by GoIllini » Mon 03 Oct 2005, 17:18:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'O')ver here in the USA we used to make fun of Canadian money by calling it "monopoly" money. I'm quite sure everyone here has played that board game before. Anyways that was back in the days...but now the situation is totally different.
Granted 1 Canadian dollar is still less then 1 US dollar, but the way things are going now it would surprise me greatly if the 2 currencies did not switch roles.
The last place you want to put your money in is the US dollar.....but of course since I'm an American I guess I kinda have to hold onto US dollars.

BTW in America the idea of putting your money into a foreign currency is considered very weird. For as long as anyone can remember the US dollar has been the center of the financial universe. That will change in the near future.
The U.S. has 1/4-1/3 of the world's coal supply- and about the energy equivalent of 2.5-4 Saudi Arabias worth of energy in it.
Mid-term, the U.S. dollar would be a bad investment. Long-term, I wouldn't write it off quite so quickly. As the world shifts to coal as its predominant source of energy, the U.S. will be a pretty decent exporter. Combine that with the fact that the world is more dependent on the U.S. for food than it is on Saudi Arabia for oil, and the USD doesn't look quite as weak once the economy starts shutting down.
Of course, commodities and even equities will be much safer than currencies.