White House Delaying Release of Budget Update

After several weeks of sideways slop, the USDX is finally falling over. While it still needs to clear a couple of lows to the downside to really build some momentum, I thought I�d provide a big picture look at the challenges ahead for dollar shorts and gold longs.

In summary: If the dollar takes this leg down, don�t get too happy just yet. While there�s some decent money to be made between here and the low 70s, I�d get really flat around 71 on the USDX. The nightmare scenario is that gold closes in on $1032, but doesn�t clear it, and then USDX somehow bounces around 71. Strong pivots off these levels would be an �oh ****� moment for gold longs (double top) and dollar bears (double bottom).

[U]This news actually broke the dollar down and out of its recent range.[/U]

Via: AP:
[B]White House Delaying Release of Budget Update[/B]

The White House is being forced to acknowledge the wide gap between its once-upbeat predictions about the economy and today�s bleak landscape.

The administration�s annual midsummer budget update is sure to show higher deficits and unemployment and slower growth than projected in President Barack Obama�s budget in February and update in May, and that could complicate his efforts to get his signature health care and global-warming proposals through Congress.

The release of the update � usually scheduled for mid-July � has been put off until the middle of next month, giving rise to speculation the White House is delaying the bad news at least until Congress leaves town on its August 7 summer recess.

The administration is pressing for votes before then on its $1 trillion health care initiative, which lawmakers are arguing over how to finance.

The White House budget director, Peter Orszag, said on Sunday that the administration believes the �chances are high� of getting a health care bill by then. But new analyses showing runaway costs are jeopardizing Senate passage.

�Instead of a dream, this routine report could be a nightmare,� Tony Fratto, a former Treasury Department official and White House spokesman under President George W. Bush, said of the delayed budget update. �There are some things that can�t be escaped.�

The administration earlier this year predicted that unemployment would peak at about 9 percent without a big stimulus package and 8 percent with one. Congress did pass a $787 billion two-year stimulus measure, yet unemployment soared to 9.5 percent in June and appears headed for double digits.

Obama�s current forecast anticipates 3.2 percent growth next year, then 4 percent or higher growth from 2011 to 2013. Private forecasts are less optimistic, especially for next year.

Any downward revision in growth or revenue projections would mean that budget deficits would be far higher than the administration is now suggesting.

Setting the stage for bleaker projections, Vice President Joe Biden recently conceded, �We misread how bad the economy was� in January. Obama modified that by suggesting the White House had �incomplete� information.

The new budget update comes as the public and members of Congress are becoming increasingly anxious over Obama�s economic policies.

Well, according to Bernanke the FED has got an exit strategy to end Quantitative Easing a.k.a. printing fiat-money=I.O.U’s until all the trees of this planet are gone because of the paper needed to print trillions and trillions of I.O.U’s :D.

There is no chance in hell the FED will ease QE because it would mean the immediate bankruptcy of the financial system worldwide a.k.a. fiat-money system as we know it.

The reason…there is 1250 trillion [BIS data] of almost worthless [8c per 1$ notional value] Deriviatives floating around worldwide with the majority being held in Europe and in the US.

The market being kind today to the FED chairman and the greenback in particular because the perception that there will be no inflation…hyperinflation has had the upper hand. For today anyway. Because the greenback recovered in Asian Session today.

[U]That is the reason.[/U]

via WSJ

[B]The Fed�s Exit Strategy[/B]

By BEN BERNANKE

The depth and breadth of the global recession has required a highly accommodative monetary policy. Since the onset of the financial crisis nearly two years ago, the Federal Reserve has reduced the interest-rate target for overnight lending between banks (the federal-funds rate) nearly to zero. We have also greatly expanded the size of the Fed�s balance sheet through purchases of longer-term securities and through targeted lending programs aimed at restarting the flow of credit.

These actions have softened the economic impact of the financial crisis. They have also improved the functioning of key credit markets, including the markets for interbank lending, commercial paper, consumer and small-business credit, and residential mortgages.

My colleagues and I believe that accommodative policies will likely be warranted for an extended period. At some point, however, as economic recovery takes hold, we will need to tighten monetary policy to prevent the emergence of an inflation problem down the road. The Federal Open Market Committee, which is responsible for setting U.S. monetary policy, has devoted considerable time to issues relating to an exit strategy. We are confident we have the necessary tools to withdraw policy accommodation, when that becomes appropriate, in a smooth and timely manner.

The exit strategy is closely tied to the management of the Federal Reserve balance sheet. When the Fed makes loans or acquires securities, the funds enter the banking system and ultimately appear in the reserve accounts held at the Fed by banks and other depository institutions. These reserve balances now total about $800 billion, much more than normal. And given the current economic conditions, banks have generally held their reserves as balances at the Fed.

But as the economy recovers, banks should find more opportunities to lend out their reserves. That would produce faster growth in broad money (for example, M1 or M2) and easier credit conditions, which could ultimately result in inflationary pressures�unless we adopt countervailing policy measures. When the time comes to tighten monetary policy, we must either eliminate these large reserve balances or, if they remain, neutralize any potential undesired effects on the economy.

To some extent, reserves held by banks at the Fed will contract automatically, as improving financial conditions lead to reduced use of our short-term lending facilities, and ultimately to their wind down. Indeed, short-term credit extended by the Fed to financial institutions and other market participants has already fallen to less than $600 billion as of mid-July from about $1.5 trillion at the end of 2008. In addition, reserves could be reduced by about $100 billion to $200 billion each year over the next few years as securities held by the Fed mature or are prepaid. However, reserves likely would remain quite high for several years unless additional policies are undertaken.

Even if our balance sheet stays large for a while, we have two broad means of tightening monetary policy at the appropriate time: paying interest on reserve balances and taking various actions that reduce the stock of reserves. We could use either of these approaches alone; however, to ensure effectiveness, we likely would use both in combination.

Congress granted us authority last fall to pay interest on balances held by banks at the Fed. Currently, we pay banks an interest rate of 0.25%. When the time comes to tighten policy, we can raise the rate paid on reserve balances as we increase our target for the federal funds rate.

Banks generally will not lend funds in the money market at an interest rate lower than the rate they can earn risk-free at the Federal Reserve. Moreover, they should compete to borrow any funds that are offered in private markets at rates below the interest rate on reserve balances because, by so doing, they can earn a spread without risk.

Thus the interest rate that the Fed pays should tend to put a floor under short-term market rates, including our policy target, the federal-funds rate. Raising the rate paid on reserve balances also discourages excessive growth in money or credit, because banks will not want to lend out their reserves at rates below what they can earn at the Fed.

Considerable international experience suggests that paying interest on reserves effectively manages short-term market rates. For example, the European Central Bank allows banks to place excess reserves in an interest-paying deposit facility. Even as that central bank�s liquidity-operations substantially increased its balance sheet, the overnight interbank rate remained at or above its deposit rate. In addition, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of Canada have also used their ability to pay interest on reserves to maintain a floor under short-term market rates.

Despite this logic and experience, the federal-funds rate has dipped somewhat below the rate paid by the Fed, especially in October and November 2008, when the Fed first began to pay interest on reserves. This pattern partly reflected temporary factors, such as banks� inexperience with the new system.

However, this pattern appears also to have resulted from the fact that some large lenders in the federal-funds market, notably government-sponsored enterprises such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are ineligible to receive interest on balances held at the Fed, and thus they have an incentive to lend in that market at rates below what the Fed pays banks.

Under more normal financial conditions, the willingness of banks to engage in the simple arbitrage noted above will tend to limit the gap between the federal-funds rate and the rate the Fed pays on reserves. If that gap persists, the problem can be addressed by supplementing payment of interest on reserves with steps to reduce reserves and drain excess liquidity from markets�the second means of tightening monetary policy. Here are four options for doing this.

First, the Federal Reserve could drain bank reserves and reduce the excess liquidity at other institutions by arranging large-scale reverse repurchase agreements with financial market participants, including banks, government-sponsored enterprises and other institutions. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the sale by the Fed of securities from its portfolio with an agreement to buy the securities back at a slightly higher price at a later date.

Second, the Treasury could sell bills and deposit the proceeds with the Federal Reserve. When purchasers pay for the securities, the Treasury�s account at the Federal Reserve rises and reserve balances decline.

The Treasury has been conducting such operations since last fall under its Supplementary Financing Program. Although the Treasury�s operations are helpful, to protect the independence of monetary policy, we must take care to ensure that we can achieve our policy objectives without reliance on the Treasury.

Third, using the authority Congress gave us to pay interest on banks� balances at the Fed, we can offer term deposits to banks�analogous to the certificates of deposit that banks offer their customers. Bank funds held in term deposits at the Fed would not be available for the federal funds market.

Fourth, if necessary, the Fed could reduce reserves by selling a portion of its holdings of long-term securities into the open market.

Each of these policies would help to raise short-term interest rates and limit the growth of broad measures of money and credit, thereby tightening monetary policy.

Overall, the Federal Reserve has many effective tools to tighten monetary policy when the economic outlook requires us to do so. As my colleagues and I have stated, however, economic conditions are not likely to warrant tighter monetary policy for an extended period. We will calibrate the timing and pace of any future tightening, together with the mix of tools to best foster our dual objectives of maximum employment and price stability.
�Mr. Bernanke is chairman of the Federal Reserve.

The Fed can’t exit itself from the enormous explosion in their balance sheet to over two trillion dollars because the FED can’t easily shrink its balance sheet by letting short-term credit run off and sell longer term assets to the public.

OTC derivatives purchased from the financial system are the toxic items that the banks had no real means of valuing for which no market existed then or now.

Who would think that these items are in fact full value to the accounted for figure? Many may well never function.
[B]
Therefore sell what to whom is the real question…![/B]

And how about the massive USD swaps with other nation�s central banks like Switzerland, UK ect. to fund the bailout of their banks, systemic to US banks, and the OTC derivatives.

Turning around those USD swaps would destabilize FX markets for non-US central banks, therein causing them trade related currency problems.

Regardless of claims to the contrary, there is no practical method of draining the huge international monetary stimulation undertaken by the US Federal Reserve.

[B]The inflation on the horizon is not a demand pull inflation but rather a currency event that will cause cost push inflation.[/B]

The Fed is boxed in and out of monetary tools.

Insane…

via Treasury Direct

[B]Treasury Auction Schedule[/B]

70 day CMBs, $30 billion (tomorrow)
13 week Bills, $32 billion (July 27th)
26 week Bills, $31 billion (July 27th)
52 week Bills, $27 billion (July 28th)
2 year Notes, $42 billion (July 28th)
5 year Notes, $39 billion (July 29th)
7 year Notes, $28 billion (July 30th)
19 year, 6 month TIPS (reopened), $6 billion (July 27th)

That’s [B]two hundred thirty-five billion dollars[/B] over the next week alone…!

Almost one quarter of a trillion…

This is going totally parabolic.

That fiat-money has to come out of [B]somewhere[/B] in order for the sale to succeed.

At this run rate the US is trying to sell[B] twelve trillion dollars over one year�s time[/B], an obviously ridiculous and impossible-to-peddle amount of debt at any price.

and they [B]demand[/B] answers from the US government and the FED in regards to QE and the greenback…

via Bloomberg

[B]China May Press Geithner on Dollar, Economy in Washington Talks[/B]

By Bloomberg News

July 27 (Bloomberg) – The dollar may be the focus of Chinese-U.S. talks starting in Washington today as China presses the Obama administration on how it will tame the fiscal deficit and protect the U.S. currency’s value, Morgan Stanley said.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will host two days of meetings spanning topics from the economic crisis to North Korea. The Strategic and Economic Dialogue is the Obama administration’s first with China.

“If the key issue in the past was the renminbi’s exchange rate, now it’s the U.S. dollar,” said Wang Qing, an economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. The yuan is a denomination of the renminbi. [B]“What China cares about the most is the stability of the dollar and the stability of U.S. policy.”[/B]

The global slump has highlighted the common interests of the economies, ranked first and third largest in the world, as Vice Premier Wang Qishan seeks to preserve the value of the world’s biggest Treasury holdings and the U.S. pushes China to rely more on domestic demand and not exports for growth.

“Raising personal incomes and strengthening the social safety net to address the reasons why Chinese feel compelled to save so much would provide a powerful boost to Chinese domestic demand and global growth,” Geithner and Clinton wrote in a joint article published in today’s Wall Street Journal.

The talks this week will move beyond economic matters for the first time.

‘Fragile States’

Few global problems “can be solved without the U.S. and China together,” Geithner and Clinton wrote. “The strength of the global economy, the health of the global environment, the stability of fragile states and the solution to nonproliferation challenges turn in large measure on cooperation between the U.S. and China.”

The two sides will probably discuss ways to revive the dormant six-party negotiations aimed at persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear program, a U.S. official said last week.

“From the provocative actions of North Korea, to stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the economic possibilities in Africa, the U.S. and China must work together to reach solutions to these urgent challenges,” Geithner and Clinton wrote.

China’s exchange-rate policy will be discussed, an Obama administration official said at a press briefing last week. The U.S. wants a more flexible yuan, though Geithner has avoided a showdown on the issue, declining to repeat comments he made in written remarks to lawmakers after his Senate confirmation hearing in January that China was “manipulating” its currency.

‘Unfortunate Timing’

“This was a most unfortunate thing to say publicly,” said Donald Straszheim, managing principal of Straszheim Global Advisors in Los Angeles. “They think the playing field is basically tilted by China managing its currency.”

Both nations are pumping cash into their economies to revive growth in the face of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Though Premier Wen Jiabao said in March he was worried about the safety of the nation’s U.S. assets, China bought $38 billion of U.S. notes and bonds in May, taking its holdings to $801.5 billion.

The U.S. deficit may reach a record $1.85 trillion for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, almost four times the previous fiscal year’s $455 billion shortfall, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will brief Chinese officials about how the U.S. plans to keep inflation in check over the next few years, people advised of the plan said this month. In June, Geithner told China that the U.S. wants to shrink its budget gap as soon as an economic recovery takes hold.

“Both nations must avoid the temptation to close off our respective markets to trade and investment,” Geithner and Clinton wrote. “Both must work hard to create new opportunities for our workers and our firms to compete equally, so that the people of each country see the benefit from the rapidly expanding U.S.-China economic relationship.”

Reporter on this story: Paul Panckhurst in Beijing
Last Updated: July 26, 2009 21:29 EDT

The greenback “fireworks” from 6 to 7am this US morning didn’t impress the Chinese one little bit.:smiley:

The Chinese still wanted answers…

[B]How long are these huge deficits sustainable[/B], they wanted to know.

[B]How long do you keep stimulating the economy, and when do you break for the exits? [/B]

[B]If the dollar nosedives compared other major currencies, what�s the administration�s Plan B?[/B]

via NYT

[B]U.S. Budget Is Scrutinized by a Big Creditor[/B]
By DAVID E. SANGER
July 28, 2009
No sooner had President Obama greeted nearly 200 of the bankers, bureaucrats and policymakers who could make or break his economic plans on Monday than they started grilling his economic team with the hardest questions about his economic strategy.

How long are these huge deficits sustainable, they wanted to know. How long do you keep stimulating the economy, and when do you break for the exits? If the dollar nosedives compared other major currencies, what�s the administration�s Plan B?

The questions were mostly asked in Chinese � by a delegation from Beijing that, diplomatic niceties aside, has come to check in on the investment of more than $1.5 trillion that China has made in United States government-issued securities.

�We are concerned about the security of our financial assets,� China�s assistant finance minister, Zhu Guangyao, said with uncharacteristic bluntness during a briefing for reporters covering the �U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue� on Monday.

It was a comment that underscored how much the global financial crisis has changed the subtle balance of power in meetings of �the G-2,� the shorthand now used to describe sessions between the world�s largest economy and its fastest-rising economic power. Gone, probably forever, are the days when American delegations would show up in Beijing with advice about how the Chinese could become a �responsible stakeholder� in the world � the phrase coined by the Bush administration. The demands that the Chinese let their currency appreciate, clean up their banks or get rid of the subsidies for state-owned enterprises have been toned down.

You do not talk to your biggest creditor that way � especially when you have a record-sized loan application pending.

…seriously…did anybody think otherwise…:smiley:

[B]Weak Treasury Auctions Raise Worries About US Debt Burden[/B]

Via: CNBC / Reuters:

The U.S. Treasury sold $39 billion in five-year debt Wednesday in an auction that drew poor demand, raising worries over the cost of financing the government�s burgeoning budget deficit.
[B]
It was the second lackluster showing in as many days, convincing analysts that the stellar results of debt auctions just a few weeks ago were a fluke and that Thursday�s $28 billion seven-year offering could suffer a similar fate.[/B]

Under the weight of the ballooning deficit, the government has raised auction volumes and analysts now wonder whether the strain on the market is showing.

�Obviously everyone is inferring that tomorrow�s won�t be good either,� said James Combias, head of government bond trading at Mizuho Securities USA in New York. �Maybe you will see more interest tomorrow but I think the increase in the auctions and the size of them may be starting to have an effect. These are very large auctions.�

Demand for the five-year notes was below average, measured by the bid-to-cover ratio of 1.92, the lowest in almost a year.

This followed a poor two-year auction on Tuesday. In a further sign of a weak sale, yields at the auction were well above expectations, known as a �tail.�

A key proxy for foreign interest, the indirect bidder category, was slightly above the average of auctions over the past year at 36.6 percent but far below the most recent sale.

�It was just a horrendous result,� said William O�Donnell, head of U.S. Treasury strategy at RBS Securities in Greenwich, Connecticut.

�It was the weakest bid-to-cover since September 2008, and by my numbers it was the biggest tail since February 1993. It was just a very, very weak result.�

The tail indicates that dealers drove an unexpectedly hard bargain to raise yields, and lower prices, to buy the bonds. Ultimately, this could raise interest rates throughout the economy at a faster rate than might be appropriate given the lingering effects of the worst recession in decades.

�If rates unwind higher and too quickly � driven not by the Fed but by the old bond vigilantes � that will be the house of pain for all risk markets,� said George Goncalves, head of fixed income rates strategy with Cantor Fitzgerald in New York.

The government plans to issue $2 trillion in new bonds this year to finance economic and financial rescues.

Treasury auctions have come under particularly close scrutiny since investors began to question the longevity of the United States� prized AAA credit rating back in May.

Overseas central banks, particularly in Asia, have been huge buyers of U.S. debt in recent years and own more than a quarter of marketable Treasuries. China is the biggest such buyer.

Wee…! :smiley:

77.688 is the last chance support on the USDX anywhere around these levels. The next stop is likely the 71-72 zone.

They�ll almost certainly try to shoot some spit balls at it around 77.688 to try to get a rally going.

Let the Goldman Sachs, UBS, JP Morgan and Co. Black Box algos warm up…good luck with that. :smiley:

Via: Market Ticker:

It appears to be that traders in the FX market � have deduced that the entire �improvement� in 2Q GDP came from government spending.

Well that�s not hard to figure out � it did.

They also appear to be making a bet that the US Government will attempt to continue this, along with The Fed monetizing the debt through its buyback programs to destruction of both the government and currency.

This is not positive for our economy. At all.

But this is the meme today � traders are piling into bonds expecting more Fed buybacks, they are shorting dollars like crazy, and Gold is of course reacting to these two facts.

This is a �collapse of government due to spending into bankruptcy� play folks, or at minimum �currency crisis around the corner.�

Right or wrong this is the trade being put on in size; the dollar selling in particular is especially pernicious and troublesome � that chart is essentially straight down since the GDP release this morning.

Now…what…?:smiley:

They gonna try to turn this around with their Black Box algos…this is gonna really be interesting because if it fails the G8 central banks will move in and push the USDX back up with their FED issued USD Swaps. The G8 central banks have done it before.

…we’re back @77.60 in the USDX.

And now this…looks like the algos together with the printing presses need to do [B]overtime[/B]…:smiley:

[B]Federal Tax Revenues Plummeting[/B]

Via: AP

The recession is starving the government of tax revenue, just as the president and Congress are piling a major expansion of health care and other programs on the nation�s plate and struggling to find money to pay the tab.

The numbers could hardly be more stark: Tax receipts are on pace to drop 18 percent this year, the biggest single-year decline since the Great Depression, while the federal deficit balloons to a record $1.8 trillion.

Other figures in an Associated Press analysis underscore the recession�s impact: Individual income tax receipts are down 22 percent from a year ago. Corporate income taxes are down 57 percent. Social Security tax receipts could drop for only the second time since 1940, and Medicare taxes are on pace to drop for only the third time ever.

The last time the government�s revenues were this bleak, the year was 1932 in the midst of the Depression.

�Our tax system is already inadequate to support the promises our government has made,� said Eugene Steuerle, a former Treasury Department official in the Reagan administration who is now vice president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.

�This just adds to the problem.�

While much of Washington is focused on how to pay for new programs such as overhauling health care � at a cost of $1 trillion over the next decade � existing programs are feeling the pinch, too.

Social Security is in danger of running out of money earlier than the government projected just a few month ago. Highway, mass transit and airport projects are at risk because fuel and industry taxes are declining.

The national debt already exceeds $11 trillion. And bills just completed by the House would boost domestic agencies� spending by 11 percent in 2010 and military spending by 4 percent.

The US Treasury has got a new plan in order to “save” the USD and the Federal Budget shortfall…

…they call it extending the [B]Cash Management Bill - CMB[/B] program.

[I]What Does Cash Management Bill - CMB Mean?[/I]

A short-term security sold by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The maturity on a CMB can range from a few days to six months. The money raised through these issues is used by the Treasury to meet any temporary shortfalls.

In the case of the US we are talking trillions in temporary shortfalls…:smiley:

The cash management bill is the most flexible instrument of the U.S. Treasury because it can be issued when needed, allowing the Treasury to have lower cash balances and issue fewer long-term notes.

Because [B]no-one[/B] is buying long-term notes anymore…:smiley:

In summary…it means QE in it’s purest form and flooding the world a.k.a. FOREX with USD until infinity…:smiley:

via Bloomberg

[B]Cash-Management Bills[/B]

To help manage short-term borrowing needs, the Treasury said it plans to sell cash-management bills in the current quarter, with some of them �longer dated� securities.

Next week�s auctions of bonds and notes will raise $14.1 billion in new cash, with the rest of the proceeds going to pay off maturing debt, the Treasury said.

Chris Martenson starting to understand the game that’s been played and he’s got the guts to say so on his website.

[B]The Fed Buys Last Week’s Treasury Notes[/B]

via Chris Martenson

Just last week, when the auction results were announced it was trumpeted to great fanfare that there was �more than sufficient� bid-to-cover, �strong demand� and all the rest.

And now it turns out that 47% (!) of the bonds that were taken by the primary dealers in that auction have been quietly bought by the Fed and permanently secreted to its balance sheet.

They didn�t even wait a full week! A more honest and open approach would have been for the Fed to simply buy them outright at the auction but this way, using �primary dealers� and �POMOs� and all these other extra steps the basic fact that the Fed is openly monetizing US government debt is effectively hidden from a not-too-terribly inquisitive US press and public.

[B]The speed of the shell game is accelerating.[/B]

This immediate repurchase of newly auction bonds by the Fed tells us that demand for these bonds is not nearly as high as advertised, and that things are not quite as strong as represented.

[U]And oh, by the way, don�t expect any stock market weakness while so many billions are being shoveled out the Fed and into the pockets of the primary dealers. They�ll have to do something with all that freshly minted cash�…[/U]

This is getting worse by the week.

[B]Soaring deficit may defy forecasts[/B]

Via: USA Today:

Stagnant unemployment, shrinking tax revenue and a struggling economy threaten to quadruple the size of last year�s federal budget deficit, raising more questions about the timing of costly proposals to overhaul health care.

As the White House and Congressional Budget Office (CBO) prepare to release new deficit estimates this month, several economists say the news is likely to be as bad as or worse than forecasts.

�This is going to be a very depressing outlook,� predicts former CBO director Douglas Holtz-Eakin, top adviser to Republican John McCain in last year�s presidential election. �They have just a nightmare in terms of these health care bills, which do nothing but make things worse.�

[B]A fiscal year 2009 deficit of $1.8 trillion was anticipated by the White House, $1.7 trillion by Congress. Reaching that level would produce a deficit four times last year�s $459 billion deficit[/B], just as Congress is considering health care overhaul plans that could cost $1 trillion over 10 years.

Who is buying all this debt…?:confused:

[B]U.S. Treasury Will Attempt to Sell $75 Billion in Debt This Week[/B]

Via: Financial Times:

US bond investors are braced for a testing week, dominated by record $75bn in debt sales by the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve�s policy meeting, which concludes on Wednesday.

Treasury yields have been rising and are back at levels last seen in early June, with the yield on 10-year notes trading at 3.84 per cent on Monday.

Traders would not be surprised to see the benchmark test 4 per cent ahead of a $23bn auction on Wednesday.

The sale will be held about an hour before the Fed�s meeting finishes, which could result in lacklustre demand for the new notes.

David Ader, head of government bond strategy at CRT, said his research and trading house was �leaning� towards a bearish view of the Treasuries market with a test of 4 per cent yield level for the 10-year note.

�The trading environment is not very liquid, volumes are low and the risk appetite of dealers is also limited,� he said.

Traders face the auction of $37bn in three-year notes on Tuesday and $15bn of 30-year bonds complete this week�s debt sales on Thursday.

This is going to be a lot of fun trading FOREX in the months ahead…:smiley:

[U]Please, take note of the word “cleverly” and that China must keep a certain proportion of other stable currencies, such as the [B]euro, British pound, and Swiss franc[/B], to offer a useful hedge against dollar devaluation.[/U]

The four majors will not know what hit them…:smiley:

[B]Chen Jiaxing: China must diversify forex, cleverly[/B]

By Chen Jiaxing
People’s Daily, Beijing
Thursday, August 20, 2009

China to trim US treasury holdings, diversify Forex reserves - People’s Daily Online

China sold $25.1 billion of U.S. treasury bills in June to bring its holdings to $776.4 billion, according to data released by the U.S. treasury Department Monday. This has gratified people in China, whereas the United States keeps a close eye on the move.

Judging from the perspective of its people, however, China is in urgent need of altering the structural imbalance of its foreign exchange reserves, so that the value of reserve assets could be preserved and increased.

U.S. treasury bonds seem to have good safety and liquidity with a higher interest rate than same-term bank deposits, and they are exempt from interest tax. But the devaluating trend of the dollar will result in an intangible devaluation of treasury bonds. In such circumstances, China’s first large-scale reduction of U.S. treasury debt is, beyond doubt, within the bounds of reason.

The reduction of US treasury bonds also shows that China is seeking to diversity its Forex reserves. Such diversification nevertheless poses a complex topic. The main problem China has been facing has two aspects:

One aspect is to make a scientific assessment of Forex structure so as to maximize return and minimize risk. The other aspect is to train competent personnel in the rules of the international game so they have managerial experience.

Behind the reserve diversification there is a diversification choice on excess value. First, China has to retain a certain proportion of dollar reserves, since the nation should have the basic means to ensure emergency international payments. Second, China must have a certain amount of gold reserves, a strategic national asset, to serve as a strong prop or backing at critical moments, and, third, China must keep a certain proportion of other stable currencies, such as the euro, British pound, and Swiss franc, to offer a useful hedge against dollar devaluation.

Since Forex reserves are not money of fiscal resource, they should be used mainly in external investment and international trade, or to purchase large-scale machinery and electrical equipment and sophisticated technologies and to make strategic asset investment or to join investment holding companies, focusing on high-growth investment opportunities where potential returns will exceed the cost of capital. Such an endeavor, however, has already been foiled repeatedly due to trade barriers and “firewalls” put up by a few Western countries.

The reserves also should be used to grant loans to other countries or uying real estate and housing and purchasing large-scale commodities.

The issue on the table now is to acquire a correct appraisal of diversified channels for foreign exchange reserves and define the Forex mix in a scientific way. To diversify foreign exchange reserves and define their scientific, rational structure is what China has to accomplish, and some new areas for investment need to be explored.

China has no choice but to shrink its U.S. treasury holdings. But China is still unfamiliar with the rules of the international game, and the nation is only a pupil with regard to the performance of capital. People in China could be entirely unaware of “manipulation” by banking tycoons or financiers. So China is in an urgent need of ace professionals in the banking sector good at strategic investment and management.

Forex reserves belong to the national wealth and it is natural and inevitable that the public pays great heed to their safety. Therefore, while answering some suspicions to win the public’s trust, confidence, and understanding, the relevant departments should also consider how to conceal their strategic intentions to the maximum.

[U]This coming Tuesday we will see an anouncement…[/U]

[B]The new projection is for a cumulative 2010-2019 budget deficit of $9 trillion instead of the $7 trillion previously estimated…!!![/B]

I reckon that’s not enough and there will be a revised projection before year end…:smiley:

The consequenses.

  1. Taxes shooting to the moon

  2. USDX shooting south

[B]AP sources: $2 trillion higher deficit projected[/B]
Higher number over next decade could spell trouble for Obama in Congress

WASHINGTON - The Obama administration expects the federal deficit over the next decade to be $2 trillion bigger than previously estimated, White House officials said Friday, a setback for a president already facing a Congress and public wary over spending.

The new projection, to be announced on Tuesday, is for a cumulative 2010-2019 deficit of $9 trillion instead of the $7 trillion previously estimated. The new figure reflects slumping revenues from a worse economic picture than was expected earlier this year. The officials spoke only on the condition of anonymity ahead of next week’s announcement.

Ten-year forecasts are volatile figures subject to change over time. But the higher number will likely create political difficulties for President Barack Obama in Congress and could create anxiety with foreign buyers of U.S. debt.
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Earlier this week, the White House revealed that it expects a budget deficit for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 to be nearly $1.6 trillion. That figure was lower than initially projected because the White House scratched out $250 billion that it had initially added to the budget as a bank rescue contingency. The administration ultimately did not ask Congress for that money.

Still that number, together with the 10-year projection, represents a huge obstacle for an administration trying to undertake massive policy overhauls in health care and the environment.

Forced to raise taxes?
Economists predict a slow recovery from the recession, further testing Obama’s goal of cutting the deficit to $512 billion in 2013. Even as he seeks higher revenues to pay for new climate change and health care measures, the president could face pressure to increase revenues or make deep spending cuts to tame the deficit.

Earlier long-term estimates released in February and May relied on now-outdated projections of economic growth. Then, the White House predicted the economy would shrink by 1.2 percent this year, but the economy shrank 6.4 percent in the first quarter, the worst in nearly three decades.

In its earlier projections, the White House said the deficit would be manageable if it slides to 3 percent of gross domestic product. Earlier projections barely met that standard � even after relying on optimistic assumptions like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan costing $50 billion a year instead of the $130 billion budgeted for 2010.

Now, the deficits could easily exceed 4 percent of GDP, even after cost-cutting efforts or new revenues claimed in Obama’s budget.

Such deficits have always prompted Congress and the White House to take politically painful steps to curb them, such as former President Bill Clinton’s tax-heavy 1993 deficit reduction plan. A companion effort by Obama could force him to break his promise to not raise taxes on individuals making less than $200,000 a year.

Get ready to hear a lot of huge numbers [B]today[/B].

The White House’s Office of Management and Budget will throw numbers in the $$$ trillions around and so will the Congressional Budget Office.

And this news ain’t dollar positive either. It’s only one sentence…

via Bloomberg

[B]Fed Must Make Public Reports on Emergency Loans, U.S. Judge Says[/B]

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) � The Federal Reserve must make public reports about recipients of emergency loans from U.S. taxpayers under programs created to address the financial crisis, a federal judge ruled.

19% increase in US budget deficit to $1.5 Trillion in the coming fiscal year.

Who said [B]“Budget deficits don’t matter”[/B]…?
If I remember right it was D. Cheney.

Now, they can throw as many numbers and forecasts around as they want. In the end it boils down to one thing…

[B]Confidence.[/B]

All activity of global central banks and FED in particular is aimed to ensure that [B]confidence[/B] in the paper crap called currencies, especially the US Dollar, is not lost.

via Bloomberg

[B]Obama Raises �10 Deficit Outlook 19% to $1.5 Trillion (Update1) [/B]

By Roger Runningen and Brian Faler

Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) – U.S. unemployment will surge to 10 percent this year and the budget deficit will be $1.5 trillion next year, both higher than previous Obama administration forecasts because of a recession that was deeper and longer than expected, White House budget chief Peter Orszag said.

The Office of Management and Budget forecasts that the U.S. economy will shrink 2.8 percent this year, worse than the 1.2 percent contraction the OMB projected in May. For next year, the budget office said the gross domestic product will grow 2.0 percent, less than the 3.2 percent expected in May. By 2011, the economy would be well on its way to recovery, growing at a 3.8 percent annual rate, according to the administration�s mid-year economic review, released this morning.

�While the danger of the economy immediately falling into a deep recession has receded, the American economy is still in the midst of a serious economic downturn,� the budget office�s report said. �The long-term deficit outlook remains daunting.�

Separately, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office today predicted that the jobless rate would average 10.2 percent next year, gloomier than the White House projection, and forecast the deficit for this year at $1.6 trillion, slightly worse than the White House estimate.

Impact on Agenda

The budget shortfall for 2010 would mark the second straight year of trillion-dollar deficits. Along with the unemployment numbers, the deficit may weigh down President Barack Obama�s drive for his top domestic priority, overhauling the U.S. health care system.

There is no end to this. U.S. deficits will shoot to the moon and tear the USD apart in the process.

People finding it difficult to trade FOREX right now…?

Just wait until the Chinese move into action later this year…:smiley:

[B]Geithner Asks Congress for Higher U.S. Debt Limit[/B]

Via: Reuters:

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner formally requested that Congress raise the $12.1 trillion statutory debt limit on Friday, saying that it could be breached as early as mid-October.

�It is critically important that Congress act before the limit is reached so that citizens and investors here and around the world can remain confident that the United States will always meet its obligations,� Geithner said in a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid that was obtained by Reuters.

A Treasury spokeswoman declined to comment on the letter.

Treasury officials earlier this week said that the debt limit, last raised in February when the $787 billion economic stimulus legislation was passed, would be hit sometime in the October-December quarter. Geithner�s letter said the breach could be two weeks into that period, just as the 2010 fiscal year is getting underway.

The latest request comes as the Treasury is ramping up borrowing to unprecedented levels to fund stimulus and financial bailout programs and cope with a deep recession that has devastated tax revenues.

[B]It is expected to issue net new debt of as much as $2 trillion in the 2009 fiscal year ended Sept. 30 and up to $1.6 trillion in the 2010 fiscal year, according to bond dealer forecasts.[/B]

[B]Insider Trading and Investor Sentiment Signaling U.S. Stock Market Top[/B]

[I]Insider Selling in August Soars to 30.6 Times Insider Buying, Highest Level Since TrimTabs Began Tracking in 2004. NYSE Short Interest Plunges 10.3%, While Margin Debt Spikes 5.9%[/I]

SAUSALITO, Calif., Aug. 28 /PRNewswire/ – TrimTabs Investment Research reported that [U]selling by corporate insiders in August has surged to $6.1 billion, the highest amount since May 2008. The ratio of insider selling to insider buying hit 30.6, the highest level since TrimTabs began tracking the data in 2004.[/U]

“The best-informed [B]market participants are sending a clear signal that the party on Wall Street is going to end soon[/B],” said Charles Biderman, CEO of TrimTabs.

TrimTabs’ data on insider transactions is based on daily filings of Form 4, which corporate officers, directors, and major holders are required to file with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In a research note, TrimTabs explained that insider activity is not the only sign the rally is about to end. [U]The TrimTabs Demand Index, which tracks 18 fund flow and sentiment indicators, has turned very bearish for the first time since March.[/U]

For example, short interest on NYSE stocks plummeted by 10.3% in the second half of July and margin debt on all US listed stocks spiked 5.9% in July, while 51.6% of advisors surveyed by Investors Intelligence are bullish, the highest level since December 2007.

“[U]When corporate insiders are bailing, the shorts are covering and investors are borrowing to buy, it generally pays to be a seller rather than a buyer of stock,[/U]” said Biderman.

TrimTabs also reports [U]that the actions of U.S. public companies have been bearish. In the past four months, companies have been net sellers of a record $105.2 billion in shares.[/U]

[B]“Investors who think the U.S. economy is recovering are going to get a big shock this fall,” said Biderman. “Companies and corporate insiders are signaling that the economy is in much worse shape than conventional wisdom believes.”
[/B]
TrimTabs Investment Research is the only independent research service that publishes detailed daily coverage of U.S. stock market liquidity–including mutual fund flows and exchange-traded fund flows–as well as weekly withheld income and employment tax collections.

SOURCE TrimTabs Investment Research