Best of the Week
DEFLATION is Winning! - Watch the Video its FREE
Most Popular of the Week
1.Cap and Trade Bill HR 2454 Will Lead to Capital Flight - Dr_Ron_Paul
2.Goldman Sachs The Fourth Branch of the U.S. Government- Graham_Summers
3.The Coming Economic Apocalypse- Roy_F_Grieder
4.The End of the Recession?- John_Mauldin
5.Bernanke is a Total Failure Unsuited for Role as Fed Chairman- Mike_Shedlock
6.Fed Market Manipulation, Surmounting The Main Threat To Profits And Protection -DeepCaster_LLC
7.China Mega-trend Stocks Stealth Bull Market Update, SSEC Up 47%- Nadeem_Walayat
Weeks Analysis
"Super Imperialism:" The Economic Strategy of Imperial America- 3rd July 09
The Smart Grid Will Offer Exceptional Investing Opportunities- 3rd July 09
Inflationary Crack-up Boom has Commenced in the G7 Economies!- 3rd July 09
Yen Carry Trade Suggests Global Stock Markets Base Building Underway- 3rd July 09
Silver Stocks and ETF - 3rd July 09
A Message for Armchair Economists- 3rd July 09
The Keynesian System, the Economics of Illusion- 3rd July 09
U.S. Housing Market Recovery Process Outlook- 3rd July 09
Japanese Yen: Resumption of the Bull Market ? - 3rd July 09
What’s Happening in Crude Oil?- 3rd July 09
Temporary Bounce in EUR/GBP Now Possible- 3rd July 09
Silver Response to Inflation and Deflation the United States - 3rd July 09
Economic Recovery Green Shoots Doused with Herbicide- 3rd July 09
U.S. Economy Economic Recovery Achilles Heel- 3rd July 09
U.S. Unemployment Soars Whilst Fed Funnels More Cash to the Banksters- 3rd July 09
Challenges and Enormous Opportunities in Alternative Energy- 3rd July 09
Listen to Citigroup Analysts at Your Own Peril- 3rd July 09
DEFLATION Video Antidote to the Mainstream Inflation Consensus- 3rd July 09
U.S. Economy Heading for Japan of the 1990's or Argentina 2002?- 2nd July 09
Profiting From Stock Market Sector Dead Cat Bounces- 2nd July 09
Basic Financial Markets Analysis Part2- 2nd July 09
U.S. Unemployment Rate Hits 9.5%, Jobs Contract 18th Straight Month- 2nd July 09
In the Future, Interest Rates Will Soar and Consumers Will be Sore Also- 2nd July 09
Preserve Your Wealth with Precious Metals- 2nd July 09
Understanding The Dangers of Leveraged ETFs- 2nd July 09
Stock Market Seasonality What is Going to Happen with the Upcoming July 4th Holiday?- 2nd July 09
China Wants New Global Currency Which is Positive for Gold- 2nd July 09
The DJIA Stock Market Index, Chess and the Idiotic Robots - 2nd July 09
Stock Market and Dollar Upward Wedge Patterns - Signs of the times- 2nd July 09
Stock Markets Jump Out Of The Gate Before Fading- 2nd July 09
Commodities Sector Timing Trading for Gold, Oil, Silver and Natural Gas - 2nd July 09
Asia-Pacific Economies Grow As Developed Economies Wither- 2nd July 09
Million Dollar Question, What's Next for S&P 500 Stock Market Index - 2nd July 09
Will China Lead the World Out of Recession?- 2nd July 09
Make Bernie Madoff the Next Fed Chairman- 2nd July 09
U.S. Treasury Bond Market Update- 2nd July 09
U.S. Housing Market Blast From the Past- 2nd July 09
U.S. Launches Offensive Operations in Cyberspace (CYBERCOM)- 1st July 09
Rising Financial Markets See Brighter Times- 1st July 09
The Magic of the Golden Cross-Over Signal in Gold, Silver and Huey- 1st July 09
Faber & Greenspan: Shills for Fed Snake Oil on Deflation and Hyperinflation- 1st July 09
Walls to Block U.S. Deflation- 1st July 09
Banks Squeeze Credit Card Account Holders- 1st July 09
Is George Soros Long or Wrong on the Global Economic Rebound?- 1st July 09
How to Profit From Japan's Stock Market Shareholder Crisis- 1st July 09
The Case for Economic Depression, Credit Destruction - 1st July 09
Warning of Severe Economic Collapse, Mainstream Media Sustainable Recovery Hype- 1st July 09
Great Banking Confusion - 1st July 09
Stock Market S&P 500 Index Trend Update for July 2009- 1st July 09
Stock Market Ends Second Quarter With a Whimper- 1st July 09
Investment Grade Bonds Return 9.2%, Junk Returns 29%- 1st July 09
The Great Bank Robbery: How the Federal Reserve is destroying Americ- 1st July 09
Is Inflation a Fact… Or Just An Opinion? Part1- 1st July 09
Is America Broke- 1st July 09
U.S. Housing Market Deteriorates as Foreclosures Soar- 1st July 09
Lawrence Roulston: Every Reason in the World to Believe Gold Will Go Higher- 1st July 09
Is the U.S. Fed Juicing the Stock Market?- 30th June 09
Gold Breakout Above $1,000 Only a Question of Time- 30th June 09
U.S. House Prices Have Bottomed - 30th June 09
How to Improve Your FICO Credit Rating Score- 30th June 09
The Case Against Hyper Inflation- 30th June 09
Which Tek Stock is a Better Investment, Apple vs. RIMM - 30th June 09
Obama: Wrong on the Economy, Wrong on Healthcare (Part 1)- 30th June 09
What Happened to the Stock Market New Goldilocks Era?- 30th June 09
Inflationary Pressures and the MAE Faber Investment Strategy- 30th June 09
Goldman Sachs The Fourth Branch of the U.S. Government- 30th June 09
OECD Joins the UK Double Dip Recession Forecast Club- 30th June 09
Summer Sun Shines on Rising UK House Prices in June- 30th June 09
The Real Crisis is Beginning to Unfold… and It’s Not Financial Part2- 30th June 09
A 20-Year Stocks Bear Market?- 30th June 09
Objective Analysis of the Increase in the Fed's Balance Sheet - 29th June 09
Green Shoots Recovery Forex Markets Fatigue & Intermarket Setup- 29th June 09
Government Regulations to Force Agricultural Food Prices Higher- 29th June 09
Power Shortage at the U.S. Fed?- 29th June 09
Crude Oil and Natural Gas Trading- 29th June 09
Stock Market Summer Crash Forecast- 29th June 09
This Summer May Prove Hot for Gold Prices Despite the Weak Seasonal Tendencies- 29th June 09
U.S. Jump in Savings Rates Means Debt Deflation in America- 29th June 09
CNBC Admits to Manipulated Market that Continues To Be Propped Up By Government Intervention - 29th June 09
Important Week Ahead For Economic Data- 29th June 09
Where to Find Jobs in a Jobless Economic Recovery- 29th June 09
Bernanke is a Total Failure Unsuited for Role as Fed Chairman- 29th June 09
Stock Index Trading Signals Update- 29th June 09
Public Sector Pensions Deficit of £1.2 trillion Adds to Britains Debt Crisis- 29th June 09
Energy Fields in Gold and How to Trade Them- 29th June 09
GLD, SLV, USO & UNG ETF Commodity Trading Update- 29th June 09
Manipulated Financial Markets and Mainstream Media- 28th June 09
Ben Bernanke on the Great Depression- 28th June 09
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report - Market Wrap W/E 26th July- 28th June 09
What PIMCO's Bill Gross Doesn’t Want You to Know (Part 2)- 28th June 09
The Coming Economic Apocalypse- 28th June 09
SHEPHERD’S of Financial Markets ILLUSION- 28th June 09
Global Stock Market Performance and P/E Ratio Valuations- 28th June 09
Global Business Sentiment Improves Inline with Stock Market Trends- 28th June 09
The Possibility of Credit Collapse Deflation - 28th June 09
The Inflation Deflation Debate and Myth of the Kondratieff Wave- 28th June 09
China Mega-trend Stocks Stealth Bull Market Update, SSEC Up 47%- 28th June 09
Embrace Deflation - It's The Cure, Not The Problem- 27th June 09
The Stock Markets Repeating Weekly Pattern- 27th June 09
Dow Jones INDU On-Balance-Volume Stock Market Sell Signal - 27th June 09
The End of the Recession?- 27th June 09
Has the Stock Market Peaked for 2009? - 27th June 09
Stock Market Trading Range Continues...Bullish Pattern Holds Potential- 27th June 09
What PIMCO's Bill Gross Doesn’t Want You to Know (Part 1) - 27th June 09
Why Higher Gold Prices Will Come- 27th June 09
A Case For U.S. Treasury Bonds!- 27th June 09
Fed Market Manipulation, Surmounting The Main Threat To Profits And Protection- 27th June 09
How the Media Uses Buffett to Make Money- 27th June 09

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Most Popular 2009
1. Depression 2009 The Largest Train Wreck in Economic History - Darryl_R_Schoon (41,747)
2.UK Housing Market Crash and Depression Forecast 2007 to 2012 - Nadeem_Walayat (34,233)
3. Emerging Giants Russia, China, Brazil and India Looming Collapse 2009 - Martin Weiss (29,977)
4. Baby Boomers- Your Generation's Crisis Has Arrived - James Quinn (26,442)
5. Ten Major Threats Facing the U.S. Dollar in 2009 - Eric_deCarbonnel (26,023)
6. Nouriel Roubini 2009 U.S. GDP Forecasting 40% Home Mortgage Failures? - Andrew_Butter (24,711)
7. Stock Market Crash 2009: Fine Tuning DJIA Target To 5,800 - Eric_Chevrette (23,492)
8. US, UK, Eurozone Banks Face Collapse: Global Banking System Insolvent - Mike_Shedlock (21,114)
9. UK CPI Inflation, RPI Deflation Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (20,821)
10.Gold Price Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (20,317)
11. Stock Market Crash Red Alert: Meltdown Imminent! - Martin Weiss (19,648)
12.Fed Manipulating Market Prices, Gold, Oil and Bonds - Rob_Kirby (19,219)
13. The Great Depression has Arrived- Collapsing American Dreams - David_Vaughn (19,054)
14. Stock Market to Fall AT LEAST Another 40%! - Martin Weiss (18,963)
15. Hyperinflation Begining in China and Will Destroy the U.S. Dollar - Eric_deCarbonnel (18,651)
Most Popular 2008
1. The Great Depression 2008 - It can't happen to us....can it?”
2. The Battle for America Has Begun- Strategic Forecasts
3. UK House Prices Plunge Over the Cliff
4. US Banking System Teetering on the Brink of Collapse
5. US Economy Forecast 2008 - First Recession then Recovery
6. How Safe is My FDIC-Insured Bank Account?
7. Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The 12 Steps to Financial Disaster By Nouriel Roubini
Most Popular 2007
1. US Housing Market Crash to result in the Second Great Depression
2. Operation FALCON - The USA is turning into a Police State
3. UK Housing Market Crash of 2007 - 2008 and Steps to Protect Your Wealth
4. US Housing Bubble Meltdown: "Is it too late to get out"?
5. Global Liquidity Crisis when the Credit Boom comes to an End
Most Popular 2006
1. Last Warning! Three-Pronged Collapse ... Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate
2. UK Interest Rate forecast for 2007 - Bank of England to do battle with inflation
3. UK Interest Rates Forecast to rise much higher due to rising Inflation and high Money Supply Growth
4. Emerging Markets outlook for 2007 - India, China, Russia, Eastern Europe and Brazil

News Feeds
RSS Feeds
Links

Money Forums
Certz
TradingTheCharts
Housing Market Forecasts
Local Issues


Deflation IS WINNING - Are You?

EuroZone Runaway Credit Inflation Feeds Gold Euro's Bull Market

Economics / Euro-Zone Jan 09, 2008 - 06:09 AM

By: Adrian_Ash

Economics

Best Financial Markets Analysis Article"...Who suffers most from inflation? Who suffers most from rising prices? It's the poor, not the rich. The rich can protect themselves from inflation. Poor people can't..." - Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank (ECB)

THE FINANCIAL TIMES just chose Jean-Claude Trichet – head of the European Central Bank (ECB) – as its "Person of the Year, 2007".


Okay, so Time magazine had to settle for Vladimir Putin – the former KGB spook now rehearsing his puppeteer skills at the Kremlin. But was the FT 's short-list really that bad? Couldn't Paris Hilton clear a space in her diary to claim the award instead?

At least the air-head heiress delivered as promised last year, denting only good taste in the process. Monsieur Trichet's inflated celebrity, on the other hand, now threatens to cost the world dear.

Trichet's No.1 task as president of the ECB is supposed to be delivering "price stability" to the 320 million citizens of the Eurozone (Malta & Greek-speaking Cyprus joined the fun on New Year's Day).

Put another way, his 2.0% inflation target means €1.00 of living expenses today should cost no more than €1.02 by this time next year. But anyone shopping in Euros this Christmas, however, found the cost of living 3.1% higher on average from Dec. '06 – or so says the EuroStat agency.

Europe 's festive inflation out-ran even November's seven-year record. It came close to undoing almost 14 years of inflation-fighting by the ECB and its pre-Euro ancestors. And things had been going so well, too!

For 2007 as a whole, consumer price inflation in Europe averaged 2.14%. But curiously, that's exactly the rate it hit in Sept. before racing higher as Christmas drew nigh. What changed in the summer of Trichet's star year? "One of his strengths is his ability to manage a crisis – he enjoys that," says Olivier Garnier, adviser to the ECB chief in his former life at the French Treasury in the early 1990s. And by golly, but Trichet got a crisis to relish this summer!

Relaxing in the sleepy French fishing port of Saint-Mâlo, Jean-Claude Trichet awoke one August morning to find "the first financial market crisis fought by BlackBerry from the beach" surging across the Atlantic towards him, gushes the Financial Times .

"As the ripple effects of the collapsing US subprime mortgage market caused global finance to seize up, the ECB announced it would unilaterally pump in unlimited overnight liquidity: in the end it added almost €95bn ($136bn, £69bn)...

"Initial shock at this unexpectedly radical intervention gave way to admiration of [the ECB's] steady hand," the newspaper goes on, hardly able to contain its praise...

"As the drama unfolded, the ECB appeared to be setting the pace among central banks. In the ultimate compliment, the venerable US Federal Reserve and Bank of England copied the tactics of an institution not yet 10 years old."

Hurrah for Trichet! Three cheers for unlimited liquidity! Hosing Paris and Frankfurt with overnight loans, Monsieur Trichet secured his place in history as "one of the few to emerge from the turmoil with his reputation enhanced," the FT declares. He certainly helped save the blushes of BNP Paribas, proximate cause of the interbank lending panic when it suspended three investment funds on 9th August after the "complete evaporation of liquidity" in the subprime US mortgage-bond market.

But our brave little pompier actually hosed so much cash into Europe's money market, he's since felt the need to mop up the puddle 14 times in the last 14 weeks, draining a total of €390 billion in Christmas week alone.

In the 456 weeks between the ECB's birth and October, by contrast, the Bank only drained "excess" liquidity from Europe 's money market a total of 21 times, offering government bonds in exchange for cash.

It's a pity, in fact, that Monsieur Trichet didn't think to take a couple of Euros out of the market before this summer's turmoil began...

Under the European Bank's first president, Wim Duisenberg, the ECB's open-market liquidity auctions averaged €64.6 billion. Since "Tricky" Trichet took over on 1st Nov. 2003 that's more than trebled to €204bn.

Indeed, our chart seems to show how the real hosing came to end when the world's money-markets froze back in August. But the number of ECB auctions helped pick up the pace, reaching 7.8 on average per month vs. 5.5 averaged per month during the preceding eight years. The average value, meantime, has risen to €136bn from €130bn between 1999 and 2007.

Was this flood of short-term liquidity really needed to help save the world's financial system? Funnily enough, said Trichet himself to the European Parliament on 19th Dec., "there has been little evidence that the financial market turbulence since early August has strongly influenced the dynamics of broad money and credit aggregates.

"Indeed, the expansion of loans to households and non-financial corporations has remained robust, which may suggest that the supply of credit has not been impaired."

No fooling, Jean-Claude!

Controlling growth of the money supply is supposed to make up one-half of the ECB's policy tool kit. Indeed, capping the number of monetary units in circulation used to be the "first pillar" of the grand anti-inflation stance it adopted at the dawn of Christendom's third millennium.

But the idea of actually using Bundesbank-style discipline to deliver German-style low inflation soon lost out to watching "broad economic data" instead. Now playing second-fiddle to what Wolfgang Munchau of the Financial Times tellingly calls "the real world view" of economic growth, consumer prices and trade-weighted exchange rates, the ECB's initial money-supply target – under which the broad M3 measure of liquidity would grow by no more than 4.5% per year – has quietly slipped from the ECB's speeches, press releases and official statements.

Unloved and un-mentioned, it's come to look like some ridiculous ex-spouse...still bent on sending a Valentine's card each year but using his left hand to scrawl "Guess Who...?" Since the Euro became flesh at the start of 2000, however, actual growth in Western Europe 's money supply has outpaced the "reference value" by more than one-third. It met or fell below that target for barely 10 months.

And right now the quantity of Euros in circulation – both physical and digital – is growing two-and-a-half times faster than the ECB's initial prescription, taking the Eurozone back to the runaway credit inflation of the late 1970s.

No wonder then that "at a global level, the risks for [price] inflation are on the upside," as Monsieur Trichet told the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) this week in Switzerland .

No wonder either that the Gold Price in Euros has exploded as a result. The citizens of France , Germany and Italy saw the Gold Market scoot higher towards €600 per ounce as Monsieur Trichet's year of 2007 reached its end.

Will his policies at the ECB cap inflation – and stall the surging value of Gold Prices – in 2008? Here at BullionVault , we think a fireman hosing a burning house with kerosene would have more chance of saving the furniture.

"There is a danger of second-round effects on headline inflation," as the FT 's Person of the Year told the Bank for International Settlements in Basel this week. Perhaps he was thinking of Berthold Huber – head of Germany 's IG Metall union – promising his members "a mega year" for pay awards, starting with demands for an 8% increase in the steel sector.

Or maybe Jean-Claude Trichet was thinking of the six public-sector unions now threatening to strike over higher wages & pensions in his homeland, France...or the failure of above-inflation pay awards in Italy's public sector to prevent fresh strikes this month...or maybe the current wage-talks in Spain, where annual pay awards are still linked to inflation – which is currently running at 4.1% from this time last year.

In Germany , even the very poorest workers – those who "suffer most from inflation" according to Trichet himself in an interview with EuroNews last year – have come to expect an inflation-beating pay rise this year. The Social Democratic Party is pushing for a minimum wage of €7.50 per hour (some $11) in the world's third-largest single economy. Sharing power with Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats in her "grand coalition", the SDP might just force the issue, too.

Several big unions, however, are pushing for an even greater "second-round effect" of the ECB's failed inflation-busting worth a massive €11 per hour (more than $16).

In short, "there is no room for complacency [on inflation]," as Monsieur Trichet, a former member of France 's militant PSU party, told his audience in Basel . But what else beyond complacency would explain the surging M3 money supply...now growing fast enough to match the surging rate of monetary expansion in the United States and not far behind the wanton inflation of Britain and China ?

It's the poor – and the poor middle classes, especially pensioners on fixed incomes – who pay most when money loses its value. Top earners, led by Europe 's hottest financial hot-shots in Frankfurt and La Defense, can look after themselves.

Not least with a flood of central-bank money so great, it needs mopping up by the very firemen themselves!

So for all the good he's done defending the value of Euros, Trichet may seem a weird choice for "Person of the Year, 2007". But for saying one thing and doing another...and for helping the forces of inflation to mass, even as he claimed to stand firm against them...he has corralled the spirit of our financial age better than even Ben Bernanke at the US Federal Reserve.

Jean-Claude Trichet, we salute you. Truly you are the man of the moment!

By Adrian Ash
BullionVault.com

Gold price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of the Gold Market
City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and a regular contributor to MoneyWeek magazine, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News and head of research at www.BullionVault.com , giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich , on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

(c) BullionVault 2007

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

Adrian Ash Archive


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note: If on Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to caching your comment has not been accepted, Press refresh and try again)

Free Credit Crisis Survival Toolkit