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This week the Federal Reserve took a step closer to acknowledging reality.
Unfortunately it didn't let that admission move it from a policy course firmly
guided by fantasy. In its policy statement, Bernanke & Co. took the important
step in noting that inflation expectations had taken hold in the country at
large. However, in asserting that it expects inflation to moderate this year
and next, the Fed gave no indications that these heightened expectations are
gaining traction within the Open market Committee itself. As a result, it signaled
no likelihood that it was actually prepared to do something to fight a problem
which it doesn't really believe exists in the first place.
In fact, by indicating that they expect inflation to moderate, the Fed is
saying that elevated expectations are unwarranted. In other words, Bernanke
claims that despite the fact that so many people are carry umbrellas, he still
believes it will be a sunny day. The takeaway from the statement is that no
rate hike is forthcoming. The markets saw this position for what it is....capitulation
to inflation and a weakening dollar. No surprise then that the gold responded
with the biggest single day gain in more than 20 years!
With the ensuing carnage on Wall Street, many Thursday morning quarterbacks
claimed the Fed missed an opportunity to reverse the dollar's slide by either
talking tougher or perhaps actually raising rates a quarter point. If the Fed
really believed it could talk the dollar up, or that a small rate hike would
do the trick, they would have given it a try. I believe they chose a dovish
route because of a greater fear of having their hawkish stance casually disregarded.
Imagine what would happen if the Fed raised rates and the dollar kept falling?
It would be like one of those horror movies where someone holds a cross up
to a vampire, and the Count tosses it aside with nary a cringe.
Others claim that now is the time for coordinated central bank intervention
to reverse the dollar's decline. Those who place their faith in such a plan,
overlook the fact that Asian and Middle East central banks have been unsuccessfully
intervening on the dollar's behalf for years. Those nations maintaining dollar
pegs must constantly intervene in the foreign exchange markets by buying dollars
to keep their own currencies from rising in value. Over the past few years
the scope of this intervention has been unprecedented, with foreign central
banks accumulating trillions of excess dollar reserves. Yet despite these Herculean
and misguided efforts, the dollar has fallen drastically.
Intervention advocates must believe that if the ECB and a few other central
banks joined the fray, that a better outcome would be achieved. However any
additional efforts to artificially prop up the ailing dollar will be equally
ineffective. Even if ECB intervention could slow the dollar's decent, what
possible reason would they have for doing so? The ECB is already concerned
about inflation and is preparing to raise rates as a result. Intervention to
support the dollar will only worsen Europe's inflation problem and run counter
to these efforts. This is because to buy dollars the ECB must increase its
own money supply. That is exactly what is happening in countries like China
and Saudi Arabia, which is why inflation in those nations is already much higher
than it is in Europe.
Further, since the ECB is asking Europeans to endure higher interest rates
to fight their inflation battle, why should they have to make additional sacrifices
to help Americans fight their own inflation? Especially when our own central
bank has held interest rates at the ridiculously low level of 2%, and has effectively
excused Americans from the conflict.
Since we can't count on any help from our friends, the only option would be
for the Treasury to intervene unilaterally. However, the U.S. government should
think twice about bringing a knife to a gunfight. The Treasury only has about
$75 billion in foreign currency reserves with which to intervene. The war chest
is just a spit in the ocean. To put this number in perspective, Poland has
$77 billion, Turkey has $78 billion, and Libya has $79 billion. On the other
end of the spectrum, China has $1.7 trillion (not counting Honk Kong's 150
billion) Japan has $1 trillion, Russia has $550 billion, India and Taiwan each
have about $300 billion. Singapore, a nation with fewer than 5 million people,
has $175 billion. In fact, the United States holds just about 1% of the world's
$7.6 trillion of foreign currency reserves, and our total position amounts
to just 2.5% of the total daily volume of foreign exchange trading. Talk about
Bambi vs. Godzilla! In other words, if the dollar is going to fall, the Treasury
is completely powerless to do anything to stop it.
For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
Peter Schiff's book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic
Collapse." Click here to
order a copy today.
More importantly, don't wait for reality to set in. Protect your wealth and
preserve your purchasing power before it's too late. Discover the best way
to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com,
download our free research report on the powerful case for investing in foreign
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and subscribe to our free, on-line investment newsletter at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
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