G20 Summit, Yet Another Global Cluster F*ck
Stock-Markets / Financial Markets 2010 Nov 12, 2010 - 12:27 PM GMTBy: PhilStockWorld
Why  should we be surprised?
The  last G20 meeting ended in chaos, the same nonsense that triggered a flight into  commodities in Q3 as Global investors lost faith in ALL of the  World leaders to be able to solve ANY of the many problems that face the Global  Economy.  Why should this time be different as the current conference  broke up with NOTHING accomplished other than to promise to get right on these  issues at next year's meeting.  REALLY?  Do we look like a planet  that has another 6 months to wait for you to do something???  

  
  The  delay by the Group of 20 industrial and developing powers in defining the external imbalances they had vowed to  address represents a blurring of what at first had appeared to  be clear goals designed to counter the growing threat of trade and currency  wars, in which countries seek competitive advantage by weakening their  currencies.  The U.S. and G-20 host South Korea ran into strong opposition  from such exporting powers as China and Germany to a proposal to quantify limits  on current-account surpluses and deficits. Without cooperation, the IMF warns,  not only will the G-20 fail to achieve a much-needed boost to growth, but it  could tip the scales on the European sovereign-debt crisis and fuel capital  flows into emerging countries that overheats their economies.  
China  is already overheating, with a 4.4% inflation rate but that's  much worse when you consider that Food Inflation was 10.1% in October from the  previous year.  With average family incomes of less than $2,000 - food is  pretty much all these poor people can afford!  The other thing people MUST  buy in China (because they can do without furniture, manufactured clothing and  power) is housing, and that rose 4.9% in the past year despite the BOC's  aggressive tightening measures.  A lot of this is due to the Yuan's peg to  the dollar as Bernanke's mad plan to devalue the Dollar is dropping China's  currency as well and that's good for the manufacturers, who benefit from  competitive export prices, but bad for their workers, who need to eat.
"Dollar  issuance by the United States is out of control, leading to an inflation  assault on China,"the Chinese commerce minister said in comments reported  on Tuesday.  Chen Deming, speaking at a trade fair in southern  China, said that exporters had done a good job of preparing themselves for  exchange rate changes as well as rising labour costs, but were suddenly  confronted with new challenges. "Because  the United States' issuance of dollars is out of control and international  commodity prices are continuing to rise, China is being attacked by imported  inflation. The uncertainties of this are causing firms big problems,"  Chen was quoted as saying by the Xinhua news agency.
Bank  of China Chairman Xiao Gang called the Fed's move "dangerous," writing in the semiofficial China Daily newspaper that  it had driven the dollar down in value, raised expectations of inflation and  hurt other economies. That position was backed by former Federal Reserve  Chairman Alan Greenspan, who said the U.S. was "pursuing  a policy of currency weakening."  U.S.  officials declared they were doing no such thing. And, in fact, the U.S. dollar  has been rising in value in recent days.  "We  will never seek to weaken our currency as a tool to gain competitive advantage  or to grow the economy," Treasury  Secretary Timothy F. Geithner told CNBC from Seoul. "It's  not an effective strategy for any country, and it's not for the U.S. We'll  never do that."  To which the Chinese  responded: "Liar, liar, pants on fire - your  nose is longer than a telephone wire!" And the  Chinese should know, as they make 98% of the World's telephone wires...  
Meanwhile,  Obama has been called on the carpet for a more private meeting with our two  biggest creditors, Japan and China as he attends the Asia-Pacific Economic  Cooperation Forum.  Angela Merkel, who has been very critical of US policy, was  not invited to attend and it's just as well as she has her own major crisis to  deal with as Ireland continues to come apart at the seams which  is already forcing the EU's usually conservative Jean-Claude Trichet to "pull  a Bernanke" as he becomes the buyer of ONLY  resort in the EU's bond market as failures in Irish and Portuguese bond auctions threaten  to spread to much larger Spain, where the Spanish 10-year bonds are already 229  points above German notes, up 15% this week and near the record 232-point  spread, which was reached before the last Eurovention, just 6 months ago.   
Spain  is 3 times the size of Ireland and Portugal combined.  Shoring up the  finances of an economy that is 12 percent of the euro region and more than  three times Portugal and Ireland combined would strain the 750 billion-euro ($1  trillion) lifeline set up to stop contagion from Greece’s near default in May.   “There’s a perception that once you start  down the path with one country, the others have to follow, at least the market  will interpret it that way,” said Kleinwort's Phyllis Reed. Investors “won’t  be able to help themselves, whether it’s right or not,”  she said.
  Portugal  and Ireland requesting aid from the European Financial Stability Fund won’t  stop the spread of the crisis, and the European Central Bank should take pre-emptive  action to stem the fallout by buying Spanish bonds in secondary markets,  Jacques Cailloux, chief European economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc  in London, wrote in a note to investors.  There are “growing  signs that the contagion is spreading to the larger economies with Spain lining  up next,” he said. “Now  is the time to act.”  Isn't there a Clash song  about Spanish Bonds?  
  The  Irish tomb was drenched in blood.
  Spanish  bonds shatter the hotels.
  My  señorita’s rose was nipped in the bud.
  Spanish  bonds; yo te quiero infinito.
Yo  te quiero, oh mi corazón.

Have  I mentioned how much I like cash lately?  Somebody certainly wants our  cash as TBT is rising like a Phoenix from the ashes of $36 this morning but the  Dollar has been doing dipsy doodles all morning and has generally been driven  down all the way from 78.64 to 78 at 9am and that is good enough to mask a  1.25% drop in the US indices, as well as the collapse of oil, which fell off a  cliff last night, ripping trough our $87.50 line and falling all the way to  85.50 before the dollar got pounded into submission and saved it.  Gold  dropped $30 overnight and copper fell 2.5%.   
  While  we are all for gold plays as a hedge (see this weekend's "Spinning Straw  Trades Into Gold") and while today is a great day to grab some  inflation protection if you haven't already, we also like to make fun of our  resident gold bugs in Member Chat as we don't take gold very seriously and  neither does Barry Ritholtz, who points out:
  Its  obvious from the chart (valuing gold in terms of silver) that Gold has no  intrinsic value. Forget QE, the Gold Miners are doing QM Quantitative Mining.  These irresponsible Miners are “printing gold”  by scraping it out of the ground as fast as they can. They are debasing it as a  store of value, and are no better than central bankers with their fiat  currencies and printing presses."    
  Last  night's drop in commodities and the chaos at the G20 led to a 5% sell-off on  the Shanghai composite, which is a lot as limit down is 10% there so 1/2 the  stocks could have gone limit down in the session.  What's most disturbing  is how easily they gave up the 3,000 line - saved only by the closing bell at  the 5% rule heading into the weekend.  The Hang Seng followed down with a  2% drop and that was 477 points, also finishing at the day's lows and the  Nikkei dropped 1.4% as the Yen could not stay below 82.50 to the dollar despite  massive BOJ pumping.  Even mighty India dropped 2% but, at 20,156, we're a  long way from worrying about them.   Europe opened way down, off 1% on the  FTSE and DAX and off 2% on the CAC but they have bounced back almost a full  point as EU Ministers run around making soothing noises for the  bond market.  
  The EU economy slowed sharply with  Greece's GDP falling 1.1% in Q3, Spain was flat, Italy up just 0.2% and Portugal  up 0.4%.  Germany, as usual, held things together with 0.7% growth rate  and France was in-line with the EU average of 0.4%. "Entering  2011, momentum is bound to remain moderate with a bias to weaken further, as  the export and inventory boost keeps softening, while domestic demand will be  dampened by fiscal consolidation," said Marco  Valli, an economist at UniCredit. "Financial-market  tensions triggered by sovereign-debt concerns remain the main downside risk to  our moderate recovery story."  
  We  maintain our cash + bearish bias going into the weekend.  I showed you how we play the dips yesterday and  the example from the morning post was our very nice DIA $113 call play from  Wednesday, which we played off the 11,250 line on the Dow.  Yesterday, it  was the QQQQ Weekly $52s that caught our attention in Member Chat at 10:06 and we were able to  get those at $1 as the Qs bounced off the $53 line and those rose very quickly  to $1.25 and topped out at $1.45 - pretty much the same path as the DIAs  followed the previous day.  Using day-trade covers like this let you ride  out longer-term bearish positions, locking in the dips without having to cash  out positions you hope will do better.
Our  oil puts should be hot, hot, HOT today as we caught a huge break for our USO  Nov $37 puts, that were as low at .30 yesterday and should open the day almost  on the money. We also took a fun play on TZA Nov $19 calls at $1.10 at 2:52 in Member Chat and  we should get a nice pop on those this morning too!  Non-greedy exits are  the key here - we don't know what is going to happen over the weekend but  anyone watching the futures this morning, where the Dow touched 11,100, got a  preview of what COULD happen if the dollar bounces back.  Meanwhile,  here's the best thing I found on YouTube this week, here. 
Phil
Philip R. Davis is a founder of Phil's Stock World (www.philstockworld.com), a stock and options trading site that teaches the art of options trading to newcomers and devises advanced strategies for expert traders. Mr. Davis is a serial entrepreneur, having founded software company Accu-Title, a real estate title insurance software solution, and is also the President of the Delphi Consulting Corp., an M&A consulting firm that helps large and small companies obtain funding and close deals. He was also the founder of Accu-Search, a property data corporation that was sold to DataTrace in 2004 and Personality Plus, a precursor to eHarmony.com. Phil was a former editor of a UMass/Amherst humor magazine and it shows in his writing -- which is filled with colorful commentary along with very specific ideas on stock option purchases (Phil rarely holds actual stocks). Visit: Phil's Stock World (www.philstockworld.com)
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