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benny balerio
Dollar's retreat raises fear of collapse
By Carter Dougherty
Thursday, September 13, 2007

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/13/news/econ.php

FRANKFURT: Finance ministers and central bankers have long fretted that at some point, the rest of the world would lose its willingness to finance the United States' proclivity to consume far more than it produces - and that a potentially disastrous free-fall in the dollar's value would result.

But for longer than most economists would have been willing to predict a decade ago, the world has been a willing partner in American excess - until a new and home-grown financial crisis this summer rattled confidence in the country, the world's largest economy.

On Thursday, the dollar briefly fell to another low against the euro of $1.3927, as a slow decline that has been under way for months picked up steam this past week.

"This is all pointing to a greatly increased risk of a fast unwinding of the U.S. current account deficit and a serious decline of the dollar," said Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and an expert on exchange rates. "We could finally see the big kahuna hit."

In addition to increased nervousness about the pace of the dollar's decline, many currency analysts now also are willing to make an argument they would have avoided as recently as a few years ago: that the euro should bear the brunt of the dollar's decline.

The euro, shared by 13 countries, once looked like a daring experiment. But it has gained credibility and euro-denominated financial assets are as good as their U.S. counterparts. With a slow economic overhaul under way in European capitals, and a fundamentally sound corporate structure, a weaker dollar justifiably means a stronger euro.

"The euro has earned what it has gotten," said Stephen Jen, global head of currency research at Morgan Stanley in London. "It is not simply rallying by default."

So long as Americans buy more than they earn from exports - and they did, creating a current account deficit of $850 billion last year - the rest of the world financed the binge by bringing dollars into the United States for investment in stocks, bonds, real estate or other assets, thereby preserving demand for the dollar.

The continued appetite for U.S. investments stemmed from a track record of strong economic growth and a financial system that has been remarkably resistant to shocks.

But the latest turmoil in mortgage markets has, in a single stroke, shaken faith in the resilience of American finance to a greater degree than even the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000 or the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, analysts said. It has also raised prospect of a recession in the wider economy.

While most economists just a few months ago would have dismissed the prospect of a dollar collapse outright, they now are debating the possibility that something on par with the dollar debacle of the 1970s might just happen again.

When a currency collapses, the central bank can push up interest rates to attract needed investment, but strangle the economy in the process. Alternatively, it can let the currency fall and watch prices of imports - and eventually competing domestic goods - rise sharply.

Double-digit inflation resulted in the 1970s and only a global recession brought it to an end.

Today, the dollar's current weakness is being driven by uncertainty over how central banks will react to the turmoil in financial markets, unleashed by the collapse of the U.S. market for subprime mortgages given to borrowers with shaky credit histories.

The European Central Bank put off an interest rate increase it had planned for September, but is still inclined to tighten credit at least one more time by the end of this year. By contrast, the U.S. Federal Reserve has hinted at a rate cut at its meeting next Tuesday - a step that would diminish the appeal of dollar-denominated assets, almost certainly sending the dollar lower.

But across a horizon of 18 months to two years, investors are pondering how quickly the dollar will fall, a question to which there are no easy answers.

After a run of strong growth, the U.S. economy has lurched into a phase of slower expansion, and last Friday the most serious warning sign appeared - an outright deterioration in employment growth.

The data has coincided with profit warnings from major U.S. retailers like Wal-Mart Stores and Home Depot, suggesting that consumer spending, the backbone of the American economy for years, was ebbing. This step would logically follow the rapidly cooling housing market, since Americans have spent heavily with money borrowed against rising home values.

A drop in consumer spending by Americans means fewer imports. The current account deficit peaked at 6.8 percent of gross domestic product in late 2005 and is now running at about 5.5 percent, with figures for the second quarter of 2007 due out on Friday.

A lower deficit means less capital needs to flow into the United States, and is consistent with a steady decline in the dollar. Since the middle of last year, the dollar, weighted for trade flows, has fallen steadily against a broad range of currencies, according to data collected by the Fed.

All this suggests that, in spite of headline-grabbing news about the latest low, the dollar could be adjusting gradually as the U.S. economy becomes driven less by lending on the back of rising home price.

The problem, as every economist knows, is that the current account deficit - about $770 billion - is still colossal in absolute terms.

And foreigners are being asked to provide those dollars at a time when the subprime turmoil is threatening to spill over into the broader economy.

Put another way, at a time when the psychology of crisis has gripped financial markets, intangible attitudes toward the dollar have become all the more important. And with growth strong elsewhere in the world, there are appealing places to go besides the dollar.

"The problem is that the deficit is still very, very large," Jen said. "And there are plenty of other investment opportunities outside the United States."

Pressed to make an educated guess, most economists opt for calm, believing the dollar is unlikely to go into a tailspin even as they mark up the odds of one.

The major holders of dollars - notably the Chinese, with their $1.3 trillion in currency reserves - have little incentive to see the dollar weaken, and their support provides the dollar with a bulwark of strength. And since investors need to stay diversified, and U.S. markets are deep and liquid, abandoning the dollar wholesale is hardly a realistic option.

"Rather than a precipitous decline, we are probably be looking at a move steadily lower," said Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist at Bank of New York in London.
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togarma
...for the love of money is the root to all evil?

I beleive the system was intentially designed to destroy America.

benny balerio
Britain's Bank Run Coming to Main Street Soon?

Adrian Ash

BullionVault

Friday, 14 September 2007

"...The queues outside British bank Northern Bank have nothing to do with subprime US home loans. But they have everything to do with today's US banking model..."

ON WEDNESDAY THIS WEEK the UK mortgage bank Northern Rock ran a banner advertisement across the bottom of The Daily Telegraph's front page.

It promised 6.30% interest on cash deposits, more than 250 basis points above the average rate-of-return offered on time deposits by UK banks in August.

British savers haven't been offered that much money to keep their cash in the bank in nearly a decade.


But Northern Rock's plea for hard cash appears to have failed. On Thursday, it arranged an emergency loan facility from the Bank of England, the UK's central bank. On Friday, queues formed at its branches across the country.

"I am going to take out the lot, every penny," said one anxious saver to Bloomberg as he queued outside the bank's West End branch in central London.

Over in the Square Mile of the City, reports the Financial Times online, a queue formed at the Northern Rock branch just 100 yards from the Bank of England's very own front door.

"The website was down and no-one was answering the phone this morning," said one of Northern Rock's anxious depositors to the FT. "When the shares fell 20% [on Friday morning] I decided to come down and take my money out."

Bereft of both cash deposits and the short-term funds it's been unable to raise in the capital markets, Northern Rock called on the Old Lady to act in its capacity of "lender of last resort". The Bank of England hasn't done this since 1973, back when the collapse of Cedar Holdings – a pioneer of second-mortgage refinancing – threatened to spark a crisis in the country's banking industry.

Northern Rock has also been a true pioneer in UK mortgages. Its sudden trauma also gives the lie – if the lie were still needed – to any claim that America's subprime crisis has been "contained".

The UK's fifth largest mortgage lender, Northern Rock repeated on Friday that only 0.24% of its total assets are exposed to the US subprime market. Ain't no subprime in them thar' home-loans!

Instead, the problem stems from how Northern Rock financed its runaway growth. "In the first 8 months of the year, Northern Rock’s total net lending was up 43% over the same period in 2006, with net residential lending up 55%," as it stated today. This stellar performance compared to its peers came thanks to what the Financial Times now calls "an alternative banking model".

The alternative being that it came from the United States, the home of debt securitization.

"Eschewing customer deposits kept down costs – the bank has just 76 branches – and facilitated a rapid expansion of the loan book," says the FT online. "Compared with the UK banking average of 7%, Northern Rock used wholesale market securitization for 43% of its funding." All told, the UK banking sector held one-fifth of liabilities in securitized loans by April this year, according to the Bank of England.

Back in the United States, meantime, "almost 68% of home mortgage originations were securitized by 2005," says the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on its website, and "in the first quarter of 2007, about half of all revolving consumer credit outstanding was held by pools of securitized assets," says Sheila Bair, chair of the FDIC. That matched the pattern of the last 10 years, Bair explained in testimony given before a House of Representatives subcommittee in early June.

If the need to refinance the loan book by appealing to the money markets has undone Northern Rock in the UK, what havoc might the ongoing liquidity crunch be causing in the US banking sector? Outstanding mortgage loans totaled more than $12.7 trillion by the end of last year, according to Plunkett Research. That makes for more than $8.5 trillion in mortgage-backed bonds used to fund America's recent – but now soured – love affair with real estate.

What if the need to raise new finance before extending new loans to buy new homes continues to meet with a big fat "No!" from the money markets?

"Northern Rock is a prime-only lender," as the distressed borrower itself said today, "and credit quality on all its loan books remains strong. Three-months plus arrears in the residential [UK] book were 0.47% at the end of August, still under half the industry average."

But built by borrowing short to lend long – rather than by the old fuddy-duddy method of attracting cash savers and then lending out their deposits – Northern Rock's spectacular growth relied on cheap and plentiful liquidity. That's what the City of London knew. The capital's hacks, on the other hand, did not.

"Buy" said The Times on July 27th. "Buy" said The Telegraph the same day. "I have bought Northern Rock," added an FT journalist one month later, "unable to resist a price of 645p, which gives a forward p/e of 6 and a dividend yield of 6.2%."

The next day, Aug 25th, brought news that private investors were filling their boots with Northern Rock stock, as well. "Last week and the end of the week before were the busiest time we've seen since February/March this year," the FT learnt from Alison Cashmore at TD Waterhouse, the big retail brokerage. Trading volumes increased by more than 50%, she said, with private investors "focusing particularly on banking stocks."

The top five purchases for Britain's private investors in August this year? Four banks and one airline – including both Northern Rock and Barclays, the third largest bank in the UK, whose CEO, Bob Diamond, demanded action from the Bank of England at the start of September.

If you're tempted to buy banking or finance stocks now they've pulled back so sharply, it might be worth asking yourself: What might the capital markets know that you can't as a private investor?

You're left with only last quarter's trading statement for guidance. Just like British share investors who piled into Northern Rock at the end of August.

Adrian Ash
BullionVault
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diverteach
Does anybody but me see the stage being set for the US economy to tank only to be bailed out by the merger into the "New world order"?

It makes perfect sense. America is far to independent to willingly sign up for such a proposition UNLESS. Start negatively affecting the lifestyles we've become accused living then we'd be more than happy to take an easier road, even if that means sacrificing our soveriegnty.
MilkMan
QUOTE(diverteach @ Sep 15 2007, 06:52 PM) [snapback]121901[/snapback]

Does anybody but me see the stage being set for the US economy to tank only to be bailed out by the merger into the "New world order"?

It makes perfect sense. America is far to independent to willingly sign up for such a proposition UNLESS. Start negatively affecting the lifestyles we've become accused living then we'd be more than happy to take an easier road, even if that means sacrificing our soveriegnty.


Or we take a baby step in that direction and join with Canada and Mexico to forum a version of what happened in Europe, including adoption a new currency.

Why did President Bush push so hard to make all the illeagle aliens leagal?

Why is he now pushing so hard for the Senate to pass the Law of the Sea Treaty?
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article....RTICLE_ID=57903

I voted for him but now I don't like the decisions he's making.

Here's the newest story on our financial situation... very interesting reading...


Currency Wars
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/70f2a23c-6b83-11...00779fd2ac.html


It just never stops coming at us...

Mike aka MilkMan

Think this is post #7


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