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Euro Bests Dollar by 79% in This Millennium
- Australia
- Australian Dollar
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Brazil
- Budget Deficit
- Central Banks
- China
- Creditors
- Double Dip
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Goldman Sacks
- Hyperinflation
- Janet Yellen
- Larry Summers
- Monetary Policy
- President Obama
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Savings Rate
- Stagflation
- Trade Deficit
- Unemployment
- White House
By Economic Forecasts & Opinions
The dollar's value against major currencies has fallen in recent months as the U.S. fiscal outlook worsened and amid expectations that interest rates will remain close to zero for some time to fight the economic downturn.
This week, the euro broke above the psychologically important level of $1.50 driving gold prices to record levels, prompting many global central banks intervening on currency markets to slow the dollars fall. (Fig. 1)

How Did We Get Here?
Since the financial crisis last fall, currency markets have taken their cues mostly from stock markets. When stocks plunged in March of this year, investors rushed to the safety of U.S. government bonds, pushing the dollar index up to 89.62, the highest point this year.
Since then, however, it has been a steady downward drift for the greenback. As markets steadied into a rally, traders sold Treasuries and Dollars for riskier assets and higher returns, pushing the dollar lower against other major currencies.

The value of the euro has risen by 79% in nine years since euro hit 0.84 in Oct. 2000 (Fig. 2), and the White House has done little to curb the dollar's slide during this period. Loose monetary policy and a weak U.S. dollar are part of the consequences resulting from the U.S. recent trends of unprecedented spending, fiscal deficits, and accumulations of government debt.
“Strong Dollar Policy”…Not
Although the current Administration officially supports a strong dollar, the latest indications came from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Larry Summers, President Obama’s chief economic advisor.
Mr. Bernanke said this week that the U.S. should cut down on its budget deficit and increase the savings rate in order to reduce global imbalances. Bernanke’s statement chimed with that by Summers earlier this year, when Summers said that
“the rebuilt American economy must be more export-oriented and less consumption-oriented… and less oriented to income growth that disproportionately favors a very small share of the population."
World War III - Currency
There are only so many paths you can take to be “more export-oriented”, and at the same time save more/spend less. We could increase our savings rate; however, with the unemployment rate around 10%, it is certainly a challenge, to say the least, for middle class Americans. Therefore, the most likely options are
- Devaluation of the dollar to help exports
- Slapping taxes on imports; or
- A national sales tax or a value-added tax (VAT), which seems to have gained traction in Washington, to discourage spending and fund federal deficits.
The problem is that much of the world is also working on increasing its exports to help recover from the global financial crisis. Many countries fear that strong domestic currencies (against the dollar) could harm their still fragile recoveries. A steep drop in the dollar has already enraged our chief creditors and trade partners resulting in Gulf States, Russia, and China reportedly ready to stop pricing oil and gas in dollars, and U.S. clashes with EU and China on trade.
Tails, Dollar Loses
There have been increased signs recently that central banks and governments in many parts of the world may gradually end the massive quantitative easing programs. Australia, for instance, hiked rates to 3.25% and highlighting inflation concerns. The U.S. Federal Reserve, on the other hand, has shown little indication that it is anywhere close to removing the massive liquidity injected into the system.
In fact, last Tuesday, San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen said she doesn't expect the central bank to tighten monetary policy “in the next few months.” This suggests the U.S. will stay on its current course of stratospheric fiscal deficits, zero interest rates, easy money, and… a weak dollar in the near term. Worse yet, in a recovering world, any good news about growth could provoke dollar selling.
Double Dip, Hyperinflation or Both?
A weaker dollar would be beneficial to exporters and to the balance of payments with a narrowing trade deficit as imports would fall faster than exports. So, with domestic demand depressed from the recession, a short to medium term boost to exports could be good for the US.

However, the flip side is that the diminishing purchasing power of the dollar will inevitably drive up prices for goods and services, among other long term effects. This could only result in three likely scenarios manifesting by the end of next year:
- W-shaped double dip recession as higher prices crimp recovery
- Hyperinflation, if we have a stronger than expected economic growth
- Another plausible scenario is that the U.S. could lapse into a double-dip recession with high inflation in commodities, i.e., a stagflation scenario.
Based on the latest economic data and the near 50% one-year gain of the Goldman Sacks Commodity Index (blue line in Fig. 3), my money is on stagflation.
Dollar Status Intact, For Now
The U.S. remains the largest economy in the world. The absence of a credible alternative to the dollar, means that, despite its declining value, its status as the world’s reserve currency is not seriously under threat. In addition, the complexity, geopolitical realities would arguably rule out the re-pricing of oil in non-dollar currencies at this time. All that might change in the future, but it will be a very long, long (think decades) debate.
Strategy: Anti-Dollar & Anti-Inflation
Meanwhile, the dollar will continue to weaken as interest rates in many countries and the eurozone are higher than the current rock-bottom U.S. rates, providing currency traders carry-trade opportunities. This will encourage more selling of the dollar and buying up stocks, commodities and other currencies, which has been the general trend since spring.
So, based on the discussion so far, prudent investors should allocate a portion of their portfolios to hard assets like silver, agri products, and non-dollar currencies such as Brazil’s Real (BRL) or the Australian Dollar (AUD) to hedge against inflation risk and the US Dollar`s devaluation.
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No the value of the Euro has not risen, remember, all fiat currencies decline in value. Only the rate of descent differs. Is it that hard to remember? You pay 250% more Euros for Real Money (gold) then 8 years ago. In Dollars the price of Real Money is up 350%.
My USD indicator is still giving bullish warnings.
Will the USD rally when the DOW bear market rally ends ?
MORE:
http://www.zerohedge.com/forum/market-outlook-0
What if the actual outcome for the USD is not a linear progression towards any particular scenario but a non-linear progression that passes through any number of these scenarios on the way to Who Knows Where?
Summers: Americans are just going to have to accept a lower standard of living.
You've assumed that Ms. Chu, the author, is suggesting +AUDUSD is the best way to express a +AUD trade. For instance, AUD is still quite some way below its highs against JPY and EUR.
reading this post is like skateboarding backwards, not particularly useful and probably quite dangerous
IMO the rush into dollars was not caused by the buying of treasuries (though that helped) but more from massive margin calls which are mostly denominated in dollars. Sales of collateral to raise dollars accelerated this process as traders worked out what was going on
Also, you asert that ....
"prompting many global central banks intervening on currency markets to slow the dollars fall"
I see very little evidence of this and would appreciate it if you could elaborate
As to going long the AUD at 92 AFTER the biggest rally ever....what would you propose as an exit, or is it a trade that will work forever ?
TimesOnline: Asian Banks Move to Prop Up the Dollar
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/markets/article6867324.ece
WSJ: Asian Nations Step In to Buoy Greenback http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125482825818867313.html
It's funny how you recommend all sorts of gobbledygook such as agri products, BRL, AUD etc. and FAIL to mention THE most important asset you should be allocating to right now. Hint: John Paulson, Andrew Hall and China are all buying truckloads of it.
What an utter load of NONSENSE.
I did not recommend gold is because I believe it might be overbought and due for a correction. There are hard assets other than gold people can diversify into.
As for USD status, my view is outlined in the following paragraph of my post:
Thanks.
Well, at least you do, if implicitly, recognize the importance that pricing of oil in dollars has to the United States, unlike some other commentators such as Mish. I don't think the dollar's reserve currency status has that long of a time horizon left. With all the shenanigans that the Fed has, and is, engaged in, a dollar crisis is overdue at this point (and we'll get it within the next couple of years, if not months). Of course, most of the market participants think that will be the case (i.e. the dollar will remain unchallenged for the next few decades) - and it is in the interest of the biggest dollar holders (whose dollar holding are already illiquid/"toxic" due to their sheer size) to have them believe that it will be case; after all they do need a market to dump all their dollars into! - which is why most of them will not be prepared when the shift comes, and will also satisfy the market maxim of "maximum pain for the maximum number".