Sunday, 18 January 2009

Gold is denominated in the US currency (Nov 2007 article)




Sterling hits $2.10 as dollar is dumped

By Richard Blackden

Last Updated: 1:09AM GMT 08 Nov 2007

China has $1.33 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves
Sterling has pushed through the $2.10 barrier for the first time in 26 years after the Chinese government indicated it is prepared to diversify some of its huge foreign-exchange reserves.
China threatens 'nuclear option' of dollar sales
Dollar crunch puts gold centre stage
Oil, gold and euro surge to records
The pound stormed to as high as $2.1021 in trading in London, a level not seen since the early Thatcher era, and many currency experts now predict it go higher despite signs that the UK economy is slowing.
The greenback's renewed weakness was sparked by comments from Cheng Siwei, vice chairman of China's National People's Congress, who suggested China will diversify some of its $1.33 trillion (£660bn) of foreign-exchange reserves.
Mr Siwei told a conference in Beijing: "We will favour stronger currencies over weaker ones, and will readjust accordingly."
Besides sterling, the dollar was down against 14 of the world's 16 biggest currencies this morning, hitting the lowest since the 1950s versus the Canadian dollar, reaching a new record against the euro and its weakest in more than 20 years against the Australian dollar.
Sterling's move higher comes a day before Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and the rest of the Monetary Policy Committee are due to give their latest decision on interest rates.
While the majority of economists expect interest rates to be left at 5.75pc, the surge in the currency is likely to put parts of the country's manufacturing industry under pressure.
The flight from the dollar is helping to fuel oil's assault on the $100-a-barrel mark and investors' appetite for gold, which is denominated in the US currency. The dollar was also hit yesterday by a report that the Fed's loan officer survey reported evidence of an incipient credit crunch across broad reaches of the US economy, with banks tightening lending standards on prime mortgages, auto debt and consumer loans.

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