Moon Kil Woong
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Economic Calendar: U.S. GDP, Fed and Housing [View article]
Don't believe the hype. Until the glut in excess houses gets purged, less people are being compelled into short selling, and the banks run low on foreclosures to sell I don't expect people's home values to even keep up with property taxes.
As for the other indicators, I expect everything to be positive or hit the mark as stimulus money keeps flowing and the government adds a few more thousands to each persons debt in the form of our national deficit. The real question is when will the stimulus/bailout meal end and the big fat tab end up on our table?
To Help Japan, Sell the Yen [View article]
Friday FX View: All Around Dollar Selling [View article]
Unlike China the US doesn't have the luxury of blatently manipulating their currency exchange rates since it is openly traded.
That being said, the Federal government needs to find a long term solution to its trade imbalance and ceaseless Federal Deficit before it becomes even more apparent the US can not domestically support the US's national and trade deficit and must abide by foreign demands even if they demand 10% interest on Treasury Bonds.
So far foreign creditors haven't yet done this simply because it would either start a massive credit contraction that would dry up all demand which exporters need and/or would lead to a massive depreciation of the US dollar which would bring to the end exporting country's undervalued currency advantage.
As for the US$ relative to commodities they are always a great investment whether when demand picks up again from any recession. This is true whether or not the US $ crashes. It is part of a traditional business cycle.
Those who hype the demise of the dollar and then say I told you so when commodities prices rise when the recession ends are misleading you. The effect will happen independent of their presumed cause.
If the US$ remains heavily funded by outside governments, it's rise and fall will be at the political convenience and benefit of those countries, not any fundamental actions the US does aside by remaining in thrall to their gluttonous appitite for consuming too much and having trading partners that are self interested in how they can always get the upper hand on trade issues. Such an occurance would most likely be abrupt and jarring for everyone involved. Personally I don't see this happening anytime soon (next 10 years) because I don't see how any player benefits unless you're already exdpecting a collapse of international trade (like another world war).
Wednesday FX View: Oh My Darling [View article]
Dollar Weakness Is Bullish [View article]
All you get is huge inflation and an unwillingness for anyone to ever buy treasuries at a low interest rate again.