Dollar Down! Good for the Federal Reserve!
Save your greenbacks, boys, the U.S. government will rise again! Maybe. Tom Petruno in the Los Angeles Times on the one-hand, on-the-other-hand on the latest dollar news (via BND.com):
the dollar isn't collapsing - not yet, anyway. It is, however, weak and getting weaker…..
A closely watched index of the buck's value against six other major currencies, including the euro and the yen, fell last week to its lowest level since August 2008.
The DXY index, so named for its ticker symbol, fell for a fourth straight week to end Friday just above 74, making a loss of more than 6 percent for the year to date. If the index slides 3.7 percent from there, it would drop through its all-time low of 71.33 reached in April 2008.
Hooray…right? Well, a falling dollars all right, if you like high-exporting big corporations:
The benefits of a declining dollar showed up last week in first-quarter earnings reports from multinational companies such as IBM Corp., Intel Corp., United Technologies Corp., Johnson & Johnson and Honeywell International Inc. All reported results above expectations, thanks to robust global demand for their goods and services.
And good for the Federal Reserve, as at least one of its policies achieves its goal, apparently.
Downward pressure on the dollar has been one objective of the Federal Reserve's easy-credit policy, as it holds short-term interest rates near zero and pumps money into the financial system via purchases of Treasury securities. The market sets currency values based on a number of variables, but a crucial one is a country's interest-rate levels: If higher rates attract more capital to a currency, its value should rise.
While the Fed keeps credit loose, central banks in Europe, China, India, Brazil and elsewhere around the globe have been raising interest rates to combat energy and food inflation.
And it's been good for commodity speculators, as any anticipation of monetarapocalypse ought to be:
Global investors have another dollar-related incentive to pile into commodities: If they expect that the U.S. won't rein in its record budget deficits and that Treasury borrowing will continue to mushroom, hard assets become a potential hedge against fiscal calamity that could drive interest rates sky high.
And in what all decent folk would assure you is completely unrelated news, gold at $1507 an ounce; silver at 2 cents below $47 an ounce.
Peter Suderman from earlier on the failure side of current Federal Reserve policy.
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To be completely fair to Timmay and Benny, I think they know that we have accumulated an insupportable national debt, and that it will continue to accumulate into the future, and that a real no-fooling default would be a neutron bomb over our economy and society.
So, since no one else is going to solve our debt problem (yeah, I'm looking at you, Congress), they're doing the only thing they can to avoid a full-on, balls-out collapse:
Trying to engineer a controlled decline of the dollar, so we can pay off an otherwise unpayable debt with devalued paper.
Much pain is inevitable, given our debt problem. But if they can actually pull off a controlled decline, and (another miracle) the federal budget gets under control, then we may get less pain that just smacking into the wall at Mach 3.
if they can actually pull off a controlled decline, and (another miracle) the federal budget gets under control
Looking forward to Dr. Bernanke's press conference: "Dr. Bernanke, exactly how do you and Mr. Geithner plan to pull off a controlled decline?"
What would a controlled decline look like? USA during the Bretton Woods periods (minus the low rates of personal debt, nearly full employment, affordable housing, balanced budgets, rapid GDP growth and beautiful cars, of course)?
It's possible. Confederate money is now worth $.80-$4 to the dollar.
It's sickening that we could solve this problem with a little effort and a little acceptance of reality, but, instead, we're going to wait until it becomes a true disaster.
"Never let a disaster go to waste."
Yes, who will get to rule over the pile of rubble?
I have no doubt they'll be people squabbling over it.
I'm also really starting to understand the Chinese curse - "may you live in interesting times."
palladium, platinum down today. Deflationary collapse in the next few months, then meso-inflation.
I wouldn't be too worried about deflation anytime soon.
Even Milton Friedman late in life stopped relying on the monetary base as a reliable indicator of inflation. MV=PY and velocity is most certainly not constant.
Posting that chart is worthless.
DOOM!!
short silver and short banks
Actually, shorting silver might not be a bad short-term trade.
Be careful, though. The silver traders have been wading through the blood of the shorts for the last several weeks, although today gives the shorts some respite.
So. How long until the dollar crash is blamed on speculators, with all their dismal predictions becoming self-fulfilling?
huhuuuuu
Any comparison of our financial situation and a mushroom cloud makes me want to panic in a big, big way.
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