• Featured
  • Australasia
  • The Americas
  • Europe
  • Africa
  • Market
  • Precious Metals
  • Resources
  • Currencies
  • Real Estate
  • The Bonner Diaries

Euro Hits Fresh All-Time Highs Versus the Dollar


By Adrian Ash • March 4th, 2008 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Adrian AshCity correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and formerly head of editorial at Fleet Street Publications Ltd, Adrian Ash has been studying and writing about the investment markets for the last 9 years. He is now head of research at BullionVault - giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich, on US$3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

See All Articles by This Author

  • None Found
Filed Under: Currencies
Tags: Euro • gold price • the dollar • US Treasury
feature photo

The Euro hit fresh all-time highs versus the Dollar already this month – and we're only one trading day in.

So might US investors want to switch out of gold bullion ahead of Easter this year and move into the single currency instead?

After all, the Euro still pays 4.0% interest per year – a feat that dumb gold could never promise or achieve – and with Eurozone inflation holding at a record 3.2% year-on-year in February, the European Central Bank (ECB) is clearly in no mood to start slashing rates now.

"Inflation will not slow as markedly as supposed," warned the ECB's Axel Weber last week. Colleague Juergen Stark added that he was "highly dissatisfied" with the current surge in the cost of living.

Tight money to come then, right? Well, the gold market doesn't buy it. Not at $1.52 to the Dollar – with European manufacturing squeaking and Mediterranean house prices slipping.

The gold price for French, German and Italian savers just keeps on rising, gaining for six of the last seven months.

And yet luxury car-maker BMW says it can't bear a further "sustained rise" in the Euro above $1.50 to the Dollar. Last week it cut 5,600 jobs.

Dassault Aviation in France says it can't compete at this kind of exchange-rate either. "The natural step is to shift to the Dollar zone [incl. most of Asia, remember] or low-cost areas as they have done in the car industry," said CEO and chairman Charles Edelstenne to Le Monde last week.

"This could include parts of our factory plant and some research tasks."

Put another way, Europe has got the worst of both worlds right now – a high-value currency that's crimping exports, and yet surging inflation at the very same time. So the European Central Bank needs to talk tough while doing nothing, hoping the inflationary and currency pressures don't squash the economy both at once.

Good job the old economies retain such political importance as well. Right?

"To have an increase in the [voting] quotas of emerging countries – China, India, Brazil – is very difficult because the sum has to add up to 100%," noted Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in late February, "so some others must lose.

"The ones who are going to lose are mainly the European countries and that is the reason why they may be reluctant [to vote for change]."

The debate goes far beyond the IMF, however, that brave remnant of post-war global planning. All top-level political groupings now face the problem of too many powers, with too much at stake, all wanting to be members of the top few spots in the "oh-so-crucial" club.

The G-7 group of industrialized nations, for instance, currently invites three Eurozone nations to the party – Germany, France and Italy – as well as Canada, Japan and the United States.

The United Kingdom gets to tag along too, not least because it's still vying with China for the No.4 slot in world GDP behind the US, Japan and Germany. It also prints the world's No.3 reserve currency, the British Pound. And my, but how it prints it!

Growing by 12.9% in January from a year earlier, the broad supply of Pounds Sterling has now been expanding at a two-decade record since March 2005.

No wonder the gold price in British Pounds is surging alongside the UK's trade & government deficits. But "when are we gonna get the real players, with the money, in the middle of these [G-7] debates?" asks Jack Welch, former head of General Electric. He was talking to Larry Summers, US Treasury secretary at the tail-end of the last Clinton presidency, on CNBC last week.

"It seems like some of our government institutions are living the last war, for example the G-7. Four European economies, Canada, Japan and you guys [the US Treasury] all meet...but the money's somewhere else."

"Oh, you know how these things go, Jack," replied Summers, former president of Harvard University and now a part-time hedge fund consultant in New York. "It's much easier to get people in than it is to get other people out...

"You want to have a reasonably small group. We worked with the Canadians to set up the G-20 for exactly the reasons you give. And I think [US Treasury] secretary Paulson is to be commended for the effort he has put into having a regular financial dialogue with China on a bilateral basis.

"I think you're gonna see this kind of evolution. Look, if we wanna address this issue of sovereign wealth funds – which I think is a concern, though it's a concern that has to be kept in perspective – the way we're gonna do it is by having dialogue with the countries that, just as you say, the countries that have the money. Some of them are China, some of them are in the Middle East, and I think we do need to recognize more than we probably have before that the distribution of financial power and influence and capacity is pretty different from the distribution of sort of political congeniality with US interests across the board.

"That means we may need to have a somewhat different grouping for the foreign ministers and the finance ministers."

Can political and financial power really be split into two different groups...with the United States at the head of both, choosing its allies here but inviting a different clique of friends there?

Perhaps with Europe gnashing its teeth about the high Euro, it's actually time for the Dollar itself to bounce, rallying from new all-time record lows on its trade-weighted index and forcing US gold prices lower.

Sure – it might require higher interest rates from the Federal Reserve, rather than the campaign of monetary destruction begun by Ben Bernanke back in August. Or conversely, those new record lows in the world value of the US Dollar might help stoke US export sales so fast, it revives the major Wall Street stock indices and erases the last five months of losses.

No...?

Should the Dollar and Wall Street's collapse continue, meantime, some kind of new monetary world order will only continue to look ever more likely. Russia is preparing to price and sell crude oil in Roubles, for example, rather than the Dollar. The Rouble might also be used as one means of payment on a forthcoming Iranian oil exchange in Tehran, according to Iran's ambassador to Moscow last month.

But whatever comes, and no matter what happens to the price of gold, don't expect the chocolate bunnies of today's monetary order to vote for either Easter or a heatwave...let alone both at the same time.

Adrian Ash
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
please wait...
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.9.11_1134]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)




P.S. to get The Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed.

Related Articles:

  • None Found

About the Author

Adrian AshCity correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and formerly head of editorial at Fleet Street Publications Ltd, Adrian Ash has been studying and writing about the investment markets for the last 9 years. He is now head of research at BullionVault - giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich, on US$3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees.

See All Posts by This Author

Post a Response

Comment moderation policy: Port Phillip Publishing supports free speech and frank and open conversation. But we reserve the right to modify or delete your comments if we consider them to be offensive or in violation of any laws, including Australia's anti-discrimination laws

By submitting your comment you agree to adhere to our comment policy.


  • Why Should I Sign Up?   We Value Your Privacy
  • Master trader predicts next move for ASX...

    Latest Slipstream Trader Video Market Update Just In... watch for free below.


    One viewer said these prediction videos were “scarily accurate”... another said Murray Dawes was “well on the money”... To find out where the Slipstream Trader thinks the market is headed next, and what that could mean for your investments, click below now to watch his latest video update...

    8th February 2012 - Market Update

    It’s one thing to have a view on where the market is headed next... It’s another to have specific stock trading recommendations emailed to your inbox.

    To take a 90-day, no obligation trial of Slipstream Trader, click here
  • Search

    The Markets

    All Ordinaries4318.900  chart-40.500
    S&p/asx 2004242.800  chart-42.300
    China Shanghai Co2344.771  chart-7.084
    Gold Sep 110.00  chart0.00
    Clj11.nym0.00  chartN/A
    Nikkei 2259052.07  chart+52.891
    Indu0.00  chartN/A
    S&P 5001346.76  chart-5.01
    Ftse 1005884.44  chart-21.26
    2012-02-14 00:39

    Most Comments

    • Australian House Prices Are Severely and Seriously Unaffordable (312)
    • Majority of Australians Believe House Prices Will Rise in Next Twelve Months (293)
    • Gas is the New Oil (256)
    • A Date for an Aussie House Price Collapse (251)
    • How to Profit From the Path of Progress (230)

    Archives

  • Headline Archive

  • Slipstream Trader

    Thousands now trade the markets who never thought they could...

    Breakthrough in trading techniques helps regular investors:

    • Determine how much to risk in a trade
    • Lock in profits while the position is still open...
    • Exit a losing position before a share tanks...

    If you thought trading was too complicated, prepare to be surprised... click here
  • Australian Wealth Gameplan

    "A rapid contagion is spreading.
    Even if you think you are relatively safe, this is a new, permanent risk. It will be with us for the next decade, or even two”.

    - Edward Morse, Veteran oil trader

    Right now a ‘paradigm shift’ is taking place that could present you with the single biggest investment opportunity of your lifetime.

    It also represents risks to your portfolio that could surpass those of the Global Financial Crisis fallout.

    Get full details in this just-completed presentation. (turn on your speakers)
  • Diggers & Drillers

    “Why a mining executive told me to F*** Off
    in front of a whole room of investors”
    Dr. Alex Cowie doesn’t have the most popular of jobs. At least – not inside the mining industry. For his readers, it’s another matter entirely.

    As Laurence says: “I have never bought a stock and got a 100% return before … thanks for providing the information for me to have that experience – and all within two months too!”

    Right now Alex has unearthed six “must buy” resource stocks for the year ahead. His method for finding them might annoy a few people in the industry… but it could help make a lot of money in 2012 too.

    Find out why, right here

  • Home
  • Newsletters
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Columnists
  • Contact Us
  • RSS

All content is © 2005 - 2011 Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd All Rights Reserved

We encourage you to republish our material, all we ask is that you provide a working text link back to the original article on this site.
Port Phillip Publishing Pty Ltd holds an Australian Financial Services License: 323 988. ACN: 117 765 009 ABN: 33 117 765 009
email: dr@dailyreckoning.com.au Tel: 1300 667 481 Fax: (03) 9558 2219
Port Phillip Publishing Attn: The Daily Reckoning PO Box 899 Braeside VIC 3195

Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Financial Services Guide

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline