Mohamed’s US dollar
“If Mohamed will not go to the
mountain, the mountain must come to Mohamed”
The Chinese
have not allowed their Yuan to appreciate; on the other end, the Fed is raising
interest rates, so the USD/CNY will not come down…
should’ve depreciated; instead commodity prices are showing the weakness of
the USD.
If you look
at most commodity charts, you’ll see what I mean –commodity prices are
skyrocketing. Or, from the opposite perspective, the USD is depreciating.
was the expected outcome, too much liquidity, and the Yuan/USD parity fixed
(well… almost), the weakening of the USD had to show up somewhere…
consequence was the rise in asset prices, housing, commodities, etc; but the disquieting
fact is –labour costs or wages will stay put, the Chinese effect!
been saying for a while, unfortunately US workers will fair poorly for the next
few years; there’s no escaping to this economic maze: it’s either a depression,
or what seems to be our present trajectory –higher interest rates
combined with inflation.
are abundant trading opportunities; but, be careful, commodities are looking
top-ish –you don’t want to be the last guy buying in!
trading guys!
Bill Gross from PIMCO, also reaffirms the notion of a prompt demise of the USD in his April presentation “*@?#»! Bond Trading
and the Tyranny of Indexation”
This is the link:
http://www.pimco.com/LeftNav/Late+Breaking+Commentary/IO/2006/IO+April+2006.htm
The following is an excerpt:
“The democratization of credit mentioned previously has provided a major assist. But with the U.S. Fed now almost done and the BOJ removing quantitative easing and threatening a tightening cycle of their own, the carry trade and importantly the existing level of the U.S. dollar vs. the Yen and almost all currencies is at risk. As global real interest rates converge, the export potential of comparative economies should begin to dominate exchange values and it is there, of course, where the U.S. is so critically deficient. Japan as we all know is an export powerhouse. Less well known is the ongoing ability of Germany as the center of Euroland to command global market share. The ascendancy of China’s production for export is of course unquestionable. That leaves the U.S. with its increasingly hollowed out manufacturing core as the near certain loser in currency valuations going forward. To be blunt, the dollar must go down as it loses its carry.”
Bottom line, now that all central banks stopped monetary easing, the hollowness of US exports becomes the dominant feature guiding USD exchange rates; triggering the start of the USD depreciation.