That brings us to the merger and acquisition activity in Australia. You may have seen that gold producer Lihir received a $9.2 billion takeover offer from Newcrest over night. Lihir says the offer undervalues the company’s assets. But whether it does or doesn’t, does the bid remind you at all of the BHP and Rio Tinto shenanigans a few years ago?
April 1st, 2010 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | ContinuedAll Posts Tagged With: "Greenback"
The Trouble With a Sovereign Debt Crisis
The trouble with a sovereign debt crisis is that you just never know what the tipping point is going to be. Things can be travelling along nicely with apparent stability and suddenly you find yourself in the middle of a crisis. For the last month we’ve been warning about a sovereign debt crisis in the Western Welfare states.
November 27th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 17 comments | Continued
U.S. Government Must Roll Over $3.4 Trillion in Debt Over Next Four Years
And if America can’t find anyone willing to finance its deficits, what then? Well, the luxury of issuing debts in the currency you also print is that you can print money to pay for them. Technically, you can never become insolvent when you enjoy this privilege. The Fed, for example, can create new money to buy debt issued by the Treasury, funding deficits ad infinitum.
November 3rd, 2009 | Dan Denning | 5 comments | Continued
The Kind of World the Next Generation Will Inherit
Then, on top of an increasingly worthless currency, Generation iPod also inherits about a quarter of a million dollars each in unfunded Social Security and healthcare obligations…
November 2nd, 2009 | Joel Bowman | 38 comments | Continued
Dollar Up, Gold Down
Here in the Far East, the dollar is a particularly curious entity. Once upon a time, the mighty greenback was the best show in town, the “must have” ticket for the rocking Asian economies.
October 29th, 2009 | Joel Bowman | 0 comments | Continued
Rally in Stocks and Rise in Aussie Dollar is a Result of the Carry Trade
That’s just what happened last year. Only then, it was both a dollar and yen carry trade that led to a rise in Aussie assets. Once the credit crisis set in, the yen carry got dropped and investors fled risk assets and piled right back into the greenback and U.S. Treasuries.
October 29th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 9 comments | Continued
The Only Thing Really Going Down Right Now is the U.S. Dollar
Okay. Who put the financial world in a time machine and took us all back to 2007? Seriously. Oil traded above $80 overnight. Gold is hovering near $1,060. Stocks are up. Bonds are up. The Aussie dollar is up. Will anything ever go down again?
October 21st, 2009 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | Continued
IMF Report Concludes Aussie Banks are “Very Sound”…
The Guv also said he would not be too timid about raising interest rates. He believes the threat [of global financial calamity] has passed and that the bigger threat may well be inflation. That kind of tough talk sent the Aussie dollar right up to over 92 cents against the greenback. If it weren’t late fall, now might be the perfect time to take a trip to America and see how cheap things really are.
October 16th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 13 comments | Continued
A Flawed Theory on How to Manage an Economy During a Recession
Your editor spent last night in a discussion with a querulous and drunk Aussie over the stimulus. “It looks like it worked to me,” he said. “Only world economy still growing. GDP up. We’ve got China. Looks like Ruddy and Swanny know what they’re doing. You’re just a hack. You’ve never run a country. And you’re a Yank!”
October 13th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 100 comments | Continued
US Dollar is Getting Trashed
“In other words, leveraged speculators are borrowing US dollars in the short-term money markets at near-zero rates to buy bonds in higher- yielding currencies like the Australian dollar or the euro.
September 29th, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 7 comments | Continued
US Dollar Declining as China’s Currency Rises
“We may now be entering the Asian century, dominated by a rising China and its currency. This decline of the dollar might take more than a decade, but it could happen even sooner…
September 23rd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 5 comments | Continued
HSBC Reveals Days of the Dollar are Numbered
“Crucially, China and rising Asia have reached the point where they can no longer keep holding down their currencies to boost exports because this is causing mayhem to their own economies, stoking asset bubbles.
September 23rd, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 10 comments | Continued
Buying Oil on Sale as U.S. Dollar Gets Weaker
Oil did move up overnight in the futures market to US$71.94. And locally, there was more positive news for energy and energy stocks. Bloomberg reports that, “LNG sales from Australia’s biggest resources project may reach A$300 billion over its first 20 years.”
September 11th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 2 comments | Continued
The Greenback Dollar Decline
“We may now be entering the Asian century, dominated by a rising China and its currency,” Roubini contends. “This decline of the dollar might take more than a decade, but it could happen even sooner if we do not get our financial house in order.
May 21st, 2009 | Bill Bonner | 7 comments | Continued
The Greenback and Gold Alliance
As heaps of negative economic data poured in, investors drove gold and U.S. Treasuries up and virtually everything else down. We remember it because it was so weird. The rally in the U.S. dollar came at a point of maximum pessimism about U.S. deficits. But as there was maximum pessimism about the global economy at the same time, you got a “flight to safety” bid for the dollar and gold. Strange bedfellows for a rally, don’t you think?
May 18th, 2009 | Dan Denning | 1 comment | Continued


