LOOMING DOLLAR CRISIS

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Citigroup was kicked out of Japan...and they are having a rough time right now in Europe...something that maybe you should read on your own...I can not get to carryed away because I get the public knowledge and other stuff I read mixed up...

JPM did the old...PAID THE DOUGH BUT DID NOTHING WRONG THING recently.

Do we really want our money being investing to the fleece artists???? Hey, mutual fund scandals, GNMA, Feddie May, Freddie Mac, Enron, Wordcom, Global Crossing was not enough for ya...yea I want to put my retirement nut in this.....

I would sell any lending broker, mortgage backer etc, etc, right now...the spreads for them are razor then and they will "surprise" the downside the next time they report and lose ya a quick 5%....

Tekno...maybe better you just e-mail...they are not interesting in stocks and I really do not want to share all my great ideas on the open board....

Good luck and be safe and enjoy the game - that will not be to much of a game thou :?.

MT
 
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Financial Times
2/5/2005

Russia said yesterday it had abandoned efforts to tie the rouble's movement closely to the dollar and switched to shadowing both the euro and the US currency.

The move heightened expectations that other countries operating de facto dollar pegs, such as China, could follow suit.

With 81 per cent of Russia's oil exports currently sold to Europe, the move also provoked fresh speculation that Russia could decide to denominate its oil in euros. Russia is the world's second-largest oil exporter, behind Saudi Arabia.

"Russia has talked about the idea of pricing its oil in euros. If it is starting to put more weight on the euro in terms of its forex regime and reserves, then that speculation will be re-ignited," said Ian Stannard, currency strategist at BNP Paribas.

Russia had announced its intention to introduce a basket arrangement last April but did not set a firm date for the change. The Bank of Russia, the central bank, has been building its euro reserves in readiness, with some 30 per cent of its reserves now estimated to be in euros, against just 5 per cent in 2000. Traders said it appeared Russia had begun to loosen its peg to the dollar in October, when the rouble began to strengthen against the dollar while the US currency fell strongly against the euro.

The bank yesterday indicated that its efforts to keep the rouble closely pegged to the dollar had caused the Russian currency to suffer against the strengthening euro, rendering the old policy "inexpedient".

The rouble has fallen by 30 per cent against the euro since January 2002, fuelling inflation in a country that conducts about 65 per cent of its trade with the eurozone.

"The rouble's performance has been highly correlated with the dollar. Now it will be more aligned with the euro," said Paul Timmons, economist at Moscow Narodny Bank.

He added that the new policy would help Russia move towards a free float of its currency in 2006, a target set by President Vladimir Putin.

This euro weighting will be increased in future to "a level that corresponds to [the] tasks of the exchange rate policy", leading some to conclude that the euro could ultimately account for 65 per cent of the basket, prompting a further re-balancing of Moscow's $128bn (€99bn, £68bn) of gold and forex reserves.

Julia Tsepliaeva of ING Financial Markets said that with inflation currently running at 11.7 per cent, Russia had been forced to stem rouble weakness in order to meet its 2005 inflation target of 8.5 per cent.

Moscow's move illustrates the growing global importance of the euro at a time when a number of central banks have been shifting reserves out of the dollar into the shared European currency.

"It is symptomatic of a global trend and reflects the growing international role of the euro," said Ralph Sueppel, head of emerging Europe strategy at Merrill Lynch.

"It is beginning to take its place in portfolios."

The Bank of Russia said it has been using a basket consisting of 0.1 euro and 0.9 dollars to target exchange rate policy since February 1. With the euro trading near $1.30, this currently gives the euro a 13 per cent weighting in the basket.
 
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MT: you say:... maybe better you just e-mail...they are not interesting in stocks and I really do not want to share all my great ideas on the open board....

- - However, you know that isn't true, the objections have mostly been to the superfluous, objectionable remarks - which makes it difficult for some, (notably me :dah:)to determine what you are saying, and, just causes others to rise to your bait !! You have no idea what the other 2,000 readers are thinking. ...not posting only means they aren't posting, not that they aren't taking all this in. My stars, what if everyone of us that does post responded to every other other post every time!!!:shock:

Now, The reason I am writing is: Your comment of e-mail reminds me that back in December I signed up for your newsletter - I am wondering if I got deleted, or if that is on hold??

Wishing you the best of what is ahead , as I do for all of us, - even the non-posters.......:^
 
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grandma wrote:
MT: you say:... maybe better you just e-mail...they are not interesting in stocks and I really do not want to share all my great ideas on the open board....

- - However, you know that isn't true, the objections have mostly been to the superfluous, objectionable remarks - which makes it difficult for some, (notably me :dah:)to determine what you are saying, and, just causes others to rise to your bait !! You have no idea what the other 2,000 readers are thinking. ...not posting only means they aren't posting, not that they aren't taking all this in. My stars, what if everyone of us that does post responded to every other other post every time!!!:shock:

Now, The reason I am writing is: Your comment of e-mail reminds me that back in December I signed up for your newsletter - I am wondering if I got deleted, or if that is on hold??

Wishing you the best of what is ahead , as I do for all of us, - even the non-posters.......:^
MT writes a newsletter?I sincerely hope that he has an editor with a firmer crayon than the one that he uses. ;)
 
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John Mauldin-Inflation is Always and Everywhere
a Monetary Phenomenon

By Myles Zyblock, CFA
- Investment Strategy Weekly


The title of this week's report is based on a famous quote by the Nobel Prize winning monetary economist Milton Friedman. His view, anchored in the quantity theory of money, is that excessive money creation spawns inflation. Our research suggests that there is value in adopting a monetary framework to assess the long-term inflation outlook. We have examined data from a cross-section of countries, as well as nearly a century of US data, to find that inflation usually accelerates when money supply growth exceeds the growth rate in the economy for an extended period of time.

By our count, the Fed has been printing money at a faster rate than the economy's ability to absorb it since the late-1990s. Too much money chasing too few goods has not yet translated into accelerating inflation. Why? Well, it might be because the excess money is not doing much chasing at all - or, as an academic would say, the velocity of money is declining. Cash hoarding by corporate America over the past few years in response to a heightened sense of geopolitical and economic uncertainty is evidence that this might indeed be the case. An alternative, and more accurate, explanation is that money metrics are not helpful in forecasting inflationary turning points with precision; rather, they provide a roadmap for what will probably occur at some point within the next few years.

We are convinced that excessive money creation in the US over the past several years will ultimately arrest the 25-year trend decline in inflation, if it has not already done so. We have and will continue to dedicate a good chunk of our thematic research to this topic because it carries the potential to dramatically alter long-term investment strategy. A reversal in trend inflation would spell an end to the secular bull market in bonds, and it would point to trend compression in P/E multiples, the closing stages of the relative performance advantage for interest-sensitive equity sectors (e.g., Financials, Retailers), and the beginning of a long phase dominated by value investing.


Feeling the Winds of Change

In the late-1990s, I began writing about what I thought was the making of an important shift in the conduct of monetary policy. The Federal Reserve was flooding the world with dollars in an effort to deflect shockwaves originating from the Asian currency crisis. Not long after that, they organized a bailout for Long Term Capital Management and then printed a mountain of money to safeguard against any potential disruptions stemming from the Y2K changeover. These reflationary steps all occurred in phases of the business cycle when the US was in good shape. It seemed like unusual Fed behavior when placed in the context of the past 20 years. It appeared as though the Fed's policy reaction function was in the process of changing. But why?




The focus for the monetary authorities in the prior two decades was to stamp out incipient inflationary risks. It all started back in the late-1970s, when then Fed Chairman Paul Volcker severely curtailed money supply growth in an effort to check the uptrend in an inflationary cycle that was spiraling out of control. The product of this acute tightening phase was a reversal in trend inflation, but at the cost of the deepest recession in post-war history. By the mid-1990s, it was pretty clear that the policy steps adopted by the authorities had helped to win the war against inflation. By the late-1990s, however, a few Board members started to hint that their battle against inflation might be too successful; that well-entrenched disinflationary trends were at risk of turning deflationary (see the chart above). Here is an enlightening quote of the time from a speech given by Fed Governor Meyer:
But with short-term rates now at zero in Japan and low inflation almost everywhere in the industrialized world, the problem [of a liquidity trap] is taken more seriously by central banks--to the point that it was one of the topics at Jackson Hole.

Governor Laurence Meyer, October 12th, 1999
At the time of Governor Meyer's speech, debt levels in the US economy had reached multi-decade heights (see the first chart below), while the inflation rate was hovering near a generational low. One only has to look back at the Japanese experience in the 1990s to realize that falling price levels, combined with excessive leverage, can produce a corrosive economic outcome.





"The authorities might be trying to inflate their way out of this problem."

My hunch about the changing nature of Fed policy was finally confirmed by the land breaking May 6th, 2003 FOMC communiqué, when the Committee explicitly recognized the risks of an "unwelcome further decline in inflation" for the first time. Furthermore, they acknowledged that inflation and economic activity were to be treated as separate risks.

We have been believers that this Fed tightening cycle would lag the inflation cycle for quite a while in order to keep the real cost of debt service low, and to attempt to inflate away a big debt problem. The real funds rate is still negative, but there has been little evidence in the way of an upturn in general price inflation (i.e., core CPI inflation might have bottomed, but it remains very low). We have never suggested that a big wave of accelerating inflation is imminent, but we do think that a bottom in the long-term inflation outlook has been set and that accelerating inflation will be more common than decelerating inflation over the next several years (refer to the next section).


The Equation of Exchange

Milton Friedman, a Nobel Prize winning economist, once said that "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon". We believe that there is validity in his statement if one examines economic trends over a sufficiently long time span. The basis for his monetary view of inflation is anchored in the equation of exchange that is highlighted below:


M • V = P • Q

Note that M is the money supply, V is the velocity of money (i.e., the rate of turnover of money in the economy), P is the general price level, and Q is real economic activity. Transforming each variable into a growth rate and rearranging the terms results in the following equation:


• • • •
P = M – Q + V

This secondary equation says that the rate of inflation is proportional to the growth rate of money. Or, said another way, inflation will increase when money supply growth exceeds the growth in real economic activity, assuming that the velocity of money remains unchanged. We have taken these theoretical underpinnings and applied them to economic data for the US since 1918. The results are shown in the chart below.





"Are we about to start the next inflation supercycle in the US?"

This chart presents some pretty compelling evidence that underlying trends in inflation usually rise when money growth exceeds real GDP growth for a sustained period of time. The latter development has indeed been the case since 1997. The time we last saw a similar turn of events was back in the 1960s, which ultimately paved the way for the inflationary 1970s. So why have we not yet experienced much inflation? Well, it could be that the velocity of money has declined by enough to swamp the impact of disproportionate monetary growth. Velocity might be in retreat (e.g., cash hoarding by corporate America over the past few years) in response to a heightened sense of geopolitical and economic uncertainty. An alternative, and more accurate, explanation is that money metrics are not helpful in forecasting inflationary turning points with precision; rather, they provide a roadmap for what will probably occur at some point within the next few years.

It is important to note that the strong link between money growth and inflation is not just evident in the USA. It is a robust relationship. We have examined data from a cross section of countries and found that higher rates of inflation typically surface in countries with faster money supply growth rates (refer to the next chart).





"Countries with higher money supply growth rates typically experience higher rates of inflation."


Why Do We Care So Much About Trends in Money and Inflation?

If we are right about the link between money and inflation, and that inflation is likely to rise (modestly) on a trend basis over the next several years, then the way to think about investment prospects needs to change. We have written about the implications of rising trend inflation in detail in past strategy reports, and will briefly touch upon a couple of key themes once again.




The chart above shows the relationship between government bond yields and trend inflation. It's pretty obvious from this chart that the secular outlook for bonds will change markedly if we are indeed on the cusp of a turn in the long-term inflation outlook. We will no longer be looking for opportunities to buy the dips, rather we will probably become more focused on when to sell the rallies.




A change in the long-term outlook for inflation will also affect equity market strategy. Since the early-1980s, P/E multiples have been lifted higher largely in response to the long-term decline in interest rates (refer to the chart above). This will probably turn around. Moreover, a trend reversal in inflation will point to further compression in P/E multiples, the closing stages of the relative performance advantage for interest-sensitive equity sectors (e.g., Financials, Retailers), and the beginning of a long phase dominated by value investing.

Bottom Line: Since the late 1990s, the Fed has been flooding the system with money. Our work shows that inflationary trends mirror monetary trends, findings that are consistent with the quantity theory of money. If past is prologue, then it seems reasonable to anticipate a trend reversal in inflation sometime within the next few years. This means that investors should plan for the end of the secular bond bull market, the secular increase in P/E multiples, the long-term performance advantage for Financials and Retailers, and the trend outperformance of growth- relative to value-based stock selection strategies.





Myles offers an interesting explanation for why we have not seen a dramatic increase in inflation and why he still expects it to come despite the recent raises by the Fed. It is quite a contrast with Gary Shilling's thoughts about deflation. And then there are the few in my camp that think stagflation is in our future. But we need to constantly test our theories, as we do this week in Outside the Box.

Your keeping a look out for inflation analyst,


John F. Mauldin
 
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Well, while the dollar crisis "looms," we're seeing a strong continuation of the dollar rally. Its about 85.3 this AM. Expect the I fund to continue to underperform as long as this rally is in play.
 
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So is this a good thing or bad thing?(dollar rally) Dollar rally will make the I Fund cheaper if someone is looking to buy into it because they feel the overseas markets will fair better than the US markets. Yes/no? Any opinions to the I Fund pro/con.
 
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Show-me wrote:
So is this a good thing or bad thing? (dollar rally) Dollar rally will make the I Fund cheaper if someone is looking to buy into it because they feel the overseas markets will fair better than the US markets. Yes/no? Any opinions to the I Fund pro/con.
GREAT thing (in fact does not get much better!!!)....gives one with greenbacks more buying power.

going to start today with a metered buy program....adding 2% everyday to I fund until i reach 47% level of TSP protfolio in I. bottom is near here.....my plan will allow me 2 bridge into it.;)






order in this am:

55% G

21% F

21% C

3% I



tekno













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Current time is 09:13 am
 
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How long is the buck's rally expected to run?

similar deal, Show-me, I don't want to risk selling my I Fund shares and have to buy fewer of themat a higher price later.

If we're talking days or a week with minimal price drop, then it is not worth trading it, but if we're talking weeks/over a month, then it could be worth avoiding the drop.
 
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Rolo wrote:
How long is the buck's rally expected to run?

similar deal, Show-me, I don't want to risk selling my I Fund shares and have to buy fewer of themat a higher price later.

If we're talking days or a week with minimal price drop, then it is not worth trading it, but if we're talking weeks/over a month, then it could be worth avoiding the drop.
Dollar is rebounding nicely. It is seemingly driven up by the Bush promise of lower deficits, but I don't see how Bush will be able to lower the deficit unless all the rules of politics are somehow magically suspended. Will the Republican legislators give up their re-election hopes, if they vote for Bush's deficit-cutting program, and they're subsequently accused of cutting hundreds of programs designed to help the poor and middle class? I guess I don't believe that will happen. So this is probably a short-lived rally that is just about near its end as the pundits will likely be saying what I'm saying, and reality will sink in, as will the hundred billion + that we're going to spend in Iraq for the next few years.

read this>>>> http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=5362486
 
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I'm not touching the I fund until that dollar shows signs of faltering again. It could keep climbing up to 90 on that index for all I know... it's already hitting a 3 month high. :shock:
 
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Yeah, if I didn't already hold it, I would wait for the buck to turn down again, too. Ima keep my whipsaw helmet on though and hope nobody confuses me with a retard. :D



.....no.....he.....didn't!
 
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Rolo wrote:
Yeah, if I didn't already hold it, I would wait for the buck to turn down again, too. Ima keep my whipsaw helmet on though and hope nobody confuses me with a retard. :D



.....no.....he.....didn't!
Rolo

the I fund will soar when u sell....LMAO

i'm a buyer:D
 
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Yes, the I Fund seems to be the best thing we have. My other international funds are doing well.
 
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