
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, April 19, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Justice Litle, editor of one of the top performing commodity newsletters in the business, pitches in with this column about protectionism
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The same kind of gains that used to take years to see can be yours in days - even hours. Find out what the next trade is. Click here: (URL). http://www1.youreletters.com/t/146806/1383445/775727/0 ------------------------- DUMB AND DUMBER By Justice Litle Last week, improved trade numbers gave hope that the protectionist crowd might back off a bit. No such luck. Since last week's figures, Washington has turned up the heat even further. On Friday, "safeguards" were imposed on Chinese textile imports (trousers, shirts, underwear). On Tuesday, the Treasury Department, as part of a biannual report to Congress, threatened to accuse China of manipulating its currency if the yuan is not allowed to rise. The Financial Times notes that Beijing has been "put on notice," and the Treasury Department expects a revaluation "within six months." At Outstanding Investments, my newsletter, we feel the Bush administration is risking the health of the global economy with these idiotic demands, and there could be implications for commodity prices. In a recent column, Bloomberg columnist Andy Mukherjee notes: "No safeguard can protect the $9-an-hour apparel-industry wages in the United States when 15 million people in China are cutting and sewing for an average 88 cents an hour. Indian textile wages are even lower. Free trade in textiles is valuable for the world's poor people because it came after three decades of oppressive quotas. Sacrificing it, to fix China or perpetuate a false sense of job security in North Carolina, is too high a price to pay." Blocking textile imports from China will not help the U.S. textile industry. It will simply allow other low-cost producers, like India, a chance to step in and fill the gap. Washington is willing to risk an escalating trade war in an effort to protect an industry that represents less than 1% of U.S. jobs, with tactics that don't even make sense in the first place. This is all political calculus. Despite what the president might say in public, free trade is not a priority of the Bush administration. By pandering to the textile states, the White House can buy political support for its other struggling initiatives (like Social Security) and take momentum away from the Democrats at the same time. The real-world consequences of these actions are simply brushed under the carpet. The loud calls for China to revalue the yuan are equally moronic. Whether you think it imperative for China to adjust its currency quickly or not, browbeating, lecturing and thinly veiled threats are not the way to go about making a proud country do anything
especially not an authoritarian country with global leadership aspirations and a wide nationalist streak. Imagine how the United States would have responded if the European Union had criticized Bush's tax cuts, demanding that they be repealed for the health of the global financial system. Or imagine if the United Nations had objected to the $295 billion highway bill making its way through the U.S. Senate at the moment on the grounds of fiscal profligacy. Dick Cheney would still be muttering expletives. Yet in demanding a change in monetary policy, this is exactly what the United States is doing to China. Regardless of the economics behind an immediate China revaluation, Washington gets a big fat "F" for effectiveness (let alone diplomacy). The hypocrisy of the situation makes it even worse: China is being singled out because it is clearly visible in the public eye, while the smaller Asian tigers are not. When you combine the mercantilist foreign exchange policies of South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia, the net effect of their manipulation is hugely greater than China's. But picking on the little countries doesn't make for good press, while standing up to the dragon does. Geo-politically speaking, this is a no-win situation. If China's leaders are forced to revalue sooner via the strong-arm tactics and threats of Washington, they will privately feel bitter, angry and humiliated. And what is the point of antagonizing an opponent to little gain? If it is a friend, you have only hurt the friendship. If it is an enemy, you only increase its willingness to do something rash in response to your threats. There is also the very real chance that Beijing is more afraid of the destabilizing effects of a premature revaluation than it is of Washington's words. Given the awful state of Chinese banks and capital markets, it remains to be seen whether China can open the foreign exchange floodgates without triggering a daisy chain of crisis events. If Beijing maintains the peg out of fear, or for some other hidden reason, then the war of words can only escalate, to no one's benefit. Meanwhile, China remains the second largest holder of U.S. Treasurys, after Japan. By buying U.S. Treasury bonds, Chain has been indirectly financing the U.S. consumer, and the U.S. economy as a whole, as long-term interest rates have moved lower. The Senate appears completely oblivious to this. Bretton Woods II, our nickname for this long- standing trading arrangement with Asia, has allowed the United States to maintain its pace of spending in the first place. Now congress want to throw a spanner in the works. What does all this have to do with the markets? Simple: An outbreak of protectionism is the single greatest threat to the health of the global economy, which in turn drives the demand for natural resources. Washington is risking everything for the sake of petty political gamesmanship. It is either too shortsighted to see what it is risking, or too cocky and overconfident to care. Protectionism is a bit like a nasty virus. The global economy is more susceptible to the virus when it is weakened, as it is now, and it only takes one carrier to spread the virus and cause an epidemic. We haven't seen a true outbreak yet, but I can tell you I'm worried about these developments. On the bright side, the markets have brushed off the Treasury's report, perhaps relieved that the language was more restrained than it could have been, or hopeful that a stalemate will persist. [Ed. Note: Justice Litle has to be extremely sensitive to any changes in global trade patterns as they impact his commodity-related recommendations much like a hammer impacts a nail. So when he noticed the potential for a massive power crunch in China he immediately scoured the markets and found 12 companies set to soar in price. He has listed them in this report: http://www1.youreletters.com/t/133897/4879042/775238/0 --- Advertisement --- ------------------------- Did You Notice
? By A Reader In Norway First of all, I'd like to thank you for educating me in the financial and economic realities of the world. The media and politics are too full of incompetent people making flawed arguments and statements. Your views and opinions, presented in your easily understandable writing, are exactly what I need. But I wish you'd comment on the Norwegian markets occasionally. I believe Norway holds some excellent opportunities for savvy investors
like you guys at the Rude Awakening. As I'm sure you know, Norway has a significant trade surplus and a foreign exchange fortune closing in on $200 billion. For a country of 4.5 million people, this is a significant amount. It's all thanks to oil and gas exports. The problem is that the politicians here, just as in the U.S., don't have a clue. They are spending the oil and gas revenues on better schools, better homes for seniors, more expensive roads, higher minimum wages, etc. and all of this is driving up prices. Now we are facing a rate hike, I'd guess. Of course, the higher costs of producing anything in Norway is killing business activity, except oil and gas production, so the bust will come, just like it has in every other country that has ever made a fortune exploiting natural resources. And when that time comes, if I'm still kicking, I'll be short the Norwegian stock market and move to Sweden - or France for that matter. For the record, I am a 28-year-old Norwegian citizen and a consultant in the oil and gas industry. I try to help the oil companies make even more money than they already do, which is an ungrateful job, as the oil companies don't seem to understand this concept. If I made any economical [sic] blunders in this letter it's because my Masters degree is in engineering, not economics. Somebody fooled me into believing I'd make more money as an engineer. It still has not bought me the Grand Soleil 40 I desperately need
so I'm now counting on the dollar plunge instead. [Ed. Note: Frequent Rude Awakening contributor, Dan Denning, has just hit the bestseller lists with his new book, 'The Bull Hunter,' in which he shows readers how to take advantage of profit opportunities all over the world. Click here to learn more about the book: http://btob.barnesandnoble.com/index.asp?sourceID=0041323346&btob=Y ------------------------- And the Markets
| Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,464 | 10,332 | 324 | -3.0% | S&P | 1,186 | 1,174 | 32 | -2.2% | NASDAQ | 2,031 | 2,004 | 54 | -6.7% | 10-year Treasury | 4.08% | 4.12% | -0.04 | -0.13 | 30-year Treasury | 4.44% | 4.48% | -0.04 | -0.38 | Russell 2000 | 608 | 595 | 26 | -6.7% | Gold | $421.90 | $419.35 | $1.50 | -3.6% | Silver | $7.19 | $7.02 | $0.27 | 5.5% | CRB | 294.85 | 294.09 | 1.00 | 3.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $47.25 | $48.97 | -$1.42 | 8.7% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 106.85 | JPY 107.49 | 0.47 | -4.2% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2686 | $1.2603 | -52 | 6.4% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8411 | $1.8335 | 95 | 4.0% |
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