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The Dollar Left Behind


By Dan Denning • September 25th, 2009 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Articles by This Author

  • HSBC Reveals Days of the Dollar are Numbered
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  • 4 Ways to Protect Against a Falling Dollar
  • Bailout on Wall Street Has Left the Door Open for Other Industries
  • Gold, the Aussie Dollar, the Greenback and You
Filed Under: Market
Tags: U.S. dollar

It was just a short twenty two hours on two planes rides, one from Paris to Singapore and the second from Singapore to Melbourne. But somewhere between Wednesday night and Friday morning, it appears that the world decided to go slightly bonkers. Not completely insane, mind you. Just a little punch drunk, the way your editor feels at the moment after switching so many time zones.

But we're going to push on before we start slurring our speech and see what in the world is worth noticing as we close the week. Gold is back below US$1,000 and oil is at nine week low, for starters. That's notable. What's weird is both commodity standard-bearers moved down amidst a flurry of negative headlines about the U.S. dollar.

"HSBC bids farewell to dollar supremacy," writes Ambrose Evans Pritchard at the UK's Telegraph. "The sun is setting on the US dollar as the ultra-loose monetary policy of the US Federal Reserve forces China and the vibrant economies of the emerging world to forge a new global currency order, according to a new report by HSBC," he begins ominously.

Now there is a big idea behind this currency order. And it is not benign. But the birth of this new currency order comes at the expense of the old geopolitical order. Specifically, it means the comfortable economic relationships of the post World-War Two years are not so comfortable any more. They're a bit itchy.

Evans says, "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. Asia's 'mercantilist mindset' of recent decades is about to be broken by the spectre of an inflation spiral."

"The policy headache was already becoming clear in the final phase of the global credit boom but the financial crisis temporarily masked the effect. The pressures will return with a vengeance as these countries roar back to life, leaving the US and other laggards of the old world far behind."

O brave new order...with such uncertainties in it!

So it will be like World War One again, says HSBC. Only this time around the U.S. dollar will be playing the role of the pound sterling. The secular decline of the national economy will accompany the spectacular decline of the currency. But keep one thing in mind...

It could take years for this to happen. It's been going on for years already, really since Nixon closed the gold window. But the financial markets are not a made-for-TV movie. There is no scriptwriter whose job it is to keep the tension high and the story line moving along. The investment consequences are not going to be instantaneous.

We mention this because we got a stack of e-mails while we were away giving us the boot for being so wrong about the rally. It was a case of non-buyer's remorse from investors who missed the rally since March after reading our warnings and staying out. What do we have to say for ourselves? The opportunity cost of reading the Daily Reckoning appears to be getting intolerably high for some readers.

You can have you March rally. These sorts of moves, when they are unsupported by the economic data, are trading events. The performance of stocks in the last six months doesn't in any way invalidate the larger economic arguments we've made about the credit bubble here at the Daily Reckoning. In other words, the verdict isn't in on whether our strategy is correct.

It's going to take a few more years. These issues—the replacement of the U.S. dollar with some other global reserve currency....the transfer of asset ownership from debtors to creditors...and the hysteria you see in a Democracy when it's revealed that you can't get something for nothing—these are not just six-month trends.

They are much bigger than that. They are going to claim more corporate and political scalps, too. And preparing for them means you have to have a much longer time frame and a much bigger imagination than your average bobblehead on CNBC.

In fact, now that we think about it, we reckon that if you are really frustrated that the warnings in the Daily Reckoning have prevented you from making money in the last six months, you probably shouldn't continue to read the Daily Reckoning. You will have missed the point of what we try to do for investors (which is to ignore the noise and focus on the historical back story).

But it's a free world (in most places, for the most part). So if you want to keep reading just for the pleasure of getting really upset with us, that's your call.

One final note before we go to bed...not all land is valuable. Earlier in the week we wrote about how renters in Europe—especially Britain—profited so much from "three-life" leases because of the huge inflation in European land prices that took place during the term of the leases.

As we flew over the vast empty width of the Australian continent last night, we realised that not all land is created equal. This is obvious, of course. But more land does not automatically make a country wealthier. If it's not fertile and you can't graze animals on it, the land will not be economically productive.

Or, if it is productive, it will be for digging and drilling for metals, ores, minerals, and oil. Extractive industries generate tradable goods. But they don't directly feed people.

Whether land itself is the prime mover in call other capital values...that is a question we'll take up next week. And the answer may even lead us to some specific observations about what stocks are worth buying now and what stocks aren't. Until then...

It's almost Armageddon if the Japanese and Chinese don't buy our debt," Robertson said in an interview. "I don't know where we could get the money. I think we've let ourselves get in a terrible situation and I think we ought to try and get out of it."

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • HSBC Reveals Days of the Dollar are Numbered
  • The Aussie Dollar as a Measure of Global Risk Appetite
  • 4 Ways to Protect Against a Falling Dollar
  • Bailout on Wall Street Has Left the Door Open for Other Industries
  • Gold, the Aussie Dollar, the Greenback and You

About the Author

DanDan Denning is the author of 2005's best-selling The Bull Hunter (John Wiley & Sons). He began his financial publishing career in 1997 and has covered financial markets form Baltimore, Paris, London and, beginning in 2005 Melbourne. He’s the editor of The Daily Reckoning Australia and the Publisher of Port Phillip Publishing.

See All Posts by This Author

There Are 6 Responses So Far. »

  1. Comment by Dan on 25 September 2009:

    "All the world is but a stage." Thing about this play is that not all the actors are reciting their words at the right time, some of the special effects didn't work, and the director is having an interesting time ad-libbing to get it all to hang together.

    Hence, I suspect, we have the bailouts and the banks holding their breath, and several other inexplicable and strange manoeuvres occurring (non economic). What the Federal Reserve is doing only looks ridiculous because we don't have the same facts, nor the same aspirations as they (and those behind the Fed).

    I reckon, Dan, your nose knows. And things like the current market rally, and the government debt expansion to fund housing markets and so on, are all poly-filler - they are a gamble, the true meaning of which we won't fully appreciate until later. They are temporary and will not prevent the shifts in the world's economic foundations that are about to occur. If people believe there is a recovery, they should look at this: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive/article-1212013/Revealed-The-ghost-fleet-recession-anchored-just-east-Singapore.html#ixzz0RLcNgkkI
    .. who can explain the meaning of that?

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  2. Comment by Claytonator on 25 September 2009:

    Interesting article - even more interesting the "Ghost ship" article. Some call us pessimists - I prefer the term realists. If only they could hurry throuh internet censorship quicker perhaps I could sail along with the masses happily into the inferno. Just got my quarterly electricity bill - 20% increase in per kilowatt/hour cost. Is this inflation or taxation or simple supply/demand economics....? Can anyone tell me if derivatives were active on Wall Street during the 1929 depression?

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  3. Comment by Greg Atkinson on 25 September 2009:

    Mmmm..time for the author to head back to school it seems especially when he comes out with "...more land does not automatically make a country wealthier". I think most people worked this out during high school geography lessons or playing Age of Empires :)

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  4. Comment by Charles Norville on 26 September 2009:

    DR could still prove very correct on its predictions on the another big dive on markets, people have bought shares but they are yet to be given good dividends - Harry S Dent's "The Great Depression Ahead" is worth a read on the summary points. Could DR have predicted the enormous cash stimulus bubble? ......well Harry Dent and others didn't either, but the point is the stimulus bubbles are not going to do anything more than delay a depression and make it worse and more protracted. I would hope that a major war can be avoided.

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  5. Comment by Akel on 26 September 2009:

    "...more land does not automatically make a country wealthier". I think most people worked this out during high school geography lessons or playing Age of Empires :)

    Greg, I have to disagree with you here. Surely, if people really knew that most of the Australian continent was nothing but dust, there would be more opposition to the record numbers of immigrants arriving on our shores.
    Obviously, our current Government seems to think we have ample land to park these people, but I suppose it's ok for them. When they retire from politics, they can find some place less crowded than the suburbs we are forced to live in complete with all it's crime, pollution, unemployment and debt.

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  6. Comment by Greg Atkinson on 28 September 2009:

    Akel you have me there, but in an attempt to defend myself can I suggest that governments of all types in Australia are not the brightest. Look at Sydney where the NSW Government is turning leafy suburbs into medium housing (i.e crowded) concrete jungles. I also wonder how the network of new roads in Sydney as opposed to investing in public transport is suppose to help reduce Co2 levels and make the city more liveable? When I come back to Sydney I cringe whenever I see the new blight on the suburban landscape...the duplex! Where there were once trees and lawns there are now bricks & mortar, they even concrete over grass on footpaths these days!

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