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INVESTMENT
FLASH: HYPER-BEARISH
by Paul J. Lamont
September 24, 2007
What
we think of as ‘money’ has been tremendously expanded by the use of
debt. Now that fear has entered the credit market, money has become
scarce putting pressure on leveraged asset prices. Margin calls are
becoming more numerous throughout the system. Central banks, through
various schemes, will attempt to reflate the credit bubble. But they
will fail because they cannot create confidence.
Another
Bank Run
We
discussed the first bank run (Countrywide Bank) of the Panic of 2007 in A
Little Distress Selling. Now we have our second. On Friday,
September 14th Northern
Rock, “currently the 5th largest UK mortgage lender, the largest
financial institution based in the North East of England” with “76
bank branches in London” experienced
a run. According to Bloomberg: “Hundreds of Northern Rock Plc
customers crowded into branches in London today to pull out their
savings after the mortgage-loan provider sought emergency funding from
the Bank of England. Northern Rock spokesman Don Hunter said ‘It is
understandable that customers are concerned. Their mortgages and savings
are safe.’” According to FT.com,
the chief executive of Northern Rock, Adam Applegarth said that the Bank
of England’s bailout made Northern Rock the “safest place to
invest.” As Northern
Rock customer Miranda Hall rebuts: “I have no means, absolutely no
means, at this moment in time of accessing my money.”
Remember
the Federal Reserve was created in 1913, so it oversaw roughly 9,000
bank failures during the 1930’s. History warns that central bank
planners will not succeed against market forces. As Murray Rothbard’s
quote explains in the Bull
Market in Cash:
”the
Federal Reserve can print money, but it cannot create credit or
confidence. ‘Money’ is therefore hoarded, by either the public or
the banks themselves (if they are concerned about an increase in
redemptions).”
Cash
is King but the Yen is Emperor
As
stated in 7
Reasons To Sell: “In a credit crunch, optimism turns to fear, risk
is re-priced, and the rush to liquidate assets begins. Prices fall and
cash is the only haven of value.” This is also happening on a global
level. For years, investors borrowed Japanese Yen cheaply and
invested it into higher yielding currencies and investments (‘the yen
carry trade’). According to Bob Lenzner at Forbes, Merrill
Lynch estimates that about $1 trillion worth of yen is being borrowed.
BNP Paribas says the borrowing is closer to $5 trillion yen. Regardless,
as an indicator of a major trend reversal, “Tens
of thousands” of Japanese homemaker-traders are leveraging their bets
on a fall in the yen. As global margin calls come in, investors will
unwind their positions, and the homemaker-traders will find that they
were the last ones to the party. We expect the Yen to appreciate for the
long term, causing major pain for these novice investors.

©
2007 Paul J. Lamont
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Contact
Information
Paul J. Lamont
Lamont Trading Advisors, Inc.
502 Bank Street
Decatur, AL 35601
Tel/Fax: (256) 850-4161
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