Showing posts with label Federal reserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal reserve. Show all posts

Monday, March 07, 2011

How - and Why - Chinese Wage Inflation May Trigger a Global Epidemic

Ask anyone who remembers the 1970's - there's no inflation like wage inflation, which has a nasty habit of perpetuating across the economy at large.

With Chinese leaders about to convene for some chalk talk around their next five year plan - and raising wages near the top of their agenda - what does this mean for inflation globally?  Our pal Sy Harding weighs in...

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China: The 800-Pound Inflation Gorilla

Being Street Smart

Sy HardingSy Harding

March 7, 2011

When it comes to the growing global worries about inflation, it looks like it will be ‘As goes China so goes the world’.

China is the 2nd largest economy in the world, and rapidly gaining on the U.S. Among other statistics, it’s the world’s largest importer of copper, steel, cotton, and soybeans, and the world’s largest exporter of goods - to say nothing of being the world’s largest owner of U.S. debt.

Inflation fears have been circling the globe in recent months, with many blaming the U.S. Fed’s additional round of ‘quantitative easing’, launched last fall to give the U.S. economy another  boost.

However, the fears began in China a year ago. China launched a massive $585 billion economic-stimulus plan in the depths of the financial crisis two years ago. In relation to the size of its economy at the time it was considerably larger even than the huge stimulus plan launched in the U.S. All that easy money chasing a limited supply of goods, properties, and investments surged China’s economy and stock market into bubbles.

The problems began coming home to roost last year. After surging up with the rest of the world’s stock markets in the first half of 2009, the Chinese stock market rolled over into a bear market, in which it lost 33% of its value in its plunge to its low last July.

The easy money remained in the system, China’s economy continued to boom, and speculation shifted from its stock market to its real estate sector (sound familiar?).

Concern about its overheated economy and soaring real estate prices finally prompted China to begin reversing its easy money policies a year ago. It began by raising the capital reserves its banks had to hold, in effect removing money from the financial system, and increasing the size of down-payments required to purchase real estate. When those efforts had no effect on the soaring economy, real estate speculation, or inflationary pressures, the Chinese central bank began raising interest rates. And as the problems persisted, it has become increasingly aggressive, with multiple hikes in interest rates and increases in bank reserve requirements, the most recent taking place last week.

The global spike-up in food and oil prices has not helped for sure. But China’s inflation problems are not confined to real estate and commodity prices, either.

China is in the stage of its economic development where it needs, and wants, to increase domestic demand for its products, and move away from dependence on exports. To achieve that goal, wages and salaries must rise to move more of the population into the middle class.

Already the minimum wage in China’s major cities and ports has been raised an average of ten percent. Meanwhile, China’s National People’s Congress is meeting this weekend to establish China’s next ‘Five-Year Plan’. An important feature of the plan is reportedly endorsement of higher wages and salaries.

Wage-price inflation is the worst kind of inflation because it feeds on itself. As wages rise, companies have to increase the prices of their products. As prices rise further, workers demand still higher wages, and a difficult to stop inflationary spiral can get underway, as took place globally in the 1970’s.

With China being the world’s largest exporter, a potential wage-price spiral has serious implications for the rest of the world.

For example, in November mainland China’s inflation problems spilled over into Hong Kong, where the Consumer Price Index rose 0.5%, an annualized rate of 6%, the fastest monthly increase since mid-2008.

Last month Li & Fung Ltd., headquartered in Hong Kong, the largest supplier of products to Wal-Mart, predicted that the price of Chinese and Hong Kong exports will increase as much as 15% this year. The second-largest retailer in Britain, Next Plc, said it expects higher labor costs in China will result in an 8% increase in its prices in the first half of this year.

Rising inflation has already become a significant problem in important global economies outside of China, including Hong Kong, India, Brazil, and emerging markets like South Korea, Indonesia, and Singapore. And their stock markets topped out in November and are down 10% to 17%, on concerns about the rising interest rates and tighter monetary policies that have already begun, required to combat the inflationary pressures.

Similar inflationary pressures have not yet arrived in the U.S. and Europe, and the consensus opinion has therefore been that interest rates in the U.S. and Europe can remain at record lows at least until the end of this year, if not well into 2012.

But the chief of the European Central Bank shocked analysts on Thursday by saying that inflation pressures have indeed become worrisome, and the ECB could raise interest rates across the 17-nation Eurozone as soon as its next meeting in April.

That does leave U.S. Fed Chairman Bernanke as about the only global central banker who does not acknowledge that what began a year ago in China is circling the globe, with the pressure pushing it from China increasing not subsiding.

That complacency is not likely to last much longer - or it will be too late.

Meanwhile, another reminder: Gold is the historical hedge against inflation.

Sy Harding is editor of the Street Smart Report, and the free market blog, www.streetsmartpost.com.


This article was originally published on our sister site, www.ContraryInvesting.com.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Why Inflation is Dead: Two Revealing Charts of Consumer Credit Trends

Late last week, our good friend and fellow deflationist Carson sent over a link from Mish Shedlock's blog, reporting a sharp annualized decrease in consumer and revolving credit.

I just plotted the Fed's historical data since 1978 (which I chose because there was a single quarter anomaly in 1977 that I didn't feel like dealing with).

First, we see that consumer credit, as of February 2010, is decreasing at an annual rate of 5.5%:

Consumer credit, after trending positive YOY in January, is once again heading south.

Next we look at revolving credit, where the data is even uglier, both in current and historical terms. Revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 13%:

Will this debt ever be paid off?

The sharp decline in revolving credit, which is defined as credit that does not have a fixed number of payments or payment schedule (think credit cards), would appear to support the debt deflation argument (of Robert Prechter, most notably) that much of the current debt outstanding is going to go unpaid.

So while the government has engaged in quantitative easing to "ease" the issuing of its own debt, it has not yet offered to print up some greenbacks to pay off the debt of American citizens.

Thus far, it appears Americans are still choking on their massive loads of accumulated debt, unwilling to take on more credit, no matter what the Fed does.

It will be interesting to see if the Fed is able to reverse these trends.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

This Week in Finance: Templeton's Final Memo; Why Richard Russell's Worried About Bonds; QE Ends; and More!


Quantitative Easing Ends (At Least For Now)

April 1st marked the end of the Fed's renowned money printing program, also known as "Quantitative Easing" for those who prefer to stick their heads in the sand and ignore what's actually happening.


Under the (QE) program, the Federal Reserve graciously bought $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities from panicky banks and hedge funds over the last 12 months. But now, it’s over. Today, the stock market lost an important undergarment… and we suspect it will begin sagging dramatically, soon.

In more direct terms, the Fed has stopped “funneling new fiat money into the mortgage-backed security market,” explains short side strategist Dan Amoss, “which, in turn, freed up extra cash for portfolio managers to recycle into bonds and stocks. This fiat money is the illusion of real savings. It goes a long way toward explaining how a country deficient in savings can fund massive government deficits at low rates and aggressively bid up the prices of stocks.”

So what happens now?

“We’ll see a more natural relationship between savings, money flows and stock and bond prices,” says Dan. “It probably won’t be good for bulls.”


We've had one day of trading since QE ended, and so far, so good. But it's early yet, and it will be interesting to see how long the markets can continue to seemingly levitate in thin air.

Of course, there's nothing to say the government will not reinstate QE the moment things head south again. In fact, gurus like Marc Faber assure this is a "sure thing" - that when the stock market turns south again, Bernanke will print and print and print until the markets turn around.

Ed. note: Big thank you to Agora Financial, publisher of The Daily Reckoning, for sponsoring the blog! Agora has a lot of great paid and free resources, and I'd encourage you to check them out. Please do me a favor and click on an ad or two of theirs - thanks!

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Sir John Templeton’s Final Words: We're Screwed

Legendary investor John Templeton, who passed away in 2008, penned a final memorandum a few years before his passing entitled "Financial Chaos", in which he predicted bad things ahead for us.

A very sharp final call from a guy renowned for them throughout his career. Here are the prescient comments that Sir John left us with:

John M. Templeton
Lyford Cay, Nassau, Bahamas

June 15, 2005

MEMORANDUM

Financial Chaos – probably in many nations in the next five years. The word chaos is chosen to express likelihood of reduced profit margin at the same time as acceleration in cost of living.

Increasingly often, people ask my opinion on what is likely to happen financially. I am now thinking that the dangers are more numerous and larger than ever before in my lifetime. Quite likely, in the early months of 2005, the peak of prosperity is behind us.


In the past century, protection could be obtained by keeping your net worth in cash or government bonds. Now, the surplus capacities are so great that most currencies and bonds are likely to continue losing their purchasing power.

Mortgages and other forms of debts are over tenfold greater now than ever before 1970, which can cause manifold increases in bankruptcy auctions.

Surplus capacity, which leads to intense competition, has already shown devastating effects on companies who operate airlines and is now beginning to show in companies in ocean shipping and other activities. Also, the present surpluses of cash and liquid assets have pushed yields on bonds and mortgages almost to zero when adjusted for higher cost of living. Clearly, major corrections are likely in the next few years.



The Amount of Managed Money Currently Invested in Gold

Now that gold is rangebound, how do you make money trading it? That's easy - treat it like a wooden pony and straddle that thing.

For the details on this trade, in more professional terms as well, check out Brad Zigler's article for Hard Assets Investor:

So what's an investor to do? Well, you can certainly sit tight and wait. But if you do, you'd be passing up an opportunity the market doesn't hand out every day—cheap volatility premiums.

Option traders know all about volatility: It's one of the primary drivers of option costs. When volatility contracts, as tends to happen in range-bound markets, option prices soften. So much so, in fact, that the purchase of option straddles and strangles becomes attractive.

A straddle is a combination of a put and a call on the same asset, each sharing the same expiration date and exercise price. A strangle is similar, but the options' strike prices are different.


The potential risk here, at least IMHO, is if the next potential wave of deflation finally comes to fruition, taking down everything, gold included.

But if you believe that gold will be rangebound for a bit here, straddles are definitely an interesting potential play.

And here's a VERY interesting chart that Brad posted in his piece - it shows another reason some smart money is wary of gold at these prices - because managed money is heavily in gold right now, which often indicates a shorter term top in price:

Chart courtesy of Hard Assets Investor.

Gold has had a heckuva run, it could easily trade sideways, or even pull back sharply, and still be within the confines of a larger bull market. Nothing goes straight up or down - trade accordingly!


Why Richard Russell is Very Worried About the Bond Market

Richard Russell thinks the bond market may be saying ENOUGH with the quantitative easing, reports The Daily Crux.

From his Dow Theory Letters:

The bond market is now very close to saying, "We've had enough."

... Many older subscribers probably remember my lifelong emphasis on the POWER of COMPOUNDING. But what of the power of negative compounding on debt? I think we are about to find out.

The power of negative compounding will be brutal. The cost of carrying the world's debt (including the US national debt) will be devastating. It will be highly deflationary and it will crush everything in its path.


I don't subscribe to Russell, but I do try to follow his writings and thinking as best I can from the outside, and this is the first I've heard him mention deflation. Very interesting!

Here's what Russell had to say in early December about gold, the dollar, and the Fed's effort to re-inflate.


An Ominous Short-Term Chart

Anytime in history that the 12-month rate of change in the Dow Jones Industrial Average has topped 40%, there's generally been trouble ahead.

Guess what? The DJIA's 12-month ROC is above 40% right now!

Here's a great chart from Michael Panzner that you should check out:


The Magic of Obama's Healthcare Plan

Looks like I've got to eat some crow here - I'm on record as suggesting that Obama's Healthcare Plan would expedite the insolvency of the Federal Government.

Boy was I ever wrong!

Check out this hilarious video of Obama's magic healthcare math, where he rocks the stage in Ohio by speculating that insurance premiums could fall by up to - get this - 3,000%!



A Few More Links, In Case You Missed Them

My Current Positions and Market Outlook

The trend of all markets still appears to be up, but the risk appears to be predominantly to the downside. The only trend that appears to have changed for certain is that of the dollar, which is currently taking a breather after a multi-month rally.

The US dollar's trend is officially UP. It's well above it's 200-day moving average.
(Chart courtesy of StockCharts.com)

If the dollar is indeed the linchpin of the financial equation, then we'd expect the other markets to roll over one-by-one in turn here. We shall see if things play out this way.

(PS - Here's why I concur with folks who believe the dollar is the linchpin of the global financial markets).

Currently I am in wait and see mode, with no long or short futures positions.

Have a great week in the markets!

Friday, May 08, 2009

Anyone See $1 Trillon? The Fed's Looking for It

This video's a doozy - Rep. Alan Grayson asks the Federal Reserve Inspector General about the trillions of dollars lent or spent by the Federal Reserve and where it went, and the trillions of off balance sheet obligations.


Further reading:

Saturday, May 02, 2009

What is the Fed's "Stimulus Ratio"?

It's the magnitude of Fed manipulation with the money supply...so would it shock you to learn the stimulus ratio has been clocking historic highs over the past 12 months?

I'd recommend you check out this insightful article written by Paul Kluskowski, where he defines the stimulus ratio as the ratio of long-term rates to short-term rates.  According to Paul, the manipulation of this ratio, which basically composes the yield curve, is the means by which the Fed manipulates the monetary supply.

And it makes sense - the Fed has total control over short-term rates, but very little control over long-term rates.  And any control they can exert over long-term rates...such as, say, printing money to buy long-term US Treasuries to keep those rates low...can only go on for a limited amount of time.  Or so we believe.

Because banks borrow short and lend long, it's really easy for them to make money when short term rates are in the basement - as they are today.  Doesn't require a lot of brain cells when the deck is stacked in your favor like that.

Here's where it gets interesting - Paul says the stimulus ratio mostly fluctuated between 0.9 and 2.5 throughout most of the 20th century.  Anytime the ratio topped 1.15, it was fairly certain there would be a rally in the stock market.

Recently, this ratio peaked at 98 in November 2008!  And at the time of Paul's writing, the ratio still stands at 13!

Point being, we are clearly in uncharted waters economically, and all bets are off. 



Further recommended reading:

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Ben Bernanke: The Ultimate Contrarian Indicator

Looking for a contrarian indicator you can take to the bank?  Look no further than our faithful Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.  In this guest piece, the folks at Casey Research revisit Big Ben's Greatest Hits, while casting an eye towards investment opportunities that arise from taking the opposite of Ben's words at face value.

When Bernanke Says All Is Well, It’s Time to Duck and Cover
By the editors of Casey Research

“We’ve averted” the risk of a depression, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said this week. “Now the problem is to get the thing working properly again.”

Appearing on CBS network’s 60 Minutes, Bernanke told correspondent Scott Pelley that concerted efforts by the government likely averted a depression similar to the 1930s. He also stated the nation’s largest banks are solvent and that he doesn’t expect any of them to fail; and that the U.S. recession will come to an end “probably this year.”

Is this finally the light at the end of the tunnel for the U.S. economy?

We don’t want to appear as perpetual gloom-and-doomers, but fact is, when Bernanke tries to predict the future, he’s usually wrong.

Prediction: The subprime mess is grave but largely contained, Bernanke reassured the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago in a speech on March 15, 2007.

While rising delinquencies and foreclosures will continue to weigh heavily on the housing market, it will not cripple the U.S. economy, he said. “Given the fundamental factors in place that should support the demand for housing, we believe the effect of the troubles in the subprime sector on the broader housing market will likely be limited.”

Reality: The median price of a home sold in the U.S. fell to $170,300 in January 2009, down 26% from a year and a half earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors. This housing crash has spread pain more widely than any before it. Home prices fell about 30% during the Great Depression, according to calculations by Yale University economist Robert Shiller. But back then, the nation was less concentrated in urban centers, and much fewer Americans owned homes.

Other housing downturns in recent decades have been regional; this one is national. Prices in the fourth quarter of 2008 fell in nearly 90% of the top 150 metro areas, according to the Realtors group. And 5.4 million homeowners, about 12%, were in foreclosure or behind on mortgage payments at the end of last year. The Federal Reserve now estimates home prices could fall 18%-29% more by the end of 2010.

Prediction: “I expect there will be some failures” of smaller banks, said Bernanke in February 2008. “Among the largest banks, the capital ratios remain good and I don’t anticipate any serious problems of that sort among the large, internationally active banks that make up a very substantial part of our banking system

Reality: IndyMac Bank failed in July 2008, with $32 billion in assets. Washington Mutual failed in September 2008, the largest bank failure in history with $307 billion in assets. Wachovia was sold to Wells Fargo in October 2008, amid concerns about its financial health, and Citigroup still scrambles to raise cash from both the government and private sources.

Fortunately for Bernanke, and unlike us at Casey Research, he doesn’t make a living by being right about the future. If he did, we strongly suspect that by this time, he would find himself without subscribers.

Thus, it is a mystery to us why the mainstream media still seem to eagerly soak up his every word, much like a devout Catholic would absorb a papal ex cathedra proclamation. But until the last American has woken up to Bernanke’s fallibility, that likely won’t change.

In the meantime, we recommend using the Fed chair’s economic outlooks as a contrarian indicator – if he says the market looks good, run for cover as fast as you can.

***

Bernanke may be wrong more often than not and still keep his job – we at Casey Research cannot afford that luxury. Our subscribers depend on us researching, correctly analyzing, and predicting market currents and emerging trends… which also includes the movements and changing policy decisions of Big Politics.

Our fresh-off-the-presses, FREE special report Obama’s Newer Deal, Part 2 tells you all about the president’s Stimulus Plan, its impact on and implications for your personal life and finances. Don’t miss it – click here now!

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Dollar Hammered After Fed Announces It Will (Actually) Print Money

Yesterday, the US Federal Reserve announced it will buy up to $300 billion of US long-term Treasury securities over the next 3 months.

Where will the Fed get that money?  It will essentially create it out of thin air - also known as "printing money."

Shockingly the markets did not like this announcement from the Fed with respect to the dollar - apparently traders fear that by printing new dollars, each existing dollar in circulation will decrease in value.  Check out these moves just from the past 24 hours in the dollar and gold:

The dollar gets taken to the woodshed.

As traders flock to a form of money that can't be printed.

In a prescient guest article last December, Bud Conrad stated his belief that The Fed would ultimately opt for inflationary policies, rather than risk deflation.  

But the longer-term expectation is that Bernanke’s assertion – an assertion now backed up by action – that the government can and will print new money to any extent needed is the more important force.

Further Reading: Battle of the Flations, by Bud Conrad



Saturday, January 31, 2009

The Scary Truth Behind the Government Bailouts

How effective have the bailouts been to date? Not very. In fact, I think that because of them, we're screwed!

In this exclusive piece,
Casey Research editors Doug Hornig and Bud Conrad break down the gory details of Fed's current predicament - and it's a doozy.
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Uncharted Waters

By Editors Doug Hornig and Bud Conrad, The Casey Report

These are uncharted waters, indeed. The shenanigans being foisted upon us by Washington are unprecedented at least since World War II, and probably ever. There is so much complexity, if not sheer trickery, going on that it becomes increasingly difficult to make any sense of what’s happening, much less what the net effect is going to be.

Nevertheless, we must try.

As always, the first line of inquiry should be directed at the data, for the raw numbers tell us things that our politicians will reveal only reluctantly, if at all.

Let’s first take a look at what didn’t happen: Casey Research Chief Economist Bud Conrad has been scrunching the numbers to distill the bigger picture. Over the past four months, American banks have received massive amounts of bailout money, ostensibly to unfreeze the credit market and enable the banks to lend money again. That it didn’t work is obvious from a couple of charts. Here’s Bud’s first chart.


Note that banks’ cash assets rose by over a half-trillion dollars in just two and a half months. That’s primarily the money (ours) that was handed over to them via the Federal Reserve. Did it go to a socially useful purpose? Mmmm… no. In actuality, we got scammed.

Here’s how the scam operated: the Treasury borrowed our dollars via the sale of Treasury notes and deposited the cash at the Fed. The Fed used the money to relieve banks of their most toxic liabilities. But instead of lending it, the banks simply bought more Treasuries, thereby polishing up their balance sheets. This is made starkly evident by Bud’s second chart, where you can see that cash was being hoarded even as lending declined.


The net result of this asset shuffling is that the Treasury (that’s us) incurred more debt, the Fed absorbed all manner of toxic waste for which it may not get 10 cents on the dollar, and the banks wound up with many more bucks and much less junk, leaving them sitting pretty and chuckling all the way to… well, to the bank.

These were not small-potatoes moves, either. Check out Chart 3 below.


That bears repeating. The Treasury Department, on our behalf, nicked us for a cool trillion in three months. Never been done before.

And remember, over the same period, the Fed was bloating its balance sheet with financial garbage to the same trillion-dollar tune. Chart 4 shows the path of the reverse meteor.


As badly as it’s behaved at times, the Fed hasn’t done anything remotely like this in all its checkered 95-year history.

What’s our point? Simply this: delicate financial balances are quickly falling into imbalance. Responses of gargantuan size have merely served to keep the system from collapsing and have barely begun to improve it. Thus, the situation is not yet stabilized. There will be new surprise problems, and bigger responses, for the foreseeable future. Of that we can be certain. And collectively, all the government’s responses will inevitably have a negative effect on the value of the U.S. dollar.

With all these momentous forces at play, it’s understandable that you would feel small and powerless. Obviously, you can’t fight City Hall. But are there ways to play along with it? Is it possible to survive, and even prosper, while the economy heads for hell in a handbasket?

Yes… but you must look behind the headlines, learn to follow locked-in trends, and develop the foresight to invest counter to what the herd may be doing. The Casey Report brings you opportunities to accomplish just that.

In these times of crisis and extremely volatile markets, the trend can truly be your friend… if you recognize it in time to profit while the investing masses are still oblivious. Month after month, The Casey Report scrutinizes and analyzes emerging trends – a strategy that has been providing our subscribers with double- and triple-digit returns. Learn more here.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Weekly Futures Positions Review - December 14, 2008

Top posts from the past week:

A review of my futures trades from the previous week:
Existing positions I've got:
  • None!

My wish list...and it looks like these commodities are at least starting to form a bottom, at last:
  • Sugar
  • Coffee
  • Cotton
  • Natural Gas
  • Silver
  • Crude Oil
  • Wheat
  • Corn

Account Balances
Current Cash Balance $49,196.88
Open Trade Equity $0.00
Total Equity $49,196.88
Long Option Value $0.00
Short Option Value $0.00
Net Liquidating Value $49,196.88

Cashed out: $20,000.00
Total value: $69,196.88
Weekly return: -2.7%
YTD return: -10.2%

***"Cash out" mostly means taxes, but lately I've also been using it for living expenses, and also to finance a cool new time management software startup that is starting to lift off.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Bud Conrad Radio Interview on Gold, The Fed, and Oil

Bud Conrad, Chief Economist at Casey Research, voices his opinion on Gold, the Fed using borrowed money from the Treasury, and Oil as a limited resource.

"There's not enough gold for everybody."

http://www.bizradio.org/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/december/wss-dec11c.mp3

http://www.bizradio.org/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/december/wss-dec11d.mp3


The Fed Is - Finally - Starting to Create Money From Thin Air

According to Tom Dyson, the Federal Reserve has finally started to create money out of thin air.

Then, last week, it took a "quantum leap," according to George Goncalves, the chief Treasury and agency strategist at Morgan Stanley.

Instead of swapping assets in the banking system, the Fed started buying them. The Fed bought $5 billion of Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, and Federal Home Loan Bank corporate debt. The New York Fed's website says the purchases are being "financed through the creation of additional bank reserves." The Fed has finally started to create money out of thin air.

In other words, to pay for its purchases, the Fed opened new bank accounts for its commercial bank customers, struck a couple of computer keys, and filled the accounts with money. The Fed hopes the banks lend this money out. If they do, it will add credit to the marketplace... That's inflation.

Consumer Credit Crisis: The Next Shoe to Drop

The Credit Crunch, Close Up and Personal
By Olivier Garret – CEO
Casey Research, The Casey Report

Within the last year, the true extent of the real estate debacle and ensuing credit crisis in the United States has become blatantly obvious.

But now there is a new phenomenon rearing its ugly head: a credit crisis of the individual that is hitting a large number of Americans straight in the pocketbook. The reason: credit providers have started to batten down the hatches.

According to a November report by the Federal Reserve, nearly 60% of banks severely tightened their lending standards on credit card loans and 65% on other consumer loans in the last three months. As unemployment and delinquency rates go up and lenders are trying to minimize their risk, the average American all of a sudden finds himself cash strapped… this at a time when home equity has dried up, 401(k)s and IRAs are losing value by the day, and many common stocks are barely worth the paper they’re printed on.

“We’ve been hearing about the liquidity crisis affecting banks for quite a while,” Joe Ridout, spokesman for the advocacy group Consumer Action, told the Washington Post. “Now we’re seeing it transform into a crisis affecting people’s personal finances as well. The next wave of the financial crisis may well be a credit-card-related crisis.”

Credit card companies are indeed clamping down hard on customers. Many Americans may have noticed that while their mailbox used to burst with junk mail of the “You’re Pre-Approved!” sort, these days the influx has slowed down to a dribble. That’s no coincidence – credit card direct mail offers in the third quarter of 2008 have seen a 28% drop year-over year as Visa, AmEx & Co. are struggling to cope with a tidal wave of defaults.

Moody’s Investors Service reported that charge-off rates rose 48% in August compared to the same month last year, the 20th consecutive year-over-year increase. This number is expected to go even higher in 2009, potentially exceeding the charge-off rates during past recessions.

Thus, credit card members are increasingly coming under scrutiny – and not just those in the subprime category. Customers with a credit score of 700, who were deemed “most creditworthy” just a year ago are not anymore. According to cardratings.com, 730 is the new 700.

The palette of “risk factors” has also broadened. Aside from late bill and mortgage payments, now location, profession, and even shopping behavior are considered. If you live in a high-foreclosure area, work in the real estate, auto, or construction business, and buy your household necessities at Wal-Mart, you’re likely on the target list.

One of the measures credit card issuers have devised to reduce risk is slashing credit limits in half. 60% of banks lowered the credit ceiling for existing nonprime and 20% for prime customers. And, as a testament that the intended “trickle-down effect” of the Fed’s massive rate cuts didn’t work at all, many companies have kept their interest rates at the same level or even raised them by two or three percentage points. Late fees, too, have been increased.

This tightening of credit translates directly to people’s shopping habits. While Black Friday weekend brought an overall growth of 0.9% in sales from last year, retail sales data show that that wasn’t enough to save the month of November. The MasterCard SpendingPulse reading noted that electronics and appliance sales dropped by 25% in November, luxury goods by 24%, and sales at clothing and department stores by 20%. Foot traffic decreased by 19% from 2007, meaning shoppers visited fewer stores.

C. Britt Beemer, CEO and founder of America’s Research Group, who has correctly predicted percentage changes in Christmas retail sales for 16 of the last 17 years, published his first negative forecast (of -1%) in 23 years, calling the 2008 Christmas shopping season a “perfect storm” for retailers.

Even as the average American is battening down the hatches and reining in consumption, the Federal Reserve seems to be going the opposite way, judging from the $700 billion bailout package that has – literally within weeks – ballooned into an estimated $8.5 trillion colossus. But despite throwing fistfuls of money at the problem, says Bud Conrad, Casey Research chief economist and editor of The Casey Report, “all the king’s horses and all the king’s men haven’t been able to put Humpty back together again.”

We don’t know whether the Humpty Dumpty economy can be saved… what we do know, though, is that every crisis holds danger and opportunity. By making the trend your friend instead of swimming against the stream, you can preserve your assets and profit handsomely, especially in highly volatile environments like the one we are seeing now. To learn more about how to generate double- and triple-digit returns in a crisis, click here.

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