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Showing posts with the label UST

USD, Gold, Crypto and a mountain of 38trn debt

I returned to my desk after a 10-day Diwali break. As I opened my overflowing mailbox, I realized a lot might have changed in the meantime. Nifty50 is flirting with its all-time level. INR has regained some of its lost ground. Precious metal prices have cooled after a sharp upmove. There is a conspicuous thaw in the Indo-US and Sino-US relations. Prime Minister Modi, who hardly missed an opportunity to represent India at various global forums, has missed the ASEAN summit after missing the UNGA annual session, arguably to avoid a one-on-one meeting with President Trump. However, what caught my attention was a large number of notes, reports, messages alluding to the unsustainable $38trn US government debt, and how the US government and the US Federal Reserve are conspiring to dissipate this mountain of debt by manipulating the prices of gold and cryptocurrencies (especially Bitcoins). Most messages are arguing that 2026 could be a 1933 and/or 1971 redux, when USD was devalued 69% (1933...

Investors’ dilemma

The behavior of Global markets has always been perplexing for the participants. The past 8-9 months have been no different in that sense. Stock prices, commodities, cryptos, bonds, and precious metals have all moved higher; in many cases without a fundamental case for such an upmove. Investors who typically manage their risk through diversification, hedging and alignment of their portfolios with economic fundamentals and corporate earnings, usually underperform in this kind of market and have reasons to be disappointed. Some of them, who usually invest on borrowed conviction, surrender to the fear of missing out (FOMO) and indulge in unnecessary churning of their portfolios resulting in violation of their standard asset allocation, and accumulation of momentum assets at high prices, only to regret later. Traders, on the other hand, ought to love this kind of markets, when most asset classes are moving in one direction, with low implied volatility. Theoretically, in the current stat...

The story so far

The script in the US is playing mostly on the expected lines (see   here   and   here ). Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) – crash landing Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is apparently on its way to crash land, with the pilot (Elon Musk) ejecting himself out shortly after taking off. DOGE’s actions have faced multiple lawsuits, with critics arguing that Musk and his team have violated federal laws, union agreements, and civil service protections. A federal judge halted parts of USAID’s shutdown, and courts have restricted DOGE’s access to payment systems. Despite Musk’s goal to cut $2 trillion from the federal budget, 2025 spending is slightly up from 2024, per Brookings Institution data. Mandatory spending (e.g., Social Security, Medicare) limits achievable cuts. Over two million federal employees were offered buyout deals, with some agencies facing mass layoffs. However, some fired staff have been rehired, indicating implementation challenges. Though...

What will outweigh USD

Reportedly, Israel and Hezbollah (Lebanon) have successfully negotiated a 60 days ceasefire to the latest round of hostilities which started with Israeli forces invading Lebanon on the 1 st   October 2024. The deal involves withdrawal of Israeli troops from Lebanon and deployment of a UN peacekeeping mission and establishment of a US led international monitoring group. This is an important development in global geopolitics. The Hezbollah group was overtly supported by the Iranian government. Israeli invasion into Lebanon had evoked a direct military response from Iran; threatening a much wider escalation of a hitherto localized Israel-Palestine conflict. The ceasefire deal, which has been welcomed by Iran, diminishes the probability of an immediate wider escalation of the Israel-Palestine conflict. However, since the deal does not cover the ongoing Israeli attacks in Gaza Strip, it does not offer any durable mitigation of the threat. If the outgoing president Biden could pursue Ukr...

BoJ dilemma

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Economists, monetary policy experts and market commentators have been talking about the dilemma the Bank of Japan (BoJ) is facing for the past few months. As the BoJ simultaneously fights both the inflationary and deflationary pressures in the Japanese, it finds striking a balance between JPY exchange rate and Japan Government treasury bonds (JGT) yields a big challenge. The Japanese economy has been facing a deflationary trend for more than three decades. After the global financial crisis, the trend accentuated further. In 2016, the Japanese authorities decided to trigger inflation by keeping policy rates below zero. Massive “free money” was pumped in the economy to boost economic activity by achieving a sustained inflation rate of 2%. Consequent to the ultraloose monetary policy, the debt in Japan has swelled to 250% of GDP. It was not a major problem till the major trading partners like the US were also keeping the interest rates close to zero and following an expansionary monetary...

Few random thoughts

 There are lots of events happening in global markets which cannot be full explained through conventional wisdom or empirical evidence. In my view, lot of these events are unintended consequences of policy actions, geopolitics and trade conflicts. For example, there is a massive rally in the global commodity prices, despite poor demand and growth outlook for next few years at least. The recovery to pre Covid level may not entirely explain the rise in commodity prices much beyond the 2019 levels. Popularization of electric mobility etc. can explain gains in some commodities, but not in steel, coal, crude etc. The forecasts of a commodity super cycle sound mostly unconvincing, given (i) worsening demographics of the world; (b) restricted mobility; (c) seriously impeded purchasing power of people; (d) already stretched limits and diminishing marginal utility of fiscal and monetary stimulus; (e) technology evolution focusing on reversal of trends in labor migration; and (f) diminis...