Forex Pips – Guide To Profitable Forex Spread Betting Rotating Header Image

Risk

Is Alan Greenspan a National Security Risk?

(Reuters) – “Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Thursday said ‘outrageous’ advice from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan helped create record U.S. budget deficits that put national security at risk.” -February 25, 2010

Alan Greenspan lamented U.S. budget deficits in the Wall Street Journal on June 18, 2010 (“U.S. Debt and the Greece Analogy”).  For an analysis of Greenspan’s flapdoodle, Barry Ritholtz covered the turf on his blog, The Big Picture.  The former Federal Reserve chairman should have withheld comment, given his personal contribution to the nation’s poverty-stricken state.

Testifying before Congress on February 25, 2010, Hillary Clinton bemoaned the advice of Alan Greenspan: “I remember as vividly as if it were yesterday when we had a hearing in which Alan Greenspan came and justified increasing spending and cutting taxes, saying that we didn’t really need to pay down the debt — outrageous in my view.” Reuters continued: “Though she did not give a date, that hearing must have taken place during the presidency of George W. Bush….”

If only it were so simple. During his tenure as Fed chairman, Greenspan’s budget positions changed more often than the weather. Always the opportunist, his self-serving opinions continue to bend the truth. During the Greenspan Boom, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service, and the Enron Prize for Distinguished Service. Now, the Secretary of State looks ready to compile a dossier on his activities. The State Department need look no further. A review of his outrageous activities follows.

In February 2000, the last year of the (William Jefferson) Clinton Administration, Greenspan appeared before the Senate Banking Committee. He recommended the government use the federal budget surplus to pay down the national debt. He amplified: “The growth potential of our economy under current circumstances is best served by allowing the unified budget surpluses…to materialize, thereby reduce Treasury debt held by the public.” Meaning: we should use surplus dollars collected by the Treasury Department to reduce the federal debt. (The Treasury can use surplus tax dollars to either purchase U.S. Treasury securities or reduce the size of new debt issues.) This fit the politics of the time. President Clinton was not proposing a tax cut.

One year later, Alan Greenspan worked for new management – the Bush Administration. President Bush wanted a tax cut to kick off his presidency. Greenspan marketed the tax cut as fiscally responsible, given recent surpluses. His advice was rendered on January 25, 2001, to the U.S. Senate Committee on the Budget. This was five days after George Bush’s inauguration. The Wall Street Journal reported: “Giving a big boost to President Bush, Chairman Alan Greenspan reversed his long-held view and said he now sees room for significant tax cuts in the federal government’s financial future…. ‘[O]ver the coming decade, the latest budget-surplus numbers show not only room for reductions, but even a need.’” The New York Times reported on the same day: “Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, gave his blessing today to a substantial tax cut…. In a clear shift from his previous position that reducing the national debt should be the focus of fiscal policy, Mr. Greenspan said improvements in the economy’s long-term potential and the swelling surplus projections had ‘reshaped the choices and opportunities before us.’”

In his testimony, Greenspan expressed concern “that continuing to run surpluses beyond the point at which we reach zero or near-zero federal debt brings to center stage the critical longer-term fiscal policy issue of whether the federal government should accumulate large quantities of private (more technically nonfederal) assets.” [Greenspan's parenthesis.]

Here, the Fed chairman anticipated surpluses of such enormous quantity that there would not be a single U.S. Treasury security left to buy. The government could be forced to buy “nonfederal” assets, such as IBM bonds. Of the 100,000 most likely problems the government should consider, this was not one of them.

Greenspan was leaning on a bizarre computation from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). In January 2001, the CBO had projected a federal budget surplus for the period of 2002 through 2011 of .6 trillion. This gem of infinite interpolation gave Greenspan the cover he needed. In 2002, the CBO reduced its surplus estimate by .3 billion, to 0 million.

Whether Greenspan’s audience succumbed to his flight of fancy, another statement should have awakened its curiosity. Greenspan prefaced his tale of woeful surpluses by discussing “recent projections [which]… make clear that the highly desirable goal of paying off the federal debt is in reach before the end of the decade. This is in marked contrast to the perspective of a year ago when the elimination of the debt did not appear likely until the next decade.” Since “a year ago” (actually, the 10 months between March 10, 2000 and when he spoke in January 2001), the Nasdaq had fallen 43%. Tax revenue had risen from 12.5% of personal income to 15.4% during the boom years. In 2000, this 2.9% increase equaled 7 billion – precisely the same as the total 2000 budget surplus. It suited Greenspan’s purposes to express mystification during testimony: “We still do not have a full understanding of the exceptional strength in individual income tax receipts during the latter 1990s.”

Greenspan could not have been blind to the source of the budget surpluses: capital gains, exercised stock options and bonuses. These tributaries had dried up. Without these flows, his fear of paying down the national debt, or even running a balanced budget, made no sense. And, while Alan Greenspan could claim that paying down the debt was a bad thing, it is a tribute to the man’s sway that his audience accepted such a silly pretense approvingly.

The Greenspan Campaign for Re-nomination to Head the Fed in 2004 had kicked off its media blitz a year earlier, on February 11, 2003. The Boston Globe reported that Greenspan viewed Bush’s (new) tax cut plan with suspicion: “Greenspan… used the opportunity to admonish the federal government for losing its ‘fiscal discipline.’” In the chairman’s words, a “return to fiscal discipline should be instituted without delay.” That was the stick. The next day, on February 12, Greenspan offered Bush the carrot. The Wall Street Journal reported: “Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan muted his initially chilly reception of President Bush’s tax cut plan, offering more praise for eliminating taxes on dividends and playing down the near term consequences for the Federal deficit.” [Italics added.] On February 22, President Bush announced that he would reappoint Greenspan for a fifth term.

On April 30, 2003, having accomplished his mission and with Bush now committed to reconfirm him, Greenspan scolded the president. The New York Times reported: “Alan Greenspan…told Congress today that the economy was poised to grow without further large tax cuts, and that budget deficits resulting from lower taxes without offsetting reductions in spending could be damaging to the economy. Opponents of the large tax cut favored by President Bush took Mr. Greenspan’s testimony as support of their position.” [Italics added.] The dissembling was obvious; yet, no one questioned Greenspan’s motives. No one questioned his logic either, but, few in Washington or Wall Street ever had.

On April 21, 2005, the chairman’s bewildering tax and federal budget advice came full circle. At a Senate Budget Committee meeting, Democratic Senator Paul Sarbanes from Maryland pursued a ragged thread in the Greenspan tapestry. The senator contended that Greenspan’s endorsement of the president’s 2001 tax cut was the “green light” that George Bush needed. (This 2001 testimony is probably what Hillary Clinton remembered.)  At this meeting, Greenspan replied that he had not “specifically” endorsed the tax cut plan. The chairman claimed: “[Y]ou will not find anywhere in the public record that I supported the [2001] tax cut.”

After the New York Times published Greenspan’s “blessing today to a substantial tax” on January 26, 2001, the Federal Reserve chairman never made a speech or provided testimony that his advice had been misunderstood. There was no reason for him to do so. Reading the January 25, 2001, speech today (available for anyone to judge on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors website, under “News and Events” and “Testimony”), his support is obvious. He was rooting for a tax cut.

This civil servant had made false statements to the people’s elected representatives before. When a vote to balance the budget loomed early in Clinton’s presidency, Greenspan said a Fed study showed a balanced budget would reduce interest rates. The Fed had conducted no such study. Greenspan testified to Congress in 1993 that tapes of Federal Open Market Committee meetings were destroyed after summaries were written. Thus, no transcripts existed. He later admitted to Banking Committee Chairman Henry Gonzales that he had known for years transcripts were kept but only remembered when a “senior staff member jogged my memory in the last few days.”

To Sarbannes complaint, Greenspan deflected criticism with a tried-and-true tactic: flattery. The Wall Street Journal reported on April 22, 2005, that Greenspan told the senator “an alternative program of tax cuts and spending increases then proposed by the Democratic Party’s leadership would have achieved the same desired reduction in surpluses.” The logic of Greenspan’s prevarications seemed to mean he had not specifically endorsed the Bush tax cut. Yet, he also told Senator Sarbannes that he “like many economists” had been wrong about the surpluses he warned of in 2001. Three years later, in 2004, the federal government set a new record with its first 0 billion deficit. So why was he now saying the Democratic Party’s proposal would have “achieved the same desired reduction” since the budget surpluses had, instead, degenerated into record-setting deficits? We will never know. Greenspan had triumphed once again.

As presidential candidate in 2008, Senator Hillary Clinton fully understood her man. She proposed an “emergency group” to “deal with high-risk mortgages.” Greenspan was one of those she would appoint to her brain trust. When an opponent questioned her strange selection of the former Federal Reserve chairman, Clinton offered an enigmatic endorsement. Greenspan had “a calming influence….Don’t ask me why, because I never understand what he’s saying.”

Regards,

Frederick Sheehan,
for The Daily Reckoning

[For more of Frederick Sheehan's perspective you can visit his blogs here and at www.AuContrarian.com.]

Is Alan Greenspan a National Security Risk? originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

Markets With Renewed Risk Appetites Rethink China

Are you full? You know, appetite wise? Probably not, for most of you read the Pfennig in the morning, with a cup o’ Joe… The renewed appetite for risk that the markets were displaying yesterday disappeared yesterday afternoon. The markets were full of risk, I guess… For the selling was swift and damaging to the levels that the currencies, commodities, and stocks had gained overnight on the news that China would allow more flexibility in the renminbi (CNY).

See how fickle these markets/traders are? Very! You had a day that everyone was looking forward to, China allowing the renminbi to gain versus the dollar again, and just threw it to the roadside… UGH!

Yes… The China news was good for about 12 hours, and then it was back to fretting about the debt crisis in the Eurozone… The euro (EUR), which had traded above 1.24 for most of the morning yesterday, not only lost the 1.24 handle, but the 1.23 handle too! UGH! The Aussie dollar (AUD) lost about a cent, as did the New Zealand dollar/kiwi (NZD). So did the Canadian dollar (CAD)… The Lone Ranger of “gained ground not given up” was the Swiss franc (CHF), which remained well bid at 90-cents.

This morning, German Business Confidence as measured by the think tank, IFO, posted an unexpected rise to a two-year high this month. Here’s the skinny, folks… With the weakened euro, businesses are eyeing a return to export glory… So, they pushed the confidence survey to a high since May of 2008! Imagine what these guys would be saying if they had known about China’s decision before they were surveyed! For you see… If the renminbi DOES GET (question mark) stronger versus the dollar, and other currencies, it could slow their exports, and Germany could take back the crown of “export king”!

OK… I had one more thought on China’s announcement yesterday, after I had time to think more about it… And you know me… Mr. Conspiracy, right? Well… What if the Chinese just said that about more flexibility to appease the G-20 members that will meet this weekend? What if the Chinese don’t have any intention of carrying out a more flexible renminbi? Wouldn’t it be just like them to give us a rug to stand on while entering the room, and then pull it out from under us? Yes, it would…

A reader sent me this snippet from today’s issue of The International Herald Tribune, distributed in China, which put me on the conspiracy path regarding China:

“The Chinese central bank announced Sunday afternoon that any changes in the value of its currency, the renminbi, would be gradual, in a clear attempt to reassure the Chinese people that a move Saturday evening toward a more flexible currency would not result in a sharp or disruptive change.”

And if the markets have a conspiracy bone in them, they have probably snuffed this out already, and thus the sell-off… But then that’s giving the markets a great deal of credit that they don’t deserve!

Well… There’s a story on the Bloomie this morning titled, “Central Banks show euro losing reserve currency status with loonie gaining”… Hmmm…

According to the writer, “The Australian and Canadian dollars are becoming reserve currencies for central bankers seeking alternatives to deteriorating government credit quality in Europe, the US and Japan.”

Well… That’s right… But let’s put this in perspective… The debt problems of the US and Japan far outweigh those in the Eurozone… So, let’s not be so quick to lump them together, eh?  Bank of America/Merrill Lynch believes that the markets have “overreacted to the debt crisis in Europe” and expects a 10% gain in the region’s stocks by the end of this year… Hmmm…

I guess this is a follow up from the story I told you about last week regarding the thought that Russia would be adding Canadian dollar/loonies to their reserves…

But, let me tell you the most important part of all this… Central banks are seeing the need to diversify… WOW! Just like you and me!

I had someone send me a note regarding my interview with MarketWatch last week, and said I was wrong, that fiat currencies do not give your investment portfolio diversification… Hmmm… On what planet does that not take? If your investment portfolio is denominated in one currency, let’s say dollars, then you have no diversification… And yes… Metals like gold, silver, and platinum also diversify your portfolio… I never said they didn’t!

So… Why wouldn’t an investor look to add currencies from countries that show good fundamental economic growth, and feature an interest rate differential? Like the Aussie dollar? Check out this most recent data print from Australia… Overall earnings of Australia’s commodity exports are set to gain as much as 23% in the fiscal year of 2010 to 2011, led by a 28.5% increase in profit from mineral and coal exports, according to the Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics. Fundamentally sound…

Speaking of debt, the US has plenty of it… Like the .6 trillion budget deficit that will be posted this year… There are rumors that the US Budget Director, Peter Orszag, will resign soon… Like BEFORE he has to put his name on another budget that shows another .6 trillion deficit! That’s just my guess, folks… But who could do that year after year? I couldn’t… But then, debt to me is like kryptonite to Superman… You have to avoid it!

Today… The data cupboard yields the Existing Home Sales data from May… This number will still be a component of two things…. 1. Government assistance, and 2. Much lower Home Prices.

My friend, David Galland, had a good thought about the Canadian dollar in a roundabout way, yesterday… David said that, “with the US set to spend $ 15 billion on offshore drilling” and with “the Gulf shut down”… “The destination of those funds are probably going to head to the tar sands of Canada.”

Well… Gold got caught in the cross winds of the China news and the end of the risk taking euphoria yesterday… At one point, gold was down … I had told our metals trader, Jen, that I wanted to buy more gold the next time it dipped… And she reminded me of that yesterday, like a good sales/trader would do!

Silver also backed off, as you would expect, given the loss in the gold price yesterday.

Yesterday I made a Big Deal out of Canada’s CPI report that would print this morning… I was half hoping that it was greater than expected, so that the Bank of Canada (BOC) would have no other choice but to raise rates again at their next meeting next month. That’s kind of a strange thought pattern, eh? Oh well… Canadian CPI for May fell to 1.4% from April’s 1.8%…

So… That news will probably knock some of the stuffing out of the loonie today… Because interest rates are not going higher in Canada with inflation data like that! And here’s my strange thought pattern working again… That’s a good thing for those that want to buy loonies… A cheaper price…

Then there was this… For years now, I’ve told you about the cartel that calls themselves the Fed Reserve… I’ve told you about how it was created, and who threw the Constitution in the trash to create it (Woodrow Wilson)… I’ve also stated on several occasions how we, as a country would be better off without the Fed. It were supposedly created to even out the economic peaks and valleys and stop recessions… They were also supposed to protect the dollar… Well… If I did my job as badly as the Fed has, I would have been fired decades ago! And so… They should also be fired… This is not just me on the soapbox, folks… Anyway… A guy names James Cobb wrote and performs a song about ending the Fed… It’s here, should you want to hear it…

To recap… The strong risk appetite on display yesterday morning, disappeared in the afternoon hours, and the euphoria over the China announcement to allow more flexibility in the renminbi was thrown overboard! The Swiss franc was the only currency that had risen the night before, to hold on to most of its gains, as most others lost at least 1-cent. There are questions about what China meant in its announcement, and therefore, the focus returned to the debt crisis in the Eurozone.

Chuck Butler
for The Daily Reckoning

Markets With Renewed Risk Appetites Rethink China originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

The Return of Risk Aversion and the Market’s Next Move

Market internals remain bearish. The rush to cut portfolio risk remains intact. Here is a two-year chart of the S&P 500 (in red) and the iShares High-Yield Corporate Bond ETF (HYG):

SPX vs. HYG

Both lines in the chart reflect investors’ risk appetite. Over the past year, retail investors have been piling into corporate bond funds. This inflow helped push bond prices up and yields down, allowing heavily indebted companies to refinance bank debt with proceeds from corporate bond offerings.

Lots of credit risk has shifted from the banking system to the bond market, where we have transparent, tick-by-tick pricing of credit (as opposed to “mark-to-myth” accounting of bank loans).

The return of risk aversion will drive many investors toward higher-quality bonds (away from “junkier” funds like HYG with higher yields and higher credit risk). This isn’t good for leveraged companies that rely on access to easy financing in the bond market.

Dan Amoss
for The Daily Reckoning

The Return of Risk Aversion and the Market’s Next Move originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

Forced to Accept Risk

Even before the financial crisis of 2008 arose, there were signs that the operation of a centrally managed fi at currency system was creating stress.

Consider the dilemma of retirement. On one hand, many might not have saved much, because throughout life government had stepped in to take care of every need from health care, elder care, child care, tuition, or even to make unaffordable mortgages affordable.

With fallbacks like these where is the incentive to spend within one’s means? But putting aside these and other reasons why one might have saved only a few percent of income annually (as is the national average), what circumstance were baby boomers in by the turn of the last century? Someone with a salary of 0,000 might have saved ,000 each year early on, rising to perhaps ,000 annually or more near retirement.

With compounding, that might have produced a nest egg worth $ 200,000, assuming no taxes (FV30 of ,000 at 7% equals ,000). What would one have done with this upon retiring? Investing in safe CDs would provide only ,000 of annual income at 5 percent. But then twice in the last decade the central bank has dropped interest rates to nearly zero. Bonds would yield only a little bit more.

So without much income, stocks would have been the best alternative, because studies of long – term total return suggested 10 percent was obtainable.

However, the first decade of the new century is likely to close with having provided a negative return, regardless of whether the consensus opinion that economic recovery would lift the equity market in 2009 or 2010 pans out.

Moreover, there is inflation to consider. The persistent printing of money, which averaged about 7 percent since the founding of the Fed nearly 100 years ago, accelerated to over 8 percent since Nixon went off gold in 1971.
Besides converting what would have been organic deflation into manufactured inflation of roughly 4.5 percent on average from 1971 to 2008, generally this increase in bank money has pumped up the value of assets, especially real estate and equities. Moreover, the value of stocks was pushed higher by expanding the presence of the financial sector within the S&P 500 to nearly 40 percent of earnings, clearly an unnatural phenomenon.

The expansion of credit to unheard of levels tended to inflate earnings per share through putting the economy on steroids and from machinations such as share buybacks. Looking at a longer time frame, equity investors were cautious after a similar debt bubble was pricked by the end of the 1930s, demanding dividend yields in excess of long dated bonds in the early 1950s. By the turn of the century, yields were down to near 1 percent.

The bottom line for those who might retire is that manipulation of the money supply first drives the populace (and the pensions held by investment managers) to not hold cash due to taxes and inflation. Then it presents an unappetizing alternative of low-yielding bonds that similarly are ravaged by these two factors.

Finally it pushes everyone into equities in desperation. Excessive money supply growth distorts the earnings the underlying corporations achieve and puffs up the valuation of those same earnings, a double whammy that magnifies risk.

The aftermath is now ugly, with nest eggs reduced, taxes increasing, inflation probable, and the risk of a generational depression palpable but now downplayed by a financial community whose forecasting and analysis blows with the latest breeze.

Consider the risk that no one wishes to discuss, which is the failure of the U.S. government. Today the only safe haven is investing in debt obligations of the U.S. Treasury, which define the risk-free rate. This solidarity has been unquestioned since the passage of the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913, which granted the Treasury Department unlimited power to confiscate the private property of its citizens.

With $ 2 million of government GAAP liability per household to be borne by the few tax brackets held responsible for generating the nation’s tax revenue, the government itself may have reached the end of its ability to pick up the tab for the products of the moral hazard it has encouraged.

The fiat era was successful as long as government had capacity remaining in its credit line. When the Great Depression hit in the 1930s, government would quench an ailing economy’s need for liquidity as easily as if it were filling an empty glass with a bottle of Coca-Cola.

After the go-go years of the 1960s and the increased spending for the Vietnam War and Johnson-era programs, it could pour the soda into a half-filled glass. The high tax rates of the 1970s similarly would not bankrupt the system yet, because growing into unused debt capacity produced inflationary gains for holders of assets, which would be deferred of taxation.

After the Internet bubble, pouring in the Coca-Cola produced much fizz and displaced little emptiness. Today, correcting the failure of a second or third tier investment bank is a tedious exercise of trying to finish filling the cup to the brim without causing a mess all over the table.

Bear Stearns and Lehman were large, but not dominant forces in 2008. Their failure at any other time would have been easily contained. Some 38 percent of total deposits nationwide of trillion were uninsured because they exceed the $ 100,000 limit, yet less than 15 years ago only 23 percent were.

With the passage of TARP, the ceiling was reset at 0,000, but this leaves 27 percent of depositor funds unprotected. With money market funds losing assets, it is possible that new deposits above the limit could enter the banking system.

Since the Great Depression, credit grew relative to GDP by an order of magnitude. Private debt was just 57 percent of GDP in 1944, with only 14 percent of this being mortgages. By 1954 it would be 71 percent, with 28 percent of this financing residential dwellings.

These statistics would not skip a beat in the 1970s, despite a shakeout in the stock market, because inflation would be raging. By 1984, private debt rose to 140 percent of the economy; you could trend-line it right up to over 300 percent by 2007. If during the 25-year or so final blow-off stage one decided to bet against the house, figuratively or literally, one would lose.

If one plunged in to buy real estate at any time during the upswing, chances are he would feel pretty good about his investment. Anyone with a sense of caution would have kicked themselves for having delayed a purchase of this essential building block of life.

Although so far this example deals with real estate, partly because it is so vital to everyday living, the same could be said for stocks; during the great bull market any delays to buy were fatal errors.

You would be told to buy on dips, to dollar cost average. Academics ranging from Roger Ibbotson to Jeremy Siegel would assure you that over the long run, stocks would outperform every other asset; the mean annual return of large company equities was over 10 percent from 1925 to 2007, with a standard deviation of just 20 percent. Small company returns were even plumper, but there was more risk.

Regards,

Bill Baker,
for The Daily Reckoning

[Editor's note: This passage is reprinted from William W. Baker's book, Endless Money: The Moral Hazards of Socialism, with the permission of John Wiley & Sons, Inc (©2010). You can get your own copy here.]

Forced to Accept Risk originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold