Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The Dollar has no future


During testimony on his nomination, when Secretary of the Treasury Geithner was asked about errors made in the Great Depression, he replied:

There were two:
1. Monetary stimulation ended too soon.
2. Heed was not taken of the dollar foreign exchange position.

Think hard on the implications of both these points.

The dollar rose into the Great Depression, acting as a break on American exports as protectionism was rising everywhere. You can be sure the present dollar rally as a place of refuge has no meaningful future.

You can be sure that Monty's estimate of $20 trillion in total monetary and fiscal stimulation is conservative.
The New Currency Trade: Gold Vs. All Else
Posted by David Gaffen
February 17, 2009, 3:36 pm

GoldInvestors have taken to terming the flight from risky assets into gold a new currency trade. The ongoing concern about the enormous task of getting the world's banks on track - bedeviling investors across the globe - has produced a safe-haven trade into the likes of Treasurys and the dollar. However, the dollar's success is, in some ways, a mirage, improving only because other major world currencies have been dreadful.

The dollar has strengthened in the last couple of months, along with gold, which is an odd occurrence, and speaks to the dearth of worthy investments around the world. But the shift to gold has picked up as "everyone is trying to devalue their own currency against everyone else," says Sean Peche, manager at BlueAlpha Investment Advisory Limited in London.

That explains the dollar's strength of late, one founded on risk aversion. Since the beginning of the year, the dollar has gained 9.5% against the euro and 2.3% against the pound, while gold, in dollar terms, is up 9.4%. The yellow metal closed up $25.50 to $967 an ounce Tuesday, highest since July 17, 2008. "Gold is telling you the dollar's rally is not going to continue," says Lance Lewis, fund manager at Lewis Capital Partners.

He adds that "other countries have a better ability to finance what they need," in reference to China and a few others that are creditor nations (others owe them money), rather than the U.S., a debtor nation.
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