Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Talk of a drop in the euro rate due to foreign exchange traders selling euros below to 1.4900

Foreign Exchange - Currency Outlook

Yesterday Dallas Fed Pres Fisher said the decline of the dollar exchange rate has been orderly. We are stunned by this statement. For one thing, the Fed hardly ever talks about buying dollars, which is the Treasury’s turf. For another, it implies approval of the any decline as long as it’s not disorderly. Fisher went from an inflation hawk to now seeing more deflationary concerns than inflationary ones, suggesting that a falling dollar is a good anti-deflation tactic. The risk we run by maintining low interest rates is that it fuels the carry trade and eventually the Fed would have to "craft an appropriate remedy." Holy cow, is Fisher wishing for a US dollar exchange rate crisis so that the Fed can step in with anti-speculation measures?

The mind boggles.

Our favorite Fed, San Francisco Fed Pres Yellen, again said the recovery will be L-shaped, if with an upward tolt, with deflation a bigger risk than inflation and unemployment probably staying high for years to come. Atlanta Fed Lockhart is most worried about commerical real estate and worries the banking system ,not yet recovered, will face another blow.

More to the point, World Bank Pres Zoellick came right out and said emerging markets face a greater threat of inflation and asset price bubbles than developed one. Speaking on the sidelines of the APEC summit in Singapore, he said Asian "central banks need to look beyond just raising interest rates to constrain the amount of liquidity that has been injected into financial systems in response to the crisis,"according to Market News. Bubbles could undermine confidence, whereas "In the U.S. and Europe, because things are in relatively weak conditions, I don't see likely inflationary effects at this time. In East Asia if you start to get a strong rebound in growth and a lot of liquidity there is the question of whether one could start to face asset bubbles in particular markets."

Out of all this, the Chinese potentially revaluing against the dollar by adopting a basket should have the biggest effect. Quite apart from the global political implications, it could be a giant boost to European exports, whereupon Europe's trade surplus will appear to be an issue. It already is an issue, but not as much as the US’ deficit. Then the question becomes whether China diversifies further into the basket currencies. On the whole, the news will be interpreted as dollar-favorable, but underneath, it’s only US-favorable. Talk of a drop in the euro rate due to foreign exchange traders selling euros below to 1.4900 and below is based more on technical ideas than on economic analysis. New euro exchange rates demand from China is the same thing as a weakness factor for the dollar, and a biggie. Fixing the global imbalance is a good thing for the world, but not necessarily for the US dollar itself.

Pounds to US Dollars = 1.6574
Pounds to Euros = 1.1060
Euro to Pounds = 0.9039
Pounds to Australian Dollars = 1.7813

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
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