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  • Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

    Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level
    November 24, 2006 (Bloomberg)

    The dollar fell to its lowest in 19 months against the euro on speculation the Federal Reserve is done raising interest rates, while central banks in Europe will keep increasing them.

    The U.S. currency extended its losses after breaching $1.30 against the euro for the first time since April 2005, a level where traders had placed automatic orders to sell the dollar. The European Central Bank has raised rates to an almost four-year high and President Jean-Claude Trichet on Nov. 20 said inflation remains a threat. The Fed has left rates unchanged since August.

    "The break of 1.30 is a strong signal that the dollar has to weaken," said Carsten Fritsch, a currency strategist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. "The sentiment for the dollar is negative. In the euro-zone, growth will remain strong."

    AntiSpin: Over the centuries, monetary systems have come and gone–such as the international fractional gold reserve system that ended in 1971. There is a pattern of events leading up to these transitions. The typical scenario for a transition from one monetary system to another is as follows.

    The old system is organized around the ability of the main players in the system to produce internationally valued real-goods output for export and capital goods used as reserves at little or not cost. Imbalances build up in the system because the ability of economies in it to produce goods for export to earn foreign exchange revenues, relative to capital goods for export, changes over time. The main players in the system are not motivated to re-organize the system to accommodate these imbalances because the transition costs from the old system to a new system are higher than the apparent benefit, and the political costs tend to be highest for the largest player in the system. The largest player and the others are motivated to work for many years to find ways to sustain the old system in a state of imbalance.

    In the current instance, the most likely system to arise from the current unilateral US dollar based system is a multi-lateral dollar-euro-yen reserve system. Getting there from a unilateral dollar based system to a multi-lateral dollar-euro-yen system minimally requires that the EU develop a euro bond market nearly as liquid and transparent as the dollar bond market, and that the EU change trade policies 180 degrees to begin running trade deficits. These two requirements alone are significant transition cost barriers to a planned transition. As a result, the US, Asia and the EU continue to make concessions to maintain the system as it grows further out of balance over time. The investments and changes in mindset and practice required to create a new system have only happened in the past as a response to a systemic monetary crisis.

    The typical life span of an international monetary system is 30 to 50 years. An unbalanced system can continue for many years, until one day an event that is mundane under circumstances of greater global balance causes one of the major players in the system to calculate that the cost of breaking from the others and absorbing the transition costs of moving to a new system is lower than either staying with the old one or waiting until the inevitable crisis occurs. This is how the fractional gold reserve system ended, when Charles de Gaulle in the late 1960s demanded re-payment of gold owed to France by the US, after he decided that the US–then running what was considered a large trade deficit–intended to depreciate the dollar and pay its trading partners back with cheap dollars. Nixon responded by taking the US off the fractional gold standard and defaulting on US debts in 1971, just as de Gaulle had feared. Nixon also devalued the dollar not just once, but twice, later that same decade. A more principled US President might have heeded the advice of economic adviser Milton Friedman and not have done any of these things. Which brings me to the main point here: the outcome of global imbalances is primarily determined by national leadership–who the leaders are in the system and how they are likely to behave in a crisis.

    Charles de Gaulle had accurately sized-up Nixon, but sometimes miscalculation precipitates crisis, such as when the US attempted to bale out Great Britain in the late 1920s to try to preserve the international gold standard based monetary system. The question today is, how do China's President Hu Jintao and Japan's Pre Prime Minister Shinzo Abe think about Bush? If the dollar and the US economy came under duress because of trade balances, can Bush be expected to act unilaterally or internationally? If the other main players calculate that a unilateral response is likely, then they may be motivated to jump the gun, as de Gaulle did. Alternatively, a player at the periphery of the system with international aspirations and strained political ties with the US, such as Russia, may form a block to threaten to break with the system, and either receives political and economic concessions within the context of the system or forces a fundamental change in the system.

    We keep a close eye on Russian-U.S. relations as well as China-U.S., then, as that is at least for now the hot spot for a international monetary crisis.

    _____

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    Last edited by FRED; November 27, 2006, 03:37 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

    An update on some of my predictions, it appears we're in the process of challenging .80 on the dollar index:






    http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

      We can scramble around trying to avoid the weakest fiats or we can just stay in gold until the transition to another reserve currency is over. So far, Gold, Silver, and commodities are outperforming them all.

      I guess at some point a dollar crash would reduce world purchasing power to such an extent that a depression will ensue.. but which currency would survive that is still an unknown. Jim Rogers for instance doesn't think the Euro will be around in 15 years. Maybe the Yuan or some form of Asian Currency block will be in place to transition to at that point.
      Last edited by Charles Mackay; November 25, 2006, 09:59 AM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

        Originally posted by Charles Mackay
        We can scramble around trying to avoid the weakest fiats or we can just stay in gold until the transition to another reserve currency is over. So far, Gold, Silver, and commodities are outperforming them all.

        I guess at some point a dollar crash would reduce world purchasing power to such an extent that a depression will ensue.. but which currency would survive that is still an unknown. Jim Rogers for instance doesn't think the Euro will be around in 15 years. Maybe the Yuan or some form of Asian Currency block will be in place to transition to at that point.
        Major reserve currency system transitions are rarely short and never pretty, e.g., 1929 - 1945 (16 years) and 1971 - 1983 (fractional gold to floating exchange, fiat dollar-centric, 12 years). The transition to a new reserve currency regime is a win-win for commodities and gold. Whatever major central banks do to try to maintain the status quo, such as by printing euros to buy dollars, as Russia and other countries move out of dollars, is good for gold. The eventual failure of these efforts will be good for gold. Creation of a multi-lateral dollar-euro-yen based reserve system–the current dream of global central banks–is daunting: the EU needs a euro bond market as liquid as the yen and dollar bond markets and EU countries need to run trade deficits. Now there is no euro bond market, only national bonds issued in euros, thus Rogers' pessimism about the euro; and trade deficits are politically impossible for most EU members.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

          Originally posted by EJ
          Major reserve currency system transitions are rarely short and never pretty, e.g., 1929 - 1945 (16 years) and 1971 - 1983 (fractional gold to floating exchange, fiat dollar-centric, 12 years). The transition to a new reserve currency regime is a win-win for commodities and gold. Whatever major central banks do to try to maintain the status quo, such as by printing euros to buy dollars, as Russia and other countries move out of dollars, is good for gold. The eventual failure of these efforts will be good for gold. Creation of a multi-lateral dollar-euro-yen based reserve system–the current dream of global central banks–is daunting: the EU needs a euro bond market as liquid as the yen and dollar bond markets and EU countries need to run trade deficits. Now there is no euro bond market, only national bonds issued in euros, thus Rogers' pessimism about the euro; and trade deficits are politically impossible for most EU members.
          If we count the beginning of this new reserve currency transition as 2001 (which represents a nice fibonacci 21 year completion of the previous market cyle that started in 1980) ...and then if we count the first 1 and 2 legs of this transition as being complete in 2006 (another nice fibonacci 5 years). Maybe we'll get lucky and legs 3 thru 5 will last another 8 years, completing in 2014 or so. "Lucky" as in predictable...not as in consequences.

          Enjoyed EJ's telephone interview with Puplava this morning!

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

            Yet another chart, this time showing the period during which the British pound lost reserve currency status. I've overlaid the dollar on it, offset by 57 years.

            http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

              nice work Bart... after 80 is violated on the USX I wonder if we'll get that 18 year reprieve like they got from 1950-1968 or so... doubt it.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                Originally posted by Charles Mackay
                nice work Bart... after 80 is violated on the USX I wonder if we'll get that 18 year reprieve like they got from 1950-1968 or so... doubt it.

                Thanks and good question... and my crystal ball isn't up to the task.

                Do keep in mind that the period of stability was mostly due to the Bretton Woods agreement and the size of the US gold reserve. In the unlikely event something similar does actually happen along those lines, ala a 'super basket of currencies' as the world reserve currency with perhaps some nods to gold, it is possible.
                http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                  Originally posted by bart
                  Do keep in mind that the period of stability was mostly due to the Bretton Woods agreement and the size of the US gold reserve.
                  1950 to 1968 was a period of u.s. domination of the first world, and a political/military standoff between the u.s and u.s.s.r which was in many ways a stabilizing force. we are now in the early innings of a period in which a formerly-triumphal sole-super-power u.s. is being reduced to one of several power centers in a multi-polar world. so we went from bretton woods i, in which other currencies were fixed to the dollar and the dollar was fixed to gold, to "bretton woods ii" with floating currencies, many of which are informally pegged to a fiat dollar. what we are looking at dead ahead, i think, is a period of currency confusion.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                    Is there any credible evidence that the euro is breaking down? The eurozone economy just seems to be doing better and better. It looks to me like a multi-country currency, even if fiat, is more stable than the single country version: it has both the scale to encompass a large amount of economic activity, and the competing national interests to provide transparency and a check on management.

                    Bless Rogers' heart for being a hard-money supporter, but I think the euro has the legs to run for quite a while. In fact I expect to see more regional currency zones.

                    Not that gold won't see an enormous spike if the dollar slips sharply, mind you...

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                      re: the euro's durability---

                      i think the argument against the euro is that the diverse financial positions of the member countries and the lack of real labor mobility will produce intolerable political strains if and when there is real economic hardship. so, e.g. italy would really like to devalue but they can't and, under current circumstances, they won't. now imagine those circumstances get significantly worse....

                      i think there's a non-zero probability of this outcome. i'm trying to think of the odds i'd want, and the time period to cover, to make me willing to bet on this outcome.....

                      i think i'd want 5 to 1 and about 12-15 years.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                        Speaking of the Euro, I just added some charts that have previously been private for the European Central Bank to my central bank watch page.

                        Two of them are quite interesting - they show ECB gold buys & sells since 1999, short & longer term. The data runs about 4 weeks behind though, so its not useful for trading.
                        I'd say their "timing" hasn't exactly been poor:






                        http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                          bart, any clues as to whether they are holding the physical metal or have lent it to gold banks?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                            Originally posted by jk
                            bart, any clues as to whether they are holding the physical metal or have lent it to gold banks?
                            Not enough to write home about, but my gut hunch is that at least 1/2 is in physicals mostly due to ECB bankers being historically more conservative. I vaguely recall something in the Maastricht agreement about physicals too.
                            http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Dollar Drops to 19-Month Low Against Euro; Breaches $1.30 Level

                              Bart is it possible the ECB's activities are moving the market? It looks too perfect. Or am I missing the boat entirely?

                              Comment

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