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All markets, in their search for a reliable formula that satisfies the scientific
and mathematical belief that market relationships are precisely measurable
in something else, believe that gold is responding in an opposite way to the
$. The corollary to that is, therefore it must be moving in synch with the €?
In fact, in the € it has been rising. It is important to look a little
more closely at this formula and the realities behind it.
The
Eurozone is relatively self-sufficient as we see by the actions of the European
Central Bank officials, acting against inflation rather than tending to growth,
unlike officials at the Fed in the States. But are they? Would Europe be able
to stave off a recession if the States were suffering from one? More to the
point, would they be able to retain growth if the $ fell against the €?
A really strong € would savage European competitiveness over time, so
Europe cannot afford to see the € too strong and remain healthy. The cheapening
U.S. competition, gaining ground as the $ fell would eat into European exports
and force Europe to begin to fragment economically or to retaliate.
This week has seen the $ head down again as the interest rate benefits of
the $ proved less attractive than those of the €. But then we saw the
$ suddenly recover way beyond a level justified by the fundamentals on the
$. Clearly global entities that wanted to see the $ hold value and its exchange
rate level moved into the market and drove it back up, despite the trend to
sap the $. But then, after the Fed drop the Fed Funds rate another 0.5% the
$ sank another 1+%.
If
theory were dominant, the European economy is set to turn down and follow the
States into recession on the back of a strong €, but we don't believe
for a moment that Europe is going to sit idly by and watch this happen. The
first point of retaliation has to be to weaken the €. The second is to
stimulate growth and place "price stability" on the back burner. The resulting
lifting of inflation, will be a price they have to pay, but if 'price stability'
leads to falling growth and a recession in Euroland, then expect to see the € de-couple
from the $ and an exchange rate battle ensuing, bringing into play market forces
that even George Soros, the great Pound Sterling speculator, never dreamed
of. The trend of the last year in particular has been for Central Bankers to
move to the view that international trade competitiveness is first prize in
the exchange rate markets. Only in the major three trading blocs in the world
has the view been any different, but for how much longer?
Can
Europe benefit from the stimuli the Fed and Bush are pumping into the U.S.
economy? Yes, provided they are not disqualified by a strong €. So expect
the € to de-couple from gold soon. After all it remains a currency whose
value is presided over by men. It remains simply an obligation of these men,
dependent only on the confidence that they can inspire in the monetary world.
When its qualities are viewed against those of gold, then one wonders just
how could markets relate the two together.
Now look beyond the time that the € and the $ move against each other,
whether in some sort of unholy alliance [between the two Central Banks] to
maintain a 'trading band' within which to move. On the side of this the rest
of the currency world will search for some stability in exchange rates with
their main trading partners [each currency in its own place in the currency
pecking order] resulting in them moving, roughly, all together in a seemingly
'stable' market. The buying power of each one will drop as far as internal
and imported inflation drops them. This is the direction global currencies
are headed in already.
Will this type of exchange rate stability, including between the € and
the $ bring back confidence? Not in the slightest. It will give no more comfort
than one lemming has, following the next over the cliff.
But gold, true to its inherent nature, alongside silver will reflect the subsequent
rapidly rising global inflation, this time in an atmosphere of superficial
comfort, like the man who fell off the fifty-story building. As he passed the
twelfth floor, he was heard to say, "So far, so good!"
The € will de-couple from gold because it is a currency and it is
reliant on the global economy to the extent that its Balance of Payments
is critical to its good health. It is also printable, as we have witnessed
this last six months. It is only a matter of time before the market sees
that and takes gold up and away from it.
"The € will
de-couple from gold, because it is a currency!"
This is a snippet from the recent issue of the weekly newsletter
from: www.GoldForecaster.com.
For the entire report, please visit www.GoldForecaster.com.
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