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The dollar is falling and doing so at a quickening pace.
It’s falling against
the euro, the Japanese yen, the Swiss franc, the British pound and even
the Brazilian real.
Its decline could have
more impact on your financial future than the latest rise in the Dow or
the next interest-rate decision by the Fed.
Depending on the
choices you make, it has the potential to gut your investment portfolio
... or send it soaring.
This hasn’t always
been the case. In fact, previous phases of the dollar’s fall were
mostly ignored by Wall Street, Washington and individual investors.
Now, however, we are
entering a critical new phase of the dollar’s decline.
In this new phase, not
only will the dollar’s value fall, but the United States could also
suffer a flight of capital.
In this new phase, not
only will you see each dollar buy less, but, more importantly, there
could be fewer dollars available, as foreign investors slash the flow of
dollars from Asia, Europe, and the Middle East ... or even pull their
money back out.
This new phase of the
dollar decline could ...
- drive
U.S. bond prices into a tailspin ...
- drive
up the interest rates on long-term bonds, commercial loans and all
forms of mortgages ...
- crack
open the U.S. housing market — not only because of rising mortgage
rates, but also because fewer foreigners are willing to speculate on
American real estate ...
- force
the Fed to start a whole new round of interest rate hikes to attract
foreign money back to the U.S., and ...
- send
contra-dollar investments — gold, silver, oil and other
commodities — into a new, rip-roaring surge.
This
is not merely our forecast of the future. We can see many of the signs
right here and now:
Already,
the dollar has fallen through key thresholds on the charts, especially
against its largest competitor as a world currency — the euro.
Just a few weeks ago,
the euro was worth less than $1.20. Now, its value has jumped to nearly
$1.28, as the dollar has fallen. For investors holding U.S. dollars that
7% decline — in a very short period of time — makes a noticeably
large dent in their portfolio.
Already,
the dollar’s decline has helped precipitate a parallel decline in U.S.
bond prices.
Indeed, most of the
dollars held by foreigners are invested in U.S. Treasury securities. So
when they’re selling dollars, they’re also selling bonds, driving
down their prices in tandem.
The price of Treasury
bond futures was at nearly 115 points in January. Last week, it was down
to less than 107.
That’s a loss of another
7% on top of the 7% lost on the dollar — a total loss of 14%, or over ten
times any interest earned on the Treasury bonds during the
period.
Already,
the weaker dollar is lighting a new fire under gold and silver as
foreign investors running from U.S. dollar bonds seek safer havens.
Gold
was rising steadily even before the dollar began to decline this year.
Now, with the extra
buying from international investors fleeing the dollar, it’s been
going up at an even faster clip ... smashing through the $600 level like
a knife through butter ... eclipsing $650 in a heartbeat ... and now
making a beeline for $700.
Silver has been even
stronger, up by more than 55% just since the beginning of the year. If
gold had risen at a similar pace, it would now be close to $800 per
ounce.
And
soon, you’re likely to see the falling dollar
drive oil prices sharply higher as well. Remember:
Oil is priced in
dollars. So just to maintain the status quo, oil exporting countries
must charge more for their oil to offset the lost revenues caused by the
dollar’s decline. Indeed, of all the markets that rise when the dollar
falls, oil and energy are the largest and potentially most powerful.
I repeat: These are not
just forecasts. Everything I’ve just told you about is already
happening. And what you’ve seen so far this year may be just the
opening tremors.
Reason: The dollar
decline witnessed to date barely begins to reflect the seismic pressures
that have been building up for many years ...
Seismic
Pressure #1
The Record U.S. Trade Deficit
Right now, the U.S. is
importing approximately $800 billion more than it’s exporting, the
single largest trade gap of any country in the history of civilization.
The reason for the gap
is undisputed: Americans have been acquiring foreign goods in a wild,
nonstop buying-and-borrowing frenzy. But most foreign consumers have
been avoiding U.S. goods like the plague.
The immediate result is
also well recognized: Foreign companies have enjoyed huge sales revenues
in the United States, collecting equally huge amounts of extra U.S.
dollars.
That much is clear.
What’s still hotly debated is how this gaping deficit is going to
impact you!
Will it simply pass you
by and let you invest, work, and live as you have been? Or will it begin
to impact your money, your job and your entire financial future?
Can you count on your
investments holding up and your standard of living continuing to
improve? Or should you be worried that you could wake up one morning to
a financial earthquake that’s off the Richter scale?
If The
United States Had Been
Any Other Country on the Planet,
The Answer Would Be Simple:
We would have been
forced to pay the price for our trade deficit long ago.
For example, Asian
companies collecting dollars from their U.S. sales would have promptly
sold them in exchange for yen, won or yuan. European companies would
have done the same, cashing them in for euros, pounds, or Swiss francs.
And just as soon as the
foreign companies sold their dollars, the value of the
dollar would have naturally gone down.
But the United States
is not just any country. It is the world’s only superpower. And for
many years it was the only market large enough to accommodate so much
new investment money so fast.
Similarly, the U.S.
dollar is not just any currency. It is generally the only one that has
served as a currency for the entire world — often called “the sun
around which all the other currencies revolve.” As such, it was a
staple for any commercial bank, manufacturer, trading company or central
bank that wanted a well rounded international portfolio.
So rather than cash in
their extra dollars, foreign investors have been sending those dollars
back to the United States — to buy U.S. bonds, U.S. stocks, U.S. real
estate, even entire U.S. corporations. That extra buying power, in turn,
was what helped prop up the value of the dollar ... and almost every
investment in America.
Any other country with
a trade deficit as large as ours would have suffered a currency collapse
years ago. And with that currency collapse, the value of their stocks,
bonds and real estate would have also fallen years ago.
But due to the huge
flow of dollars back to the United States, we were spared a similar fate
and given an extra lease on the good life. Our money was not gutted. Our
economy did not sink into a quagmire.
Instead, our citizens
enjoyed the unique privilege of living high on the hog ... without
working harder.
Our Congress was given
a blank check to spend on wars and pork ... without matching the new
spending with new revenues.
Our Treasury Department
borrowed from abroad to its heart’s content ... without paying higher
interest.
As a nation, we got a
free ride. We had our cake ... ate it ... and let foreigners pick up the
tab.
But as you will see in
a moment, it’s a devil’s pact.
Seismic
Pressure #2
Biggest Mountain of
Foreign Debts Ever
After years of record
trade deficits and years of selling our assets to foreigners, guess
what: Foreign investors now own a big chunk of our stocks and bonds —
approximately two and a half trillion dollars’ worth.
They own U.S. Treasury
bills, notes and bonds. They own U.S. common and preferred stocks. Plus,
they are also big investors in U.S. land, buildings and homes.
Their holdings exceed
those of American banks, pension funds, insurance companies, households
or any of other single domestic sector.
In sum,
We have been binging.
And to finance our habit, we have sold the farm. Dollar by dollar, piece
by piece, we have auctioned off our assets to cover the consequences of
our seemingly incurable spend-and-borrow addiction.
Seismic
pressure #3
Subtle But Powerful
Shifts in Confidence
Now comes the day of
reckoning.
There’s nothing that
requires foreign investors to continue investing in the
U.S. or even continue holding U.S. assets they’ve purchased so far.
Like every other investor, every day of every year, they have a choice:
To buy, hold, or sell.
They have no obligation
to us. Quite to the contrary, it’s America that owes an obligation to
them:
Anytime foreign
investors want their money back, we are committed to returning it to
them, no questions asked. Anytime they want to sell, they can do so —
almost instantly.
No, they’re not going
to sell their entire $2.5 trillion in U.S. securities all at once. But
to sink the dollar and shatter our bond markets, they wouldn’t have
to.
All they’d have to do
is make a subtle shift of a few percentage points in how they allocate
their investment portfolios: A few percent more for the euro or the yen
... a bit more to gold and oil ... a few percent less for the dollar.
That alone would be enough to shake the earth and tear down the walls of
the U.S. currency.
What Might
Trigger an
International Flight
From U.S. Dollars?
Some of the very same
changes we’ve been telling you about here in Money and Markets
week after week:
- Many
investors, especially in the Middle East, are likely to be shifting
out of dollars as they lose confidence in America’s military
enterprise in Iraq, and as Iraq sinks ever deeper into the quagmire
of civil strife. Back in January, in “Break
Points,” I showed you how we are about to pass the point of no
return in Iraq. Now, even supposedly secure areas are in turmoil, as
illustrated by the rising tide of Shiite violence against the
British in Basra this past weekend.
- Others
could be scared away by the showdown with Iran. Last Monday, in “Winds
of War,” I showed you how Iran could retaliate against UN
sanctions by reducing its oil exports ... paralyzing the Strait of
Hormuz ... or worse. Now, just this weekend, Iran has renewed its
threats to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty ...
its president has just dismissed sanctions as “meaningless” ...
and its parliament is pushing to end unannounced nuclear
inspections.
- Still
other investors are running in reaction to the increasing bravado
and defiance they see in anti-American oil countries like Venezuela
and Bolivia. In last week’s “Time
Bombs about to Explode,” Larry showed you how and why. Now,
Venezuela’s Hugo Chaves, Bolivia’s Evo Morales, Cuba’s Fidel
Castro and others are forming an anti-American alliance, again using
oil as their primary weapon.
- As
Sean vividly illustrated in “Investing
for Peak Oil” last week, the fact that worldwide oil
production could now be in a long-term cyclical decline is only
giving more leverage to all those that might defy the United States.
- And
the fact that many of America’s high-tech industries — the last
sectors in which the U.S. retained an edge — could be surpassed by
their counterparts in Taiwan, China, South Korea or Japan is not
helping either. (See “The
Hsinchu Miracle” by Tony Sagami).
- Nor
does it help when the new Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve —
Ben Bernanke — sends out signals that he may be soft on inflation,
as he did last week. “At the very minimum,” say foreign
investors, “pay us a higher interest rate to help cover the rising
risk we’re taking with your dollars.” But even that, says
Bernanke, is something he may not want to do.
Taken in isolation,
does any one of these events seal the dollar’s fate? No. But each is
opening up another fissure, hastening the day of a major quake.
Clearly, the global
reality has changed. Now, the only thing still holding up the U.S.
dollar is the lingering global perception of that
reality. That’s a dangerously vulnerable situation for our currency,
for our financial markets and for you.
What To Do
First
and foremost, if you still hold long-term bonds, get
the heck out! A 10-year Treasury note or 30-year Treasury bond doesn’t
yield that much more than a 3-month Treasury bill.
So what good is the
extra yield over the course of a full year when the principal value of
your notes or bonds can fall that much — or more — in less than a
week?
Second,
steer clear of stocks in companies vulnerable to a falling dollar and
rising interest rates. That includes most in the banking and housing
industry. But a falling dollar actually favors companies that derive
most of their revenues from overseas operations.
Third,
keep most of your keep-safe funds in 3-month Treasury bills or
equivalent. You can buy them directly from the Treasury Department using
the Treasury Direct program. Or, for better liquidity and checking
privileges, use a
money market fund that specializes in U.S. Treasuries.
Fourth,
to protect yourself against this new phase of the dollar decline, buy
investments that are likely go up when the dollar goes down. You saw how
gold, silver and oil are already moving higher. Stick with them and we
feel you’ll not only have nice hedges against the dollar but also
major profit opportunities.
Fifth,
for funds you can afford to risk, aim for gains of nearly $70,000 with
no risk beyond your modest investment, using Larry’s long-term options
strategy. Last week, he got the correction he was looking for.
One Last
Thought ...
Nearly two thousand
years ago, in the year 75 AD, Rome was running a trade deficit of about
100 million sesterces, the equivalent of 2 percent of its total economy.
Among the many factors that led to the empire’s eventual decline,
Rome’s trade deficits could easily have been one of the most
important.
Similarly, fifty years
ago, when I was growing up in Brazil, a massive trade deficit was also a
critical factor in that country’s decline. Its currency was decimated
over and over again.
Just ten years ago,
Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and other Asian countries were plunged
into a currency crisis, thanks to big deficits and over-reliance on
foreign capital.
And today, when a
country’s trade deficit exceeds 5 percent of its GDP, it’s a major
sign of real and present danger, according to the International Monetary
Fund.
But the United States
continues to flaunt both history and the IMF. At over 6% of GDP, our
deficits greatly exceed those of ancient Rome, 20th century Brazil or
any Asian country one decade ago.
Don’t take this
lightly. Pay close attention to the new phase of the dollar’s decline.
And take protective action.
Good luck and God
bless!
Martin
Martin
Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money Report
support@martinweiss.com

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
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