';



Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Alex Merk: ‘Tools in Place’ for Dollar Diversification

Posted on: Jun 17th, 2009 | By Contrarian Profits | Filed under Notes From the Investment Underground

We’ve been musing on the fate of US debt for some time now. It’s no secret that we’re bearish on the fate of US Treasurys and the buck. (It’s no accident, dear reader, that your editor lives outside the US of A. We see the threat of inflation on the horizon, a dark and foreboding cloud, and we don’t like it one bit.) And the mixed signals from China and Russia on their Treasury holdings doesn’t make us sleep any easier at night.

As currencies expert Alex Merk of Merk Mutual Funds wrote recently, “Russian President Medvedev suggests the dollar is on its way out; Russian Finance minister Kudrin says there is no substitute for the dollar. The Chinese see a need to diversify out of the dollar; the Japanese say their trust in the dollar is unshakable.” What’s a poor investor to think?

Merk says Russia’s and China’s – along with fellow BRIC nations India and Brazil – concern over the stability of the dollar and their need to diversify out of dollar-denominated assets is a strategic perspective. As he rightly points out, “There is simply no substitute for the U.S. dollar today; no other market is as deep and liquid, or able to absorb the cash that needs to be deployed by central banks around the world.”

Does this mean the dollar is safe and sound? Not by a long shot. This, again, from Merk:

    [We] believe countries around the world are racing to put the “tools” in place to be less dependent on the US dollar. In Asia, for example, after the 1997/1998 financial crisis, Asian countries realized they needed to bolster their countries’ reserves. In the latest crisis, they realized that holding almost exclusively U.S. dollar reserves was a risky strategy. The solution is all too obvious, namely to develop domestic markets. This isn’t just about developing domestic consumption to create a more “balanced” world economy, this is about creating domestic infrastructures, fixed income markets in particular. Currently, many global investors invest in Asian markets by buying US dollar denominated securities plus derivatives. This makes Asian issuers – governments, supranational and corporate issuers alike highly dependent on the US dollar. This will only change if global investors have confidence in the stability and maturity of the local markets. The message to “CEOs” of countries around the world is to show that they are open and ready for business. Such trust is not earned overnight. In Asia, Singapore is a leader; not surprisingly, Singapore has a healthy domestic fixed income market. China is on its way, but needs to do more to provide access to its domestic markets.

It other words, global diversification away from the dollar may not happen today or tomorrow. But the risk to the dollar – and to long-term US economic growth – is real.

Notes readers may want to do something about diversifying their portfolio allocation to hedge against this outcome. As usual we recommend considering beefing up the hard assets side of your portfolio and adding TIPS into the mix, too.

If you’re serious about investing in hard assets, we highly recommend you read this special investor report from Crisis Trader editor Christian DeHaemer on what he calls the “Great Red Oil War.”

Of course, you could also choose to trade currencies directly. For information on how to follow master forex trader Bill Jenkins to currency trading profits, click here.

More on this topic (What's this?) Read more on Investing in China at Wikinvest

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

Related Articles



Leave Comment