Tuesday 30 December 2014

Article - Strong Dollar Policy Needed

Given that mildly affirmative interest rates coupled 
with benign inflation is the Goldilocks equation for consistent economic growth, then the US Fed has to find a method very quickly to wean Wall Street of this culture of low interest rate expectation. Firm interest rates with mild inflation is a net positive on the US economy resulting in jobs creation far more reaching than any Keynesian conceptualized government public works program. At the center of all this global activity is the US economy and the strength of its US Dollar. Without strong US demand for goods and services China cannot sustain its growth. Read here for today's BBC report and China's slowing economy http://www.bbc.com/news/business-30640116 and Europe cannot pick itself up from the onset of recession as weaker European nations suffocate under their debt burdens. read here BBC report for Eurozone crisis http://www.bbc.com/news/business-13366011

A strong US dollar is what the market needs as that translates into cheaper commodities to get the world growing again.

One Hundred and Forty Nine dollar crude oil in tandem with an unbridled US credit bubble is what has sunk the global economy the last 6 years and finally it seems we have rid ourselves of the two calamities.


Six years of near zero interest rate Fed policy and a jittery Wall Street has led us all to believe that the USA must continue this status quo. But in the longer run, from a distant perspective, the question begs of itself – why did the US economy stutter through a weak Dollar policy and when exactly are traders on the Big Board going to realize that it is time for us to wean ourselves off this cycle of low interest rates.

Witness the economic collapse of Japan in the 1980’s and 2 decades of low interest rate policy. If low interest rates did not shake the largely export driven Japanese economy from its property an credit asset bubble, then could it be reasoned that a weaker Japanese Yen had not contributed to further Japanese economic expansion. Could it be true that conversely, a stronger currency still equally promotes domestic economic growth and increases manufacturing competitiveness in the race to service the domestic sector and export surplus products to other nations?

God forbid the US economy should suffer a similar fate. In the first place the US today is not a largely export driven economy and in the second place its banking market infrastructure and credit markets are far more liberalized to what the Japanese banking model provided in the 1980’s to deal with the problem of credit bubbles. It is a credit to the US economy that although the USA has pumped more money into short run deficit financing program to provide government sponsored liquidity on a Keynesian basis to coax the moribund economy back to life, in the long run the US government intervention has worked to grease the credit market machinery to rid itself of excess bad credit and shake down to provide a clearer basis for fresh lending. Although I am not a supporter of government intervention in a free market and I do not support the idea that the rescue of AIG or Detroit was largely beneficial, the degree of government intervention through fed open market operations was necessary to pump liquidity into the credit system and restore faith.  However the flip side to government intervention had to be lower interest rates and consequently a weak US Dollar. And I for one whist accepting the short term US Dollar weakness was necessary as part and parcel of the government effort to rid the system of shaky credit, in the long run a weak US Dollar does not support the contention of a growing US economy based upon  domestic economic strengths coupled with benign and temperate inflation.

Strong interest rates attract overseas investment into USA, increases economic integration with Europe and assists China to export low-tech manufactured goods to the USA. 

A strong US Dollar means cheaper commodity prices, cheaper oil, cheaper costs of production and eventually assists in the reduction of budget and fiscal deficits that is currently strangling the USA. Compare the following charts demonstrating the CRB index commodities and the fall in prices and the rise of the USD the last 10 years courtesy Omega research.









 10year chart CRB Index.



















 10 Year Chart USD


Of course in the short run Dollar strength can affect corporate earnings with those US companies exporting, particularly tech sector goods and volatilities make it harder to predict corporate earnings. 

Please read here Bloomberg article on Dollar climb http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-20/dollar-resumes-climb-as-yellen-signals-2015-interest-rate-rise.html

But Overall a stronger US Dollar is good news as the US does not have to import inflation and the value of gold as a safe haven investment diminishes as the US Dollar rises to prominence with the march of the Greenback in 2015.

Overall a strong Dollar policy translates into cheaper oil and gasoline at the pump and thats exactly what is needed to bring some kind of economic sense into the pricing of the most widely used commodities for global manufacturing of goods.



Pieter Bergli - DeLoren Trust Holdings

Forex Market Education


Disclaimer - U.S. Government Required Disclaimer - Commodity Futures Trading Commission


Futures and Options trading involves risks of losses. No representation is being made that any reader and account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those that are being discussed on this blog http://forexeducationperspective.blogspot.com/. The past performance of any trading system or methodology discussed is not necessarily indicative of future results.

CFTC RULE 4.41 - HYPOTHETICAL OR SIMULATED PERFORMANCE RESULTS HAVE CERTAIN LIMITATIONS. UNLIKE AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE RECORD, SIMULATED RESULTS DO NOT REPRESENT ACTUAL TRADING. ALSO, SINCE THE TRADES HAVE NOT BEEN EXECUTED, THE RESULTS MAY HAVE UNDER-OR-OVER COMPENSATED FOR THE IMPACT, IF ANY, OF CERTAIN MARKET FACTORS, SUCH AS LACK OF LIQUIDITY. SIMULATED TRADING PROGRAMS IN GENERAL ARE ALSO SUBJECT TO THE FACT THAT THEY ARE DESIGNED WITH THE BENEFIT OF HINDSIGHT. NO REPRESENTATION IS BEING MADE THAT ANY ACCOUNT WILL OR IS LIKELY TO ACHIEVE PROFIT OR LOSSES SIMILAR TO THOSE SHOWN.

All trades, patterns, charts, systems, etc., discussed in this blog http://forexeducationperspective.blogspot.com/ are for educative and illustrative purposes only and not to be construed as specific advisory recommendations for actual trades. Disclaimer -  http://forexeducationperspective.blogspot.com/ bears no responsibility for the trading actions of its readers.