http://bit.ly/17chVB

- - -
For the first time since another Democrat occupied the White House,
investors from Beijing to Zurich are challenging a president's attempts to
revive the economy with record deficit spending. Fifteen years after forcing
Bill Clinton to abandon his own stimulus plans, the so-called bond
vigilantes are punishing Barack Obama for quadrupling the budget shortfall
to $1.85 trillion. By driving up yields on U.S. debt, they are also
threatening to derail Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's efforts to
cut borrowing costs for businesses and consumers. 

The 1.4-percentage-point rise in 10-year Treasury yields this year pushed
interest rates on 30-year fixed mortgages to above 5 percent for the first
time since before Bernanke announced on March 18 that the central bank would
start printing money to buy financial assets. Treasuries have lost 5.1
percent in their worst annual start since Merrill Lynch & Co. began its
Treasury Master Index in 1977. 

"The bond-market vigilantes are up in arms over the outlook for the federal
deficit," said Edward Yardeni, who coined the term in 1984 to describe
investors who protest monetary or fiscal policies they consider inflationary
by selling bonds. He now heads Yardeni Research Inc. in Great Neck, New
York. "Ten trillion dollars over the next 10 years is just an indication
that Washington is really out of control and that there is no fiscal
discipline whatsoever."

...

"The vigilante group is different this time around," said Mark MacQueen, a
partner and money manager at Austin, Texas- based Sage Advisory Services
Ltd., which oversees $7.5 billion. "It's major foreign creditors. This whole
idea that we need to spend our way out of our problems is being questioned."


MacQueen, who started in the bond business in 1981 at Merrill Lynch, has
been selling Treasuries and moving into corporate and inflation-protected
debt for the last few months. 

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in March that China was "worried" about its
$767.9 billion investment and was looking for government assurances that the
value of its holdings would be protected. 

The nation bought $5.6 billion in bills and sold $964 million in U.S. notes
and bonds in February, according to Treasury data released April 15. It was
the first time since November that China purchased more securities due in a
year or less than longer-maturity debt.

...

The initial progress Bernanke made toward reducing the relative cost of
credit is in jeopardy of being unwound by the work of the bond vigilantes. 

The average rate on a typical 30-year fixed mortgage rose to 5.08 percent
this week from 4.85 percent in April, according to North Palm Beach,
Florida-based Bankrate.com. Credit card rates average 10.5 percentage points
more than 1-month Libor, up from 7.19 percentage points in October. 

"Longer term the danger is that the rise in yields disrupts the recovery or
the rise in inflation expectations dislodges the Fed's current complacency
on inflation," Credit Suisse Group AG interest-rate strategists Dominic
Konstam, Carl Lantz and Michael Chang wrote in a May 22 report. 

'It's Over' 

Inflation expectations may best be reflected in the yield curve, or the
difference between short- and long-term Treasury rates. The gap widened this
week to 2.76 percentage points, surpassing the previous record of 2.74
percentage points set on Aug. 13, 2003. Investors typically demand higher
yields on longer-maturity debt when inflation, which erodes the value of
fixed-income payments, accelerates. 

"The yield spreads opening up imply that inflation premiums are rising,"
said former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan in a telephone interview from
Washington on May 22. "If we try to do too much, too soon, we will end up
with higher real long- term interest rates which will thwart the economic
recovery." 

Other economists are more pointed. After falling from 16 percent in the
early 1980s, 10-year yields have nowhere to go but up, according to Richard
Hoey, the New York-based chief economist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp. 

"The secular bull market in Treasury bonds is over," Hoey said in a
Bloomberg Television interview. "It ran a good 28 years. They're never going
lower. That's it. It's over."
- - -

Tick. Tock.

- Bob


_______________________________________________
Post Messages to: [email protected]
Subscription Maintenance: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profox
OT-free version of this list: http://leafe.com/mailman/listinfo/profoxtech
Searchable Archive: http://leafe.com/archives/search/profox
This message: 
http://leafe.com/archives/byMID/profox/[email protected]
** All postings, unless explicitly stated otherwise, are the opinions of the 
author, and do not constitute legal or medical advice. This statement is added 
to the messages for those lawyers who are too stupid to see the obvious.

Reply via email to