Godlike Productions Banner
Users Online Now: 628 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 58,930
Pageviews Today: 165,168Threads Today: 317Posts Today: 4,008
12:52 PM
Join Now, Free! (& No Ads) | FAQ | Links | Link to Us | Contact | User Map
User Photo Album | Dooms Day Calendar | Radio! | GLP Store | Proxy Toolbar
Back to Forum
Back to Forum
Post a New Thread
Post New Thread
Reply to this Thread
Reply
View Your Favorites
View Favorites
Rate this Thread
Absolute BS Crap Reasonable Nice Amazing
 

COORDINATED WORLD WIDE CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION TO SUPPORT THE DOLLAR BEING CONTEMPLATED

 RSS 
Juanwhoknows
User ID: 469222
7/17/2008 10:04 PM

Report abusive post
COORDINATED WORLD WIDE CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION TO SUPPORT THE DOLLAR BEING CONTEMPLATED
Quote

Amber light flashing on U.S. dollar intervention

Wed Jul 16, 2008 3:19pm ET
By Mike Dolan - Analysis

LONDON (Reuters) - Three days before the last bout of coordinated central bank intervention to calm world currency markets, the International Monetary Fund's top economist opined: "If not now, when?" Many experts are now asking the same.

In 2000, when Michael Mussa urged the world's big central banks to calm the markets, it was the euro's seemingly endless slide which was perceived to be destabilizing the world economy. Now, it is the plight of the U.S. dollar that is ringing alarm bells.

The greenback set record lows again on Tuesday in its alarming downward spiral as severe questions are being asked by overseas investors about the financial reliability of the world's biggest economy and its financial obligations.

Once lost, investor confidence can take years to restore.
The risk to the dollar in that environment is stark and given few governments around the world have any interest in seeing a further devaluation of the U.S. currency, support for concerted intervention is on the rise.

The dollar's decline has clearly exaggerated oil and food prices worldwide, complicating monetary policies from the United States to the euro zone and Britain as well as to the export-oriented economies of Asia and the Middle East.
As the world economy slows after a year of credit turmoil, dollar-exaggerated inflation has tied the hands of central banks everywhere from cutting interest rates, and dollar losses also squeeze the export-driven growth engines of emerging economies

"The United States should consider intervening on the foreign exchanges," said Jim O'Neill, chief global economist at Goldman Sachs in London. "The dollar's ongoing weakness and aggravation of the oil price is a threat to the whole world."

"There's a danger of a vicious circle developing here -- the dollar is declining across the board, oil prices are still rising and both are causing simultaneous inflation damage."

"They can't just stand idly by and watch all this happen without a fight," O'Neill added.

Goldman Sachs are not alone in warning of the possibility of dollar-supportive intervention.

"The conditions for successful dollar supportive coordinated intervention are now starting to fall into place," economists at French bank BNP Paribas told clients on Wednesday, saying the most important factor was a growing global consensus.

U.S. investment firm Morgan Stanley said its in-house model on the probability of central intervention has been rising all year and reckons chances are now as high as one in three.

Investors as well as bankers feel the time is ripe.
"The return of coordinated intervention in the foreign exchange market could prove to be one surprise in the coming months," said Edouard Carmignac, President of Luxembourg-based fund manger Carmignac Gestion told his clients on Tuesday.

PUSH COMES TO SHOVE
So how bad is it?
Against a euro bolstered by this month's European Central Bank interest rate rise, the dollar set a record of $1.6038 and its lowest in three months against a basket of world currencies <.DXY> -- within 1 percent of uncharted levels.
In testimony before a U.S. House of Representatives' panel on Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke treaded carefully around a question whether intervention was needed, but he pointedly noted it should not be set aside as a policy tool.

"I think it's something that should be done only rarely, but there may be conditions in which markets are disorderly where some temporary action may be justified," the U.S. Fed chief said.

Ultimately, the dollar's value "depends really on the fundamentals and it's up to us to get the fundamentals right," he added, in a tacit acknowledgment that the currency is becoming less attractive as U.S. economic woes mount.

The dollar index that weighs it against a basket of other currencies is down 10 percent in a year and has now dropped more than 40 percent in just over six years. Meanwhile, crude oil prices denominated in dollars have risen more than sevenfold over the same period.

What is more, the dollar and the euro are fast approaching the sort of moves that preceded some of the most famous coordinated central bank interventions in recent history.

In the five years leading up to the 1985 Plaza Accord that devalued the U.S. dollar, the greenback's trade-weighted index had risen about 50 percent. The euro's equivalent measure has done exactly that since it was rescued by the ECB and the other Group of Seven central banks in 2000.

The unease around the globe is palpable.

China, under fire for years to allow its semi-pegged yuan rise faster, has started to do just that over the past year. But it now faces growing domestic dissent about the damage that may wreak on exports.

That anxiety is mirrored across Asia and also in the petrodollar boomtowns of the Middle East, whose strict dollar pegs are also at breaking point despite recent reassurances from a visiting U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

But as a weakening economy, housing market slump and hobbled banks all infect each other stateside, the Federal Reserve's medicine of more than halving interest rates to 2 percent since last September looks to have worn off.
Dollar-linked inflation suggests rates should rise, but pervasive financial weakness now argues for even lower rates.

The dollar is taking the brunt of the policy stalemate.
Salt in the wounds has come from Treasury's need to bail out giant state-sponsored mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on Sunday, casting a pall over U.S. assets. In the five years leading up to the 1985 Plaza Accord that devalued the U.S. dollar, the greenback's trade-weighted index had risen about 50 percent. The euro's equivalent measure has done exactly that since it was rescued by the ECB and the other Group of Seven central banks in 2000.
The unease around the globe is palpable.

China, under fire for years to allow its semi-pegged yuan rise faster, has started to do just that over the past year. But it now faces growing domestic dissent about the damage that may wreak on exports.

That anxiety is mirrored across Asia and also in the petrodollar boomtowns of the Middle East, whose strict dollar pegs are also at breaking point despite recent reassurances from a visiting U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson.

But as a weakening economy, housing market slump and hobbled banks all infect each other stateside, the Federal Reserve's medicine of more than halving interest rates to 2 percent since last September looks to have worn off.
Dollar-linked inflation suggests rates should rise, but pervasive financial weakness now argues for even lower rates.

The dollar is taking the brunt of the policy stalemate.
Salt in the wounds has come from Treasury's need to bail out giant state-sponsored mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on Sunday, casting a pall over U.S. assets. As the Fannie/Freddie crisis has snowballed this month, their borrowing premia over U.S. Treasuries has ballooned to near one full percentage point. But much more worryingly, the bailout has even raised doubts about what has for decades been seen as the safest of safe -- AAA-rated U.S. government debt.

Credit insurance costs on a U.S. Treasury default, although still small, surged this month to some 16-20 basis points and exceeded other major sovereigns by a significant measure for the first time ever. German premia for example, are 5 basis points.

On top of another 10 percent dollar fall over the past year, that will surely have unnerved overseas investors who hold more than $2.6 trillion of U.S. Treasury Securities. Two-thirds of this is held by foreign governments, which also own more than a $1 trillion in Fannie and Freddie debt.
(Additional reporting by Glenn Somerville in Washington)
(Editing by Malcolm Whittaker, Gary Crosse)
[link to today.reuters.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 469947
7/17/2008 10:49 PM
Re: COORDINATED WORLD WIDE CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION TO SUPPORT THE DOLLAR BEING CONTEMPLATEDQuote

no, here is what is going to happen.............NOTHING
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 419558
7/17/2008 10:57 PM
Re: COORDINATED WORLD WIDE CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION TO SUPPORT THE DOLLAR BEING CONTEMPLATEDQuote

Yeah, just trying to scare the currency traders and the Chinese!
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 469222 (OP)
7/17/2008 11:36 PM
Re: COORDINATED WORLD WIDE CENTRAL BANK INTERVENTION TO SUPPORT THE DOLLAR BEING CONTEMPLATEDQuote

Yeah, just trying to scare the currency traders and the Chinese!
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 419558


Yeah, everything put out has been pretty deceptive lately, but still noteworthy.
Back to Forum
Back to Forum
Post a New Thread
Post New Thread
Reply to this Thread
Reply
View Your Favorites
View Favorites
Vote for Us!
Vote For Godlike Productions!
Vote for Us!  Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional



Disclaimer:
This website exists for entertainment purposes only. The reader is responsible for discerning the validity, factuality or implications of information posted here, be it fictional or based on real events. Moderators on this forum make every effort to review the material posted on this site however, it is not realistically possible for our small staff to manually review each and every one of the more than 5000 posts GodlikeProductions gets on a daily basis. The content of posts
on this site, including but not limited to links to other web sites, are the expressed opinion of the original poster and are in no way representative of or endorsed by the owners or administration of this website. The posts on this website are the opinion of the specific author and are not statements of advice, opinion, or factual information on behalf of the owner or administration of GodlikeProductions. This site may contain adult content and if you feel you might be offended by such content, you should log off immediately.

Not all posts on this website are intended as truthful or factual assertion by their authors. Some users of this website are participating in internet role playing, with or without the use of an avatar. NO post on this website should be considered factual information on face value alone. Users are encouraged to USE DISCERNMENT and do their own follow up research while reading and posting on this website. Godlikeproductions.com reserves the right to make changes to, corrections and/or remove entirely at any time posts made on this website without notice. In addition, Godlikeproductions.com disclaims any and all liability for damages incurred directly or indirectly as a result of a post on this website.

This site is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied. You should not assume that this site is error-free or that it will be suitable for the particular purpose which you have in mind when using it. In no event shall Godlikeproductions.com be liable for any special, incidental, indirect or consequential damages of any kind, or any damages whatsoever, including, without limitation, those resulting from loss of use, data or profits, whether or not advised of the possibility of damage, and on any theory of liability, arising out of or in connection with the use or performance of this site or other documents which are referenced by or linked to this site.

Some events depicted in certain posting and threads on this website may be fictitious and any similarity to any person living or dead is merely coincidental. Some other articles may be based on actual events but which in certain cases incidents, characters and timelines have been changed for dramatic purposes. Certain characters may be composites, or entirely fictitious.

We do not discriminate against the mentally ill!

Fair Use Notice:
This site may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Users may make such material available in an effort to advance awareness and understanding of issues relating to civil rights, economics, individual rights, international affairs, liberty, science & technology, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C.Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
For more information please visit:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml

This Disclaimer is subject to change at anytime.

Mail Webmaster with questions or comments about this site.

Page generated in 0.082s (6 queries)