Most Popular
1. It’s a New Macro, the Gold Market Knows It, But Dead Men Walking Do Not (yet)- Gary_Tanashian
2.Stock Market Presidential Election Cycle Seasonal Trend Analysis - Nadeem_Walayat
3. Bitcoin S&P Pattern - Nadeem_Walayat
4.Nvidia Blow Off Top - Flying High like the Phoenix too Close to the Sun - Nadeem_Walayat
4.U.S. financial market’s “Weimar phase” impact to your fiat and digital assets - Raymond_Matison
5. How to Profit from the Global Warming ClImate Change Mega Death Trend - Part1 - Nadeem_Walayat
7.Bitcoin Gravy Train Trend Forecast 2024 - - Nadeem_Walayat
8.The Bond Trade and Interest Rates - Nadeem_Walayat
9.It’s Easy to Scream Stocks Bubble! - Stephen_McBride
10.Fed’s Next Intertest Rate Move might not align with popular consensus - Richard_Mills
Last 7 days
THEY DON'T RING THE BELL AT THE CRPTO MARKET TOP! - 20th Dec 24
CEREBUS IPO NVIDIA KILLER? - 18th Dec 24
Nvidia Stock 5X to 30X - 18th Dec 24
LRCX Stock Split - 18th Dec 24
Stock Market Expected Trend Forecast - 18th Dec 24
Silver’s Evolving Market: Bright Prospects and Lingering Challenges - 18th Dec 24
Extreme Levels of Work-for-Gold Ratio - 18th Dec 24
Tesla $460, Bitcoin $107k, S&P 6080 - The Pump Continues! - 16th Dec 24
Stock Market Risk to the Upside! S&P 7000 Forecast 2025 - 15th Dec 24
Stock Market 2025 Mid Decade Year - 15th Dec 24
Sheffield Christmas Market 2024 Is a Building Site - 15th Dec 24
Got Copper or Gold Miners? Watch Out - 15th Dec 24
Republican vs Democrat Presidents and the Stock Market - 13th Dec 24
Stock Market Up 8 Out of First 9 months - 13th Dec 24
What Does a Strong Sept Mean for the Stock Market? - 13th Dec 24
Is Trump the Most Pro-Stock Market President Ever? - 13th Dec 24
Interest Rates, Unemployment and the SPX - 13th Dec 24
Fed Balance Sheet Continues To Decline - 13th Dec 24
Trump Stocks and Crypto Mania 2025 Incoming as Bitcoin Breaks Above $100k - 8th Dec 24
Gold Price Multiple Confirmations - Are You Ready? - 8th Dec 24
Gold Price Monster Upleg Lives - 8th Dec 24
Stock & Crypto Markets Going into December 2024 - 2nd Dec 24
US Presidential Election Year Stock Market Seasonal Trend - 29th Nov 24
Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past - 29th Nov 24
Gold After Trump Wins - 29th Nov 24
The AI Stocks, Housing, Inflation and Bitcoin Crypto Mega-trends - 27th Nov 24
Gold Price Ahead of the Thanksgiving Weekend - 27th Nov 24
Bitcoin Gravy Train Trend Forecast to June 2025 - 24th Nov 24
Stocks, Bitcoin and Crypto Markets Breaking Bad on Donald Trump Pump - 21st Nov 24
Gold Price To Re-Test $2,700 - 21st Nov 24
Stock Market Sentiment Speaks: This Is My Strong Warning To You - 21st Nov 24
Financial Crisis 2025 - This is Going to Shock People! - 21st Nov 24
Dubai Deluge - AI Tech Stocks Earnings Correction Opportunities - 18th Nov 24
Why President Trump Has NO Real Power - Deep State Military Industrial Complex - 8th Nov 24
Social Grant Increases and Serge Belamant Amid South Africa's New Political Landscape - 8th Nov 24
Is Forex Worth It? - 8th Nov 24
Nvidia Numero Uno in Count Down to President Donald Pump Election Victory - 5th Nov 24
Trump or Harris - Who Wins US Presidential Election 2024 Forecast Prediction - 5th Nov 24
Stock Market Brief in Count Down to US Election Result 2024 - 3rd Nov 24
Gold Stocks’ Winter Rally 2024 - 3rd Nov 24
Why Countdown to U.S. Recession is Underway - 3rd Nov 24
Stock Market Trend Forecast to Jan 2025 - 2nd Nov 24
President Donald PUMP Forecast to Win US Presidential Election 2024 - 1st Nov 24

Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

How to Protect your Wealth by Investing in AI Tech Stocks

Make That a Cheap Money Bubble to Go

Stock-Markets / Liquidity Bubble May 22, 2007 - 11:34 AM GMT

By: Adrian_Ash

Stock-Markets

"...From Shanghai to Soho, the flood of cheap money is causing fresh mischief each day. Investors beware! Creating value is fast losing out to just taking profits..."

"WHY NOT SELL UP? He's been grilling cheese sandwiches for the last 40 years. Now his café and the apartment upstairs are worth £2.5 million [just shy of $5 million]. He can retire rich overnight!

"So what if Costa Coffee or one of the other chains move in? Okay, London's famously cool Soho district loses character...and it loses a little institution, too. But who cares? This guy certainly doesn't. He cashes out and never has to make a frothy coffee again.


"The owner gets rich. The chain store or some financier gets prime location, and the estate agent takes a fat fee - plus sales tax on top for the government. Everyone's a winner, or they would be...if only Soho weren't becoming as bland as the rest of London."

Is nowhere safe from the mischief of cheap money? A friend told me this story at a christening on Sunday!

But low interest rates aren't only talking too loudly in church. They have driven West London house prices up by one-fifth in the last 12 months according to the gossips at the font. And they're turning big governments and small savers alike into full-time financial speculators.

"Wave of petrodollars hits UK," reports the Financial Times from Dubai today. One Saudi fund now owns 3.1% of HSBC, the world's second, third or possibly fourth largest bank by market value, depending on who you ask. Dubai International Capital owns another big chunk. Funds controlled by Qatar own 17.6% of Sainsbury, the UK's No.2 supermarket.

British and US investors of a certain vintage will recognize the pattern. "Gulf money has flooded into the UK before," as Simeon Kerr, the FT reporter, notes. "In the 1970s, the Kuwait Investment Authority led the way, buying slices of large western groups such as BP." When the Saudi money turned tail and fled - right alongside a collapse in oil prices driven by tight money and higher interest rates worldwide - the Pound Sterling suffered a five-year collapse from $2.50 to just $1.00 vs. the Dollar.

"The current wave of Gulf money, driven by an oil boom that has seen oil prices peak at $78, has been on a different scale," says Kerr. The late 1970s was the last extended period when borrowing cash made you richer than saving it. Now real rates of interest - on the Dollar, Sterling, Euro, Yen and Swiss Franc - sit near to zero again.

Throw the Chinese Yuan into the mix, and is it any wonder oil prices have trebled in the last half-decade? The flood of money is simply washing back whence it came.

"Thanks to huge trade surpluses in Asia and massive oil revenues in Saudi Arabia and Russia," reports Reuters today, "sovereign wealth funds designed to maximize returns on part of a country's currency reserves have blossomed in recent years."

"The 13 biggest funds manage assets totaling of $2.1 trillion, according to estimates by Lehman Brothers," says the newswire, "potentially allowing them to exert hefty influence on global asset prices."

Government agencies, in other words, now control liquid assets - held as investment funds - worth China's entire annual GDP. But if that didn't signal loudly enough that the bubble in cheap money has brought the world to a pretty pass, there's more mischief ahead. "OECD says monetary policy to blame for buy-outs," announces Yahoo, after the Organization for Economic Co-Operation & Development said today that "private equity plays a valuable role in helping to transform under-performing companies [but it could create] adverse consequences for investors."

"The current boom in private equity, as a share of the economy, is much stronger than the previous late-80s leveraged buy-out boom," notes the OECD report, "which did end in tears and a number of criminal charges by 1991."

Who to blame for the criminal charges brought against leveraged buy-outs in 2008 and beyond? "If one fixes the price of money in parts of the world economy," says the OECD, "one will not be able to control its supply. The recycling of this [fixed-exchange] money is an integral part of the arbitrage opportunity that is driving the private equity boom. Easily the main contribution to the measure of global liquidity in 2006 is Chinese foreign exchange market intervention."

Tied to the Dollar, the Chinese Yuan fails to reflect China's surging economy - or so goes the theory. Either way, China's super-low interest rates remain well below inflation. The overnight rate charged by the People's Bank of China - the PBOC's version of the Fed Funds rate - fell to 1.57% per annum earlier this spring. That was 12 basis points lower than where it stood in June 2006 according to the economists at Northern Trust. It was also just HALF the official rate of consumer price inflation.

As a result, China's broad money supply keeps surging ahead...up by more than one-sixth year-on-year in April, alongside a gain of 54% in the Shanghai Composite Stock Index since January alone. But the bubble in Chinese money is inflating asset prices far beyond the domestic exchanges. Blackstone's $3 billion deposit from the Chinese government this week marks just the start.

"The Chinese government wants to increase its access and role in the global private equity market," says one corporate advisor. "It should be, or will be, part of a trend," adds Stephen Schwarzman, co-founder of Blackstone itself.

"Blackstone is the first [recipient] but over time I would suspect there would be others."

Back here in London, meantime, the government is fast building its own monuments to the 21st century's cheap money bubble. Besides hoodwinking local town planners with talk of a "shortage of housing", Whitehall wants to cream all that it can off the speculative froth.

"Planning shake-up paves the way for new runways," says the Daily Telegraph today. "Push towards pay-as-you-go roads," chips in the BBC. New plans revealed this week could see UK drivers paying nearly $2.50 per mile on the busiest routes.

Such rent-seeking is only to be expected amid credit excess. But it hardly makes earning a living - nor investing in productive businesses - any easier. Creating value is fast losing out to just taking profits.

Make that a cheap-money bubble to go.

By Adrian Ash
BullionVault.com

Gold price chart, no delay | Gold prices live | Latest gold market news
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.


© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Post Comment

Only logged in users are allowed to post comments. Register/ Log in