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T

ON
POLITICS AND CURRENCIES
by Jes Black
Editor &
Publisher FX Money Trends
May 29, 2007
Following
the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 there was a spike in
interest of opposing views generated by the Left and Right where even
Hardball with Chris Mathews got parodied on Saturday Night Live because
of its surge in popularity.
But polls
soon showed a significant drop in interest for mainstream media outlets
as independent news sites captured that attention. As the public became
educated they then shared their found information with others as the
Blogging revolution was born.
The most
infamous of recent bloggers is Rosie O'Donnell who asked questions about
the collapse of WTC 7, which was the third skyscraper in lower Manhattan
to implode in its own footprint that day.
This is
the same building from which Presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani
heroically escaped on that day, after he was alerted it was to come
down.
To this
day the government has no known plausible answer for the collapse since
it was not hit by the terrorist attack. So incredible is the independent
collapse of WTC 7 that this is by far the most significant event, which
has caused a shift in public thinking against mainstream media. This is
corroborated by independent polls of New Yorkers, which show the
majority does not believe the "official story."
As we
noted last month, "What appears reasonable becomes Conventional
Wisdom for the public. Often, it is because there is no other mainstream
source of information for the public to consume that ideas are given
their stature as truths. These ideas, true or false, become part of the
fabric of philosophy upon which we build further ideas, right or wrong.
Everyone "knew" that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass
Destruction, even though we wrote in September 2002 that this was not
the case."
"Politics,"
we said, "feeds on a gluttony of warped perceptions mainly because
the public is generally so misinformed." Our point is to underline
the fact that this service tries to uncover the truth of the matter and
find ways to learn and profit from uneven information flow.
So with
the election campaigns picking up, it is interesting to see that
opposition to Republican candidate Ron Paul has gathered steam.
Initially, we thought Mr. Paul would be marginalized by an unknowing and
indifferent public.
But since
the Republican debate on May 3, Ron Paul has won two post-debate polls
posted by event sponsor MSNBC and it was not lost on us that MSNBC, who
commissioned the poll wrote nothing of Ron Paul in May 8 article,
despite having handily won their poll. He is now going to appear on real
time with Bill Mahr on HBO.
The
interest in Mr. Paul centers on the fact that he represents the
Republican ideals of yesteryear. He's really a Republican candidate for
limited government a la Reagan which does not conform to the New
Republicans of Empire and Debt where citizens are told to only answer to
the call of duty of whatever the "Empire" does.
As we said
last week, Newsweek's latest poll put the President's approval rating at
just 28% showing little approval of the costs of Empire. As we also
remarked last week, "Back in December 2004 we said that President
Bush looked like a mix of both Wilson and Nixon and that the involvement
in foreign wars would increase while his popularity continued to
wane."
Just as
Wilson was disgraced by Congress' refusal to ratify his 14 points
following World War I (which he entered after he said he would not),
President Bush is now as unpopular as was Jimmy Carter who also scored a
28 percent approval in 1979. But if CPI was reported today using CPI
methodologies of 1980 it would be at 10%!
Currency
Focus: The Mexican peso has had a spectacular two months, rewarding
us for positioning bullishly near the lows. We added to that over the
last month and were content to see the peso forge a technical break
above long-term downtrend resistance at 0.93.

Note that
the peso has now risen to wave (1) of 3 following a significant
trendline breakout. We expect profit taking near current levels before
wave (3) of 3 begins.

The USD
index is nearing the bottom of Wave B and looks to have begun Wave C of
the expected advance. Recall that we see this happening concurrent with
a rise in interest rates to the 5% level as the Fed sees inflation
dangers on the horizon.

See in the
chart below how the CAD/USD rate appears to be nearing a significant
wave 5 top as well. When this currency pair peters out, this should
signal the go ahead for the dollar to reverse for a short stint.

Ultimately,
the overall macro view lines up perfectly with what we predicted as an
ABC type bounce in the US dollar back in 2005. Currently, the dollar may
have ended the "wave B" decline in May and a move above 82.50
would be the first sign of a major turnaround.

© 2007 Jes Black
Editorial Archive
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Contact
Information
Jes
Black
FX Money Trends, LLC
One Henderson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
646.229.5401 Tel
201.222.5577 Fax
www.fxmoneytrends.com
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