Posted on 07/24/2007 8:38:04 PM PDT by bruinbirdman
The dollar has tumbled to its lowest level ever against the euro and to a 26-year low of $2.06 against the pound as financial turmoil sent US markets tumbling to their worst days performance in over four months.
US stocks were left spiralling along with the American currency on fears of broader economic contagion from the sub-prime property slump.
The benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 226.47 points to 13,716.95.
The fall caused London markets to tumble dramatically late in the day. The blue chip FTSE 100 fell 125.7 points to 6498.70, while the FTSE 250, which consists largely of UK-based firms rather than multinationals, plummeted 198.20 points to 11,584.
So deep were the concerns about the fate of the US economy, the biggest single engine of global growth, that markets brushed aside US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's attempts to allay fears of a sharp US downturn, and reassurance that a strong dollar is in our nations interest.
Paulson: sub-prime mortgages
problem is 'containable'
"There has been a very significant housing correction. I think we're at or near a bottom there. I don't deny there's been a problem with sub-prime mortgages but it's quite containable," he said.
The closely watched DXY dollar index broke through a crucial support to fall through 80 for the first time since 1995, raising the risk of a disorderly rout as foreign funds pull their money out of the US.
David Bloom, currency chief at HSBC, said the dollar had fallen victim to growing fears of a US credit crunch, and likely knock-on effects through debt markets. "Foreigners have made a $2 trillion bet on US credit and now they're discovering it's not as good as they thought," he said.
Mr Bloom said hopes of a brisk US recovery after the winter slowdown were "melting away" as the housing slump continued to hinder consumer spending power. "The concern is that this could spread into equities, which have been insulated so far. Then we have a major problem," he said.
The real spark for concern in equity markets was news of a 33pc fall in quarterly profits at Countrywide Financial, the largest US mortgage lender, which also slashed its full-year profits outlook.
USG, the worlds largest seller of gypsum wallboard for home building, gave a similarly gloomy housing outlook.
JP Morgan added to jitters with a warning that US house prices could fall 15pc during the next two years as interest rates on mortgage "teaser" loans adjust sharply upwards, triggering further waves of defaults. It said the damage would continue to spill over into the wider credit markets, where spreads on high-yield debt punched up to two-year highs yesterday.
It usually takes months before widening credit spreads start to infect equities but there were signs yesterday that this may be drawing closer. Daniel Stillit, an economist at UBS, said the squeeze in the loan markets would end the craze for jumbo takeovers by private equity groups armed with debt, which have pushed up stock prices. "Deal sizes are being scaled back, with far-reaching implications for equities," he said.
The pound and the euro have taken the brunt of the dollar's slide since the Chinese yuan is fixed to the greenback by a crawling peg, and the Japanese yen has been held down by rock-bottom interest rates. The failure of Asia to play its full part in the dollar adjustment is causing major imbalances in the global currency system. It has already prompted protests from French president Nicolas Sarkozy. Although sterling touched a high of $2.0650 against the dollar yesterday, it hardly moved against the euro. Roughly 65pc of UK exports go to Europe, which is enjoying a mini-boom. As a result, much of British manufacturing has been sheltered from the strong pound so far.
But the first signs of stress among exporters are starting to appear. The CBI's industrial trends survey released yesterday showed a sharp fall in orders from +8 in May to -6 in June. It said export orders had fallen "noticeably" for the first time in 18 months.
"UK exports had been resolute in the face of a strong pound but a combination of a slower US economy and sharp increases in the price of oil, commodities and freight is beginning to tell for exporters," said Ian McCafferty, the CBI's chief economist.
PS, I KNOW.
Normally, the market performs well over the long run.
yitbos
Foreigners have to buy U.S. debt to keep the Dollar propped up.
As the Dollar falls in spite of their efforts, Americans can then only afford fewer imports.
That’s what the Dollar falls against, after all...foreign currencies.
Your U.S. salary next week will still be the same whether the Dollar goes up or down 50%...but countries that export goods to the U.S. see wild swings in prices based on the Dollar’s value.
This puts a considerable dilemma on the heads of foreigners because while they *want* to flee the U.S. market, they are selling Dollars at an all-time low to buy their own currencies back right now.
They bought high.
They are selling low.
Cry me a river.
I was reminded of it twenty years later when the markets finally found their feet after 9-11...
This real estate slump feels a lot like 1993, except most everybody hadn't just re-fi'ed a bunch of equity out of their homes with Countrywide back then...
Are you sure you name ain’t Edith Anne? You silly person! You don’t know and if you don’t quit tormentin me I’ma gonna go tell yer mom on you!!!
As in Ambrose Tutti-Fruitti?
yitbos
Let me try again, all my stuff is in the ground.
Hay wayte a minut! Don’t let that big dog uv yers git any closer to that there little dog, lest that big bugger inhale that little mutt! I had no Idea they let dogs that big enter the state of misery!!! Ha Ha Ha!!!
Feel free to tattle, and yes, I do too know. ;-D
Wull... Sumthin like that, maybe, sorta, kinda... whataya think? And you still forgot ta tell me what “yitbos” signifies, dang it!!!
News for you: The little dog is the boss. The big dog just has bigger teeth, more brains, and is better behaved. The little one got her mojo on him when he was just a baby. Mastiffs are sweet, gentle giants. That minpin chased a neighbor’s steer out of my pond and back in the pasture.
Very perceptive.
Ambrose Tutti-Fruiti is a low seller journalist.
yitbos
“Imported goods will be more expensive, and that includes energy.’
And since I retired, I don’t drive my car five days a week to and from work. Typically, I go out once or twice a week now. Higher gas prices don’t necessarily impact retirees all that much.
Higher gas prices dont necessarily impact retirees all that much.
All that stuff in the grocery store doesn’t get there by magic.
Something I'd expect from a trader in speculatives.
yitbos
Ok, well I give up! You’d probably try to tell me that’s some verbal greeting as part of a secret handshake of NSA guys/gals for special evesdropping corps of the Bush/Cheney administration, or somethin like that.
Invest in energy; it's like toilet paper, everybody needs it and its on a roll.
yitbos
Energy Prices !!! That's oil and its derivatives, natural gas and its derivatives, coal, liquid natural gas, electricity and the companies that own, extract, process, transport, sell, distribute and use it.
yitbos
I didn’t write that. I was responding to gcruse.
You're in the brotherhood of soldiers
"Yell if the beer is on sale!"
Youre in the Butt of Sheep
Your Initiation Takes Balls Of Steel
Your In The Basement...Oh Shit
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