Wary currency traders have
been expecting a dollar-slide for months but
were nervous about the possibility of
widespread panic. Everyone from Bill Gates
to Paul Volcker has predicted that the
current trade deficit of $800 billion (7% of
GDP) would inevitably produce a weaker
dollar, so it is only natural that China,
Japan and other foreign lenders would begin
to cut back on their purchases. The danger
to the United States, however, remains
extreme. If the transition doesn’t go
smoothly, it could precipitate a run on the
dollar and trigger economic pandemonium. No
one wants to see the world’s economic
powerhouse pirouetting through the ether in
flames. By the same token, no one wants to
be the last man holding onto stockpiles of
scrip that are diminishing in value.
The delicacy of the
situation explains the sudden appointment of
Henry Paulson as Treasury Secretary. Paulson
is a brainy insider who has the bone fides
to manage a very tricky “retreat” from the
dollar. America’s economic future will
depend heavily on his ability to steer the
ship of state through troubled waters.
As we said, there was no
doubt that China, Japan and others would
eventually reduce their dollar-holdings as
America’s debt continued to mount. What is
surprising though is that a sell-off did not
occur earlier when Bush enshrined his
reckless tax cuts and profligate spending as
“permanent”. The administration’s fondness
for living beyond its means has never been
in doubt, now greenback will pay the price
for Bush’s excessiveness.
Of course, Bush is not
the main scoundrel in this morality play.
The Federal Reserve has weakened the dollar
enormously by engineering one monetary-coup
after another. Greenspan’s “cheap money”
policy has created massive equity bubbles
that appear whenever interest rates are
absurdly low. When the stock market crashed
in the late 90s, millions of working class
people lost their retirement and life
savings overnight, while wealthy insiders
walked away unscathed. Undaunted by the
economic carnage he produced, Greenspan
again lowered interest rates to a ridiculous
1% in 2001 which created a $9 trillion
housing bubble, “the largest equity bubble
of all time” (says “The Economist”). Now, as
interest rates inch higher, the housing
industry is lumbering towards the
power-lines and certain death. The effects
on the world economy will be catastrophic.
Under Greenspan, the money supply
expanded at an unbelievable rate. “From
1982 to 1992, it went from a "modest" 8%
year-on-year expansion. However, from 1992
to 2002 it moved into overdrive with the
deregulation of global markets with a
year-on-year expansion of more than 12%.
Since the 2002 post 9/11 crash, the money
supply has been expanding at greater than
15%”; more than doubling in less than a
decade. (“Fiat and Credit” Nigel Maund)
Now there are signs that foreign
lenders are tired of the weakening dollar
and are reducing their stockpiles of
greenbacks and dollar-denominated
securities. The Gold Forecaster reports in
its recent article “The US Dollar and its
Prospects”:
“Last month saw the U.K. and Caribbean Banks
buy a disproportionately large amount of
U.S. Treasury assets. It appears that this
is part of an international dollar liquidity
management program. If this is correct the
two centers will buy even more from now on,
as other foreigners reduce their purchases
of the U.S.dollar.”
This means that China and Japan have begun
to reduce their purchases of US Treasuries
but, surprisingly, some mysterious third
party has begun to pick up the slack.
Who is crazy enough to
increase their dollar-holdings when most
analysts are predicting a loss in value?
Apparently, the Bush
administration (along with the Federal
Reserve) is purchasing its own debt
(Treasuries) to control the rate at which
the dollar declines. It’s a good strategy,
but it can’t last forever.
If the dollar began a
sudden nosedive, central banks around the
world would quickly ditch their
stockpiles and ignite a global-economic
firestorm. By purchasing its own debt, the
US hopes to engineer a “soft landing” while
maintaining its status as the world’s
“reserve currency”.
As the world’s reserve
currency, the Fed can simply print money
which the rest of the world accepts as
payment for its manufactured goods and
resources. It’s the slickest deal on earth.
As one admiring currency-trader said, “It’s
like having a mint in your own backyard.”
The system was put in place
after the vast devastation of World War 2
and has made the Federal Reserve the
de-facto steward of the global economic
system. Nearly 70% of the reserves in
foreign central banks are either dollars or
dollar-denominated securities. This is as
close to a monopoly as it gets.
The expansion of the dollar
is the greatest fiat-money experiment in
history. The awesome power of the greenback
extends to all markets, and yet, is
completely disconnected from the traditional
means of measuring value, like the gold
standard.
It’s clear that Bush
believes that the dollar can survive
“devaluation” if the US is able to control
the vast oil resources in the Middle East.
Foreign countries will be forced to use the
dollar in their oil purchases regardless of
the staggering trade deficits. The dollar’s
value will continue to be pegged to oil
while its future will increasingly depend on
the military’s success in Iraq and,
potentially, Iran. Needless to say, the
results are far from certain.
Even if the
administration’s plans in the Middle East
succeed, there are stormy times ahead for
the greenback. The United States has reached
an unsustainable level of debt in
government, business and personal finances.
Personal savings are down, mortgage payments
are up, and credit card debt is higher than
ever. The entire country is mired in swamp
of red ink for which there is no easy
remedy.
James Shepherd,
President of JAS MTS Inc. puts it this way:
“A
perfect storm is developing and much of this
danger has to do with debt. …When
a saturation point of debt and leverage is
reached, even a minor dislocation can cause
a dramatic collapse….Debtors are always
punished more severely in a declining
economy because, as activity subsides, they
are less able to service their debt and the
value of the assets that have collateralized
are also falling. Once those that own real
estate realize that their neighbors cannot
service their mortgages and are forced to
sell at almost any price, thereby driving
down the perceived value of their own
property, the conditions necessary for a
full-fledged debt-driven meltdown will be in
place…
a severe recession - is about to sweep over
the landscape and blow away those who are
not prepared.”
The predictions of
Warren Buffett,
Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, are equally
sobering:
“There are deep-rooted structural problems
that will cause America to continue to run a
huge current-account deficit unless trade
policies either change materially or the
dollar declines by a degree that could prove
unsettling to financial markets. Indeed,
without policy changes,
currency markets could become disorderly and
generate spill-over effects, both political
and financial.”
(Quotes form Dudley Baker, “Ominous Warnings
and Dire Predictions of World’s Financial
Experts”)
“Could the falling dollar
lead to “political turmoil”, as Buffett
suggests?
The Organization for
Economic Cooperation (O.E.C.D.) has joined
skeptics at the IMF in predicting that the
dollar will fall by 35% to 50% in order to
balance current account deficits. These are
modest predictions given the enormous amount
of debt the US has accumulated in just the
last 6 years. ($3 trillion) Consider how
life for the average American will change
when gas is $6 per gallon rather than $3;
when groceries skyrocket to twice their
normal price, and when life-savings are cut
in half overnight.
.
The greenback is now
facing its greatest challenge due to its
massive account imbalances, reckless
mismanagement, and erosion in confidence.
The only way the dollar can slow its
downward slide is by maintaining its
stranglehold on the oil trade. Currently,
oil is sold exclusively in dollars which
allows the US to float trillions of
greenbacks through the system without fear
of them being cashed in. Unfortunately,
there’s rebellion among the vassals. Iran
(5.4% daily world oil output) Venezuela
(5.2% daily world oil output) and Russia
(15.3% daily world oil output) are all
threatening to abandon the dollar in their
oil transactions which would send hundreds
of billions of dollars back to the US and
plunge the country into a deep recession.
If this mutiny succeeds, the dollar will
vanish in a poof of black smoke.
Abolishing the M-3
In late March, 2006 the
Federal Reserve ceased publishing the M-3,
the indicator of how many dollars are
currently in circulation. This removes all
the reliable data on the dollar’s value.
Now, the public has no way of knowing what
is going on with its own currency. This lack
of transparency will be disastrous for the
dollar as the use of money is predicated on
confidence. By making their activities as
opaque as possible, the Fed has undermined
the publics’ trust and added to the anxiety
in the markets.
America’s biggest lenders
in Europe and Asia are now expected
to calculate the value of the dollar without
the statistical tools they need to make a
reasoned judgment.
That does not inspire
confidence.
How
long will countries continue to loan money
to a nation that takes a “trust me”
attitude, especially when the government is
as widely distrusted as the Bush
administration. The removal of the M-3 may
seem like a short-term fix to obscure the
machinations of the Fed, but over time it
will be seen as a costly mistake.
Paulson to the Rescue
Newly-appointed Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson has been given the
daunting task of closing ranks with the
Federal Reserve and supervising an “orderly
devaluation" of the dollar. There's great
concern that a “sudden disorderly
adjustment” will precipitate a run on the
dollar, traumatizing the markets and sending
the economy into a tailspin. Regrettably,
there are no easy choices; the dollar is
losing air, and fast. The accumulated weight
of unfunded tax cuts, extravagant military
expenses, personal debt, and global trade
imbalances have taken a wrecking-ball to the
greenback and left little room for hope.
Paulson’s job is to turn the dollar’s
downfall into a “controlled demolition”
rather than a full-system meltdown.
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