Showing posts with label US dollar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US dollar. Show all posts

Friday 5 November 2010

High unemployment in Fed cross-hairs


November 5, 2010 - 7:06AM
    The United States faces the prospect of high unemployment for some time as the Federal Reserve embarks on a risky and unproven course to bring back solid economic growth.
    All eyes will be on the October labour market report on Friday, expected to show a dip in job creation and an unemployment rate stuck at 9.6 per cent for the third consecutive month.
    The Federal Reserve announced on Wednesday it would inject an additional $US600 billion ($A598.12 billion) into the struggling economy, through the purchase of new Treasury debt from financial institutions at a rate of around $US75 billion ($A74.76 billion) a month.
    Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said the extraordinary action was necessary because the central bank has a duty to help promote increased employment and sustain price stability.
    Though the current low level of inflation was "generally good" it poses the risk of morphing into deflation, a dangerous cycle of falling prices and wages, Bernanke said in an opinion article published Thursday in the Washington Post.
    But it was the suffering job market that spurred the stimulus move, known as "quantitative easing."
    Bernanke said that in the panel's review of economic conditions, "we could hardly be satisfied."
    "Unfortunately, the job market remains quite weak; the national unemployment rate is nearly 10 per cent, a large number of people can find only part-time work, and a substantial fraction of the unemployed have been out of work six months or longer," he said.
    "The heavy costs of unemployment include intense strains on family finances, more foreclosures and the loss of job skills."
    The Fed action came a day after Tuesday's nationwide congressional and local elections that handed big victories to Republicans, who have called for less government interference in the US economy.
    Republicans won control of the House of Representatives and whittled the majority of President Barack Obama's Democrats in the Senate.
    At the top of voters' complaints was persistently high unemployment more than a year after the recession officially ended, along with massive federal spending to rescue the economy from recession that has produced record deficits.
    The government's weekly snapshot on unemployment trends reinforced the picture of a depressed labour market treading water.
    Initial unemployment claims rose more than expected in the week ending October 30, up 4.6 per cent from the prior week, the Labor Department reported.
    "Unfortunately, there is nothing in the data that suggests the employment sector is on the cusp of entering a prolonged hiring expansion.
    "Instead, the stability suggests that employment growth is going to be slow and sluggish for the foreseeable future," said Jeffrey Rosen at Briefing Research.
    Andrew Gledhill at Moody's Analytics noted that businesses remained anxious about economic conditions and were being cautious about payroll decisions, while layoffs were still climbing at a rate consistent with minimal job growth.
    "The stalled labour market will not significantly break out of this trend until the second half of next year," Gledhill said.
    "Even once widespread hiring resumes, it will take considerable job creation to restore employment to its pre-recession level; we forecast that won't occur until 2013."
    AFP

    http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/high-unemployment-in-fed-crosshairs-20101105-17g4d.html

    The Fed turns on printing press: The Implications

    The Fed turns on printing press
    Sewell Chan, Washington
    November 5, 2010

    IN ITS latest move to help the economy, the Federal Reserve is about to restart its monetary printing press - or rather, the electronic equivalent.

    The Fed announced that it intended to buy $US600 billion in long-term Treasury securities through June. It also signalled that it could make more purchases after that if unemployment remained too high and inflation too low.

    The Fed is prohibited under law from directly lending to the Treasury Department, which issues government debt. So the Fed buys government securities on the open market from ''primary dealers'', a network of 18 institutions, including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, that constantly trade in such securities.

    While monetary policy is set at the Fed's headquarters in Washington, it is carried out in Lower Manhattan, at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which buys and sells Treasury securities and other assets on the Fed's behalf.

    In typical recessions, when the Fed pumps money into the economy, it buys assets, like government bonds, and creates an equivalent amount in liabilities - reserve deposits that commercial banks keep at the Fed. Those deposits, which now exceed $US1 trillion, along with currency in circulation, now $US961.4 billion, make up what economists call the monetary base - in essence, the raw material from which money is created and made available to consumers and businesses.

    If banks were quickly start quickly using the reserves to make loans, the supply of money, now $US8.7 trillion by one estimate, could grow rapidly and lead to inflation even as the amount of reserves remained constant.

    The supply of money includes not just currency, but also things like bank deposits, savings accounts and money market funds.

    For now, that seems highly unlikely. Banks say there is not much demand for loans.

    NEW YORK TIMES

    Thursday 4 November 2010

    Fed's $600bn gamble risks throwing away America's biggest asset

    Fed's $600bn gamble risks throwing away America's biggest asset


    Apparently, there's been an election in the US. The BBC tells us that America's wholly unsurprising verdict on the past two years is frightfully important and signals the end of the Obama dream, whatever that may have been; it was never entirely clear.


    The Fed is taking a massive gamble with America's long term future by blindly pursuing further monetary stimulus
    The Fed is taking a massive gamble with America's long term future by blindly pursuing further monetary stimulus Photo: EPA
    Barely able to disguise his horror at the result, Mark Mardell, the Beeb's North America editor, solemnly pronounced that the hope Obama raised when elected president had turned out to be "too audacious for the times".
    It didn't seem to occur to him that Obama's drubbing was not so much a case of haplessly falling victim to economic circumstance but was in fact largely down to incoherent legislative experiment, blind disregard for the deficit and chronic mishandling of the economy. Americans had reasonably expected better.
    Obama's punishment will make little if any difference to the mess the US economy finds itself in and in any case is something of a sideshow against the latest high risk policy initiative the Federal Reserve is visiting on an already battered nation. The Hill can't act, but the Fed still stands ready and willing at the roulette wheel.
    The fresh $600bn (£372bn) infusion of quantitative easing announced on Wednesdaymay or may not provide a lift for beleaguered domestic demand – both Goldman Sachs and HSBC have said much more is needed to escape a real or imagined liquidity trap – but one thing it certainly does do is further debauch the currency. Never before has dollar hegemony been so much under threat.
    By flooding the world economy with yet more freshly minted dollars, America further undermines faith in the greenback as an internationally reliable store of value and is thereby squandering an economic and geo-political asset of huge importance to the nation's history.
    The dollar's reserve currency status means that America can borrow at will in its own currency from the rest of the world, and at favourable rates to boot. This privilege is being recklessly thrown away. Every time the Fed prints more dollars to fight the domestic recession, it further devalues that debt. The lenders are understandably getting restless.
    As is now becoming steadily more apparent, dollar hegemony was a major underlying cause of the crisis, for it allowed America to go on an unrestrained borrowing binge; the developing world is ever more minded to think its demise part of the solution.
    The Fed is taking a massive gamble with America's long term future by blindly pursuing further monetary stimulus; it may take time, but the dollar's all powerful reign on the world stage is drawing to a close.
    And they wonder why US business remains in a state of paralysed shock. Policy seems hell bent on destruction.
    In Obama's defence, it is usually said that the economic legacy he inherited was so poisonous that it was never likely to be easily fixed, and there is no doubt much truth in this contention.
    But rather than focusing like a lazer on the economic catastrophe unfolding before him, Obama instead embarked on a wildly ambitious, disruptive and divisive legislative programme that has succeeded only in heaping further uncertainty on already damaged economic confidence.
    If ever more mountainous public debt were not deterrent enough to investment and trade, the clutter of futile reform emerging from the White House would have frightened even the most loyal of American investors into inaction.
    Stripped of his political authority, Mr Obama can only look hopelessly on as the newly enthused "Reds" suck the lifeblood out of health and financial reform. Hard won at near fatal political and economic cost, much of the president's legislative programme may end up neutered to death.
    A Republican House cannot overturn these bills, which have already been passed into law, but it can render them toothless by influencing the fine print and more importantly, refusing to fund them. "Defunding" Obama's legislation is readily justified in pursuit of the small state Republicans aspire to.
    Unfortunately, the Republican opposition seems as bereft of a credible plan to put public debt back on a sustainable footing as the White House. The political stalemate makes it most unlikely one will be found any time soon. Any long term fix requires a combination of tax rises, pension and medicare reform. There's no cross party support for any of these things.
    The political class has no strategy for rolling back debt in a growth friendly way, while the blunt instrument of ultra loose monetary policy has called into question the dollar's international standing and therefore the nation's ability to refinance itself.
    Larry Summers – who departs as the President's economic adviser in January – puts it like this: "For how much longer", he asks, "can the world's top borrower carry on being the world's top power?" It's a good question.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeremy-warner/8108660/Feds-600bn-gamble-risks-throwing-away-Americas-biggest-asset.html

    Fed spends big to fight deflation



    Stuart Washington
    November 4, 2010 - 9:43AM
      Quantitative easing barely registered on world markets but the message from the US Federal Reserve was heard throughout the world: it would use every measure possible to ward off deflation.
      The move to support US asset prices through printing money served to slightly bolster already-high equity markets and pushed the Australian dollar to trade above parity with the US dollar for most of the morning.
      George Tharenou, an economist with investment bank UBS, said the Fed’s announcement overnight of $US600 billion ($600 billion) in treasury purchases was combined with a commitment to continue buying troubled mortgage securities, bringing the total value of the package close to $US1.1 trillion.
      The second round of quantitative easing, or QEII, adds to $US1.7 billion in unconventional measures it launched after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.
      Mr Tharenou said the Fed was continuing action in an environment in which it could not cut already low official interest rates.
      ‘‘Whether or not the Fed can actually stop deflation is a matter of debate (but) I think the Fed is taking the best possible action it can,’’ Mr Tharenou said.
      Andrew Pease, the chief investment strategist for fund manager Russell Investments, said the Federal Reserve had highlighted its commitment to restoring inflation and warding off deflation, with early signs being positive.
      ‘‘It’s a big package,’’ he said. ‘‘The question is what impact is it going to have. Is it going to be pushing on a string or is it going to do something? My guess is its going to reinforce positive price expectations.’’
      Mr Pease said of deflation, which occurred in Japan after its own debt crisis in 1990: ‘‘People don’t spend, businesses can’t make profits ... there’s a whole lot of problems when an economy falls into deflation.’’
      Mark Reade, a director of credit strategy for investment bank Citi, said the lack of market reaction was due to the package being broadly in line with expectations.
      ‘‘The Fed reiterated its commitment to keep rates low for an extended period of time,’’ he said. ‘‘That commitment is going to support asset prices.’’
      He said the willingness to support prices also supported people's willingness to continue to invest in riskier assets - including equity markets and the Australian dollar.
      On the news, the US dollar fell slightly below parity with the Australian dollar and remained there around midday.
      However, Mr Pease warned the Australian dollar was ‘‘overvalued by just about any metric’’.
      swashington@smh.com.au

      Thursday 21 October 2010

      Dollar plummets on report Fed plans to pump $500bn more into economy

      US stock markets recovered on Wednesday as the dollar fell across the board amid further signs the Federal Reserve will increase economic stimulus over the next six months.

      The dollar fell across the board on Wednesday amid signs the Federal Reserve will pump $500billion into the economy over the next six months.
      The dollar fell across the board on Wednesday amid signs the Federal Reserve will pump $500billion into the economy over the next six months. Photo: Getty Images
       
      The Fed’s Beige Book survey on regional business on Wednesday said the US economy expanded at a “modest pace” with little sign of acceleration last month, fueling speculation that central bankers could take further measures to support growth.
      Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Chicago-based Harris Private Bank told Bloomberg: “The Beige Book reiterates the call for quantitative easing. The economy is growing, just not accelerating. It remains to be seen what ultimately the Fed buying of bonds will do.”
      A report by consulting firm Medley Global Advisors suggested the Fed could start introducing the stimulus as soon as next month, spending $100bn a month on bond purchases. It is understood the Fed has an open-ended commitment to do more over the next 18 months. 

      The dollar plummeted to its lowest level against the euro since July, and a 15-year low against the yen. The euro was up 1.06pc at $1.395 and the dollar ended at 81.05 yen. 

      Camilla Sutton, Scotia Capital currency strategist, told Reuters: “We think the dollar will end the year weaker, but for now, we're probably going to be in a period of more subdued trading until we get a firmer idea of where policymakers are headed.” 

      Meanwhile stocks and commodities recovered after China’s surprise interest rate hike on Tuesday. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 129.35 points, or 1.18pc, at 11,107.97. The Standard and Poor’s 500 Index was up 11.78 points, or 1.05pc, at 1,178.17, with more than 20 companies scheduled to report third-quarter earnings today. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 20.44 points, or 0.84pc, at 2,457.39. 

      Key companies driving the market change included Boeing, whose shares rose 3.35pc after posting a quarterly profit that beat Wall Street’s expectations. Delta Air Lines and US Airways Group also surged after reporting strong profits. 

      Web portal Yahoo! rallied 2pc after announcing late on Tuesday that third-quarter net income had more than doubled to $396.1m, or 29 cents a share. 

      Wells Fargo, the largest US home lender, climbed 4.28pc after saying it was “eager” to return cash to shareholders following a record quarterly profit. 

      Lawrence Creatura, a New York-based fund manager at Federated Investors Inc, told Bloomberg: “We’ve had a variety of company earnings reports which indicate that the sky is not falling. Yesterday was a dark day for the market because of macro factors. Today it will be company management teams’ turn to lead the way again.”



      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/8077090/Dollar-plummets-on-report-Fed-plans-to-pump-500bn-more-into-economy.html

      Friday 15 October 2010

      US is currency war's 'tomb maker': economist

      October 14, 2010 - 1:27PM
       
      The United States fired the first shot in the currency war and the rest of the world must be on guard for its deliberate strategy to devalue the US dollar, a Chinese economist says.

      In a front-page commentary in the overseas edition of the People's Daily, Li Xiangyang today described the United States as the conflict's "first maker of tomb figures", a Chinese idiom that means someone who creates a bad precedent.

      Li, head of the Asia department at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a top government think tank, said continued intervention in currency markets by developed economies would deal a blow to global economic recovery.

      Chinese leaders have warned before that loose monetary policies in the United States pose a serious challenge for emerging markets, but rarely in such strident language, a window onto the rising anger in Beijing.

      "The dollar's depreciation may appear to be market-driven. In reality, it is a depreciation coloured by very strong, deliberate actions," Li said in the paper, which serves as the chief mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party.

      The overseas edition of the People's Daily is a smaller offshoot of the domestic edition.

      Li said the Federal Reserve's announcement that it might soon launch another round of quantitative easing by buying bonds and other financial assets had been the key factor pulling down the dollar.

      The motives were plain enough, he said.

      Without a weaker dollar, the United States would have no hope of meeting President Barack Obama's goal to double exports in five years, Li said.

      Dollar depreciation will also serve longer-term interests by generating inflation and easing the debt burden that the financial crisis dumped on the US government.

      "If the global financial crisis was about nationalising private debt, then in the post-crisis period the urgent need of the United States is to internationalise its national debt," he said.

      Reuters

      Wednesday 16 December 2009

      The Future of Gold, the Dollar, and More

      The Future of Gold, the Dollar, and More
      By Jennifer Schonberger
      December 11, 2009

      The dollar has had a huge effect on the stock market's moves this year. As the dollar has depreciated, many stocks have climbed higher; the logic is that a weaker dollar will boost the bottom lines of companies such as McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Aflac (NYSE: AFL), and Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), all of which derive a substantial portion of their revenues from abroad. The depreciating dollar has also boosted commodity prices and associated commodity stocks such as Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) or Newmont Mining (NYSE: NEM), serving to lift the market.

      As we approach 2010, what is the future of the dollar, and what are the implications for the asset prices that move inversely to it? What does it all mean when it comes to rebalancing the global economy and our economic relationship with China?

      For some insight on all this, I spoke with the man who had the foresight to call the financial meltdown in 2006: Peter Schiff, president and chief global strategist of Euro Pacific Capital and author of the newly updated book Crash Proof 2.0.

      Schiff believes the dollar is on a long-term downward trajectory, and that it could collapse if the government continues its current policies. That has implications for the stock market and gold, which he thinks could go to $5,000 an ounce.

      Here's an edited transcript of our conversation:

      Jennifer Schonberger: You've been bearish on the dollar for some time. Do you still stand by your bearish call for the greenback?

      Peter Schiff: Yes. I think the dollar is going to fall for years. It's not going to fall every day, or every week. There are going to be periods of time where the dollar rallies -- that's how markets work. Like a bull market climbs a wall of worry, a bear market follows a slope of hope. And there's always going to be hope that the dollar is going to recover, based on "maybe the Fed will raise interest rates," "maybe the U.S. economy will improve." But none of that is going to help the dollar. I think the dollar's fate has been sealed by the policies being pursued by the government and the Federal Reserve, and unfortunately it's a grim fate.

      Schonberger: If the dollar does remain weak, as you expect, what are the implications in terms of rebalancing the global economy?

      Schiff: Part of rebalancing the global economy is going to necessitate a lower dollar. The reason the global economy is so out of balance is because the dollar is artificially strong. It's been propped up by foreign central banks, and this enables Americans to import products they really can't afford. So if we want the global imbalances to be solved, it's going to require a lower dollar -- and that's what's going to happen. The longer foreign central banks artificially prop up the dollar, enabling Americans to keep spending borrowed money, the worse the global imbalances are going to get.

      Schonberger: You recently wrote, "While [China's] peg [to the U.S. dollar] certainly is responsible for much of the world's problems, its abandonment would cause severe hardship in the United States." Why?

      Schiff: It would cause hardship in the U.S., but it's something that we have to deal with sooner rather than later. By propping up the U.S. dollar and by carrying U.S.-dollar-denominated debt -- U.S. Treasuries, mortgage-backed securities -- the Chinese have kept interest rates and consumer prices artificially low. Americans have been able to benefit from that in the short run because their mortgages, car payments, and credit card payments are lower. They can go to stores like Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) and get those everyday low prices. But those prices aren't because of Wal-Mart, they're because of China.

      When the Chinese government removes all those subsidies, there's going to be an immediate benefit to the Chinese people, because they're suddenly going to see lower prices and more access to capital. In America, we're going to have the rug pulled out from under us ...

      Schonberger: The dollar is central to the relationships of other assets' prices. There is an inverse relationship between the dollar and equities. Do you expect that linkage (between the dollar and equities) to continue into next year?

      Schiff: Remember, there's an inverse relationship between the dollar and the price of everything, because as the dollar loses value, you need more dollars to buy anything. That's true for an ounce of gold, a barrel of oil, a bushel of wheat, or shares of stock. So you're always going to see prices rising as the dollar is falling. That's what's happening now.

      Now at some point, inflation could be so problematic that it drives interest rates up substantially, and as inflation gets bigger and bigger, the prices that tend to react more quickly will be things like food and energy. So if U.S. corporations suddenly see the cost of their long-term debt or short-term debt jump up and their customers don't have any money to buy their products because they're spending all their money on food, then ultimately you could see falling stock prices as the dollar is falling.

      Schonberger: Speaking of relationships, you expect gold to go to $5,000 an ounce, correct?

      Schiff: Yeah. It could go higher than that, but I think $5,000 is a reasonable expectation of where gold is headed over the course of the next several years, based on monetary and fiscal policy that is in place. Now if the government were to reverse course -- if they suddenly brought the budget into surplus, and if the Fed aggressively raised interest rates back up to a reasonable level, say 5%, 6%, or 7%, not just a quarter-point every few months -- then gold would probably not get to $5,000.

      But I don't think they're going to do that. Based on what the Fed is saying and doing, they're going to keep interest rates at practically nothing for as far as the eye can see. The U.S. economy is not recovering. All we're doing is spending stimulus money. The minute you take away the stimulus, all the GDP growth, all the jobs that are associated with that stimulus spending, will vanish. So they can't take the stimulus away without destroying the phony recovery. So if interest rates are going to stay low and they're going to keep printing money, the only thing that's going to happen is the dollar is going to fall until it all of a sudden collapses ...

      Schonberger: So then you're actually calling for a collapse in the dollar relatively soon?

      Schiff: Relatively soon, yes. Maybe not tomorrow, but I think it will happen soon. I think it will happen before Barack Obama leaves office even if he's only a one-termer. The first initial collapse in the dollar will be about a 50%, 60%, or 70% decline in dollar value. That collapse will usher in the new leg -- the much more severe leg of our economic downturn. Not only will we have a financial crisis, but we'll also have a currency and economic crisis.

      Hopefully that will be the tough medicine, the shock that finally causes Congress and the Fed to abandon its current policy and start doing the right thing. If it doesn't -- if they respond to that big drop in the dollar by creating more inflation, and if they fail to raise interest rates aggressively and withdraw liquidity -- then they will turn the dollar into confetti. Then we will have hyperinflation. If we go down that road, gold prices aren't just going to $5,000, they'll go to $50,000, or $500,000. I hope that cooler heads will prevail before we go down that road, but from this point that's still a possibility if we don't change policies.

      Strong words from Peter Schiff.

      Fool contributor Jennifer Schonberger does not own shares of any of the companies mentioned in this article. AFLAC is a Stock Advisor recommendation. Coke and Wal-Mart are Inside Value picks. Coke is also an Income Investor recommendation. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

      http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2009/12/11/the-future-of-gold-the-dollar-and-more.aspx

      Sunday 6 December 2009

      Gold price slumps as dollar strengthens

      Gold price slumps as dollar strengthens

      The gold price has hit a number of all-time highs in recent weeks
      The gold price has slumped after surprisingly good US unemployment data sent the US dollar higher, making gold a less attractive investment.

      Gold fell more than $65, or 5%, to $1,161.4 an ounce, down from a record high of $1,226.56 in early trading.

      After figures showed the US jobless rate falling, the dollar gained 2% on the Japanese yen and 1.3% on the euro.

      Gold has hit a number of record highs in recent weeks as the dollar weakened due to low interest rates in the US.

      'Teeth kicking'

      Both the dollar and gold are seen as safe investments, but investors have preferred gold in recent months due to the weak dollar.

      The US has said it will maintain low interest rates for some time, which makes the dollar less attractive.

      But the sudden strengthening of the dollar has now sent the gold price sharply lower.

      The dollar rose on the back of data which showed that the US unemployment rate fell in November to 10%, down from 10.2% in October.

      In all, 11,000 jobs went over the month - the smallest number since the recession began in December 2007. That was far fewer than the 130,000 expected by most analysts.

      The dollar rose against the euro, to $1.4889, and against the yen, to 90 yen.

      "So many people have piled into gold, so this pop in the dollar is freaking people out," said Matt Zeman at LaSalle Futures Group.

      "The dollar is rocking and gold is getting its teeth kicked in."

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8396542.stm

      Saturday 5 December 2009

      Markets and the US Dollar Turn Higher Sign in to Recommend

      Markets and the Dollar Turn Higher Sign in to Recommend

      By DAVID JOLLY
      Published: December 4, 2009

      Stocks and the dollar rose Friday and bonds fell after the release of a much-better-than-expected jobs report in the United States.

      The Dow Jones industrial average reached a high for the year, gaining 95 points, or 0.9 percent, in late morning trading. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index rose 1.1 percent, and the Nasdaq 1.5 percent.

      On the year, the Dow is up 19 percent while the S.&P. 500 is 23 pecent.

      The Labor Department said in Washington that the United States lost 11,000 jobs in November, less than a tenth of the roughly 125,000 job losses economists had been expecting. The unemployment rate improved to 10 percent from 10.2 percent in October.

      While companies are still shedding workers, the pace was the best since the recession began in December 2007, and suggested to some analysts that the economy is headed toward recovery.

      Jeffrey Saut, chief investment strategist for Raymond James, characterized the November job-loss number as “an outlier.”

      “There’s no doubt the recession is in the rear-view mirror,” he said, “but I wouldn’t be surprised to see the jobless rate ticking up again in the months ahead.”

      Unemployment, he added, is a lagging indicator, so investors who wait for the labor market to turn around have historically missed out on major market gains.

      Lawrence Glazer, managing partner at Mayflower Advisors in Boston, said would-be stock buyers remained somewhat cautious, despite the surprising data.

      “Investors are still seeing a divergence between Wall Street’s gains and Main Street’s malaise,” he said. “The market has been anticipating better data all along. The question hasn’t been ‘is the market pricing in a recovery,’ but ‘is the market pricing in too big of a recovery.’ ”

      Mr. Glazer said institutional investors had already begun to close positions and did not want to be reshuffling portfolios toward the end of the year, damping the effect of the positive surprise.

      In other economic news, the Commerce Department reported that orders to American factories unexpectedly rose 0.6 percent in October, which was better than the flat reading that economists had expected.

      In Europe, the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 index of euro zone heavyweights was trading 1.4 percent higher after the data, while the FTSE-100 index in London was up 0.7 percent. In Asian trading, the Tokyo benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average rose 0.5 percent. European markets had been down before the American jobs report was released.

      The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury rose one-tenth of a percentage point to 3.5 percent.

      The dollar rose against other major currencies. The euro fell to $1.4911 from $1.5053 Thursday, and the British pound fell to $1.6572 from $1.6540. The dollar rose to 89.81 yen from 88.26 yen.

      Spot gold fell 2.3 percent to $1,180.20 an ounce.

      http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/05/business/05markets.html?_r=1&ref=business

      Tuesday 17 November 2009

      Retail Investors Can Take A Worldly Approach To the Dollar

      Retail Investors Can Take A Worldly Approach To the Dollar
      Published: Wednesday, 28 Oct 2009 | 11:41 AM ET Text Size
      By: Chris Taylor,
      Special to CNBC.com

      If you’re getting a little queasy about the sagging U.S. dollars in your savings account, join the club.


      With deficits high and interest rates low, one potential outcome is high inflation, which would eat away at the value of the greenback.

      Now it seems banks are sharing the unease: They’re putting almost two-thirds of their new cash into the euro and the Japanese yen, according to Barclay’s Capital. Compare that to a decade ago, when it was the U.S. dollar that garnered two-thirds of that cash. Global reserve currency? Not so much.

      So what’s an investor to do about the shakiness of the dollar? Enter currency exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which let even casual investors put a little foreign spice in their cash holdings. There are now a total of 35 on the market, covering everything from the Indian rupee to the Brazilian real.

      Other People's Money

      “What currency ETFs provide are democratization,” says Bradley Kay, an ETF analyst with research firm Morningstar. “Previously foreign currencies were largely inaccessible to individuals, because of things like minimum investments. ETFs have opened that all up.”

      Complete Currency Coverage
      In fact they now hold more than $4.5 billion in assets, up $500 million in the third quarter of this year alone. The first currency ETF only opened at the end of 2005. Whereas currency trading used to be the province of institutions and private banks catering to the ultra-wealthy, any investor can now bet heavily on, say, the Chinese yuan or the Swedish krona.

      But that doesn’t mean you should put your life savings into foreign currencies, just because you can. When it might make the most sense for investors: If you have significant cash holdings, and want to hedge some of it against a potential fall of the greenback. With the U.S. government massively increasing its balance sheet, a spike in inflation in the next few years is a distinct possibility, which would eat away at the value of the dollar.


      In a worst-case scenario there could be a loss of faith among major debt-holders like China and Korea, who could decide to shift their central bank reserves to other currencies.

      It’s not so far-fetched: The dollar’s already slid to a 14-month low, partly thanks to such worries.

      “If you’re concerned about the dollar, by all means hold some of your cash in another currency,” says Morningstar’s Kay. “Or if you’re going to have major expenses abroad—like a big family trip, or you’re relocating to work in another country—you can fix those costs now, for the $8 cost of a brokerage fee.”

      Currencies, however, should not be a core, long-term holding for investors.

      “They belong in the trading-risk end of a portfolio,” says Joe Trevisani, chief market analyst for Saddle River, N.J.-based FX Solutions. “They’re not investments in the classic buy-and-hold sense.” Instead, speculative plays should be—as FX Solutions’ own disclaimer says—“conducted with risk capital you can afford to lose."

      Remember that big, bad currencies banks have been the undoing of major funds and banks over the years. Do Barings Bank and Nick Leeson ring a bell?

      Rules Of The Road

      A few caveats about currency investing. Remember that you’re buying cash, not asset-backed vehicles like stocks, bonds or real estate. As such, it’s a zero-sum game—other currencies have to fall, in order for your investment to rise—and appreciation potential is limited.

      And if it’s the U.S. dollar you’re worried about, you can reduce your exposure in other ways, such as buying stock in large multinational firms or broad international-equity funds, particularly small-caps, which are very tied to local currencies.

      For solid long-term bets, consider baskets of currencies to reduce your risk, suggests Morningstar’s Kay. Make a single bet like the Mexican peso, and you’re taking your chances.

      But buy a broad ETF, and you spread your risk appropriately. Consider the PowerShares DB US Dollar Bearish [UDN 28.63 0.13 (+0.46%) ], a basket of developed-market currencies dominated by the euro, or WisdomTree Dreyfus Emerging Currency [CEW 22.40 0.105 (+0.47%) ], a geographically-diversified collection of currencies in emerging-market economies.

      For investors looking for a more direct play, there are a number of online trading platforms. GAIN Capital's Forex.com, GFTForex.com, CMS Forex, for example, allow investors to open trading accounts. Minimum investments and other requirements vary, but one thing is always the same. Currency markets trade around the clock and are very liquid, so price swings can be fast and furious.

      Of course, the dollar’s slide isn’t guaranteed, since a double-dip world recession, or another international crisis—political or financial—could see investors flooding back to the relative safety of the greenback.

      “But it’s primarily the dollar’s weakness that is driving currency markets now,” says FX Solutions’ Trevisani. “This will continue until the Fed makes clear its intention to begin raising rates—and I don’t think that’s likely until the second half of 2010.”

      © 2009 CNBC.com

      http://www.cnbc.com/id/33289478

      Saturday 17 October 2009

      Dollar to Hit 50 Yen, Cease as Reserve, Sumitomo Says

      Dollar to Hit 50 Yen, Cease as Reserve, Sumitomo Says


      By Shigeki Nozawa

      Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar may drop to 50 yen next year and eventually lose its role as the global reserve currency, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.’s chief strategist said, citing trading patterns and a likely double dip in the U.S. economy.

      “The U.S. economy will deteriorate into 2011 as the effects of excess consumption and the financial bubble linger,” said Daisuke Uno at Sumitomo Mitsui, a unit of Japan’s third- biggest bank. “The dollar’s fall won’t stop until there’s a change to the global currency system.”

      The dollar last week dropped to the lowest in almost a year against the yen as record U.S. government borrowings and interest rates near zero sapped demand for the U.S. currency. The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, has fallen 15 percent from its peak this year to as low as 75.211 today, the lowest since August 2008.

      The gauge is about five points away from its record low in March 2008, and the dollar is 2.5 percent away from a 14-year low against the yen.

      “We can no longer stop the big wave of dollar weakness,” said Uno, who correctly predicted the dollar would fall under 100 yen and the Dow Jones Industrial Average would sink below 7,000 after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last year. If the U.S. currency breaks through record levels, “there will be no downside limit, and even coordinated intervention won’t work,” he said.

      China, India, Brazil and Russia this year called for a replacement to the dollar as the main reserve currency. Hossein Ghazavi, Iran’s deputy central bank chief, said on Sept. 13 the euro has overtaken the dollar as the main currency of Iran’s foreign reserves.

      Elliott Wave

      The greenback is heading for the trough of a super-cycle that started in August 1971, Uno said, referring to the Elliot Wave theory, which holds that market swings follow a predictable five-stage pattern of three steps forward, two steps back.

      The dollar is now at wave five of the 40-year cycle, Uno said. It dropped to 92 yen during wave one that ended in March 1973. The dollar will target 50 yen during the current wave, based on multiplying 92 with 0.764, a number in the Fibonacci sequence, and subtracting from the 123.17 yen level seen in the second quarter of 2007, according to Uno.

      The Elliot Wave was developed by accountant Ralph Nelson Elliott during the Great Depression. Wave sizes are often related by a series of numbers known as the Fibonacci sequence, pioneered by 13th century mathematician Leonardo Pisano, who discerned them from proportions found in nature.

      Uno said after the dollar loses its reserve currency status, the U.S., Europe and Asia will form separate economic blocs. The International Monetary Fund’s special drawing rights may be used as a temporary measure, and global currency trading will shrink in the long run, he said.

      To contact the reporter on this story: Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at snozawa1@bloomberg.net.

      Last Updated: October 15, 2009 03:34 EDT

      http://bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a_A5nqmw9Dq8

      Thursday 15 October 2009

      Investing In A Weakening Dollar Environment

      Investing In A Weakening Dollar Environment
      Posted: October 13, 2009 12:17PM by Ryan Barnes

      You've likely heard of this scenario mentioned in an ominous financial forecast: The U.S. dollar continues to lose value compared to other major world currencies, and any number of very bad things occur, spelling doom for our fragile economic recovery.

      But even though a low dollar world has a few deleterious side effects, it also brings benefits, and the latter can be profited on by investors who think ahead about where to place their assets. Today we'll discuss what makes the USD rise and fall, and where to position your investments to take advantage of a low dollar world.

      Background
      The U.S. Dollar Index is an exchange-traded instrument that measures the value of the USD against a basket of 6 major world currencies, including the Euro, Yen, British Pound and Canadian Dollar.

      In the past six months, the U.S. Dollar Index has fallen by roughly 13%. This is a continuation of a longer term trend that has seen USD Index fall by 46% since 2001.

      What Causes a Falling Dollar?
      There is no single bullet theory as to why the USD has fallen, but most professionals point to several ongoing events. First, the strength of the USD is largely determined by how willing global investors are to hold investments denominated in dollars versus other currencies. The USD is often noted as the "world's reserve currency," meaning that foreign governments around the world often choose to park a good chunk of their reserves in dollar assets like Treasury Bonds rather than holding them in their home currency.

      But if investors become skittish about the strength of the U.S. economy and our ability to pay our future bills (via Treasury interest), they will begin to shift assets away from the dollar. The rising budget deficit of the U.S. is one of many caution flags that is beginning to be noticed by global investors.

      Another reason why the dollar has weakened this decade is because interest rates have been historically very low. The 10-year Treasury Bond, a benchmark for global fixed income investors, has seen its lowest yields this decade since the 1960's. These low yields aren't much of an incentive for global investors to buy U.S. bonds.

      The Federal Reserve has had good reason to keep interest rates low; it was crucial in freeing up money flows in the face of a global recession. But as the economy stabilizes, look for the Fed to slowly begin to ratcheting up interest rates. As this happens, the U.S. dollar should begin to strengthen.

      What Investments to Hold in a Low-Dollar World?
      Commodities and other "hard" assets tend to do very well in a low dollar environment. The reason is twofold; hard assets are a safe haven when fiat currencies weaken, and most global commodities are priced in dollars. So foreign investors (whose currency has risen in value vs. the USD), can buy more with the same amount of money. This increases overall demand, leading to rising prices for things like gold, silver and oil. (For further reading, check out How to Invest in Commodities.)

      Companies that are based in the U.S. but conduct a lot of business overseas make great investments in a falling dollar world. The reasoning is simple; costs to pay workers and produce goods are paid in dollars (which are weak), but goods are sold in foreign currencies abroad. When those higher-valued foreign currencies are translated back to dollars for the purposes of accounting, the favorable exchange rate adds to profit margins.

      Investors can easily find out how much business a U.S. firm does overseas by reading the most recent annual report. Look for firms with greater than 40% of sales abroad, and having the bulk of factories and offices located in the U.S.

      USD Outlook
      The future strength of the dollar will largely depend on how well the U.S. government can control its budget deficit. The better the U.S. looks as a debt payer, the better the dollar will do. Use this as a guide to determine when it might be time to begin investing in dollar strength versus dollar weakness. (To learn more, check out What Fuels the National Debt?)

      And when it comes to the dollar, a little inflation can be a good thing. As our economy strengthens, some inflation should begin creeping back into the system. This will trigger the Fed to start raising interest rates, boosting the dollar along with Treasury yields. When this trend begins to occur, look to shift away from the investments outlined above.

      Parting Thoughts
      A low dollar world will have some bad side effects, like more expensive overseas travel and higher prices of imports like gas and electronics. But savvy investors can make up the pennies being squeezed elsewhere by profiting from the many companies and assets that are taking a low dollar environment all the way to the bank.

      http://financialedge.investopedia.com/financial-edge/1009/Where-To-Invest-In-A-Weakening-Dollar-Environment.aspx

      Sunday 11 October 2009

      Ringgit weakest in more than a year versus Aussie

      Ringgit weakest in more than a year versus Aussie

      Tags: Australian dollar | Azrul Azwar | Bank Islam Malaysia Bhd | Bank Negara Malaysia | Canada | New Zealand | Ringgit | Weakest level

      Written by Chong Jin Hun
      Thursday, 08 October 2009 11:00

      KUALA LUMPUR : The ringgit traded at its weakest level against a firmer Australian dollar in more than a year yesterday, after policymakers in Australia unexpectedly raised its key interest rate to 3.25% from 3%, prompting demand for the Australian dollar.

      Investors tend to park their money in countries with higher lending rates to capitalise on higher returns.

      The ringgit weakened as low as 3.0619 versus the Australian dollar at 5.10am yesterday before strengthening to 3.0432 at 10.16am. A day earlier, the ringgit was traded at 3.0587 against the Australian dollar, the weakest in 14 months since August 2008, compared to the 2.2824 level seen in February this year

      Economists said the surprise move by Australian lawmakers could result in similar initiatives among other commodity-based economies such as New Zealand and Canada.

      “Countries that may follow suit could be other commodity-based economies, “ Bank Islam Malaysia Bhd senior economist Azrul Azwar told The Edge Financial Daily yesterday.

      In Malaysia, while commodities like palm oil, and oil and gas, constitute a crucial component of the nation’s economy, Azrul said the country should not be regarded as a commodity-based entity.

      Meanwhile, an improving economic climate in Malaysia is expected to see a stronger a ringgit versus a weakening US dollar.

      Azrul said as recovery in the broader landscape was still tentative, a rapid appreciation of the ringgit might have a negative impact on the nation’s export competitiveness. However, a stronger ringgit could be one of the contributing factors in containing imported inflation.

      “With increasing signs of improving economic conditions in Malaysia, and expectation of a resumption of positive GDP (gross domestic product) growth by the fourth quarter of 2009, the way forward for the ringgit is to strengthen.
      “I think it is prudent to let market forces dictate the level of the ringgit but at the same time we should exercise an orderly and gradual strengthening of the ringgit,” he said.

      Bank Negara Malaysia had pegged the ringgit at 3.80 against the US dollar on Sept 2, 1998 during the Asian financial crisis then. The fixed-exchange rate policy was scrapped on July 21, 2005, and replaced by a managed-float system which allows the central bank to monitor the ringgit’s value against a basket of currencies.

      An interest rate hike in the US would trigger a sharp rebound in the US dollar. In its latest “Standard Chartered Global Focus” report, the bank said it did not foresee US policymakers initiating a rate hike throughout 2010.

      “We think this is unlikely. We also believe that the US and the UK will continue to run wide fiscal deficits through 2010 — far larger as a share of GDP than those in the EM (emerging-market) economies. This, combined with ultra-loose monetary policy, may put continued negative pressure on both currencies,” Standard Chartered said.


      This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, October 8, 2009.