Suitcase With $134 Billion Puts Dollar on Edge: William Pesek
Commentary by William Pesek
June 17 (Bloomberg) -- It’s a plot better suited for a John
Le Carre novel.
Two Japanese men are detained in Italy after allegedly
attempting to take $134 billion worth of U.S. bonds over the
border into Switzerland. Details are maddeningly sketchy, so
naturally the global rumor mill is kicking into high gear.
Are these would-be smugglers agents of Kim Jong Il stashing
North Korea’s cash in a Swiss vault? Bagmen for Nigerian
Internet scammers? Was the money meant for terrorists looking to
buy nuclear warheads? Is Japan dumping its dollars secretly? Are
the bonds real or counterfeit?
The implications of the securities being legitimate would
be bigger than investors may realize. At a minimum, it would
suggest that the U.S. risks losing control over its monetary
supply on a massive scale.
The trillions of dollars of debt the U.S. will issue in the
next couple of years needs buyers. Attracting them will require
making sure that existing ones aren’t losing faith in the U.S.’s
ability to control the dollar.
The dollar is, for better or worse, the core of our world
economy and it’s best to keep it stable. News that’s more
fitting for international spy novels than the financial pages
won’t help that effort. It is incumbent upon the U.S. Treasury
to get to the bottom of this tale and keep markets informed.
GDP Carriers
Think about it: These two guys were carrying the gross
domestic product of New Zealand or enough for three Beijing
Olympics. If economies were for sale, the men could buy Slovakia
and Croatia and have plenty left over for Mongolia or Cambodia.
Yes, they could have built vacation homes amidst Genghis Khan’s
Gobi Desert or the famed Temples of Angkor. Bernard Madoff who?
These men carrying bonds concealed in the bottom of their
luggage also would be the fourth-largest U.S. creditors. It
makes you wonder if some of the time Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner spends keeping the Chinese and Japanese invested in
dollars should be devoted to well-financed men crossing the
Italian-Swiss border.
This tale has gotten little attention in markets, perhaps
because of the absurdity of our times. The last year has been a
decidedly disorienting one for capitalists who once knew up from
down, red from black and risk from reward. It almost fits with
the surreal nature of today that a couple of travelers have more
U.S. debt than Brazil in a suitcase and, well, that’s life.
Clancy Bestseller
You can almost picture Tom Clancy sitting in his study
thinking: “Damn! Why didn’t I think of this yarn and novelize
it years ago?” He could have sprinkled in a Chinese angle, a
pinch of Russian intrigue, a dose of Pyongyang and a bit of
Taiwan-Strait tension into the mix. Presto, a sure bestseller.
Daniel Craig may be thinking this is a great story on which
to base the next James Bond flick. Perhaps Don Johnson could buy
the rights to this tale. In 2002, the “Miami Vice” star was
stopped by German customs officers as he was traveling in a car
carrying credit notes and other securities worth as much as $8
billion. Now he could claim it was all, uh, research.
When I first heard of the $134 billion story, I was tempted
to glance at my calendar to make sure it didn’t read April 1.
Let’s assume for a moment that these U.S. bonds are real.
That would make a mockery of Japanese Finance Minister Kaoru
Yosano’s “absolutely unshakable” confidence in the credibility
of the U.S. dollar. Yosano would have some explaining to do
about Japan’s $686 billion of U.S. debt if more of these
suitcase capers come to light.
‘Kennedy Bonds’
Counterfeit $100 bills are one thing; two guys with
undeclared bonds including 249 certificates worth $500 million
and 10 “Kennedy bonds” of $1 billion each is quite another.
The bust could be a boon for Italy. If the securities are
found to be genuine, the smugglers could be fined 40 percent of
the total value for attempting to take them out of the country.
Not a bad payday for a government grappling with a widening
budget deficit and rebuilding the town of L’Aquila, which was
destroyed by an earthquake in April.
It would be terrible news for the White House. Other than
the U.S., China or Japan, no other nation could theoretically
move those amounts. In the absence of clear explanations coming
from the Treasury, conspiracy theories are filling the void.
On his blog, the Market Ticker, Karl Denninger wonders if
the Treasury “has been surreptitiously issuing bonds to, say,
Japan, as a means of financing deficits that someone didn’t want
reported over the last, oh, say 10 or 20 years.” Adds
Denninger: “Let’s hope we get those answers, and this isn’t one
of those ‘funny things’ that just disappears into the night.”
This is still a story with far more questions than answers.
It’s odd, though, that it’s not garnering more media attention.
Interest is likely to grow. The last thing Geithner and Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke need right now is tens of billions
more of U.S. bonds -- or even high-quality fake ones -- suddenly
popping up around the globe.
(William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions
expressed are his own.)
To contact the writer of this column:
William Pesek in Tokyo at
wpesek@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: June 16, 2009 15:00 EDT