Re: Uncle Sam’s Credit Line Running Out?


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(email exchange)

>   
>   On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 10:31 AM, John wrote:
>   
>   Here is support for recent reviews and portfolio positions.
>   

Yes, thanks, and ridiculous, of course. Comments below:

Uncle Sam’s Credit Line Running Out?

By Randall W. Forsyth

The yield curve and credit-default swaps tell the same story: The U.S. can’t borrow trillions without paying a price.

Not saying that at all!

What was once unthinkable has come to pass this year: massive bailouts by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve, with the extension of billions of the taxpayers’ and the central bank’s credit in so many new and untested schemes that you can’t tell your acronyms or abbreviations without a scorecard.

Even more unbelievable is that some of the recipients of staggering sums are coming back for a second round. Or that the queue of petitioners grows by the day.

But what happens if the requests begin to strain the credit line of the world’s most creditworthy borrower, the U.S. government itself? Unthinkable?

Yes, government spends first, then borrows.

Trillions are no hyperbole. The Treasury is set to borrow $550 billion in the current quarter alone and $368 billion in the first quarter of 2009. “Near-term pressures on Treasury finances are much more intense than we had thought,” Goldman Sachs economists commented when the government announced its borrowing projections last week.

Define ‘intense’ please…

It may finally be catching up with Uncle Sam. That’s what the yield curve may be whispering. But some economists are too deaf, or dumb, to get it.

The yield curve reflects anticipated Fed funds rate targets plus ‘technicals’ which can include misguided risk perceptions.

But the Treasury has not needed to issue longer term maturities. It can do it all in 3 month bills or even shorter maturities.

Treasury securities function to ‘offset operating factors’ and provide interest bear accounts as alternatives to the interest rate now paid on excess reserves.

And any constraints on government spending are self imposed.


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UK’s Brown on the pound


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Europeans worry a lot more about inflation from falling currencies than the Fed does.

>   
>   On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 7:19 AM, Milo wrote:
>   

  • BOE’s King says he has No Desire for ‘Sharp’ Drop in Pound
  • BoE Signals Rate Cuts Needed as Economy Contracts
  • U.K. Jobless Claims Rise 36,500, Most Since 1992
  • Brown signals imminent tax cuts
  • British retail sales fall for 1st time since 2005
  • U.K. Housing Sales Drop to Record Low as Prices Fall, RICS Says
  • U.K. Banks Pared Mortgages 13% After Rate Cut

BOE’s King Says He Has No Desire for ‘Sharp’ Drop in the Pound

The following are comments by BoE policy makers on inflation, economic growth and interest rates. Governor Mervyn King and colleagues made the remarks at a press conference following the central bank’s inflation report.

“Clearly if sterling falls far enough this will be a concern and it will have an impact on inflation. It’s not surprising that it’s fallen in the past year. We started by going into this with a significant trade deficit. We are seeing a rebalancing of the world economy.”

“That can be a helpful part of rebalancing the economy, provided it doesn’t affect our ability to meet the inflation target. It’s something we keep a very careful eye on. We have no wish to see it fall very sharply.”

“We have to accept that some fall back from the level we saw in 2007 is part of the rebalancing. Central bankers are prepared to worry almost every day, and I’m prepared for that.”

Regarding the current value of the pound, the bank’s Chief Economist Charles Bean said:

“That very considerable stimulus from the exchange rate should help to pull the economy out of its slow period.”


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2008-11-12 USER


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ICSC UBS Store Sales YoY (Nov 11)

Survey n/a
Actual 0.4%
Prior 0.9%
Revised n/a

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ICSC UBS Store Sales WoW (Nov 11)

Survey n/a
Actual -1.0%
Prior 0.6%
Revised n/a

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Redbook Store Sales Weekly YoY (Nov 11)

Survey n/a
Actual -1.0%
Prior 0.3%
Revised n/a

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Redbook Store Sales MoM (Nov 11)

Survey n/a
Actual -1.2%
Prior -1.2%
Revised n/a

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ICSC UBS Redbook Comparison TABLE (Nov 11)


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