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The Last Days of the Dollar?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby seahorse2 » Wed 29 Nov 2006, 16:02:32

Mr. Bill, several prominent people, i.e. Rubin and Volker, have recently warned about a potential dollar plummet. One of them, I don't remember which, said it was likely to occur in the next two years.

Bloomberg



What's your best guess of a dollar crash, i.e. Argentina style crash, in the next two years using a percentage for likelihood? What do you think would precipitate this? What would be the warning sign, if any?
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Denny » Wed 29 Nov 2006, 17:40:34

Would it not be a wise idea for the U.S. government to separate the social security funding and payouts from the government accounts?

By making up a separate, self-funded, arms length body to deal with social security and medicaid etc, they would not be faced with this big problem. The separate body could just use payroll premiums to fund its operations, separate from income taxes. And by being separate, people would not bitch about it so much, like they do now. Maybe its time to separate this important function from government and politics. Like the Federal reserve bank is at arms length. Many life insurance companies that have actuarial experience and claims administration experience could be fund administrators.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 05:24:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'M')r. Bill, several prominent people, i.e. Rubin and Volker, have recently warned about a potential dollar plummet. One of them, I don't remember which, said it was likely to occur in the next two years.

Bloomberg



What's your best guess of a dollar crash, i.e. Argentina style crash, in the next two years using a percentage for likelihood? What do you think would precipitate this? What would be the warning sign, if any?


Rubin and Volker obviously by virtue of their past and present positions have access to more detailed analysis than I have. I have often remarked that insights, or what passes for management in many cases, is just access to information. And the higher you are on the ladder the farther over the horizon you can see. At least the higher you are the more likely you are to see over the trees to see the forest. Not always, but in this case their positions give weight to their warnings.

From my point of view it is quite simple. As a European politician noted, "we all know what to do, we just do not know how to get re-elected if we do it?" Truer words were probably never spoken. I get a kick-out of these former politicians who come clean after they are out of a position to actually do something about the mess we (collectively) find ourselves in? Ironical, and a bit cowardly, too.

I blame the USA 100% for their budget deficits, debts and unfunded future liabilities. They have no one to blame but themselves. That is just poor government.

However, when it comes to the balance of payments and the rest of the current account deficit, including the trade deficit, America's trading partners are far from blameless.

The so-called Bretton Woods II unwritten, informal agreement that we have been operating under since (approximately) the Dot.con crash in 2000 is, as many pointed out already, just a system where America borrows money to buy stuff on credit. While OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers and Asian central banks are quite happy to lend the USA the money to buy that stuff, and to keep their own local currencies artificially weak to boost export lead growth. Hence the global imbalances we have seen building to unsustainable levels.

Had these countries let their currencies rise automatically in concert with their export earnings; had they developed their own local capital markets; had they stimulated growth in their own domestic economies; then they would have lent America less money in total; they would have bought less US treasuries; US interest rates would be higher and the value of US dollar denominated assets like houses would be lower; US savings rates would be higher; and the US trade and current account deficit would be lower than it is today. But they did not.

OPEC and non-OPEC producers as well as Asian central banks were quite happy to hitch a ride on America as The Consumer of Last Resort to boost their own export lead growth rates. This exacerbated current global imbalances. Plus the FED and the US government in an attempt to avoid a recession in the wake of the Dot.con crash and the aftermath of 9/11 turned on the money supply in an attempt to stimulate domestic demand in the USA. The result is larger US budget deficits and a current account deficit that consumes two-thirds of the world's net savings or about $1 trillion per year in 2006 and rising.

Obviously those holders of US debt are going to have to give back some of that faster growth, and gains from trade, in the form of lower returns on their US dollar purchases as the dollar corrects lower against those exporters' currencies, but those currencies should have been stronger in any case.

Any country experiencing a current account surplus needs to lend those funds abroad. Especially if they are also running a balanced budget or a budget surplus. Under such a scenario their local currencies should be appreciating on a trade weighted basis, while domestic interest rates should be falling towards zero real interest rates net of inflation. But that assumes the central bank and the government's treasury do not interfere in those capital market flows. However, they do in order to boost growth and create jobs.

So a dollar collapse is predicated on those OPEC and non-OPEC producers as well as Asian central bankers all of a sudden finding the courage to let their own currencies rise, not just against the dollar, but against one another, and accepting lower export lead growth as well as a loss on their foreign exchange reserves. Instead what many central banks have started to do is not dump US dollar holdings, but simply slow their increase by diversifying their foreign exchange reserves into euros, Sterling and gold.

But how deep are those markets? Will the ECB let the euro appreciate noticeably beyond $1.3000 or $1.4000? Or in otherwords to record levels against the yen and the yuan just so that Asian exports increase at the expense of European exporters? The Airbus argument noted above.

A stronger euro will make exports to Asia less competitive, at the same time that Asian exports become more competitive into Europe, a problem for manufacturers in Italy, that have their own growth, unemployment and fiscal problems. So really you shift the pain from American manufacturers to European manufacturers, which is a very familiar problem to UK exporters as the pound has relentlessly strengthened against the euro and gutted their manufacturing base.

Europe is already struggling with low to slow growth; high structural unemployment; debts and deficits in excess of Maastricht EMU limits for many members; and the burden on Germany to support the fiscal cheaters, like Italy, is growing; straining the entire euro project politically and financially. The EU project afterall is about shifting growth and jobs from the haves to the have nots in the form of regional transfer payments, handouts by Brussels, and the same core of countries consistantly paying more into the EU budget than they get out. How sustainable is that when the euro also strengthens another 25% making European exports less competitive and hurting Germany's growth and employment, who is afterall the main paymaster for the EU in the first place?

Anyone who is familar with the EU political process knows it is strangled by inertia. In Germany they are raising the age of retirement starting by one month per year, or from 65 to 67, over a period of 24 years until 2029. And that may yet be watered down by further compromises as certain sectors of the workforce argue that they should be excepted for example. The glacial pace of reform and not always forward. Plus that is only at the national level, and they still have Bundeslander and the EU wide political process that adds layers of red tape and slows growth as well as adding to the cost of doing business. A strong euro is the last thing they need at the moment.

Argentina. Argentina has not defaulted once, but many times.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
Indeed, capital markets appear to have a remarkably short memory. Argentina has defaulted on its foreign debts five times in the past 175 years; Brazil seven times; and Venezuela nine times. A debtor can default no more than once, unless a creditor is willing to forgive and forget. Amnesia sometimes sets in remarkably quickly. The bad loans that Argentina inherited from the debt crisis of the 1980s were written down in 1992. Just three years later, Argentina was carrying more foreign debt, both in absolute terms and relative to the size of its GDP, than it had in 1991.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------


IN 1902, after Venezuela defaulted on its sovereign debt, German, British and Italian gunboats blockaded the country's ports until the government paid up. In 1881, after the Ottoman empire failed to honour its obligations, European powers simply seized Ottoman customs houses and helped themselves to their due. The options available to more than 500,000 aggrieved creditors of the Republic of Argentina, which defaulted on bonds worth $81 billion in December 2001, were more limited. After much bluff and bluster, a large majority of them meekly surrendered their claims before a deadline on February 25th, in exchange for new bonds worth roughly 35 cents on the dollar.

........................................................................................................

Russia's default in August 1998 deprived Argentina of such ready access to foreign capital (see chart 2). Then Brazil's devaluation five months later destroyed Argentina's competitiveness in foreign markets. The country was stuck with twin deficits, a trade gap and a budget gap, that foreigners were less and less willing to finance. To right itself, the Argentine economy needed to regain competitiveness. Since the exchange rate could not fall, prices and wages had to instead. As recession took hold, peso prices edged downwards, tax revenues faltered and Argentina's dollar debts grew harder to repay.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In the end, Argentina defaulted on everyone. It stopped servicing its bonds, domestic and international; it cut wages and raided pension funds; it foisted its bad IOUs on to one side of the banks' balance sheets, then made a grab for the deposits on the other side, putting a freeze on withdrawals. It forcibly converted dollar deposits into pesos at one exchange rate; dollar loans at another. For the banks, this “asymmetric peso-ification” was every bit as painful as it sounds.
Argentina's debt restructuring

America cannot default in the same manner as Argentina or Russia simply due to their size, and the fact that the supranational organizations that stepped in to smooth out the fallout from the Tequilla and Asian crises get a lot their funding from the USA in the first place. The theory behind these bailouts or clean-ups after the fact were that in principle the world economy was essentially healthy, but the US and its partners wanted to avoid messy contagion or a meltdown in confidence. The system has been tested. Russia and Argentina were both in the magnitude of $100 to $200 billion, but were contained without any long-term damage. The sums involved in a US default would simply be much larger and there is no defacto lender of last resort. I do not expect China to step in and fill this role.

Therefore, rather than an Argentinia-style default a much slower and more painful period of adjustment and working off of those global imbalances. We know the US can consume two thirds of the world's savings, but I doubt it can consume 100%, and I know it cannot consume more than one hundred percent. So even growing at $1 trillion per year, plus accumulated interest, the US quickly approach a number between two thirds and 100% where they are simply not able to borrow anymore abroad. Then plugging the budget deficit will have to come from domestic savings at the expense of investment in the real economy or the stock market.

And in order to attract foreign investment to plug the current account deficit they will have to devalue the dollar enough to make US assets attractive, but not enough that the world loses confidence in the value of the dollar. This will have to be accompanied by real interest rates rising which will cut export lead growth elsewhere, and as US rates are a global benchmark, slow foreign growth as well. Take a 1990's Japanese slow to no growth for a decade scenario and then apply it to the rest of the world. I cannot see any country avoiding the fallout as either borrowers from international capital markets, exporters or producers? To a greater or lesser degree everyone will share the US' pain.

I think that former policy makers like Rubin and Volcker see this quite plainly, and I would not be surprised if it scares the living shi'ite out of them? To many this is a Made in America problem, but for the reasons I have given it is clearly a global problem.

On an individual level you can diversify out of the US dollar to protect your networth, and then re-invest in dollar assets when they become cheap enough. But on a macro-level that is simply not possible. As painful as the decade of recession and slow growth was for Japan, I actually see this as a prefered scenario for the USA at this point? Anything else would be trying to blow-up another bubble a la Greenspan in my opinion and only makes the eventual day of reckoning that much more painful - for everyone!
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Doly » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 10:52:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'T')herefore, rather than an Argentinia-style default a much slower and more painful period of adjustment and working off of those global imbalances. We know the US can consume two thirds of the world's savings, but I doubt it can consume 100%, and I know it cannot consume more than one hundred percent. So even growing at $1 trillion per year, plus accumulated interest, the US quickly approach a number between two thirds and 100% where they are simply not able to borrow anymore abroad.


Wait a moment. Does this really means what it sounds like? That, of all the money that everybody in the rest of the world has to invest in foreign assets, two thirds of that money is getting loaned to the US? 8O 8O 8O

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Then plugging the budget deficit will have to come from domestic savings at the expense of investment in the real economy or the stock market.


But the US has no domestic savings one can speak of right now! Or do they?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')And in order to attract foreign investment to plug the current account deficit they will have to devalue the dollar enough to make US assets attractive, but not enough that the world loses confidence in the value of the dollar.


Sounds like mission impossible to me. And what would happen if it is impossible, and the US is unable to attract foreign investment?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Take a 1990's Japanese slow to no growth for a decade scenario and then apply it to the rest of the world.


Do you mean that growth goes to hell for about a decade everywhere? Because, if I follow you right, it doesn't sound like the US is growing in the meantime.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')As painful as the decade of recession and slow growth was for Japan, I actually see this as a prefered scenario for the USA at this point? Anything else would be trying to blow-up another bubble a la Greenspan in my opinion and only makes the eventual day of reckoning that much more painful - for everyone!


But isn't this the option that the US has been consistently avoiding so far? Assuming that they keep trying to avoid it and everything crashes spectacularly, how would you expect that to pan out?
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 12:07:22

Doly wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ait a moment. Does this really means what it sounds like? That, of all the money that everybody in the rest of the world has to invest in foreign assets, two thirds of that money is getting loaned to the US?


Yes, it does.

global C/A surplus = global C/A deficit
surplus/deficit = budget surplus/deficit +/- trade surplus/deficit +/- balance of payments
balance of payments = interest earned abroad - interest paid abroad

So, for every dollar the world saves (NET) the USA borrows 66.7 cents or $1 trillion in 2006. They are not the only net borrower. They are simply the largest in absolute terms.


Doly wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut the US has no domestic savings one can speak of right now! Or do they?


The US does not domestic savings in aggregate. But individual savers and investors in the USA have money to invest. They just either choose to invest it abroad in search of higher returns or to diversify their portfolio. Or if they are not savers then they spend their disposable income on stuff instead of saving it. Low interest rates encourage consumption over savings. High interest rates vice versa. Real interest rates net of inflation that is.

Doly wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ounds like mission impossible to me. And what would happen if it is impossible, and the US is unable to attract foreign investment?


The hole has to be plugged. If not by foreign investment, then by domestic savings. The only third alternative would be for the USA to borrow abroad in euros, yen or yuan for example by issuing eurobonds. Countries like Argentina have to issue eurobonds in foreign currency all the time because no one wants peso debts.

But if you raise real rates to 5% and devalue the dollar by another 25% against a basket of other currencies, then all of a sudden there are a lot of bargains to be had on main street and wall street. Foreign firms would be lined up around the block to buy stakes in US firms or any other hard assets put up for sale at bargain prices. Note, this exercise is not designed to help Americans feel more wealthy. They would be much poorer a la Argentina. Selling the family heritage, peerage or family silver has a long and illustrous history.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')o you mean that growth goes to hell for about a decade everywhere? Because, if I follow you right, it doesn't sound like the US is growing in the meantime.


No. Some have argued that growth in the rest of the world, specifically Asia, or some say Europe as well, could decouple from growth in the USA. That is one argument. But I do not believe it.

Most growth takes place at the margins. Europe may trade very little with the USA. But European firms export capital goods like machinery to Asia. And Asian firms export to the USA to earn money to pay for inputs such as energy, commodities, base metals and those capital goods from Europe.

So, it is not to say there will be no growth. Japanese firms continued to grow outside of Japan even though growth in Japan stagnated. It is just net/net I think once you remove the $1 trillion dollar stimulus from the world economy compliments of Uncle Sam, and foreign exchange reserves shrink in value, that governments and exporting firms as well as the commodity, energy and base metal producers that feed that growth will feel a lot poorer.

Or as ENINEM would say, "They tried to shut me down on world trad-ing. But it feels so empty without me"

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut isn't this the option that the US has been consistently avoiding so far? Assuming that they keep trying to avoid it and everything crashes spectacularly, how would you expect that to pan out?

Yes, and wouldn't you use your credit card to make your mortgage payment, if you had no other alternative? Next month is long way away if you do not have a roof over your head today.

The politically impossible become suddenly possible when there are no other alternatives.

But as I have painstakingly tried to point out it is not just a US problem, but everyone who took also a ride on the US as The Consumer of Last Resort. They will pay in the form of lower returns on their US investments, lower future exports, slower growth and financial contagion from a fall-out in global capital markets. That effects anyone else who runs either a current account or budget deficit, anyone who exports, and anyone who produces commodities, base metals or energy for sale to any of the above.

Not even N. Korea can escape the fall-out as the Hermit Kingdom relies on foreign aid and counterfeit US dollars to pay their bills. Not even sub-Sahara Africa as the US is the absolute largest aid donor and largest supporter of the UN. Not even Cuba as energy prices will tumble in real terms due to a fall in demand, and then Chavez will not have the money to dole out in support of his Bolivar Revolution. Canada with 87% of its exports to the USA goes without saying. In short, almost everyone.

We all eat from the same rice bowl, and we all draw from the same global pool of liquidity whether it is in euros, Sterling, yen or yuan.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Revi » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 12:39:13

I'd certainly prefer a slow Japan like crash to a fast, Russian or Argentinian one. The dollar lost again to the pound according to marketplace on NPR this morning. It seems like the dollar is tanking. It lost 2% on Friday. Maybe it'll level out a bit and start to peacefully sink slowly.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby airstrip1 » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 18:16:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')
So a dollar collapse is predicated on those OPEC and non-OPEC producers as well as Asian central bankers all of a sudden finding the courage to let their own currencies rise, not just against the dollar, but against one another, and accepting lower export lead growth as well as a loss on their foreign exchange reserves. Instead what many central banks have started to do is not dump US dollar holdings, but simply slow their increase by diversifying their foreign exchange reserves into euros, Sterling and gold.

But how deep are those markets? Will the ECB let the euro appreciate noticeably beyond $1.3000 or $1.4000? Or in otherwords to record levels against the yen and the yuan just so that Asian exports increase at the expense of European exporters? The Airbus argument noted above.

A stronger euro will make exports to Asia less competitive, at the same time that Asian exports become more competitive into Europe, a problem for manufacturers in Italy, that have their own growth, unemployment and fiscal problems. So really you shift the pain from American manufacturers to European manufacturers, which is a very familiar problem to UK exporters as the pound has relentlessly strengthened against the euro and gutted their manufacturing base.


This strategy is never going to work in the long run. Europe is much too fragile politically and economically to take that sort of strain. There is a good chance that it would fracture and that the constituent nation states would just quit the Euro to defend their economies. In addition even with an overvalued currency Europe is probably never going to provide an export market for Asian manufacturers on the scale of the US.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 03:45:09

EURJPY hit a record 153.92 yen overnight (in Asian trade). I am sure the champagne corks are popping in the Aichi Prefecture not the suburbs of Stuttgart or Muenchen that is for sure.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Euric » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 19:52:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('airstrip1', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')
So a dollar collapse is predicated on those OPEC and non-OPEC producers as well as Asian central bankers all of a sudden finding the courage to let their own currencies rise, not just against the dollar, but against one another, and accepting lower export lead growth as well as a loss on their foreign exchange reserves. Instead what many central banks have started to do is not dump US dollar holdings, but simply slow their increase by diversifying their foreign exchange reserves into euros, Sterling and gold.

But how deep are those markets? Will the ECB let the euro appreciate noticeably beyond $1.3000 or $1.4000? Or in otherwords to record levels against the yen and the yuan just so that Asian exports increase at the expense of European exporters? The Airbus argument noted above.

A stronger euro will make exports to Asia less competitive, at the same time that Asian exports become more competitive into Europe, a problem for manufacturers in Italy, that have their own growth, unemployment and fiscal problems. So really you shift the pain from American manufacturers to European manufacturers, which is a very familiar problem to UK exporters as the pound has relentlessly strengthened against the euro and gutted their manufacturing base.


This strategy is never going to work in the long run. Europe is much too fragile politically and economically to take that sort of strain. There is a good chance that it would fracture and that the constituent nation states would just quit the Euro to defend their economies. In addition even with an overvalued currency Europe is probably never going to provide an export market for Asian manufacturers on the scale of the US.


The people running Europe know what they are doing. They knew the euro would not be a smooth road, but something that had to be done to prevent a collapse of their local economies from weak currencies.

If they are ever strained to the point it will cause a fracture, mark my words, a dictatorship with absolute control will take shape first. Don't think for a moment some type of plan is already created to do whatever it takes to assure the euro stays put. without the euro, Europe is sunk and they know it.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Euric » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 20:03:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'E')URJPY hit a record 153.92 yen overnight (in Asian trade). I am sure the champagne corks are popping in the Aichi Prefecture not the suburbs of Stuttgart or Muenchen that is for sure.


Maybe so, but it would be a very short lived celebration.

Remember that it is Japan that holds the most US treasuries. When the dollar tanks, so does the Yen not long after.

Japan is like a millionaire that has put all of his money into one bank or stock. As long as that bank or stock is performing, he will make money and look good to others. But when that bank or stock goes under, it will be obvious to him and to everyone else he now has nothing.

The British pound is moving up too. But the British also kiss up to Washington and New York. When the dollar goes so goes the pound. The only thing that will save it, is if London kisses up to Frankfurt in the dollar's last days.

Anybody who has lent the US money will find themselves equally bankrupt when the dollar goes.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Euric » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 20:28:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'E')URJPY hit a record 153.92 yen overnight (in Asian trade). I am sure the champagne corks are popping in the Aichi Prefecture not the suburbs of Stuttgart or Muenchen that is for sure.


Maybe so, but it would be a very short lived celebration.

Remember that it is Japan that holds the most US treasuries. When the dollar tanks, so does the Yen not long after.

Japan is like a millionaire that has put all of his money into one bank or stock. As long as that bank or stock is performing, he will make money and look good to others. But when that bank or stock goes under, it will be obvious to him and to everyone else he now has nothing.

The British pound is moving up too. But the British also kiss up to Washington and New York. When the dollar goes so goes the pound. The only thing that will save it, is if London kisses up to Frankfurt in the dollar's last days.

Anybody who has lent the US money will find themselves equally bankrupt when the dollar goes.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby mjohncoady » Thu 07 Dec 2006, 20:05:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DantesPeak', 'L')uckily, China won't use its $1 trillion in reserves to directly buy oil as an investment to deploy spare dollars (but they do plan on buying 1 billion barrels for a SPR).

Depsite the fact that it appears that China has saved the day, the central banks of the world not only are not stopping inflation - but are actually in the process of accelerating inflation.

China buys its US$ reserves mostly (but not entirely) by issuing new fiat money (it does also borrow from the savings of the Chinese people). The US also issues fiat money (essentially Federal Reserve notes are fiat money backed up with a small amount of gold). As China, Japan, etc., issue fiat money to buy US fiat money, more and more fiat money is created. For the most part, Japan has refrained from issuing new fiat the last year or two after splrging in 2002 and 2003 to stop the dollar from losing value.

This money game will only stop when someone like China says 'game over'. So far they still want to play this game.

Meanwhile the dollar will continue to lose value until finally all the central banks just give up - and then the 'fun' begins.


Well, it is fiat money but it is backed by the economy, the goods and services produced, of the issuing country. In other words, by the tax base. No one is particularly interested in ending it but the erosion of that tax base should certainly affect the willingness of others to accept it as having value.

The Economist recently reported that of its $1 trillion in foreign reserves, China held about 70% of it in US dollars. The interesting thing is, according to this same article, that the amount of money involved is so staggeringly large that any attempt at an alternative investment to US Treasuries will result in affecting the price of that alternative.

For example, if China wished to use these reserves to purchase much needed infrastructure improvement (like rural electrification and improved sanitation), the need to convert to the Yuan would drive the price of the Yuan up (and the dollar down). Since the Chinese government wants the Yuan pretty much where it is, it can't do this. Similarly, any other attempt to diversify out of US treasuries will have an undesirable effect on the asset purchased: oil, gold, corporate bonds. For the time being, the Chinese are stuck with treasuries as the purchase of them, while not producing the best return, props up the price of the one thing they want to keep relatively expensive--the US dollar. For the dollar collapse scenario (which is entirely possible) to come to pass, some other profound externality will need to come to pass first but under current conditions the Chinese simply do not have the options.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Micki » Thu 07 Dec 2006, 20:35:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..Similarly, any other attempt to diversify out of US treasuries will have an undesirable effect on the asset purchased: oil, gold, corporate bonds. For the time being, the Chinese are stuck with treasuries as the purchase of them, while not producing the best return, props up the price of the one thing they want to keep relatively expensive--the US dollar. For the dollar collapse scenario (which is entirely possible) to come to pass, some other profound externality will need to come to pass first but under current conditions the Chinese simply do not have the options.


Yes they do. They can sign up long term contracts based on US$.
This would not impact on currencies and would allow China to get rid of US dollars even if the dollar tanks.

Example; they sign a 10 year contract to buy Nickel, Zink, Copper etc. The purchase is priced in US$.
If the dollar tanks, the contract still stands. If the supplier is hedged, the thing works out quite OK.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Doly » Fri 08 Dec 2006, 10:38:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', 'T')hey can sign up long term contracts based on US$.
This would not impact on currencies and would allow China to get rid of US dollars even if the dollar tanks.


But for that, they would need to find people willing to sign those contracts in US$.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 08 Dec 2006, 11:51:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', 'T')hey can sign up long term contracts based on US$.
This would not impact on currencies and would allow China to get rid of US dollars even if the dollar tanks.


But for that, they would need to find people willing to sign those contracts in US$.


This by necessity would create currency mismatches for someone even if not necessarily for China. But first you have to assume that the PBoC is going to act as a counterpart for long-term commercial supply contracts instead as a central bank and holder of China's foreign exchange reserves. This creates legal risk for whomever is signing those long-term supply contracts, which when dealing with China is not an inconsiderable risk. But not impossible.

However, the currency risk does not go away, it is simply passed along to the next counterpart. Say, Russia in the case of guaranteed energy supplies. Oil & gas production costs in appreciating rubles with sales that are locked-in in depreciating dollars. Russia is just assuming China's FX risk. You can apply that currency risk to any country who enters into a long-term supply contract by agreeing to sell in one currency while having production costs in another.

You cannot easily hedge that out. If you do long-term cross currency forward contracts the forward price equals the spot price taking into account the interest rate differential between the two currencies. And as these are on-balance sheet transactions, not only do they eat up a lot of statutory capital as required under Basel II, but they also create long-term counterpart risks.

Counterpart risk that partly stems from one or the other not willing to honor any long-term contracts that go significantly against them. Perfect examples are long-term energy supply contracts to California that they were happy to put on when prices were going higher and happy to rip-up when prices fell. Other examples involving sovereigns are all the LATAM countries including VZL and Bolivia who were able to void commercial contracts because their terms were no longer attractive. It happens all the time. It shouldn't, but it does.

Think about VW, Airbus and many others who have consistently bet against foreign exchange markets and lost thereby locking in currency losses. One of the major oil companies, I cannot remember which one at the moment did the same thing by forward selling crude when it got to $45. Of course, when they went to $60 or $75 that no longer looks very prudent.

Also, currency risk is directly tied to interest rate risk. If you agree to buy or to sell US dollars forward for 1, 2 or 3 years you are also locking in the interest rate differential between your home currency and the US dollar. If the dollar devalues and interest rates soar you may be locking-in dollar deposit equivalents at very low rates while your costs of production in domestic rates will be floating. Higher if there is a dollar meltdown and inflation for dollar denominated inputs go up.

A more prudent currency hedge is for China to offset some of their dollar receipts by buying dollar assets such as factories, know-how, equities, etc. This was the strategy with trying to buy a US oil company. Just because it did not work does not mean that China should stop trying. Buying interests in Canadian oilsands is a good proxy. Not a perfect hedge, but partial coverage. But again that means diverting central bank reserves to private Chinese companies to make these purchases. That smacks of a centrally controlled economy and they usually either overpay, underperform, are susceptible to interference and corruption, or all of the above?

Japan building car plants in the USA is an example of hedging their long dollar, short yen currency exposure, while insuring themselves as well from trade protectionism.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Micki » Sat 09 Dec 2006, 03:41:58

No argument there.
Just showing how China might have protected themselves. A lot of reasoning regarding future strength of the dollar is that the Chinese must support the US$ or they will end up loosing billions.

I think the Chinese are a bit more clever than that and they have taken measures to not to feel the full grunt should the US$ collapse.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby Euric » Sun 10 Dec 2006, 12:28:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mjohncoady', '
')
Well, it is fiat money but it is backed by the economy, the goods and services produced, of the issuing country. In other words, by the tax base. No one is particularly interested in ending it but the erosion of that tax base should certainly affect the willingness of others to accept it as having value.

The Economist recently reported that of its $1 trillion in foreign reserves, China held about 70% of it in US dollars. The interesting thing is, according to this same article, that the amount of money involved is so staggeringly large that any attempt at an alternative investment to US Treasuries will result in affecting the price of that alternative.

For example, if China wished to use these reserves to purchase much needed infrastructure improvement (like rural electrification and improved sanitation), the need to convert to the Yuan would drive the price of the Yuan up (and the dollar down). Since the Chinese government wants the Yuan pretty much where it is, it can't do this. Similarly, any other attempt to diversify out of US treasuries will have an undesirable effect on the asset purchased: oil, gold, corporate bonds. For the time being, the Chinese are stuck with treasuries as the purchase of them, while not producing the best return, props up the price of the one thing they want to keep relatively expensive--the US dollar. For the dollar collapse scenario (which is entirely possible) to come to pass, some other profound externally will need to come to pass first but under current conditions the Chinese simply do not have the options.


I don't see how China exchanging dollars for Yuan to invest in infrastructure improvements is going to drive up the value of the Yuan, since the Chinese themselves control the exchange rate. The Yuan is not freely convertible. The Yuan has appreciated some in the recent past, but only because others nations, not market forces, keep pressuring China.

China, in my opinion, isn't interested in the money. They were and still are only interested in technology transfer. As I've said before, when they finally opened up to the world after being closed up by Mao, they realized they were in the stone age. There was no way they could ever be a world power without technology. The were to poor to buy it, and it they developed it, it would take so long, they would always be a step or two behind.

Their huge population became somewhat of an advantage. They were able to the sell it to the west in the form of cheap labour. Instead of hoards of Chinese moving to other countries to man the factories, the factories came to China. Along with the factories came the technology that China needed to modernize and it came quickly and virtually free.

China's diversification out of dollars may have less to do with the fear of a dollar collapse, and more to do with its other trading partners wanting to use currencies other then the dollar. For instance, if they purchase a lot of European products, they may be forced to pay for them in euros, thus the need to increase euro reserves.

If China's teradollar reserves became worthless over night, they would lose almost nothing. They would still have all those modern working factories and from there they can do the research to modernize and improve on those.

The Chinese know what they are doing....the Americans don't.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby ohanian » Sun 10 Dec 2006, 17:21:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Euric', '
')If China's teradollar reserves became worthless over night, they would lose almost nothing. They would still have all those modern working factories and from there they can do the research to modernize and improve on those.

The Chinese know what they are doing....the Americans don't.


What America makes, makes America.
What China makes, makes China.

China wants to make everything.
This will eventually makes China EVERYTHING.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby evilgenius » Sun 10 Dec 2006, 21:14:18

Sec. Paulson isn't going to China for nothing. He wants to get some relief for the dollar. The administration's constant rhetoric of a higher value yuan is just a bunch of hooey. He wants a cheaper yuan and so do the Chinese.

I believe that the US and China are in a symbiotic relationship now and at least the Chinese know it. China is not going to agitate for military supremacy. Everything the militants in the US have to say about China is either misdirection, because of the voting unemployed, or jingoism.

The PTB in the US are angling for integration of the US banks into the Chinese financial infrastructure. Once this is accomplished the rich will be taken care of no matter what happens to the dollar.

If I had some spare coin I would apply it to Goldman Sachs or to the oil refiners in the US because a shortage of refined gasoline, and accompanying high pump prices, is what Bernanke is going to use as an excuse to either raise rates or keep them high instead of lowering them to save housing.
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Re: The Last Days of the Dollar?

Unread postby mmasters » Mon 11 Dec 2006, 00:24:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'T')he PTB in the US are angling for integration of the US banks into the Chinese financial infrastructure. Once this is accomplished the rich will be taken care of no matter what happens to the dollar.

Interesting thought, makes some sense. How exactly would this protecting of the rich be facilitated though through the intergration? A new currency or sorts? some cocktail of financial instruments?
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