Posted on 11/30/2004 4:21:37 PM PST by M. Espinola
The dollar hit a new all-time low against the euro, which rose to $1.3335 on Tuesday as new figures showed that U.S. economic growth in the third quarter was stronger than previously estimated.
In late New York trading, the euro eased back to $1.3280, below its intraday high but still above Monday's late rate of $1.3273.
The dollar's weakness has been fueled by concern over the U.S. trade and budget deficits, and analysts say markets are paying only limited attention to other economic data against that background.
The dollar hit its low against the euro, whose previous record of $1.3329 was set Friday, shortly after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet renewed his assertion that the euro's rapid rise against the U.S. currency is "unwelcome."
Despite Trichet's attempt to talk the euro down, the dollar ended mixed against rivals on Tuesday, falling against the euro, British pound and Swiss franc, but strengthening slightly against the Japanese yen and Canadian dollar. The pound was quoted at $1.9107 from $1.8940 late Monday, while the dollar bought 103.03 yen, up from 102.82; 1.1392 Swiss francs, down from 1.1422; and 1.1879 Canadian dollars, up from 1.1838.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
But if we have to import certain necessities like oil --- how does a weak dollar help us? I know we can still import most of the durables because China is still tied to the dollar.
Why wouldn't they just buy Chinese made electronics which are quite a bit cheaper than USA made?
It helps the 5% of our economy that exports. It screws the other 95%.
Look at it this way, Americans feel it primarily in oil prices which still don't approach inflation-adjusted highs. Europe is screaming bloody murder about the dollar. Our tourists aren't going there. Their tourists are flocking to this country. We're rebuilding our country with their economic blood. What's not to like about that?
Glad I bought my M5 three years ago.
Well the free traders told me that letting go of manufacturing was a good thing --- we would somehow benefit if foreign goods were very cheap so we could buy them. Now the weak-dollarers are telling me the opposite --- that foreign goods should be expensive and we should want manufacturing. We should want expensive goods and expensive oil and other imports --- who is right?
Plot that Euro chart back to the Euro's introduction, and you'll see we're right back where it started.
Meanwhile, this is great news for U.S. exporters, after two decades of getting the NAFTA shaft-a.
Meanwhile, this is great news for U.S. exporters, after two decades of getting the NAFTA shaft-a
I import machines from Europe. This makes it tough.
This is a dip against the Euro, not the British Pound.
The British Pound is strong against the Euro. A few months ago the Euro and the dollar had parity practically.
And foreign imports haven't really gotten that much more expensive. China's currency is pegged to ours, so there's been no change in the cost of their exports to us. Europeans have decreased their profit margins on their exports to the US to try to remain competitive, but it's gotten to the point where no more cutting can help.
This is almost certainly a temporary phenomenon. As the American economy heats up, we'll raise interest rates and the dollar will strengthen. And a robust American economy lifts the rest of the world with it. So they're just going to have to endure some temporary pain in order to make that happen.
The one country that gets a free ride out of this is China, which is why we are trying to get them to unpeg the yuan.
If we don't have to pay too much for raw materials --- and it will help only whatever exporters we have left --- I just hope it's not the same people who applauded NAFTA that are applauding the weak dollar it's led to --- they would have to contradict themselves.
I dunno. It was significantly lower to refinance to a 10-year loan than any loan of a longer term, so I jumped on it. My monthly payment dropped and my term shortened by about 11 years.
Any moron could see the wisdom in that.
You don't really understand this, do you?
The dollar is going down vis-a-vis the euro primarily. The decline against other currencies is not nearly as severe. The reason it is dropping like a rock against the euro is that the EU has a restrictive monetary policy that is killing their economy. They don't buy, we do. Because we are buying more of everything, we are buying more imports. They are not. The result is that we have a trade deficit, and the dollar goes down.
But who does it hurt? Primarily the EU. The EU cannot sell its goods in America without increasing the price or reducing their margin--and it's because the dollars they are selling their goods for are worth less to them. On the other hand, we can sell our goods in Europe for the same price and make more money because the euros we are receiving in payment are worth more.
Of course, it is true that we've got to pay more for imports--mainly oil. But not as much as we'd have to pay if the government restricted imports, which is the other alternative.
But that seems like the problem to me --- Chinese products are still far cheaper --- they don't have the tax burden to the USA government like American made products do. We'll still be importing from Mexico and China --- and what if the Europeans turn to those cheaper countries to buy and still don't buy from us?
The truth is that economic times in Europe are FAR worse today than they are here today. Check out their unemployment rates. Look at their deficits in comparison to GDP.
They are hurting.
They just need to hurt a little more, partly to encourage political and fiscal changes to their policies, and partly to bring the might American economic engine up to full force once again.
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