by Petrodollar » Wed 24 Oct 2007, 17:18:27
...speaking of US treasuries, it appears that August 2007 may have signaled the beginning of the end of the required foreign support for the US dollar to sustain the huge twin imbalances. I'd pay close attention to the net US foreign outflow figures for September....(the following si an article from a gold website that makes some rather strong predictions)...
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/buckl ... 02407.html
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]The Global US Dollar Showdown
William (Bill) Buckler
Captain of The Privateer
Oct 24, 2007
Extracted from the Late October Issue of Bill Buckler's "Global Report"
The October 19 meeting of the G-7 Finance Ministers and Central Bankers in Washington which takes place in the wings of the IMF/World Bank meetings stands as one of the pivotal post WW II meetings. The European Union appears to have had its fill of false American protestations to the effect that the US has a "strong Dollar policy". The US has had no such policy for a long time. The US Dollar has been falling since early 2002 and the Bush Administration has done nothing to support it.
The Word from Europe is "Extreme":
On October 15, the President of the European Central Bank came out and said that he was paying "great attention" to American statements in support of a "strong US Dollar". The previous week he had said that he was paying "extreme attention". This is not so "coded" speech to the effect that the US Dollar is in danger of losing EU support.A Matter of Balance - A Matter of Scale:
Over the past six years, Europe has added jobs at a faster rate than has the US. It has had a much lower budget deficit than the United States and is now posting higher productivity gains and a $US 3 Billion annual trade surplus as well as a global current account surplus. The US stands with a current account deficit of $US 860 Billion annually, about 6 percent of GDP. It is the US which is out of balance with the world, not Europe.
The Bernanke Fed's recent interest rates cuts while the US Dollar hovered near all time historical lows shows that the international value of the US Dollar is today only being held up by the courtesy of others - mainly Europe. Japan is not helping while it holds it official interest rates at 0.5 percent and fosters the "carry trade". China is holding down its currency.
...not sure if I would downplay the reserves of Japan and China with regard to Europe's holdings, but the point remains the same, the US dollar is being propped up by the "kindness of strangers," (including Saudi Arabia and some other oil-exporters), but the recent US Treasury data about does suggest that the "kindness" is beginning to wane.
...excerpt...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'L')isten to the US Dollar - TIC, T-I-C:
August was the turn of the tide. The latest US monthly net TIC (Treasury International Capital) flows include all non-market flows, short-term securities and changes in banks' US Dollar holdings.
This measure of US net foreign capital outflow(!) was $US 163 Billion in August compared with an inflow of $US 94.3 Billion in July. This is a net turnaround in the money flows across US borders of $US 257 Billion! This is what The Privateer has analysed and forecast would happen if the US continued on its present course. The fact that this outflow is now happening is, of course, to be seen by the huge fall in the international value of the US Dollar as well as the global increases in US Dollar commodity prices. The US Dollar is now falling against most currencies, against most global commodities and against Gold.
The Data of this US Turn is Drastic:
The August US TIC flow compares with the $US 57.59 Billion trade deficit during the month as reported last week by the Commerce Department. Foreign official institutions such as Central Banks sold a net $US 29.7 Billion of Treasuries, up from net sales of $US 6.9 Billion during the previous month.
For US equities, net foreign sales totalled $US 40.6 Billion in August, compared with purchases of $US 21.2 Billion the previous month. For US corporate bonds, net foreign sales were $US 1.2 Billion in August versus purchases totalling $US 4.5 Billion in the previous month. Net foreign sales of long maturity securities accelerated to $US 85.5 Billion in August, following sales of $US 2.7 Billion in July, according to the US Treasury Department report.
Foreign official holdings of US Treasury bills, notes and bonds fell to $US 1.428 TRILLION in August from $US 1.453 TRILLION in July.Japan remained the largest holder of US Treasury securities, though its holdings fell to $US 585.6 Billion in August from $US 610.4 Billion. China was still the second largest world holder of US Treasuries. Its holdings declined to $US 400.2 Billion from $US 409.0 Billion. Great Britain remained in third place, with holdings increasing to $US 244.0 Billion from $US 210.6 Billion.
The US has to borrow $US 2.1 Billion a day to finance its huge trade gap. But the money outflows from the US have begun. The US cannot even gain the funds internationally to cover for its own monthly trade deficits. Something has to give. The main item which is "giving" and will "give" more is the international value of the US Dollar. ...and here's the conclusion...
.
Foreclosing on the US not only means that the rest of the world stops lending more of its money to the US but also that the rest of the world starts showing up in the US and demanding repayment of all the past loans! This has now started happening as shown by the "TIC" data already reported. The US financial system will not be able to handle a situation where the world demands that they begins to repay debts. US market interest rates would soar, as would US Treasury rates. An instant US recession follows.
If an accelerating outflow of funds now held by foreigners inside the US were to start, it is a near certainty that at some point in this accelerating outflow, the US would act to institute a version of FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONTROLS. In effect, these would prohibit funds owned by foreigners from leaving the US. For all those who had lent to the US, that would be a global catastrophe.
The recent freeze-up in the global interbank payments system would be small potatoes in comparison because the flow of money across the world's borders would also start to freeze up. Many smaller nations in this bind would promptly institute their own national versions of foreign exchange controls and some of them would simply seize American assets inside their borders and sell them in their own local markets, using the proceeds from the sale to compensate their nationals from the losses they had suffered from having their money blocked by the US. International trade and air travel would come to a shuddering halt. Factories beyond number would be standing still because required foreign components would not be arriving. Economically, most nations would be thrown backwards to function upon the productive means presently existing inside their own borders. Deep recessions and outright depressions would follow.