http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/060918/economy.html?.v=2
Interesting article in that it shows the US deficits are not being funded. They are getting only about 50 % of the needed monthly inflow.
How long will it be before the US has to raise interest rates to exceedingly high levels to compensate?
Best thing to do is for the US to start holding euros in reserve, if they haven't started already.
Reuters
Current account gap up, capital inflows fall
Monday 2006-09-18 11:59 ET
By Doug Palmer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Surging oil costs helped widen the U.S. current account deficit more than expected in the second quarter and capital flows into the United States in July ebbed, government reports showed on Monday.
The $218.4 billion quarterly current account shortfall was larger than Wall Street forecasts for a deficit of $214 billion, a Commerce Department report showed. The government raised its estimate of the first-quarter current account deficit to $213.2 billion from a previously reported $208.7 billion.
Both reports measure what world financial leaders call 'trade imbalances,' which include the large U.S. trade deficit and capital flows from countries with large trade surpluses to the United States. These officials have warned that a sudden shift in capital flows could endanger the world economy.
The current account, the broadest measure of U.S. trade with the rest of the world, includes both trade in goods and investment flows. The deficit totaled 6.6 percent of gross domestic output, the same as in the first quarter.
A separate Treasury Department report showed net flows of capital to the United States fell to a much smaller-than-expected $32.9 billion in July, less than half of the U.S. trade deficit in that month.
U.S. government bond prices extended losses after the data showed a sharp decline of net inflows into Treasuries. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note's price traded down 9/32 in price for a yield of 4.83 percent. (US10YT=RR).
The dollar briefly fell to session lows against the euro but then retraced most of the losses as dealers quickly turned their focus more on upcoming inflation data on Tuesday and a meeting of the Federal Reserve on Wednesday.
Stocks were little changed as a downgrade of Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:HD - News) offset optimism that Fed policy-makers will continue to hold interest rates steady.
Analysts were expecting net capital inflows into the United States of $70 billion.
CHANGING CONDITIONS
Market conditions have changed significantly since the data for both reports were collected. Oil prices were rising the second quarter and hit a record $78.40 a barrel in July, but have since fallen to about $63 a barrel in New York trading. The Dow Jones industrial average was below 10,700 in mid-July, and has since risen above 11,500.
Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at RBS Greenwich Capital, said the most interesting feature of the current account report might have been the record $4.1 billion deficit on investment income flows in the second quarter.
"This is going to highlight ... that the U.S. is a net debtor and as such is paying out more income than it is receiving. That has been anticipated for a long time and it is finally coming home to roost," Ruskin said.
The Commerce Department revised its first-quarter estimate of the investment income balance to a deficit of $2.5 billion, from a previously reported surplus of $1.9 billion.
The goods deficit increased to $210.6 billion in the second quarter from $208.0 billion in the first.
Foreign demand for industrial supplies and materials and capital goods pushed U.S. exports to $252.8 billion in the second quarter, from $244.5 billion in the first.
That was overshadowed by the effect of higher oil prices, which boosted imports to $463.4 billion in the second quarter, from $452.5 billion in the first, the Commerce Department said.
The huge current account gap has put downward pressure on the dollar in recent years. The greenback depreciated 3 percent on a trade-weighted average basis against a Group of Seven major currencies in the second quarter, the report said.
In July, private net buying of U.S. assets fell to $31.8 billion, the lowest since May 2005, in what analysts took to be a danger sign for appetite for U.S. assets.
"This is a very disturbing number and clearly we were unable to finance our deficit for the month of July," said Michael Woolfolk, a senior currency strategist at the Bank of New York.
(Additional reporting by Mark Felsenthal)





