Bill Bonner: fool on a fool's errand
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Bill Bonner Jun 05, 2009
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This week brought an entertaining episode. Wall Street's man in Washington, incidentally Secretary of the US Treasury, was sent to Beijing.
His mission: to convince the canny Chinese of something that everyone knows is untrue – that US bonds are safe.
Of US government paper, China has plenty. Bond holdings alone add up to $768bn. Other dollar-denominated assets in Chinese hands add another $700bn or so. Despite this Newcastle in its vault, the US would like China to buy more coal.
But lately, those dollar holdings have done poorly. Thanks, supposedly, to the economic rebound, the dollar has fallen against just about everything. Against gold, it is down 15% in 2009. Against oil, it is off 50%. As for copper, the dollar has lost 65% of its purchasing power. Thirty-year US Treasuries have fallen too – down about 27% since January. A rough guess is that China has lost more than $200bn so far this year.
Martin Wolf, in the Financial Times, says these trends are signs of progress. "Rising government bond rates prove policy is working," begins his line of thought. Spreads between corporate bonds and Treasuries are narrowing. Real yields on corporate bonds are falling while yields on Treasuries go up. "Normalisation", he calls it; investors now expect inflation instead of extinction.
The rise in inflation expectations is clearly visible in the US bond market, where inflation-indexed bonds are once again selling for substantially higher prices than their non-indexed cousins. Towards the end of 2008, the bond market anticipated zero inflation. Now, the latest figures imply a 1.6% positive inflation rate over the next ten years.
If inflation doesn't show up as forecast it won't be for lack of effort on the part of Geithner and his friends. The US deficit for the current year is $1.84trn. Every two months, the Feds need to borrow nearly the equivalent of the previous entire year's record-breaking deficit. And if private lenders balk, the Fed stands ready to raise its own hand at the next auction of US government debt.
The Chinese are worried. They've put a lot of eggs in the basket now being carried by Geithner, Bernanke, et al.
What if Team America isn't as surefooted as it claims?
"It will be helpful if Mr. Geithner can show us some arithmetic," said Mr. Yu Yongding, described as a former advisor to the central bank of China. Mr. Geithner showed up with numbers, of course. From a deficit of 12% of GDP, the US plans to take its deficit down to 3%, he said. But when he delivered this solemn fib at the University of Beijing the students laughed at him.
American Secretaries of the Treasury are not used to being laughed at. Almost 40 years ago, a US Treasury Secretary, John Connally, expressed the imperial view: "it may be our currency, but it's your problem". Even after the crack up in the fall of 2008, the US continued in the fantasy that it could lay off as much paper on the foreigners as it wanted.
Mr. Yu Yongding addressed this point directly: "I wish to tell the US government: 'Don't be complacent and think there isn't any alternative for China to buy your bills and bonds... The euro is an alternative. And there are lots of raw materials we can still buy.'"
China is hedging its bets, buying assets that don't have dollar-signs on them. Why else would they be going up? Speculators - including the Chinese - are hedging against inflation. They're worrying about a government-fuelled melt-up in prices. These anxieties – not a return to 'normalcy' – are sending the price of gold back towards $1,000 and the dollar towards $1.50 per euro.
Inflation, like cholesterol, comes in two forms, good and bad. The good raises asset prices. The bad raises consumer prices. No one complains when prices of houses and stock are rising. But when toothpaste and bread follow, an alarm goes up. Soon, central banks are taking action to stop it – raising interest rates and credit standards.
But this time it's different. Both types of inflation are welcome. Harvard economist Ken Rogoff says he advocates 6% inflation "for at least a couple of years". It would make it easier for debtors to repay loans. Economist John Taylor, of the eponymous 'Taylor rule', gives another reason inflation would be well met. He points out that running a balanced US federal budget, even ten years into the future, would require a permanent 60% tax increase. "A 60% tax hike won't happen," he writes. "The government will attempt to inflate the problem away instead." Even Warren Buffett told CNBC that the likely solution to America's problem was inflation.
Mr Yu Yongding countered: "You should not try to inflate away your debt burden." But that's just what the US is trying to do. So far, it's not good faith that protects China's dollar assets. It's a depression – and incapacity. The Geithner team tries to create inflation, but hasn't yet got the hang of it. Give them time.
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