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Years
ago, I recollect hearing a successful currency speculator say that
if you wanted to know what a government is going to do with its
currency, listen to what they say they aren't going to do… then
expect the opposite.
On March 3, 2007, for instance, we had the following report out of
Bloomberg.
Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and four other Persian Gulf
nations will discuss revaluing their currencies' peg to the U.S.
dollar before a proposed monetary union in the region in 2010.
The states would only change the dollar peg simultaneously, U.A.E.
Central Bank Governor Sultan Bin Nasser al-Suwaidi told reporters
today. The six countries form the Gulf Cooperation Council and
their central bank officials next meet in April. The other
countries are Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and Kuwait.
“We will not act unilaterally,'' al-Suwaidi said in Dubai, U.A.E.
On March 15, Bloomberg followed up with this…
The
dollar may also be buoyed after the six Gulf Cooperation Council
members, which include Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, agreed not to
revalue their currencies against the U.S. currency.
“We have no plans to revalue,'' Hamad Saud al-Sayari, the
governor of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, told reporters in
Dubai today. “The U.S. dollar is still very important to
us.''
Apparently,
someone forgot to copy the Saudis on the memo, because on March
20, Kuwait announced that it was tossing the dollar peg over the
side and replacing it with a basket of currencies.
This will almost certainly lead to a domino effect in the Middle
East, a move that would likely be warmly welcomed by the local
citizenry there, and not so warmly welcomed by those in the U.S.
government charged with maintaining the U.S. dollar hegemony.
And Then There’s China…
On
announcing last year that it was forming a new agency to help
better manage its foreign reserves, China took pains to assure the
markets that they were not doing so in order to begin unloading
dollars. But then on May 18, it announced it was going to invest
$3.3 billion in Blackstone, a private equity group.
Now, you can be assured that Blackstone is going to go all out to
impress their deep-pocketed new partner. And it won't impress them
very much if they only buy U.S. stocks that have to then fight
against the tide of a depreciating dollar.
In our view, this is just the beginning of a much larger strategy,
the core of which will be trading out of U.S. treasury bills and
into all manner of other investments… an international basket of
stocks, natural resource deposits around the globe… pretty much
anywhere and anything offers the prospect for a higher return with
lower currency risk.
Or, if the currency risk is going to be taken, then the potential
returns will have to offset those risks. Earning a 4.5% yield on a
Treasury bond while taking a 10%, 20% or even 30% risk on the
dollar doesn’t make a lot of sense to us. And, we expect,
neither does it to the Chinese.
There are some very interesting implications in all of this. For
instance, if the Chinese slow down their buying of Treasuries in
favor of other asset classes, who is going to step up to take
their place?
Of course, at the right interest rate, far higher than those on
offer today, someone will. But then there’s that whole
collapsing housing bubble thing.
The U.S. continues to be trapped on the horns of a dilemma, wedged
squarely between a rock and a hard place. Raise interest rates to
head off a devastating mass exodus from the dollar and sink the
economy… or, lower interest rates to keep the economy afloat and
doom the dollar.
Or,
simply continue printing money like there’s no tomorrow,
steadily devaluing the $6 trillion in the hands of foreigners, and
hope no one will notice.
There
are times, like today, that any reasonably astute observer can
look to the horizon and see what’s coming. A monetary crisis is
headed in our direction, and the pace of its arrival is, in our
view, quickening.
Gold,
and for more pep in your portfolio, gold stocks, are no longer an
option but a prerogative–even for conservative investors.
Meanwhile,
pay close attention to the comments of high government officials
about their intentions on the dollar…

© 2007 Doug Galland
Managing Director, Casey Research
Editorial Archive
David Galland is the
managing editor of BIG
GOLD,
a new publication from Casey Research dedicated to helping
investors profit from the developing bull market in precious
metals--with an easy-to-maintain portfolio of conservative mid- to
large-cap gold producers and near-producers.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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