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The Carry Trade

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 05:19:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', 'M')y apologies for the intrusion, Mr. Bill. But I've heard so much talk of the central banks lending their gold to the wall street firms for the purpose that I've just described in my post above. Is this a myth or the 'conspiracy' of which you speak? I always want to make sure I have my facts straight.


Micki is the one to ask. He is the expert on gold lending from the central banks to commercial banks. We do not agree on the facts, although he has more supply of them than I do.

Although this is not depletion economics related, my point of view is that gold lending comes down to a misunderstanding of how 'loans' are treated on a bank's book to 'avoid' (not aid) the so-called double counting.

Gold on a central bank's balance sheet is treated as part of its equity or its capital. Liabilities and equity are on the same side of the balance sheet. But gold is a non-income earning asset, so the only way to generate a return is to lend it out. When the CB lends gold out it creates an asset.

However, the CB's asset is the commercial bank's liability. So there is no double counting. The commercial bank lends the central bank money against the gold loan.* Or in other words it uses cash as collateral against the gold loan and it pay interest on the gold loan. The cash loan to the CB is an asset on the commercial bank's balance sheet to offset the liability of the gold loan. The interest on the gold loan has to be paid out of the bank's interest income or from its own capital. So that gold loan also has a cost of money. It is not a free loan.

If the commercial bank then turns around and lends out the gold to someone else. Perhaps a gold trader that is short. Then again the bank creates an asset in the loan of gold. That asset is offset by the gold trader's liability to repay that loan. So there is no double counting of assets or reserves as each time it creates a liability as well.

And here is where Micki and I disagree. If the price of gold has risen from under $300 in 1998 to almost $650 today (it was higher of course). And if the commercial banks were manipulating the price of gold by short selling it. With enough leverage to make a serious difference. Then how did they make money? They would have lost money on the way up everytime gold went up in price multiplied by that leverage. Call it 10X or 100X.

In my opinion the gold longs, not the gold shorts made money. But Micki feels they traded in and out to maintain a core short position and to take advantage of market timing. I just do not see it, but as I have no facts to support my argument it is just my opinion. Others disagree and that is their right. So long as we agree on the mechanics of the loans and their accounting treatment.

Now, of course, there are outstanding cash loans against those gold loans and that interest and principle needs to be re-paid. Keeping in mind that Fed funds has risen from 1% to 5.25% starting in April 2004. And someday that gold has to be returned to the CB who is its rightful owner. Some have also argued that gold has been lent out and will never come back. However, just like I have no facts to support my opinion, they also have no facts to support theirs either. So we just have to agree to disagree?

But I do not see many similarities between gold lending and the yen carry trade. Different fundamentals and the yen carry trade was not manipulation of the physical market, but used to finance the leverage on credit, interest rate and currency risks to earn a profit from low, stable rates in Japan used to make profits elsewhere. It is a pure funding play that is blowing-up in many player's faces at the moment due to a sudden jump in the value of the yen against the US dollar, euro and other currencies.

However, against the reality of post peak oil resource depletion you can make a case for borrowing cheaply to benefit from a rise in commodity, metals and energy prices. If your cheapest source of funding is yen thanks to Japan's ZIRP then great. But you still have to take the price risk and the currency risk. It is not a risk free trade as some would have you believe.

*it depends on whether it is a gold loan or a repurchase agreement (repo). A loan is a loan. No change of ownership. A repo or reverse repo is a buy/sell arrangement. There is a change in ownership. But you enter into both side of the transaction simultaneously, so you still create an asset and a liability. And just to make it a little more complicated repos can go on 'special' which means you may lend money AND pay interest for the privilege depending on the demand for gold (or stock/equity for that matter). So when the market is really short gold/equities it is quite expensive to stay short because you have to pay double for the privilege.
Last edited by MrBill on Tue 06 Mar 2007, 05:47:14, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby Zentric » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 05:36:37

Thank you, Mr. Bill. I'll read your post a few times more over the next few days to better absorb the details of what you're saying. But you've made your point. There surely is more complexity to the gold-leasing business than how I attempted to sum it up in my earlier post.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 05:44:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', 'T')hank you, Mr. Bill. I'll read your post a few times more over the next few days to better absorb the details of what you're saying. But you've made your point. There surely is more complexity to the gold-leasing business than how I attempted to sum it up in my earlier post.


And Micki is also upset (in another post) about US investment banks like Goldman Sachs beating the drum of higher gold and commodity prices in their research, while their trading desks may be shorting the heck out of it. But that is because of Chinese Walls that Elliot Spitzer and the SEC insisted on to separate Sales & Trading from Research.

So their 'independent' researcher may be advocating one strategy for all the right reasons at the time, but Trading may be seeing something completely different. As was the case when the gold market was predicting higher inflation and/or a falling US dollar, while the bond market was pricing in lower yields from falling economic activity.

It turns out they might be both right in the form of stagnation in the US economy against a backdrop of higher commodity demand in the rest of the developing world. Maybe? So the stock market gets trounced instead! ; - )
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:10:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', 'T')hank you, Mr. Bill. I'll read your post a few times more over the next few days to better absorb the details of what you're saying. But you've made your point. There surely is more complexity to the gold-leasing business than how I attempted to sum it up in my earlier post.

Be careful on his "analysis" - it doesn't include a working knowledge of "fractional reserve banking". :lol:
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:23:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', 'T')hank you, Mr. Bill. I'll read your post a few times more over the next few days to better absorb the details of what you're saying. But you've made your point. There surely is more complexity to the gold-leasing business than how I attempted to sum it up in my earlier post.

Be careful on his "analysis" - it doesn't include a working knowledge of "fractional reserve banking". :lol:


We have already clarified that issue and my explanation was found perfect in both theory and practice!

MonteQuest even was so kind as to send me the link to the Fed that confirmed my analysis right down to the last debit, credit, asset & liability. There is no more discussion. There will be no further attempt to explain it again for those that just don't get it?

The link is here. A Workbook on Bank Reserves and Deposit Expansion. But of course you have to be able to understand what you read as well.
Modern Money Mechanics

So go back to writing software and installing printers or whatever it is you do? thanks.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:28:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'S')ince it's in the news, I thought I would bump this up.


Yes it is in the news, it is interesting and it is important, but what does it have to do with post peak oil resource depletion economics? ))


Asked and answered two years ago.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'B')ut, by the way, I do not see how this is a Peak Oil discussion?


Tied to it in my initial post:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f nothing “breaks”, and energy prices continue to fuel inflation, I think we can expect short-term rates in 2006 around 4.75 to 5.5%, or higher.


The forum is for discussion related to the economics ramifications of hydrocarbon depletion. And if rising energy costs fueling inflation is not a ramification, I don't know what is.

It is what peakoil is all about. This is a precursor.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd if you wrote about the yen carry trade in 2005, you were about 7-8 years too late. The Japanese were borrowing yen to buy gold back in 1998 already! ; -

Read my post. I didn't write about the yen carry trade. per se.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:33:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Zentric', 'T')hank you, Mr. Bill. I'll read your post a few times more over the next few days to better absorb the details of what you're saying. But you've made your point. There surely is more complexity to the gold-leasing business than how I attempted to sum it up in my earlier post.

Be careful on his "analysis" - it doesn't include a working knowledge of "fractional reserve banking". :lol:


We have already clarified that issue and my explanation was found perfect in both theory and practice! MonteQuest even was so kind as to send me the link to the Fed that confirmed my analysis right down to the last debit, credit, asset & liability. There is no more discussion. There will be no further attempt to explain it again for those that just don't get it?


The facts in evidence do not support that conclusion, I am afraid.

Your posts are in direct contradiction of publicly stated FED policy.

That fact has not been refuted, and since you can't...yes, the discussion is over for you.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:48:50

As I said before my posts are correct and supported by the Fed link you kindly gave me, which I took the time to read. The Fed even uses 'T' accounts to trace the flow of assets & liabilities.

Specifically "Bank Deposits - How they expand or contract" then "Deposit Expansion". Pay particular attention to the page entitled "How much Can Deposits Expand in the Banking System" and the next item "Expansion through Bank Investments" And then importantly "How Open Market Sales Reduce Bank Reserves and Deposits". For me that is pages 5 through 12 of 46 but your pages may be numbered differently as I am using A4 paper.

Of course, as I said earlier, you have to be able to comprehend & process what you read as well as be able to recognize the words themselves and that may be where your problem lies? In reading comprehension? I can think of no other explanation? ; - ))
Last edited by MrBill on Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:57:32, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:51:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o go back to writing software and installing printers or whatever it is you do? thanks.


Nice defense, got something to hide? :lol:
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 11:55:49

MonteQuest wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ead my post. I didn't write about the yen carry trade. per se.


Oh really?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Posted: Tue Mar 06, 2007 9:39 am Post subject: Re: World Stock Market Crisis

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

mmasters wrote:
In large part a good number of speculators using ultra cheap loan money from Japan have decided to reduce their speculation. This speculation money is literally spread all across the world market and is why seemingly everything has been affected.

MonteQuest wrote:

Yes, the Carry Trade. I wrote about this potential unwinding back in August of 2005.



So let me get this straight. Depletion economics is about whatever YOU decide it is about whether it is money supply or the yen carry trade, and everyone else's posts are off-topic? I just want to know for the future? Thanks.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 20:21:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')s I said before my posts are correct and supported by the Fed link you kindly gave me,


Your posts in evidence do not support that conclusion, I am afraid.

That is a fact.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Tue 06 Mar 2007, 20:38:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')onteQuest wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ead my post. I didn't write about the yen carry trade. per se.


Oh really?


Really. The post you quoted was posted yesterday, not in 2005. And it still doesn't mention the yen per se, but the Carry Trade.

What's all the nitpicking about?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o let me get this straight. Depletion economics is about whatever YOU decide it is about whether it is money supply or the yen carry trade, and everyone else's posts are off-topic? I just want to know for the future? Thanks.


Read the forum posting guidelines in the top thread. This is not an investment forum. It s a forum for discussing the ramifications of hydrocarbon depletion on economics. Tie your post to that criteria as I have done, and you are fine.

And since I wrote the forum permissions with the the approval of Aaron and the site owner, yes...my posting guidelines stand even though I am no longer a mod.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 07 Mar 2007, 04:43:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')s I said before my posts are correct and supported by the Fed link you kindly gave me,


Your posts in evidence do not support that conclusion, I am afraid.

That is a fact.



I really do not have a problem if you disagree with anything and everything I say. I have explained my positions in great detail from


basis, and from my own experience as a foreign exchange and money market trader both in the USA and abroad. I am not about to repeat all those detailed explanations again.

You were kind enough to provide me with a link to a detailed explanation from the Chicago Fed, and I made sure to read it to make sure my own understanding was correct. Where theory meets practice. And it was.

Therefore, as far as I am concerned your opinions or your understanding of money creation do not stand-up to scrutiny, and therefore everything you post on the subject is faulty. Not wrong, but based on a misunderstanding of how credit expansion works.

Now you have a lot more invested in peak oil dot com than I have. You will probably be here long after I am gone. So ironically due to survivor bias your faulty views will be propagated long after I am gone with no one to correct you as well.

And as you have a habit of shouting down your detractors my guess is that a lot of posters will also come to learn and leave in frustration. Perhaps if only because they lack my ability to formulate how things actually work from a practical, accounting and cash-flow basis because they do not have twenty years of experience in all areas of banking. So due to poor wordsmithing you will make them feel bad, and they will leave peak oil dot com because let's face it who wants to feel bad about themselves when they only came here to learn in the first place?

Basically, if you cannot understand my detailed postings on the subject, which is actually very straight forward, then there is no point in posting. So as I said before, have a nice life. Shame about the others though. They will have to get their 'information' from the Michael Moores and Jim Kunstlers of the world.

UPDATE:
Or people like this guy that are just so out of touch that it is sad.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he fallacy with Wall Street's logic is also simple: They focus on assets, the exact same strategy Goldman-Sachs, Merrill Lynch and Wall Street's insiders have been focusing on since the mid-1990s. Why? Because it's making billions. Between 1995 and 2005 this strategy has roughly tripled assets under management for Wall Street and mutual fund firms, according to the Bogle Research Institute, with annual revenues also tripling to over $350 billion by 2005, while returns to Main Street investors have actually declined in the past decade.

So please, forget assets. Here's another example to prove our point: Suppose you retire from government or corporate life, with a pension generating $60,000 annually, with no assets! Ergo, those silly asset-based calculators are misleading. I encourage you to go back and review our earlier, detailed example of the elements included in an income-based formula.

Focus on income: Pensions, Social Security, IRAs, and a new career, business or some part-time work. And remember, savvy families also quietly build wealth in home equity. Pay off the mortgage, live debt-free. Downsize. Maybe cut costs moving to a cheaper region. Go for a reverse mortgage. Be creative. Add up these pieces of income and you'll see how to reach whatever you need to live comfortably in retirement.
You're saving 'too much' for retirement!

Yes, retiring on all that income from Pensions, Social Security, IRAs, and a new career, business or some part-time work like being a Wal-Mart greeter when you're 70 years old, over-weight, suffering from muscle and joint pains and it hurts to stand all day. Never mind the uncertainty of those unfunded government liabilities given the prospects of lower, slower growth from resource depletion.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby seahorse2 » Wed 07 Mar 2007, 12:27:35

Goldman Sachs warns of "dead bodies" as a result of carry trade.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he global currency storm of the past week is starting to infect the corporate bond markets and may prove harder to contain than last year's May sell-off, Goldman Sachs has warned.

Jim O'Neill, the bank's chief global economist, said investment firms playing the "carry trade" had been caught on the wrong side of huge leveraged bets against the Japanese yen.

Man looking at share prices in Tokyo, Goldman Sachs warns of 'dead bodies'
A man looks at share prices on a board outside a Tokyo securities firm. Japan's stock market slumped 3.3pc

"There has been an amazing amount of leverage on currency markets that has nothing to do with real economic activity. I think there are going to be dead bodies around when this is over," he said. "The yen carry trade has reached 5pc of Japan's GDP. This is enormous and highly risky, as we are now seeing.

Telegraph UK
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby seahorse2 » Wed 07 Mar 2007, 16:14:32

Greenspan says "carry trade" has "limited room to run."

Yahoo News
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Wed 07 Mar 2007, 20:57:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', ' ')I really do not have a problem if you disagree with anything and everything I say.


It is not me who disagrees, it is the FED as the evidence of your posts shows. I quoted you and then quoted the FED. They are still there and still show the contradictions.

Banks don't create money and banks only lend money already created. Those are two of your positions. Both not true and both refuted by FED publicly stated policy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ow you have a lot more invested in peak oil dot com than I have. You will probably be here long after I am gone. So ironically due to survivor bias your faulty views will be propagated long after I am gone with no one to correct you as well.


Much easier to say that, rather than back up your posts with FED policy, isn't it?

Ad hominems are the last resort.

I only have one view that I stand by: Our debt-based fiat money system based upon infinite growth and hydrocarbon depletion are not compatible, as the economic growth required to sustain such a system will not be possible.

A faulty view? We will see, won't we?
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 08 Mar 2007, 11:25:00

MonteQuest wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')anks don't create money and banks only lend money already created. Those are two of your positions. Both not true and both refuted by FED publicly stated policy.



I wrote what I wrote. Please do not try to paraphrase me as we all know that your reading comprehension skills leave a lot to be desired. Thanks.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby threadbear » Thu 08 Mar 2007, 15:24:42

How could the topic depletion economics, remain purely about that topic without easily straying further afield. I would say, just by virtue of the fact that most people here think there is something to peak, all of their financial machinations and manueverings are taking this into account.

Can't they be of benefit to others who may not necessarily wish to invest, but shelter their money in a safe haven, as the economy is hit by both peak related and unrelated events? I haven't seen anyone pushing stock here. It's not an investment club. It seems like an investment averse club. This thread is like one long subvertizement for Wall Street.
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby ohanian » Thu 08 Mar 2007, 20:17:06

Meet the "Yen Carry Trader"

Image

By some definitions Japanese investors in their 60s and 70s – who have been venturing abroad in increasing numbers because of low domestic interest rates – do not count as Yen carry traders at all. Rather than borrowing to invest in non-yen assets, they simply transfer yen savings into investment trusts with foreign portfolios or into so-called uridashi bonds, foreign-currency-denominated paper issued in Japan.

But the effect is the same. Their transactions have put downward pressure on the yen and upward pressure on the currencies and assets into which their investments flow.

http://www.euro2day.gr/articlesfna/30079254/
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Re: The Carry Trade

Unread postby MonteQuest » Thu 08 Mar 2007, 21:47:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'M')onteQuest wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')anks don't create money and banks only lend money already created. Those are two of your positions. Both not true and both refuted by FED publicly stated policy.



I wrote what I wrote.


Yes you did write what you wrote.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')lease do not try to paraphrase me as we all know that your reading comprehension skills leave a lot to be desired. Thanks.


As I said, ad hominems are the last resort.
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