Friday, November 21st, 2008

The Worst Is Far From Over for the US Dollar

Aug 7th, 2008 | By Bill Bonner | Category: US Dollar & Forex Trading

Daily Reckoning editor Bill Bonner agrees with Dan Amoss, who says that all fiat currencies eventually lose their value. The markets are correcting. First subprime mortgages. Then the stock markets. Now commodities. But Bill says a bigger correction is in store for the dollar-based monetary system itself. And to try and prevent it, the Fed will create more money and inflation

The Bernanke team knew it would be damned for sending the U.S. into recession if it raised rates. It knew too that it would be damned for allowing inflation out of its cage if it cut them. So it decided to do nothing.

“Although downside risks to growth remain,” said a Fed spokesman, “the upside risks to inflation are also of significant concern to the committee.”

Here at The Daily Reckoning headquarters we are fans of doing nothing - at least in financial matters. Not spending money, for example, keeps us from going broke. Not investing money often has the same effect. When it comes to money, politics or romance… the sins of omission may cause you to miss opportunities, but the sins of commission get you sent to Hell.

We’ve had our binoculars out for the last couple of days. What we’ve seen is a major correction. Initially, the correction was centered on housing and subprime mortgage finance. Then, it hit stock markets - doing most damage in the go-go markets of the emerging economies. And now, it is leaking into the rest of the financial industry.

“Defaults hurt credit card bonds,” reports the Wall Street Journal. Morgan Stanley is said to “freeze client home equity loans,” adds Bloomberg.

Everything gets corrected eventually. Total debt to GDP reached 230% in 1931. Total debt probably peaked out a couple of years earlier, but by the ’30s, GDP was falling, while the debt had yet to be liquidated - producing a record debt/GDP figure. Then, in the following correction, the ratio collapsed to 50% by the end of WWII.

But the last quarter century has been a great time to be in the financial industry. Everybody wanted to borrow… or to lend. The debt to GDP figure shot back up to near 300%… as the financiers collected their millions in bonuses. But now, another major correction is underway.

Commodities are correcting too. China announced a slowdown in manufacturing last week. This means less demand for oil, iron, copper and the whole complex of resources. So far, they’re down 10-20%. Yesterday, oil lost another $2.83, bringing the price down to $118 a barrel.

Gold, too, took a beating yesterday. It fell $21, to $886. “Will we ever have an opportunity to buy gold below $900,” we asked a few days ago. Now we have our answer - yes. Will we have an opportunity to buy gold below $800? We will have to wait for the answer to that one. But our guess is ‘no.’ Because a bigger correction still lies ahead - a correction of the post-Bretton Woods, dollar-dependent, faith-based monetary system.

The dollar has seen fairly decent weather since March. “The worst is over,” say the fair-weather forecasters. “It’s clear sailing from here on,” they guess. Then, looking at the decline of gold: “See, I told you so,” they say.

But here at The Daily Reckoning, we treat our dollars like we treat our salads: there’s no sense in saving them. Not that we have a prejudice against the greenback. We feel the same way about the euro. And the pound. It’s all funny money as far as we’re concerned. In a correction, the real cost of things goes down. Because there are fewer people with the desire and the means to buy them. So, we’d expect the price of gold to go up - since it must become more valuable compared to the things it will buy. That is what happened in the Great Depression; Franklin Roosevelt first confiscated all the nation’s gold and then he raised its price 60% - effectively increasing the money supply the same amount.

Paper currencies, meanwhile, are created and managed by people who have a deep loathing for corrections of any sort. These are the people who set the U.S. government on course for a half a trillion dollar budget deficit this year… and who stand ready to spend $300 billion to bail out America’s over-confident mortgage lenders and over-stretched homeowners. They want to prevent a serious correction in the worst possible way. What’s the worst possible way? Ben Bernanke has already described it. He said he would “drop money out of helicopters” if that is what it took.

We don’t expect to see it raining $100 bills anytime soon. But we don’t expect any serious effort to contain inflation either - as evidenced by the Fed’s decision, yesterday, to do nothing. Instead, one way or another, they will do what Roosevelt did; they will lower the price of the dollar.

“Inflation accelerates; growth stagnates,” summarizes Bloomberg.

The country should be listening to the “inflation alert,” says the Wall Street Journal.

The latest official tally puts consumer price increases at 5%. But the Dallas Morning News issues a word of caution:

CPI numbers “may not reflect your family’s reality.”

Inflation is on the rise; it will get worse. As it gets worse, the dollar will fall against gold.

Source: Financial Correction Center


AdvertisementSarb-Ox Panic Hands Investors 7 Times Their Money

Why would a CEO voluntarily sell valuable assets at bargain basement prices? Why would a CEO do anything to "cause" investors to dump his company's stock ...artificially? Answer: to avoid jail time and huge fines. Fortunately, Horacio Marquez has found a way to use one CEO's fear of Sarb-Ox penalties to increase your money 7 times this year.
Read Report



More on this topic (What's this?)
Jim Rogers Says Massive inflation is Coming
The U.S. Dollar Going Forward
Lie of the Day
Read more on U.S. Dollar (USD), Inflation at Wikinvest
Tags: , , , , , , ,

By Bill Bonner

Related Articles



About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning and three best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of the 21st Century, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis and Mobs, Messiahs and Markets..

See All Posts by This Author



The Daily Reckoning offers a "uniquely refreshing" perspective on the global economy, investing and the ability to live well in uncertain times. You will learn what you can expect from today's markets and how to prosper in the face of uncertainty.

See All Posts from This Publication

Leave Comment