Gold, the Canadian dollar, the euro and the lowering of short-term interest rates does not bode well for the U.S. dollar. Or at least that is what conventional wisdom is saying. You will be hard pressed to find a financial TV show or publication saying anything positive about the greenback these days. Arguments are a plenty: the dollar is weak because the Fed added to much liquidity to U.S. economy in 2001 and 2002, the dollar is weak because of our huge trade and budget deficits, the dollar is weak because we are a people who are undisciplined and cannot save. The arguments go on and on. Someone in Barron's actually wrote that the dollar is weak because inflation is high. Outside of housing there does not seem to be a lot of price deflation, but taking the leap to suggest inflation is pervasive enough to cause the dollar to weaken is somewhat of a stretch.
As we have blogged a few times this past month, the U.S. dollar is weak because currency traders have a trend-is-your-friend mentality. They will lever up and follow that trend until they get spanked by central banks. Currency reversals are driven by Treasury secretaries working with central bankers to change the direction of a currency. Expect that to soon happen particularly with the U.S. dollar reversing against the euro. The seeds are already being sown to spank those currency traders good and to drive the U.S. dollar higher. The U.S. economy remains the place to be and the global leader in new business creation. Do not sell the dollar short, go long the greenback.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-08-2007 @ 2:06PM
Don Martin said...
Have you looked at M-2 growth recently?
The January - August 2007 growth was 3.7% vs 2.3% for the January - August 2006 period. And now the Fed's added additional monetary stimulus to the mix.
That's bound to make any dollar-sensitive investor start to itch.
10-08-2007 @ 2:43PM
WhoseAskingU said...
The US economy has spanked itself, "the place to be"? Hmmm, huge trade deficits, national debt, borrowing for wars, houses devaluing, over leveraged mortgages, unaffordable health care, overpriced insurance, out of hand credit card debts, tapped out consumers, volatile markets, liquidity dumps, interest rates going lower, if that's the place to be then the whole world is in trouble. China and Dubai are looking pretty good aren't they? Why do we keep talking about Iran now, Geez give us a break.
10-08-2007 @ 4:36PM
wildbill said...
I love this, Deflation in the housing market??
How about correction? The price increases from 2002-2006 are between 100 to 180%, depending on market. It cost money to purchase a home. Did I miss something and wages have increased by that amount? Deflation is consistent with a decrease in price of fair value. I think that in a few more months all will have a much clearer view of what is really here. I'll give you a clue - you are not going to like it.