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DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Petrodollar sysem collapsing

Unread postby Euric » Sat 27 May 2006, 15:36:15

When Americans planned the petrodollar system, they never expected that the OPEC countries (or any other country) would do anything else but "invest" those dollars only in US assets, thus permanently subsidizing the US economy.

Now holders of dollars are feeling free to sell off those dollars and invest in assets outside the US, the euro becoming the most popular. Even if all the oil is still presently sold in dollars.

It will be interesting to see how long it takes for the American economy to notice the loss of such a huge amount of investments and what affects it will have on the American lifestyle and living standard.

George Bush may be able to start wars to assure oil is sold in dollars, but what can he do when the holders of George's rubber cheques cash them in anyways?


http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/a ... rent_id=28

Gulf banks seek lower funding costs in eurosPublished: Saturday, 27 May, 2006, 08:21 AM Doha Time

LONDON: Banks in the Gulf are selling bonds in Europe for the first time, reducing their dependence on US investors and taking advantage of lower borrowing costs.
Gulf Investment Corp, the financial services group controlled by Saudi Arabia and five other governments, and Saudi British Bank, which is 40% owned by HSBC Holdings, sold more than 700mn euros ($894mn) of bonds since April.
Emirates Bank International, which is 77% owned by Dubai’s government, may issue debt next week, according to Barclays Capital, which is underwriting the sale. Gulf banks are turning to Europe’s 824bn euro bond market after relying almost exclusively on US investors for debt sales outside the region. The 74% surge in oil since the start of 2005 filled the coffers of the region’s banks and companies, making them safer investments.
“It was a matter of time before we started seeing Middle-Eastern banks diversifying from dollars into euros,” said Richard Luddington, head of debt capital markets for Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa at UBS in London, which is helping to arrange the Emirates sale.
Kuwait City-based Gulf Investment sold 400mn euros of floating-rate bonds due in May 2011 that pay a premium of 35 basis points more than the Euro interbank offered rate, or Euribor, a benchmark for corporate borrowing.
The bond, issued last week, is rated A2 by Moody’s Investors Service and A- by Standard & Poor’s. The first coupon hasn’t been set yet.
“When oil prices are as high as they have been, the money’s coming in by the bucket-load,” said Alok Basu, who bought some of the Gulf Investment bonds for the $27bn he helps manage at Gartmore Investment Management.
Gulf borrowers “will be a natural beneficiary.” Besides providing the banks with a new group of investors, borrowing in Europe is cheaper than in the US Euribor has risen 42 basis points this year to 2.91%, compared with a 62 basis-point increase to 5.22% for dollar-denominated debt.
Gulf Investment’s dollar-denominated floating-rate bonds due in 2010 trade at a premium of 35 basis points more than the London interbank offered rate, a benchmark for dollar-denominated floating-rate debt, according to BNP Paribas prices.
In March, Gulf Investment sold HK$150mn ($19.35mn) of unrated floating-rate five-year notes at 35 basis points more than Hong Kong’s benchmark lending rate. The rest of the $1.3bn of the firm’s debt is denominated in US dollars.
Interest rates are rising more slowly in Europe than in the US. The European Central Bank has boosted its benchmark twice since December to 2.5%.
Interest-rate futures show that traders expect it to reach 3% by year-end. In the US, the Federal Reserve has lifted its rate 16 times in the past two years to 5% from 1%, and futures indicate a better than 50% chance of another increase to 5.25% next month.
Floating-rate bonds are the most sensitive to changes in central bank policy, because they typically pay investors a premium above interest rates that change every three months. “The euro floating-rate note market is cheap and liquid,” said UBS’s Luddington.
Europe’s corporate bond market has grown almost 10 times in the past decade. The US market for company debt totals $5tn.
Emirates Bank plans to meet with investors to sell floating-rate bonds denominated in euros starting May 29, Barclays Capital said last week.
The sale will be benchmark in size, the bank said, which typically means between 350mn euros and 500mn euros.
“A year ago it would have been more expensive to do it in euros than dollars but now investors in euros have become much more comfortable and the difference has closed,” John Eldredge, general manager and treasurer of Emirates Bank International, said in a phone interview from Dubai yesterday.
Emirates Bank expects to sell floating-rate bonds due in five years, Eldredge said
Moody’s ranks Dubai-based Emirates Bank International’s proposed bond A1. S&P and Fitch Ratings rank it a level lower at A. The bank this year sold debt in Europe denominated in Hong Kong dollars, Swiss francs, Singapore dollars and US dollars.
“This region is growing very fast and people are recognising it as an asset class they’d like to hold,’’ said Mahmood Al-Aradi, treasurer of Gulf Investment in Kuwait City.
“I would expect this to be the start of a trend.’’ The economies of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates will expand more than 5% in 2006 for the fourth straight year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Moody’s, S&P and Fitch have been slow to upgrade credit ratings on Gulf banks even with the surge in oil prices. There are potential “risks to the region’s political and economic stability’’ because of the insurgency in Iraq and the clash between Iran and the US and Western Europe over the Iranian nuclear program, S&P analysts including Farouk Soussa in London wrote in an April 5 report.
Saudi British Bank became the first Gulf firm to tap Europe’s market with 325mn euros of five-year floating-rate notes. The bonds were sold on April 7 to yield 35 basis points more than Euribor. – Bloomberg
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DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Unread postby Euric » Sat 27 May 2006, 20:49:18

http://www.freemarketnews.com/Analysis/ ... 1&nid=5062

DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Friday, 2006-05-26

The dollar was once the almighty dollar. It became the world reserve currency. Every investor and government wanted dollars over all other currencies. Those were the glory days for the economy but now it appears the United States has been running a trade deficit for so long that is so large, those glory days are nearing an end. It may be time to sell your dollars before the upcoming 30 percent off sale.

When the Federal Reserve cut short-term interest rates to one percent, the dollar versus the euro adjusted down from 85 to 125. In retrospect, the decline in the dollar should have lowered the trade deficit – as foreign goods became more expensive in America, and American goods became cheaper abroad – but that didn’t happen. Instead, we took advantage of lower interest rates to borrow against our houses and spend more, so the trade deficit has just kept on growing! Americans now spend approximately $800 billion more than they make each year; a mind-numbing amount of money! To paraphrase an election slogan we remember hearing from former President Clinton, “It’s about the trade deficit, stupid”.

Currencies in every country need to adjust from time to time to close trade deficits. Trade deficits reflect more purchases (than sales) of goods and services abroad, and are financed by the flow of financial capital. Since Americans don’t save, capital, as well as goods, must flow into our country to pay for the trade deficit. (Indeed, the trade deficit creates a financial deficit.)

The fact that our federal government spends more than it taxes, adds to the problem. This basically means that our government is borrowing $400 billion at the same time it needs to find lenders willing to cover the $800 billion needed to finance the trade deficit. Congress has let spending run out of control, pushing up the Treasury’s need to borrow.

It also doesn’t help that we have a war President who has not used the spending veto - and is not likely to in an election year - and only wants to spend more on his war.

You may wonder where all the money comes from to pay for all those extra goods and services bought abroad by spendthrift Americans who don’t save a penny, especially when this spending is not matched by earnings from selling America’s goods and services abroad.

To finance our trade deficit of seven to eight percent of GDP and encourage the buying of dollars worldwide, a form of “financial bribery” through interest rate differentials has been used. Up until now, it has worked like a charm with investors, speculators and hedge funds to place hundreds of billions of dollar assets. For instance, as the Fed raised interest rates well above those paid on euro and yen accounts, a lot of money was made by borrowing low-cost euros and yen, and then investing them in higher-yield dollar assets.

Remember, it has taken a widening interest rate differential just to keep the dollar stable. A falling interest rate differential between what investors can earn in dollars, euros and yen, etc., will be the death of the dollar as hedge funds (loaded up with dollar assets) begin to unload them.

In addition, virtually every central bank in the world has been buying U.S. financial assets. Without this continued magnitude of buying, the dollar will fall. Why is there such enormous buying of dollars from world central banks? To start with, the Japanese, Chinese and Asian central banks have found it in their commercial interests to buy dollars to prevent their own currencies from appreciating. (China and Japan now hold about a trillion dollars each.) In addition, the United States government uses political blackmail and the arm-twisting of our allies and their foreign central banks, to buy dollars. Two clear examples are the Gulf Arab States stashing their earnings on oil, and the United Kingdom helping to fund the “oil” war in Iraq.

We may see a slight shift in global trends in the form of a sell-off of the dollar as central banks worldwide seek a buffer from the burgeoning U.S. trade and budget deficits.


Developing countries have for years been told that building up U.S. dollar currency reserves was the best way to maintain financial stability in their countries.

Now that the Fed has slowed raising interest rates in our country, interest rates are creeping up in Europe, Japan, China and the rest of Asia, making these currencies more attractive. However, the Fed realizes there could be a significant economic slowing and the winding down of the housing market (with declines in home sales, new home construction and housing prices) will surely guarantee the interest rate differential will shrink.

More importantly, the G7 and the IMF have gone on record to say that currencies need an adjustment; a very big adjustment! This implies that Asian currencies must go up and the dollar must go down. Also, it will be virtually impossible to prevent the euro (as well as the currencies from countries that sell oil and other resources) from going up against the dollar.

In order to fully understand what is really happening on the central bank front, Larry Summers is worth listening to, now that he is free of all the politics at Harvard. Mr. Summers who served in a series of senior policy positions – most notably as the secretary of the treasury of the United States – specialized in the currency markets. Indeed, he was “the man” who successfully engineered foreign central bank gold sales to help hold the price of gold down and make the dollar look strong!

Mr. Summers is now urging the poorer, smaller countries with excess dollar reserves, “to do something with them”. Perhaps his advice is to sanction foreign aid, but I suspect he may be encouraging these smaller central banks to swap out of dollars early before the big banks do. This would preserve the real value of their foreign exchange reserves, and save the IMF a lot of money down the road for not having to bail them out.

Just remember, when someone yells fire in the movie theatre, you want to be sitting in the back row near the exit door, so you can get out before it’s too late. Larry Summers has just yelled “fire”.

The dollar is in grave danger because there are hundreds of billions of dollar assets funded by hedge funds that will be sold. Worldwide, central banks are beginning to buy fewer dollars at a time when the U.S. needs new buyers of dollar assets to fund our escalating trade deficit.

If America, as a matter of policy, is going to let the dollar go, there are many investments you must not own as an investor or saver: One investment is dollar-denominated bonds. A falling dollar is very inflationary. As inflation rises, it forces interest rates up so you’ll lose on the currency devaluation, as well. U.S. Stocks will fight the headwinds of inflation and may go up in dollar terms, but they will most likely not keep pace with inflation.

When the dollar is declining, if you own paper-assets denominated in dollars (cash, stocks or bonds) sell them and wait for the dollar to crash before going back to owning dollar assets. The dollar could fall 20 to 30 percent before there is a material improvement in the trade deficit. You should, instead, consider owning real assets: Gold, silver, other precious metals and commodities, come to mind.

For investors who prefer being in cash, it’s not easy but it is possible to open up a foreign currency account. Everbank even offers foreign currency CDs insured by the FDIC, and there is a new, short-dollar currency fund offered by RYDEX Funds that offers a two-percent increase in value for every one-percent the dollar goes down.

So, if you truly value a good night’s sleep, and the thrills and terror of the stock market have you spinning, put your money in cash, just not dollar cash!
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Re: DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Unread postby clover » Sat 27 May 2006, 21:13:11

A swell idea, to be sure. We (the American economy) have had it coming for quite some time now.


Question though- what's the practical application of this for small fry such as myself? Many foreign banks require you to be a resident to open an account... online yuan/yen/CDN$ accounts have $10.000 min opening balance reqs.

So do I stick with gold coins? Stash away a drawer full of euro-denominated traveler's checks? Or just walk up to the exchange window at Bank of America, trade in a stack of dollars for something more attractive, and hope the gain in value offsets the exchange fees?
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Re: DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Unread postby beechdriver » Sat 27 May 2006, 21:56:17

Checkout everbank.com.
But really - do you want Euros when that means you a chunk of France, Italy, Greece and a host of other loser countries.
Maybe you could get some rubles - other country that seems less than stable.
Best bet is Gold?
Try goldmoney.com?
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Unread postby katkinkate » Sat 27 May 2006, 22:01:49

Hi, I'm not sure of his sources, but my brother told me this morning that many other countries are printing money to keep their currencies in line with US to try and hold off the effects of the devalueing US$ against their trade balances. I think this may need to be taken into account, or at least investigated, if you look to invest in other currencies. I like to keep it simple, and I'm sticking with gold and silver.
Kind regards, Katkinkate

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but the cultivation and perfection of human beings."
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Re: DOLLARS ON SALE, 30 PERCENT OFF

Unread postby JoeCoal » Sun 28 May 2006, 00:48:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clover', 'S')o do I stick with gold coins?

YES! Or, I would recommend Silver coins, at a lower cost and higher profit if you have room and sufficient upper body strength. Paper/Electronic money is a sham and a fraud and is:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('The Discovery Channel', 'S')econds From Disaster!
Good night, and good luck...
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