Weak Dollar? Not To Worry, Many Economists Say

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Weak Dollar? Not To Worry, Many Economists Say
Posted By:Albert Bozzo
Topics:euro * U.S. Dollar * Currencies
By Albert Bozzo Senior Features Editor * 21 Sep 2007 * 02:45 PM ET
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Worries about a dramatic decline in the value of the dollar may be overdone, economists say.

The U.S. currency has plummeted since Tuesday's surprisingly steep cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, reaching a fresh low against the Euro
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[EUR-TN 1.4089 0.0025 (+0.18%) ] and parity with the Canadian dollar
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[CAD-TN 1.0005 -0.0017 (-0.17%) ] for the first time in three decades.
Gregorio Borgia / AP

And with speculation that the Fed is likely to cut rates further to ward off a recession, some traders are betting the dollar is headed for more sharp declines.

But several economists say that’s unlikely. On Friday, the dollar recovered somewhat as traders speculated that the currency's decline had gone too far.

"I’m not concerned right now," says Josh Bivens, an economist with the American Policy Institute in Washington. "If (the Euro) stops at the 1.40 level against the dollar, then it’s a non-story."

"It is at or close to the lows we saw in 1995," adds Ram Bhagavatula, an economist by training, who’s now managing director of the hedge fund Combinatorics Capital. "What you’re seeing is short term responses to interest rate cuts. These kinds of knee-jerk things get washed over."

Looking at History

History bears that out. The dollar’s broader decline over the past two decades has triggered periods of worry.

After the so-called Plaza Accord in 1985, in which the U.S. and its major trading partners agreed to the idea of a weaker dollar, sustained declines in the U.S. currency triggered alarms on Wall Street ahead of the stock market crash of 1987.

A decade later, the dollar wilted again, only to began a powerful appreciation that ran through 2002.

So why all the worry? "People think there’s a direct correlation between the value of the dollar and the health of the economy, " says Bivens

The current alarm over the dollar comes at a time when Wall Street, Corporate America and Washington are reaping the rewards of a weak currency.

Exports have spiked, bringing jobs, profits and higher stock prices. The Bush Administration, despite talking about a strong dollar, has seen the once ballooning U.S. trade deficit pared with many of the nation’s major trading partners in Europe.

"I hear no complaints from the U.S. manufacturing sector, " chides Bhagavatula.

Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist and Standard & Poor’s points out that some 45% of the revenue of the S&P 500 comes from overseas. S&P is forecasting a 5% decline in the dollar this year and next, based on a trade-wrighted basket of currencies.

That bounty, however, has not silenced the worry-warts, who say a rapidly depreciating in the dollar could re-ignite inflation--mainly by increasing the cost of goods and services the voracious American economy consumes, making it harder to the Fed to cut interest rates.

Dismissing Inflation Worry

Bhagavatula and others dismiss that inflation concern. "Exchange rates are much more volatile than the economic fundamentals, " he says, adding that he doesn’t think the markets are expecting a U.S. recession.

Nor do any of those interviewed for this story expect the Fed to factor the dollar into its interest rate decisions.

"A gradual and orderly decline in the dollar is fine," adds Jim Awad, chairman of W.P. Stewart Asset management, which overseas $6 billion in what it calls quality large cap growth stocks. "What’s happening now is that it is all in the headlines. If this goes on it will create a negative psychology."

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Awad doubts that will happen, partly because he expects third-quarter earnings reports due out in the coming weeks to be strong enough to stop any meaningful dollar decline.

Talk of the dollar’s demise has been exaggerated for decades and usually reflects short-term thinking.

William Silber, an economist and professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business, says "the hand-writing is just wasted energy." He says there’s no reason yet to doubt the dollar’s status as the global economy’s reserve currency.

Silber, whose latest book, "When Washington Shut Down Wall Street: the Great Financial Crisis of 1914 and the Origins of America’s Financial Supremacy," says "the value of a currency is always based on supply and demand and right now there are too many dollars."

Moreover, he thinks the Euro will have trouble challenging the dollar's supremacy because "it's hard for currencies without a country to be a safe haven."

"Ask a Chinese peasant what currency he wants to hold," asks Silber. "It’s the dollar.":clink:
© 2007 CNBC.com
 
:)

Yeah any "many economists" also thought the subprime mortgage insudtry was the best thing since sliced bread.

imho " many economists" are just running fronts for industries and stock concerns.
 
We are headed for another 'Great Depression'

Thanks to the Federal Reserve Bank...a corrupt organization that side stepped USC Article I,Section 8,Clause 5... Congress shall have the power "to coin money.regulate the value therof,and of foreign coin,and fix the standard of weights and measures"

This organization was formed in 1910 by wall street investors better known as crooks..the Glass-Owen Federal Reserve Act...was signed by Woodrow Wilson in 1913...this organization was in league with the Bank of London and the Del Banco family of Venice!

We are definetly headed for another Great Depression....see how the 'City of London' created the Great Depression 1929;1931-33...Sound familiar with all the 'Bank runs' going on in London!

www.tarpley.net/29crash.htm


Hold onto your hat Topper...there won't be much of a need for accountants when the Depression hits!
 
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Battlegramps,
you and usc have uneducated grampa syndrome.
the world has passed you buy so it's doom and gloom for everybody.
Relax the bowling alley will still be there,
you ole milwakee beer will just cost .25 more a can:clink:
 
No worries for me...........

Battlegramps,
you and usc have uneducated grampa syndrome.
the world has passed you buy so it's doom and gloom for everybody.
Relax the bowling alley will still be there,
you ole milwakee beer will just cost .25 more a can:clink:


The world did not pass me by...I am happily retired ...y'all working stiffs need to worry! Especially those in the Wall Street and investors field...hope ya don't live in a 'High Rise'!


and what is 'ole milwakee beer' is that what you drink?..Personally I drink Corona and Irish Red! and .25 cents would not hurt that bad as I don't drink that much!
 
the rich always make out
when's the last time you saw wall street types hurting gramps
good on ya for the corona's I drink about 12 a year
 
Hummm...........

the rich always make out
when's the last time you saw wall street types hurting gramps good on ya for the corona's I drink about 12 a year



Great Depression...1929,1931-33...(opps I read about that I was not born yet)...as for lately Beats me I don't hang with them I hang with the 'Friends in low places ' crowd!...Where is Garth when ya need him?:D
 
This is what they do. A pump and dump on an entire society.

www.tarpley.net/29crash.htm



from bb's source

2. The New York stock exchange speculation of the Coolidge-Hoover era was not a spontaneous phenomenon, but was rather deliberately encouraged by Norman and Strong under the pretext of relieving pressure on the overvalued British pound sterling after its gold convertibility had been restored in 1925. In practice, the pro-speculation policies of the US Federal Reserve were promoted by Montagu Norman and his satellites for the express purpose of fomenting a Bubble Economy in the United States, just as later central bankers fostered a Bubble Economy in Japan after 1986. When this Wall Street Bubble had reached gargantuan proportions in the autumn of 1929, Montagu Norman sharply cut the British bank rate, repatriating British hot money, and pulling the rug out from under the Wall Street speculators, thus deliberately and consciously imploding the US markets. This caused a violent depression in the United States and some other countries, with the collapse of financial markets and the contraction of production and employment. In 1929, Norman engineered a collapse by puncturing the bubble.
 
LOL at another great depression.

If anything we are on the verge of another golden age if we can push this corn rush.

You all doom and gloomers that sit out the market thinking its going to end its going to end the markets going to crash are no better then the annoying Jehovah's witnesses that bug me at my doorstep. Meanwhile you miss countless opportunities to make money. Hell IM floating in the Caribbean on a ship and made bank last week not even paying attention. Awesome week for us investors.
 
LOL at another great depression.

If anything we are on the verge of another golden age if we can push this corn rush.

You all doom and gloomers that sit out the market thinking its going to end its going to end the markets going to crash are no better then the annoying Jehovah's witnesses that bug me at my doorstep. Meanwhile you miss countless opportunities to make money. Hell IM floating in the Caribbean on a ship and made bank last week not even paying attention. Awesome week for us investors.

Dumbass, money is worthless. It merely infects the fevered brain of the selfish as they imagine the control the death paper provides them.
 
lol at money being worthless. thats great.

why do i give a shit if the loonie is worth the same amount as the dollar or the euro is worth more unless im traveling to those countries? If anything wouldn't a weak dollar bring more business to America? cheaper products. great vacation destinations.. more tax revenue for usa? Ask yourself this.. why are the Europeans so worried about there run away euro? shouldn't they be happy there value is going so high? hmmm
 
lol at money being worthless. thats great.

why do i give a shit if the loonie is worth the same amount as the dollar or the euro is worth more unless im traveling to those countries? If anything wouldn't a weak dollar bring more business to America? cheaper products. great vacation destinations.. more tax revenue for usa? Ask yourself this.. why are the Europeans so worried about there run away euro? shouldn't they be happy there value is going so high? hmmm

There are upsides to a weak dollar. That is true.
 
Yeah it would be good if we still made much of anything and did not have to import something like 70% of our energy needs.

60 % of our economy is consumer based, not manufacturing based.
 
its all relative. And honestly this is a planned strategy thats got the Europeans bloomers in a bunch. Lets visit currency 101 here:

Weakening Dollar Advantages
U.S. firms find it easier to sell goods in foreign markets.
U.S. firms find less competitive pressure to keep prices low.
More foreign tourists can afford to visit the U.S.
U.S. capital markets become more attractive to foreign investors.

Disadvantages
Consumers face higher prices on foreign products/services.
Higher prices on foreign products contribute to higher cost-of-living.
U.S. consumers find traveling abroad more costly.
Harder for U.S. firms and investors to expand into foreign markets.
 
Oh and one more thing. lets visit the golden rule of investing.

Buy Low Sell high.

Well the dollar is certainly at a low. So now is not the time to be selling.
 
It would be more relative and balanced if our foreign trade was more balanced and so much of our debt was not owned by other nations....
 
I am not going to contribute any longer............

to this obvious nonsense..I will wait until 2008 and watch the jumpers from the 'High Rise's'..once again..glad I am retired and have put the kids on the right course for survival... The next 'Great Depression' is on the horizon...only the lonely can't see the writing on the wall...have a great life in 2008!
;)
 
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