more than $375,000 in debt onto the market every second in some weeks, all in an effort to fund a budget deficit that’s closing in on $1.6 trillion!

Do I expect a nine-fold rise in U.S. 2-year note yields? A 40 percent plunge in bond prices in just a couple of months? Not really.

But I do believe the bond market will force us to take our fiscal medicine. I do believe a sovereign debt crisis is brewing here. And I do believe it will be just one reason our interest rates will head significantly higher.

So please, invest and prepare accordingly. By the time the bond market bleeding starts, it’ll be too late.

Until next time,

Mike Larson

Regards,
Dhaval
Investment Academy | Baroda | 098255 28815
Blog: Http://investmentacademy.wordpress.com

Hyperinflation will begin in China and will destroy Dollar

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Dear Investor

   I wrote yesterday about How vulnerable dollar is to various external forces and even FED’s intention to trash the dollar to save the economy.   Today, i am presenting one more dimension to that. Very few are looking at China’s strategy and decisions. China has continued to diversify the portfolio beyond Dollar to various commodity and mining and mineral assets.   Uptill 2007, China was mostly dependent on Exports and still continue to be, but from 2008 China introduced many policy changes to boost domestic economy. To replace export shares, China wants to boost the domestic economy but that will have various effects on CHina’s inflation, interes rates and currency.   Important aspect of those effects: Growth of domestic economy coupled with largest exporter to the world will give rise to the inflation, which china will export along with goods china exports across the world and that will add pressure on dollar’s decline. Puzzeled???    Read on it is very intelligent, out of the box, article on “China’s Hyperinflaiton will destroy Dollar”.       Hyperinflation will begin in China and will destroy Dollar by Eric deCarbonnel from Market skeptics

The conventional wisdom on China is dead wrong. Specifically, there is a widespread belief, as expressed by Goldman Sachs, that “China will keep the yuan trading within a narrow range in 2009 due concerns about exporters.” Worse still, others are even predicting that China will devalue its currency! The sheer wishful thinking is astounding! The idea that “China will keep the dollar peg to help its exporters” ranks all the way up there with “Housing prices always go up” and “You can spend your way to prosperity”.

THERE ARE NO FREE LUNCHES

If you have learned nothing else in the last year and a half, you should have learned that if something sounds too good to be true, that is because it IS too good to be true. The media overwhelmingly presents China’s dollar peg as a win-win situation: Americans get cheap imports and low interest rates while China gets a strong manufacturing sector. While commentators do sometimes debates whether China will keep lending us money forever, they never talk about the REAL problem with the dollar peg.

Below is a chart which shows how China’s dollar peg works. See if you can spot the downside that the media never seems to mention.

The US’s trade deficit requires China to print money!The little discussed downside of the dollar peg is all the money China has to print to maintain it. China’s Central Bank puts the extra dollars it receives from its trade surplus into its growing foreign reserves and then prints yuan to pay Chinese exporters. This results in an increase in China’s base money supply by an amount equal to the increase in its foreign exchange reserves. While China’s ability to keep accumulating US reserves is endless, its ability to keep its money supply under control is not.

The true threat to the dollar peg

If there is one development which could force China to drop its dollar peg, it is out of control inflation. Rampant inflation would result in millions of citizens starving and would create widespread social unrest. Keeping food prices low is a matter of political survival for Chinese authorities. So, facing the choice between losing their grip on power and losing the dollar peg, they will not hesitate for a second to sacrifice the dollar to save their own skin.

So far China been able to contain inflation, but…

In recent years, China has been able to contain the inflationary effects of its trade surplus by soaking up or “sterilizing” all the extra liquidity (printed yuan). These sterilization efforts mostly involved:

A) Raising the reserve requirements of commercial banks. In essence, the PBOC (People’s Bank of China) prints money to fund its trade surplus and then increases the amount of yuan banks have to keep as reserves at the Central bank, preventing the printed cash from reaching the economy. As of May of last year, commercial banks’ reserve requirements were at 16.5 percent

B) Selling RMB-denominated sterilization bills. The state owned and controlled banking system has been forced to absorb the majority of these bills. As of May of last year, the value of sterilization bills reached 10 percent of bank deposits.

Taken together, these two steps have immobilized roughly 26.5 percent of Chinese commercial banks’ deposits. This shows the magnitude China has had to intervene so far, as the value of sterilization instruments outstanding has been increasing at roughly the same rate as its foreign reserves.

PBC Foreign Reserves and Sterilization Instruments (US$ Billions)

While China has been able to contain inflation to single digits for the last decade, that is about to change. All economic forces are aligning in China for a surge in inflation.

1) China has abandoned its sterilization operations

Currently, the PBOC has abandoned its sterilization efforts all together:

A) The PBOC has lowered reserve requirements by 2 percentage point for China’s big banks and by 4 percentage point for all other banks.

B) The PBOC has scaled back sterilization efforts by reducing liquidity-draining three-month and 52-week bill sales from once a week to once every two weeks. As a result of these decreasing sales, the clearing house for China’s interbank bond market expects PBOC’s 2009 bill issues to be down over 70%, which will increase the Chinese base money supply by 2 trillion yuan.

These actions signify that the PBOC has ceased sterilizing its currency interventions and is focusing on (imaginary) deflation risks. A flood of cash has been unleashed, and a tsunami of pent-up inflation will soon hit China.

2) China is running record trade surpluses

China’s imports are crashing much faster than its exports. In December, Chinese imports fell 21.3% while exports fell only 2.8%. As a result, China has been running record trade surpluses these last three months: $35 billion, $40 billion, and 39 billion.

The reason for China’s surplus is obvious when you think about it. Consider the following list of goods a country can exports and ask yourself what would hold up best during a severe global economic downturn.

*** Commodities (Oil, gas, steel, etc)
*** Capital goods (Airplanes, Caterpillars, Machinery for new factories, Machinery for new mining/oil exploration projects, etc)
*** Durable goods (SUVs, CARs, appliances, business equipment, electronic equipment, home furnishings, etc)
*** Luxury goods (brand name products, designer clothing, artwork, etc…)
*** Cheap consumer goods (everything you buy at Wal-Mart)

The answer is that the demand for cheap consumer goods will hold up better than anything else. This can easily be seen in the retail sales this holiday shopping season. Wal-Mart, which imports 70% of its products from China, was the only retailer to post a year-on-year increase in sales. So while the world economy might be imploding spectacularly, demand for Wal-Mart’s cheap Chinese goods is holding up quite well. The implications of this is that while China’s exports will fall, they will fall less than those of any other country.

The current trade surplus is still completely unsustainable. If China’s continues running a 40 billion dollar trade surplus all year, its base money supply will double by the end of 2009. Also, since China has halted the appreciation of the yuan, its trade surplus is unlikely to shrink as demand for cheap consumer goods is set to remain strong.

3) The Chinese economy will shrink in 2009

Consistently amazing economic growth is the biggest factor which has helped China contain inflation. Inflation happens when the money supply is growing faster than the economy, and china’s economy has been growing fast. This economic growth has helped absorb the enormous quantities of yuan that have been printed to support the dollar. However, this will change in 2009. Due to falling global demand, China’s economy is set for zero, if not negative, growth which will remove a significant mitigating force against inflation and amplify the inflationary impact of China’s printing press.

Side note: China’s economic strength is underestimated

It is important to note that, while economic growth will go probably go negative, China’s economy will not crash. The strength of the Chinese economy is widely underestimated in the media today. In addition to the resilient worldwide demand for its cheap consumer goods, China is also benefiting from import substitution at home. This is why imports to China are falling so fast: Chinese are switching to cheap domestic products instead of expensive foreign imports. So while there has been a sharp drop in Chinese demand for big-ticket brands (Dior, Chanel, Hermes, etc…) and others luxury items, knock-offs and other cheap goods are still flying off the shelves. Chinese consumers are downshifting, but they are still spending strongly, as reflected by the 21% year-over-year growth in 2008.

However, despite China’s strong fundamentals, the current worldwide downturn is too strong for it to escape. The worldwide financial carnage is so severe that even the demand for cheap consumer goods will decrease. As a result, while China may outperform every country on Earth, its economy will still suffer in 2009.

4) Deflation in China would be too good to be true

China has been in a constant war with the inflation caused by the dollar peg. Economic growth and sterilization operations alone have not been enough to absorb the growing liquidity, and China has been forced to turn to ever more drastic steps in its efforts to contain inflation. These stifling policy measures together with its sterilization efforts have enormously suppressed domestic demand and have distracting the government from developing key services enjoyed by other developed nations. This suppressed domestic demand has also distorted China’s economy, as reflected by the undersized service sector, and has lowered the quality of life for Chinese citizens.

Chinese financial repression and market socialism

Below are just a few of the anti-inflation measures China has adopted to suppress domestic demand and keep prices down:

A) Strict price controls. (ie: Large wholesalers must seek central government approval if they want to raise prices by 6 percent within the space of 10 days or by 10 percent within a month.)
B) Credit ceilings. (limits on how much commercial banks can lend)
C) Floors on lending rates and ceilings on deposit rates
D) Strict rules governing lending decisions
E) Tight land purchase and lending requirements
F) Direct government intervention to limited expansion in certain industries (ie: aluminum, steel, autos and textiles sectors in 2004)
G) Penalty taxes on anyone buying and selling real estate in a short period of time.
H) Forcing local government to cut back spending by delaying approval of their investment projects
I) High sales taxes.
J) Etc…

Suppressed domestic demand has distorted China’s economy

The distortions caused by sterilization operations and stifling policy measures are best seen when comparing the Chinese and US economies:

A) US home buyers get tax incentives VS Chinese home buyers get tax penalties
B) US gets artificially low interest rates VS China’s artificially high interest rates
C) US’s “service economy” VS China’s “service-less economy”
D) Etc…

In the US, the overvalued dollar and easy credit environment have caused the service sector to become oversized, artificially raising America’s standard of living. In contrast, China’s suppressed domestic demand has led its service sector to become undersized, artificially decreasing its standard of living.

Focus on inflation has lead to a lack of key government services

With Chinese authorities sidetracked by their export oriented focus and battle with overheating, the development of key government services enjoyed by other developed nations has been neglected. As a result, Chinese citizens’ lack of social security, free education, and available consumer credit, which has forced them to save far more than their Western counterparts, leaving them with less disposable income.

Deflation would be a godsend to China

Chinese authorities must be thrilled about the prospect of fighting deflation instead of inflation. Fighting deflation would allow China to:

A) Scale back its increasingly costly sterilization efforts.
B) Lower interest rates.
C) Get rid of all the controls which are distorting domestic property markets.
D) Promote consumer spending without worrying about the inflationary impact.
E) Develop a comprehensive social security net.
F) Increase funding of public education.
E) Accelerate the development of a system to rate people’s credit.
F) Encourage growth in underdeveloped domestic sectors (housing, health care, education, entertainment, etc)
G) Etc…

Most of the steps above are already being taken by Chinese authorities. Unfortunately, there are no free lunches. The probability that China can maintain a highly inflationary currency peg, reverse years of anti-inflation policies, release a flood of sterilized yuan back into circulation, and go on a Western-style stimulus/bailout binge without experiencing double digit inflation is zero.

5) No deleveraging

There is no chance of real deflation happening in China. None. The Strength of China’s Banking System makes it impossible.

A) Apart from Bank of China, Chinese banks have little exposure to overseas debt. So, although toxic US securities were sold to banks around the world, China’s capital controls protected its banking system from America’s bad debt

B) As a side effect of the country’s sterilization operations, 26.5 percent of Chinese commercial banks’ deposits were placed with the central bank last year (reserve requirements and forced underwriting of PBOC bills).

C) Unlike Western banks, who have been enjoying a credit bonanza for decades, Chinese banks have only recently gotten into the credit game, after years of being ridiculed for being overly cash-centric. Because of this late entry, Chinese banks completely missed the subprime party.

D) China is also in the enviable position of being one of the few countries which doesn’t need to deleverage. While Western banks were going insane with high leverage and off-balance sheet financial vehicles, Chinese banks were doing the opposite, as can be seen on the chart below (from Tao Wang of UBS).

E) China has been waging a war against NPLs (non-performing loans) in the last few years. For example, with heavy penalties having been imposed on bank managers responsible for new NPLs, Chinese banks have become much more concerned about the loan safety than profitability. This battle again NPLs has paid off. As of September 30, 2008, nonperforming loans totaled only 2 percent for Chinese banks, compared to the 2.3 percent for FDIC-insured banks in the US. Loan loss provisions have also improved substantially, with provisions of Chinese banks amounting to an impressive 123 percent of their NPLs.

F) Finally, China’s money supply itself is underleveraged when compared to the rest of the world. For example, the US’s M2 to M1 ratio is 65% higher than China’s. The Chinese M2 to GDP ratio is also more 160 percent, perhaps, the highest in the world.

When considering the strength of Chinese Banks and underlying strength of China’s economy, no debt deflation is possible.

If there is no chance of deflation, then why is China’s cpi slowing down?

There are three main reasons for the slowdown in China’s cpi:

A) The bursting of the commodity bubble. Because of speculator dominated futures markets in the US, commodity prices were boosted to artificial level going into the summer of 2008. As these inflated commodity prices fell back down to Earth, they caused a temporary worldwide slowdown in inflation.

B) In the second half of the year, deleveraging and hedge fund redemption caused the outflow of a large amount of hot money from China. This outflow temporary depressed asset prices.

C) The unwinding of the commodity bubble spread deflation fears worldwide and caused the velocity of money to drop.

6) Deflation fears are paralyzing China’s money supply

“deflation fears” have slowed the Chinese money supply to a crawl. While they are still spending, Chinese consumers are delaying big purchases and downshifting to discount stores. Businesses are strapped for cash, and scared Chinese banks are dumping riskier borrowers, like credit-card holders. China is experiencing one of the brief deflationary periods which typically precede hyperinflation.

Deflation fears in China also provide the perfect example of how a slowdown in the “velocity of money” and makes prices fall. Right now, Chinese banks are hoarding cash and delaying payments on personal credit cards. Only a year ago, most banks paid credit-card transactions in 14 days, but now merchants are having to have to wait 20, 40 or even 90 days to get paid. With lenders making credit-card transactions as unattractive as possible, many merchants are refusing to take credit cards from Chinese consumers. Think about that for a second, all that purchasing power from Chinese credit cards wiped out due to nothing but fear itself.

The important point to note about the price deflation caused by the deflation fears is that it will reverse sharply once inflation picks up. Banks will begin paying credit cards normally, and merchants will start accepting them again. The enormous amount of purchasing power which disappeared will reappear just as suddenly, causing a wild jump in inflation.

7) Sterilization operations have become a loss generating ventures

Until last year, China’s sterilization operations had been profitable, since the rate of interest that Beijing earned on foreign exchange reserves (mainly US Treasuries) had been higher than the rates it was paying on its yuan-denominated sterilization bills at home. However, now that the fed has lowered US interest rates to zero for the foreseeable future, China’s dollar peg has become a loss-making policy. When inflation hits china and interest rates rise again, China’s losses from its currency sterilization will become staggering.

8) China likely to attract a flood of hot money in 2009

China has had a problem with hot money inflows in the past, and those problems are likely to get worse this year. Hot money refers to the money that flows regularly between financial markets in search for the highest short term interest rates possible. This hot money has found ways around China’s capital controls and flows freely in and out of China to the authorities great frustration.

When hot money flows into china, it forces the PBOC to print money the same way as the trade surplus does. At the beginning of last year, these hot money inflows were one of China’s biggest problems, bringing inflation up to 8.6 despite the authorities best efforts. The country’s hot money problem ended temporarily with the bursting of the commodity bubble.

In the second half of last year, deflation fears and hedge fund deleveraging cause much of this hot money to leave China and seek the “safety” of US treasuries. This small exodus is what is responsible for the brief fall in China’s foreign reserves. However, the outflow of hot money from China has ended, and it now looks set to reverse.

In the next month or so, rising inflation will start pushing up Chinese interest rates at a time when central banks around the world have set their rates at or near zero. Since the entire world knows that the yuan is undervalued, these higher rates will make China the most attractive destination on Earth for those seeking safe high yielding interest rates, and the hot money problem will return with a vengeance.

9) Chinese authorities are pulling out all the stops

Chinese authorities are pulling out all the stops to get the country back on track. In order to prop up economic growth, Chinese authorities have:

A) Raised tax rebates for exporters of everything from high-tech and electronic products (motorcycles, sewing machines and robots, etc) to some rubber and wood products.
B) scraped export taxes for some steel products, aluminum, rice, wheat, flour and fertilizers
C) Cut the lock-up period beyond which people can resell their property without paying a business tax from five years to two years.
D) scraped the urban property tax for foreign firms and individuals
E) Allowed people to buy second homes on the same preferential terms normally reserved for first time buyers.
F) Announced plan to spend 900 billion yuan over three years to build affordable housing
G) Cut the deed tax payable by first-time buyers of homes smaller than 90 sq m is to 1 percent.
H) Announced measures such as cash subsidies and tax cuts to encourage home purchases
I) Announced plans for a 4 trillion yuan (586 billion) stimulus package to boost domestic demand through 2010.
J) Announced plans to invest 5 trillion yuan roads, waterways and ports in the next three to five years (over 2 trillion yuan more than originally planned).
K) Approved 2 trillion yuan for railway investment
M) Announced a tax break for public infrastructure projects.
N) Abolished the 5 percent withholding tax on interest income.
O) Scraped the 0.1 percent tax on purchases of equities.
P) Instructed Central Huijin (a government investment arm) to buy shares of listed Chinese firms.
Q) Encouraged state-owned firms to buy back shares.
R) Raised minimum grain purchase prices by 15 percent
S) Approved landmark reforms that give peasants the right to lease or transfer their land-use rights
T) Issued a stimulus package for its auto sector, including a tax cut
U) Set a price floor for air tickets
V) Handed out cash gifts to brighten the mood before the Chinese New Year
W) Etc…

10) Banks are flooding the economy with new loans

Chinese authorities are pushing banks to extend credit and help fight “deflation”. To encourage this money supply growth and new lending, the PBOC (the People’s Bank Of China) has halted sterilization operations and has cut the benchmark one-year lending rate by 2.16 percent and the deposit rate by 1.89 percent. Also, as part of these efforts, Chinese officials are reversing decades of financial repression and freeing up their banking system.

As China lifts restrictions on lending, banks are flooding the economy with new loans. Credit ceilings under which commercial banks have been operating have now been removed, and credit controls have been relaxed to give banks more leeway in making lending decisions. Chinese lenders will now be able to restructure loans and adjust the types and maturities of debt. Banks are being pressured to use this new financial freedom to “promote and consolidate the expansion of consumer credit”.

In addition to stimulating consumption, credit constraints are being relaxed to give loan access to small and medium privately owned businesses, which have until now been mostly shut out of credit by the state-owned financial system. As part of this effort and in order to help banks overcome their deflation fears, China has said it will tolerate more bad debt. This step is particularly significant, as the heavy penalties imposed for the creation of new non-performing loans has been a big restraint on credit expansion.

Finally, the commitment of Chinese authorities to fight deflation is so great that regulators have stated they will support the sale and securitization of loans. I repeat, China is moving towards securitization of loans! The adoption of securitization holds the potential to enormously accelerate money supply growth.

China’s efforts to boost lending are working. In December, China’s M2 money and loan growth soared. Just look at the graph of Chinese money supply growth below.

Does it look like China is headed towards deflation to you? (this chart will become much scarier once January’s numbers are added in)

Conclusion

I view hyperinflation in China as absolutely guaranteed. Zero doubt. China is dismantling all the measures it has put in place over the years to fight inflation. It is dropping restrictions on purchasing property, eliminating price controls, getting rid of loan quotas, lowering interest rates, ceasing its sterilization efforts, etc… It is also pulling out all the stops to boost government spending and new loan creation.

Meanwhile, China’s 40 billion dollar trade surplus means that its base money supply looks set to double in 2009. There is also the fact that China’s money supply is frozen due to cash hoarding and will cause inflation to increase when it accelerates. Finally, the commodity bubble has finished bursting, and China’s economy looks set to shrink.

Every economic factor in China suggests an enormous wave of hyperinflation will begin early this year. While I have written about the threats facing the dollar, this will be the event that finally ends the US’s borrowing binge and destroys our currency.

Hyperinflation in China will be a monumental event

Because China makes most of the world cheap consumer goods, it will export its hyperinflation around the world. This means that no fiat/paper currencies will survive this with its purchasing power intact. Some will lose all value (dollar) while others will survive while experiencing a loss of purchasing power (yuan, euro, yen, etc…). The only money that will retain its full value in the face of Chinese hyperinflation is gold.

China will sink the dollar to save the yuan

Once hyperinflation kicks into gear, Chinese authorities will find it impossible to bring it under control without sacrificing the dollar. Since hyperinflation would hurt Chinese exporters as much as losing their US exports, China will face a clear cut decision. By dumping the dollar peg and selling its USD holdings, China will help contain domestic inflation in many ways:

1) China will no longer be printing massive quantities of yuan to support the dollar.
2) By selling dollars in exchange for yuan, China will be able to take those yuan out of circulation, shrinking its monetary base.
3) Since the yuan will strengthen enormously again foreign currencies, Chinese exports will fall and that means there will be a lot more goods available for domestic consumption.
4) Since the yuan will be stronger against foreign currencies like the dollar, Chinese imports will rise. That means cheaper commodity prices across the board.
5) Dropping the dollar peg will make the yuan a major reserve currency. That means lower interests rates in China as foreign central banks build up yuan reserves.

Those expecting deflation are in for a surprise

Western nations who are lowering interest rate very sharply, without fearing inflation, are mainly concentrating on the domestic dynamics of their economies and the value of their currency. My bet is that no one is even considering the possibility that inflation could be imported from China, and, when cheap Chinese imports stop being cheap anymore, it will catch everybody completely by surprise

Dhaval

Why GILT funds are still lucrative?

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December 22, 2008 6:43 PM

Dear Investor

IN my last week mail on “Bull markets returns in Bear market”, I advised to remain invested in GILT funds. PL go through the attached presentation to find, how hard and steep interest rate cuts, central banks of developed and emerging countries have executed?

Reasons on why India will have to axe interest rates further.

  1. India is behind the curve, most of the developed and strong economies are now near to zero interest rates, India is last in the list and base rate is still as high as 6.50 %
  2. As election approaches near, to offer loans at lower rates to attract the voters coupled with weak economy, rate cuts can not be ruled out.
  3. Inflation and commodity prices have come down sharply forcing further aggressive rate cuts to stimulate the economy
  4. Lowering interest rates is the first instrument used along with stimulus packages to prompt the economy, hence further tinkering is inevitable.

Therefore, I believe there are still opportunities to earn higher return investing in safest instruments. Stay invested.

Regards,

Dhaval Shah

AVP | PINC | Baroda | 09825528815
Debt_Funds-Back_In_Action.pdf

Bonds are no more safer assets!!!!!!!!!!! Must Read.

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September 11, 2008 11:06 AM

Dear Investors

When did you heard last about the difference between Govt. & Corporate debt as high as full 14 %?

And, again pl remember this is just beginning of crisis.

Read on:

Junk Bond Distress Levels Surge, Signaling Defaults in Europe

By John Glover

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) — More than 30 percent of European high-risk, high-yield bonds are trading at distressed levels, the most in five years, stoking speculation defaults will rise.

Investors demand an extra yield over government debt of more than 10 percentage points to hold 53 of the 169 bonds in Merrill Lynch & Co.’s Euro High Yield Constrained Index. That’s the biggest proportion of distressed debt since March 2003, in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks and the dot-com crisis..

“Typically, those levels of distress would indicate that defaults are going to rise,” said Karl Bergqwist, who manages the equivalent of about $500 million in high-yield debt at Gartmore Investment Management in London . “We think there’s much worse to come. Spreads could go a lot wider and defaults are undoubtedly going to go up.”

Defaults on European speculative-grade corporate bonds will climb to 2.3 percent in a year, from 0.7 percent now, near a record low, Moody’s Investors Service said in a Sept. 8 report. Worldwide defaults will surge to 7.4 percent, from 2.7 percent.

Spreads on high-yield debt have widened as investors, fleeing the fallout from the collapse of the U.S. subprime- mortgage market, shun all but the safest bonds and as banks tighten lending standards. The average yield in the Merrill High Yield index, an indication of the absolute cost of debt to companies, is now 12.3 percent, twice the level of last March.

Europe ‘s high-yield bond market has been effectively closed since July 2007, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Last year, companies borrowed the equivalent of $32.1 billion using such securities, with all but $5 billion in the first half. Now, amid spiraling money-market rates, investors are wary of speculative borrowers.. High-yield, or junk, bonds are those rated below Baa3 by Moody’s or BBB- by Standard & Poor’s.

Probability of Default

“If companies find it difficult to raise money in the bond market at the same time as banks are tightening lending, then the probability of default increases,” said Guy Stear, a strategist at Societe Generale SA in Paris. “That’s the case even if the fundamental business is sound.”

The New York-based ratings firm expects makers of durable consumer goods such as furniture, floor coverings and fridges to show the highest default rate in Europe .. The companies with the largest share of bonds in euros at distressed levels are General Motors Corp. and its finance unit, General Motors Acceptance Corp., Bloomberg data show.

Pre-Crunch Rush

Some bonds sold in the rush of the first half of 2007 are now distressed.

The 500 million euros ($704 million) of 7 percent notes due 2017 sold by Norske Skogindustrier ASA, the second-biggest newsprint maker, are at a spread of 1,016 basis points more than government debt, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. The 125 million euros of 8.125 percent bonds due 2014 sold by Paris-based car rental company Europcar Group SA are at 1,441 basis points, RBS prices show.

Whistlejacket Capital Ltd., the structured investment vehicle backed by Credit Suisse Group, defaulted on 45 million pounds ($79 million) of senior notes it sold in June 2007.

Levels of distress are “a leading indicator of future speculative-grade defaults with a lead time of roughly nine months,” S&P analysts including Diane Vazza wrote in a research report published last month. “A rising distress ratio is indicative of a stressful credit environment.”

The absolute number of bonds in the Merrill index quoted at distressed levels is the highest since November 2002 after banks reported losses and writedowns of more than $500 billion worldwide, almost half of them in Europe .

In November 2002, investors were willing to pay an average price of 74 cents on the euro for the bonds in the Merrill High Yield index. The securities carried an average Moody’s rating of B1, four levels below investment grade. The average price of the current index is 80.7 cents and the rating is unchanged.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Glover in London at

Regards,

Dhaval Shah

Investment Academy| Baroda | 09825528815