Posted on 09/24/2008 5:06:06 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter
US dollar set to be major casualty of Hank Paulson's bailout This may prove to be the dollars epochal moment the moment historians look back at as its major turning point.
By Edmund Conway Last Updated: 10:47PM BST 22 Sep 2008
Comments 108 | Comment on this article
The dollar could be at a major turning point Photo: AP Whether or not tomorrows accounts of todays turmoil prove David Owen of Dresdner Kleinwort right; whether or not this is the beginning of the end of the dollars pre-eminence in the worlds central banks and foreign exchanges, the economic landscape has undoubtedly changed forever.
The US taxpayer bail-out of Americas banking sector is an event whose significance will reverberate for many years. What it means for free markets, for the way Western economies are run, for the prosperity of the world economy, must remain to be seen.
But as investors scrambled to make sense of last weeks events, already one conclusion was all but irrefutable the US dollar will have to take another major fall.
The dollar rally that began in July and pushed the pounds value against the greenback significantly lower has come to an abrupt end as markets face up to the fact that the currency will have to absorb the effects of a sudden shocking increase in Americas budget deficit.
When Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson announced that the worlds biggest economy was about to embark on the worlds biggest bail-out for its financial sector, the first concern economists had was about the long-term prospects for the nations finances and its currency.
Might the dollar now be vulnerable to a run? In the longer term, might this signal the beginning of the end for the dollars status as the worlds reserve currency?
The US Treasury was already planning to borrow $438bn (£237bn) next year to shore up its budget deficit. That could now rise to $1 trillion or more after the cost of the $700bn mortgage rescue fund is taken into account. Budget deficits of that kind are usually enough to scare many foreign investors away, and indeed the dollar slumped 1.1 cents to $1.8441 against the pound yesterday, and in late trading was down almost two cents against the euro at $1.46880.
Ironically, despite the pounds comparative strength against the dollar having risen from just above $1.75 in the past few weeks it remains extremely weak against other world currencies, due to investors fears about the UKs own home-grown problems.
The magic trillion-dollar deficit is within sight, says Simon Derrick, of Bank of New York Mellon, The combination of the fiscal position and loose monetary policy is likely to be significantly dollar-negative. With an expanding supply of US paper they might want to hold something else as their safe haven, which might mean other currencies and might just as easily mean commodities such as gold.
When a government opens the spending taps and borrows more, investors invariably take flight, fearing that assets denominated in those currencies will lose their value as inflation rises and the currency weakens.
However, with the Treasury still reluctant to spell out precisely how the rescue package, modelled on the late 1980s Resolution Trust Corporation, will work, analysts are still unclear about how far the dollar has to fall.
It is likewise still unknown precisely what effect the quasi-nationalisation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will have for the nations finances, though the implications will again almost certainly be negative.
According to Mr Derrick, the sums have changed so quickly on the fiscal side within the space of two weeks, and clearly the outlook for the US economy relative to where people were forecasting before Freddie and Fannie. Investors will also have a radically different outlook for the future.
The biggest question, however, is whether the reserve managers in central banks in China and elsewhere will treat this as a justification for selling off some of their massive mountain of dollar-denominated investments. If this were to happen, it could cause a catastrophic drop in the US currency, potentially compromising its status as the worlds reserve currency.
However, with the euro area facing its own economic and financial crises, it looks unlikely to be able to step into the breach. This helps explain the leap yesterday in gold and oil prices as investors seek to buy tangible commodities in place of currencies that may easily be devalued in the coming years.
What was perhaps even more worrying for investors was an item in the small print of Hank Paulsons rescue plan. It said that, separate to the $700bn markets rescue package, the US Treasury would plunder the Exchange Stabilisation Fund the US currency reserves, established in the 1930s in order to pay for an insurance scheme for the money markets.
The Treasury has committed the nations FX reserves to supporting the money market industry, said Chris Turner, head of foreign exchange strategy at ING. That suggests to us that the dollar has fallen down the list of the administrations priorities a worrying development for foreign investors in the US.
The funds cash is being funnelled into a new scheme designed to protect money market mutual funds, which mirrors the Federal Deposit Insurance scheme for consumers bank savings. What worries us is that the US Treasury has committed the nations FX reserves at a time when the dollar is exceptionally vulnerable, said Mr Turner.
Waiting for Bush’s speech to hear his reasoning for all this.
I already knew the dollar was screwed.
It does not take a London School of Economics phd to tell you that the dollar will crash if King Henry gets his way.
Well at least now we can be the banana republic the free traitors have long dreamed America to be.
the link to the story does not work, could you repost it?
Here comes a much weaker dollar and much higher inflation.
Keep that bubble full of air, folks.
that’s what I was afraid of
“Bubbles can burst?”- Bart Simpson
This should shoot gas to about $5 per gallon.
“Ironically, despite the pounds comparative strength against the dollar having risen from just above $1.75 in the past few weeks it remains extremely weak against other world currencies, due to investors fears about the UKs own home-grown problems.”
Sums it up nicely. Where ELSE is the world going to go? Russia? Down 50% since the Georgia invasion.
China? Down almost 30% in the last two weeks.
The Euro?
Not with Italy ready to pull out and tear the whole thing apart.
Fact is, we’re the adults on the block, and the rest of the world knows it.
Oh ffs, you think the subprime mess, Fannie, Freddie, et al. occurred because we buy too many imports (in your view).
“Waiting for Bushs speech to hear his reasoning for all this.”
You’re funny.
His purpose was to be scared by Paulson’s presentation to him, then show that concern via a stern-looking face.
Isn’t King Henry a democrat? I thought I heard that a few days ago.
“Fact is, were the adults on the block, and the rest of the world knows it.”
I like your post,
but isn’t we are just the biggest “kid” on the block?
George Bush has become George III of 1776!
Ironically, they share a bloodline.
No, I'm talking more of all the free traitors who have the audacity to say that a weak dollar is good for America.
If anyone wants to comment on the Bullsheet Bailout, call now at
866 222 2368 Roger fredinberg Show
Sorry... you are going to be eating a big old pile of defaltion.
LLS
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