Click here to start saving with ING DIRECT!
If you have problem debt, a debt management plan or an IVA could be your first step towards a debt free life. Make sure you get the right advice from qualified debt advisers.

Even if you've had credit problems in the past, you are eligible for a $1000 payday loan .Get your personal payday loan and you can use it to pay off unusually high bills.

Go Daddy $1.99 Domains 125x125

Advertise in DIV-Net Feed
~
Dividends4Life
The Dividend Guy
Dividend Growth Investor
the moneygardener
Stock Market Prognosticator
The Div Guy
Disciplined Investing
Associate Members

Seeking Alpha Certified
Add to Technorati Favorites

Subscribe to Living Off Dividends

RSS

Subscribe via email:



Living Off Dividends's Facebook Profile

personal finance

Friends

Poor credit marketplace that provides Bad Credit Loans and credit articles.

Why the Dollar Hasn’t Already Collapsed

MSNBC has a good explanation on why the dollar is still holding up against the other currencies. Even though I’m bearish on the dollar for the next few years, its still a good read. I think the dollar will slide against a majority of foreign currencies including the yen and given that the Japanese real estate market has been flat for 15 years and only just picked up I think its a good time to get into the Japanese REIT market. But thats another post.

COMMENTARY
By John W. Schoen
Senior Producer
MSNBC

As the U.S. keeps adding billions to its trade deficit, and the government churns out billions more in Treasury debt, several readers are getting a little nervous about the value of the dollar. Just how come it’s not falling?

What I’d really like to know is why the dollar isn’t falling even faster: Given our status as the world’s greatest debtor nation, what is holding it up? And … why are people still pricing oil in dollars, rather than moving to a currency issued by a more solvent country, e.g. the yen, yuan or euro?
C. P. — Houston, Texas

There are certainly plenty of economists out there who will tell you that the dollar is headed for a fall. If the rest of the world stops buying our IOUs, the Treasury Department would have to keep raising interest rates until it could find buyers. That could, in theory, throw the U.S. economy into tailspin.

But for all its vulnerability, the U.S. dollar is still the most powerful currency in the world. And one big reason is that the U.S. economy is still the largest and most resilient in the world.

China, though it is growing more rapidly than either Europe or the U.S., logged $8.9 trillion in 2005 GDP. But China only recently began to gently unhook the yuan’s “peg” to the dollar — it remains to be seen what will happen when that currency tries to stand on its own two feet. And while the Chinese economy is growing rapidly, it’s not at all clear how long such rapid growth is sustainable. If they have a recession over there, it’s going to be a doozy.

Globalization no doubt puts added strains on the greenback. But we’ve seen this movie before. In the mid-1980s, the great Asian economy was Japan. As its economy surged, the value of the dollar against the yen was cut in half from March 1985 to March 1988.

The yen surge touched off a wave of hand-wringing on U.S. editorial pages amid fears that the days of the American economic supremacy were numbered and the dollar would be knocked off its perch as the global currency of choice. With all those swollen yen, Japanese buyers began snapping up U.S. real estate. When Mitsubishi bought Manhattan’s iconic Rockefeller Center in 1990, it seemed to some that the worst fears of the dollar’s twilight were being confirmed.

Five years later, with Japan’s economy in shambles, Mitsubishi couldn’t make its payments and basically turned over the keys to the holder of the mortgage. Today, Japan is finally digging itself out of a depression that’s gone on for more than a decade.

True, a U.S. trade deficit now running at an annual rate of $776 billion, on track for a fifth straight record year, is troubling. But you can also view that trade deficit as a huge vote of confidence by the rest of the world — which is still willing to take our Treasury bills in payment for its goods. No one places near that much faith in the economies of Japan, Europe or China.

It’s also why oil traders still want to be paid in dollars when they sell their barrels. The surge in oil prices is a big reason the dollar has take a beating — and the trade deficit has swollen. And anything that pumps up inflation hurts the dollar because it erodes the purchasing power of every one in your pocket. But the recent slump in oil prices should help the dollar perk up.

U.S. gross domestic product — which is basically the value of all goods and services produced here — came to about $12.4 trillion in 2005, according to the CIA Factbook. (To arrive at that GDP number, you add up all spending by consumers, investors and government agencies — then add the value of exports and subtract the value of imports.) That represents about a fifth of the total worldwide. So one out of every five dollars in global economic value is created in the United States.

Total GDP for Europe was roughly the same ($12.2 trillion). But though it relies on a common currency, the European economy is nowhere near as unified as the U.S. — thanks to the 25 separate economic policies pursued by its member countries. And, as anyone who has tried to sell a product across Europe has learned the hard way, marketing in 20 different languages at once can get expensive.

If you found this post helpful, consider donating to my coffee fund!

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon] Related Posts
  • China Pulls Out The Heavy Ammunition! According to the Telegraph,The Chinese government has begun a concerted campaign of economic threats against the United States, hinting that it may liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries if Washington imposes trade sanctions to force a yuan revaluation.Two officials at leading Communist Party bodies have given interviews in recent......
  • Is The Economy Recovering? Had dinner last night with an old family friend at a fancy restaurant. One of the topics that came up for discussion was the stock market and whether the recent rally was sustainable. While I didn't have any concrete information about the numbers, I felt that the rally in the......
  • Which Dividend Stocks Are Worth Looking At? The market has been defying gravity this summer, with the S&P500 up 49% since March. But most of the appreciation has been in what I consider lower quality stocks. Many homebuilders with doubtful prospects have doubled from their recent lows, while stocks that are somewhat recession proof like McDonalds, Walmart,......

Related Websites
  • Determining Rare Coin Values in Your Collection When you are deciding whether or not you would like to add a specific coin to your collection, one of the things that you are going to want to take into account is rare coin values. The rare coin values that you find will ultimately be determined by availability of......
  • The Golden Hoard The February 2006 issue of Money had a short feature on owning gold. George Mannes, "The Answer Guy," answers a reader's question about how to invest $50,000 in gold as a hedge against the declining US dollar. The response is only luke warm: he suggests Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and international......
  • Who Will Stimulate the other Economies? As bad as things are in the U.S., other countries have it worse.  Some anecdotal evidence from around world: Today, the Bank of England lowered its benchmark interest rate to 1%, the lowest its been since the bank was founded in 1694.  Economic experts expect the U.K. economy to shrink......

[All content is copyright of Living Off Dividends & Passive Income]

Random Posts

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply