i was looking through some charts when i came on ewz [the ishares brazil tracking etf] and it looked
really familiar; it looked a lot like gold. i then looked at the
other trackers of overseas markets and noticed the same pattern.
they were all part of the "everything's rising on a sea of
liquidity" market, though some rose faster than others. the
overseas markets corrected from early may to early june, just like
gold. and then they all started to recover, just like gold.
until july 3. from that date forward they all uncoupled. gold
rose and the trackers fell.
this might explain some of the dollar's strength. money is being
repatriated to the u.s. from overseas, and especially from
emerging markets. then some of it is being used to buy gold.
this would support the dollar and also contribute to gold rising
vis a vis the dollar.
the dollar will tank when overseas investors repatriate from the
u.s. these, the foreign holders of dollar assets, are different
folks than the ones on the receiving end of u.s investments abroad.
really familiar; it looked a lot like gold. i then looked at the
other trackers of overseas markets and noticed the same pattern.
they were all part of the "everything's rising on a sea of
liquidity" market, though some rose faster than others. the
overseas markets corrected from early may to early june, just like
gold. and then they all started to recover, just like gold.
until july 3. from that date forward they all uncoupled. gold
rose and the trackers fell.
this might explain some of the dollar's strength. money is being
repatriated to the u.s. from overseas, and especially from
emerging markets. then some of it is being used to buy gold.
this would support the dollar and also contribute to gold rising
vis a vis the dollar.
the dollar will tank when overseas investors repatriate from the
u.s. these, the foreign holders of dollar assets, are different
folks than the ones on the receiving end of u.s investments abroad.
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