THE US DOLLAR - Strong Again? When, How, Why

This is some rather strange commentary here! First, no one
is very good at predicting future movements in interest rates,
inflation or unemployment, not least financial and foreign exchange
market movements which follow what economists call a random walk. If
you're concerned about adverse exchange rate movements, the I would
suggest hedging with some strategy using derivative securities. Second,
an exchange rate is an adjustment mechanism at the macroeconomic level
to deal with inflexible wages and prices in the short-run. In the
long-run, after the necessary macroeconomic adjustments have been made,
the economy operates at potential output, under the natural rate
hypothesis regarding interest and employment.Third, everyone on
here (and all of the financial journalists that fancy themselves as
financially savvy) seems to be considering only the nominal exchange
rates, that is, exchange rates viewed in the market. In reality, what
matters is the real exchange rate, which are nominal rates adjusted
with domestic price indexes. In the long-run, economists look at
exchange rates in purchasing power parity terms (PPP), which considers
a hypothetical basket of consumption in real terms.Fourth,
countries do no compete economically, and anyone that believes this,
including Fareed Zakaria, simply has failed to develop a sophisticated
background in trade theory and economics. No smart economist would
tell you that international trade is some game in which countries
compete.

Fifth, the American trade deficit does not matter because while
the capital account surplus reflects the gap between domestic saving
and investment, the US generates a net capital inflow which finances
primarily capital goods yielding a higher internal rate of return
and/or lower cost capital goods, as well as intermediate goods. Only
25% of US imports, according to data showing imports by final end use,
are strictly for consumption.Sixth, neither the Euro nor the
Yuan will displace the dollar as the world's reserve currency. Not
only do demographic trends favor the US, but the American economy
(especially the financial system) is far more sophisticated than that
of China and even Europe, including the UK. Indeed, while China has a
fixed nominal exchange rate to the dollar about which politicians,
financial journalists and union leaders complain incessantly, the real
exchange rate shows that the Yuan has shown a large tendency to drive
trade patterns based on comparative advantage. In fact, the
Yuan has depreciated in real terms precisely because fixing its nominal
rate to the dollar has resulted in a large increase in China's monetary
base, and consequently higher inflation has ensued. Furthermore, it
doesn't really matter if your currency is a reserve currency. What
matters is how your nation's central bank conducts monetary policy in
order to preserve the purchasing power of your currency. In that
respect, the developed countries have been doing well in the past 25
years or so for a variety of reasons. Even developing countries have
been doing much better at maintaining price level stability.

My suggestions: Hedge with derivatives or get paid in dollars
if possible and ensure that those dollars are deposited with a large
multinational bank (like HSBC, Citibank) so that you have access to
your wealth if the Argentine government decides to freeze withdrawls to
stem their foolish economic polices. It's very easy to have the
deposits transfered to a safe bank in the US. Foreigners in all
countries do it all the time, and in the lingo of a nation's balance of
payments accounting, it's called unilateral transfers.In the
meantime, if any employers are looking to hire a young and talented
American economist (with good Spanish skills) seeking to move to
Buenos Aires, contact me at [email protected], Marc Randal
 
MR said:
This is some rather strange commentary here!

Ditto

MR said:
First, no one is very good at predicting future movements in interest rates, inflation or unemployment, not least financial and foreign exchange market movements which follow what economists call a random walk.

Basically you just discredit your own post by stating this ;)


MR said:
If you're concerned about adverse exchange rate movements, the I would suggest hedging with some strategy using derivative securities.

"Derivatives are the weapon of mass financial destruction" Soros

http://www.economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9033348

Here you can find the whole article if you don't have a subscription of the Economist. That article was from April 2007 and it has become more and more relevant...

http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=129247

MR said:
Second an exchange rate is an adjustment mechanism at the macroeconomic level to deal with inflexible wages and prices in the short-run. In the long-run, after the necessary macroeconomic adjustments have been made, the economy operates at potential output, under the natural rate hypothesis regarding interest and employment.

Exchange rates are not so relevant, but it will reflect in the future of which economies that deflate the fastest...

The debt bubble is global, but the US of A debt bubble is the one that has inflated the fastest, but is now starting to deflate...
http://folk.uio.no/fredrin/super_bubbleb.GIF


MR said:
Third, everyone on here (and all of the financial journalists that fancy themselves as financially savvy) seems to be considering only the nominal exchange rates, that is, exchange rates viewed in the market. In reality, what matters is the real exchange rate, which are nominal rates adjusted with domestic price indexes. In the long-run, economists look at
exchange rates in purchasing power parity terms (PPP), which considers a hypothetical basket of consumption in real terms.

Eh, the US dollar buys less commodities everyday, that matters for normal people.

MR said:
Fourth,
countries do no compete economically, and anyone that believes this, including Fareed Zakaria, simply has failed to develop a sophisticated background in trade theory and economics. No smart economist would tell you that international trade is some game in which countries compete.

Que Boludo!!!111oneoneeleven

So the US of A or bankers has never cheated in the world economic game to get more for less? hahahahahaha

MR said:
Fifth, the American trade deficit does not matter because while the capital account surplus reflects the gap between domestic saving and investment, the US generates a net capital inflow which finances primarily capital goods yielding a higher internal rate of return and/or lower cost capital goods, as well as intermediate goods. Only 25% of US imports, according to data showing imports by final end use, are strictly for consumption.

I have no clue where you get those numbers from, but import of oil sure strangles Joe Six Pack (J6P)


MR said:
Sixth, neither the Euro nor the Yuan will displace the dollar as the world's reserve currency. Not only do demographic trends favor the US, but the American economy (especially the financial system) is far more sophisticated than that of China and even Europe, including the UK. Indeed, while China has a
fixed nominal exchange rate to the dollar about which politicians
financial journalists and union leaders complain incessantly, the real exchange rate shows that the Yuan has shown a large tendency to drive trade patterns based on comparative advantage.

I think the US financial systems is so sophisticated that no one understands it... makes me think of the "Emperors new clothes" ;)

MR said:
In fact, the Yuan has depreciated in real terms precisely because fixing its nominal rate to the dollar has resulted in a large increase in China's monetary base, and consequently higher inflation has ensued. Furthermore, it doesn't really matter if your currency is a reserve currency. What matters is how your nation's central bank conducts monetary policy in order to preserve the purchasing power of your currency. In that respect, the developed countries have been doing well in the past 25 years or so for a variety of reasons. Even developing countries have been doing much better at maintaining price level stability.

Helicopter Ben is doing a great job of keeping the purchasing power of the dollar up................... NOT


MR said:
My suggestions: Hedge with derivatives or get paid in dollars if possible and ensure that those dollars are deposited with a large multinational bank (like HSBC, Citibank) so that you have access to your wealth if the Argentine government decides to freeze withdrawls to stem their foolish economic polices. It's very easy to have the deposits transfered to a safe bank in the US. Foreigners in all countries do it all the time, and in the lingo of a nation's balance of payments accounting, it's called unilateral transfers.

Shitybank and HSBC are almost inslovent now, they would love to get hold of your cash :)

If you really want to preserve your wealth for looong term, buy property and physical gold and silver, maybe you will not make money in dollar terms, but you will be 100% sure to preserve your wealth. Short term 'cash is king'


If anyone wants to get some help from an information specialist... type me :)

-s-
 
Crash course of what money is and how it works.

Money as Debt - Video 45 min
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279
 
Hey Smartypants.....you must be joking! Your weak arguments would get you laughed out of an intro level class, not least a Ph.D. program.

You do understand that it's unethical to misuse data and invent phony theory to justify ideological convenience? You're dangerously going into Paul Krugman territorial full of shrill writing.

Should I assume that you have an incredibly rigorous background in economics, finance and math, in which case you're just being unethical and lying? Or should I assume that you're just plain ignorant?

Either way, many things like derivatives and learning econ from McNews can cause disaster when used by amateurs that have no understanding of sophisticated matters.

I'd suggest a reading list for newbies, but you'd probably reject it out of pure emotion and a naive faith in cranks like George Soros.
 
MR said:
Hey Smartypants.....you must be joking! Your weak arguments would get you laughed out of an intro level class, not least a Ph.D. program.

Not in an Austrian economic class... http://www.mises.org/

MR said:
You do understand that it's unethical to misuse data and invent phony theory to justify ideological convenience? You're dangerously going into Paul Krugman territorial full of shrill writing.

Wow, I just say wow. Say that to the guys that cook the official books in the US... Like that there is no inflation in the US... hihi

I have no clue who Paul Krugman is.

MR said:
Should I assume that you have an incredibly rigorous background in economics, finance and math, in which case you're just being unethical and lying? Or should I assume that you're just plain ignorant?

I have no clue why you choose to attack me and suggest that I'm lying and being unethical.

MR said:
Either way, many things like derivatives and learning econ from McNews can cause disaster when used by amateurs that have no understanding of sophisticated matters.

That goes both ways. It could also cause disaster if it's used by 'proffesional' people that think they know what they're doing.

MR said:
I'd suggest a reading list for newbies, but you'd probably reject it out of pure emotion and a naive faith in cranks like George Soros.

I'm fascinated by the way you characterize me without knowing me, but it sure adds to your character ;)

Now get the thread back on track!
 
DA said:
Really enjoyed that video, however it left me with a few questions, If the whole world is using the same banking system with money as debt it would not matter what currency you saved your money in and USD would be just as good or better since more debt is more money:)

more debt is more money created.

Take the price of gold. The amount of gold in the world is relative constant, but the amount of dollar has been increasing, so you need more dollar to buy the same amount of gold. This is very general, but I hope you get the idea.

-s-
 
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