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While most U.S. investors stayed home Friday, foreign investors were
running away from the dollar.
The greenback plunged
to a 19-month low against the euro and a two-year low against the
British pound.
The utter speed of its
decline rattled Wall Street ... added new momentum to rising commodity
prices ... and raised the specter of massive dollar selling by foreign
central banks.
This weekend, with no
specific news to blame, currency experts scrambled to find an
explanation.
But Mike
Larson’s timely warning that the dollar is on the ropes
anticipated the decline. Even before Friday’s trading began, he showed
you how the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) — one of the broadest measures of
the dollar — was busting its two-year trend ... conclusively ending a
rally that began in early 2005 ... and paving the way to an all-out
dollar rout.
Now
that rout has begun in earnest.
The U.S. Dollar Index
fell to 85.10 on Tuesday, slid to 84.57 on Wednesday, and plunged to
83.66 on Friday — an even clearer breakdown in Mike’s chart.
Unfortunately,
there’s no one — not even the U.S. Treasury Department — lifting a
finger to stop its decline. And, alas, the consequences of their
complacency are conclusive:
Consequence
#1 A New Flight to Gold
Despite the fact that
the New York Mercantile Exchange was closed on Friday, gold bullion
surged $9.60 to $638.60 an ounce in electronic trading.
In the past 30 days,
it’s up $51.70. In the past year, it’s up $144.90. And since its low
in April of 2001, it has surged $382.90.
That’s a trend.
And with the dollar
just now beginning a new plunge, it’s far from over. As
Larry points out in his latest report ...
“If
China were to lay its $1 trillion in reserves end-to-end using dollar
bills, the trail of paper would stretch for 96,906,565 miles. That’s
enough to wrap around the widest part of the earth 3,876 times! ...
China is going to corner the gold market.”
And they’re not
alone. All foreign governments that are flush with sinking dollars have
no choice to step up their gold buying.
Oil-producing nations,
also stuck with sinking U.S. dollars in payment for their exports, are
starting to pile in. Banks, large speculators, small investors — all
are about to rush into gold as a hedge against further dollar declines.
We’ve been alerting
you to precisely this phenomenon all year. Now it’s happening.
Consequence
#2 A New Surge in Energy
A barrel of crude oil
— and virtually every other major source of energy — is measured in
U.S. dollars. So if the value of each dollar declines, the number
of dollars per barrel must go up accordingly. For example ...
- Approximately one
year ago the U.S. Dollar Index was at 92, while crude oil was in the
high $50s.
- Today, the U.S.
Dollar Index is at 83.66, down 9% in value, but crude oil is trading
near the same levels as one year ago.
Even assuming no
increased oil demand ...
Even assuming no new
threats to oil supplies ...
That means the price of
crude oil needs to quickly adjust upward by about 9% just to compensate
for the dollar’s decline. And, as I just explained, that dollar
decline has barely begun.
Consequence
#3 Even Sharper Gains in Energy and Gold Stocks
For
the past two months, while the price of crude oil has been mostly flat
or even sliding, energy exchange traded funds (ETFs) have been
recovering swiftly.
For example, the Oil
Service HOLDRs (OIH), the leading ETF in its sector, has bounced very
nicely from an extreme low of 118.19 on October 4 to a close of 140.30
on Friday.
That’s still off from
its closing peak of nearly 164 last May.
But with the dollar
sinking and oil prices likely to adjust higher, it could easily reach,
or exceed, those highs by early next year.

Another ETF, this one concentrating in gold mining companies, is also
bouncing back sharply:
About two months ago,
the Market Vector ETF (GDX) hit an extreme low of 32.41. Friday, it
surged to a close of 39.90.
That puts its all-time
closing high (41.70) within easy reach. And the pattern is similar for
other mining ETFs as well as most precious metals-related mutual funds.
Consequence #4 China’s
Leading Stocks Gain New Momentum
A powerful fundamental
force behind the dollar’s decline is the blatant contrast between (a)
a weakening U.S. economy and (b) the stronger economies of Europe and
Asia, especially China.
So the dollar’s slide
parallels China’s rise. And any further flight from dollar-denominated
investments can only boost Asian stocks still further, as Tony has been
pointing out all year long.
That’s
why leading indexes of China’s stocks surged so dramatically last
week. And it’s also a key factor behind the surge in our favorite
China ETF.
This China ETF is up by
2.85% in the past week ... 12.6% in the past month ... and over 45%
since June — the equivalent of 350 points on the Dow in one week ...
1,500 in a month ... and nearly 4,900 Dow points in half a year.
But it’s not just the
magnitude of the rise that we look at: Equally important is its steady
pace, with fewer-than-average gyrations and a nice pick-up in momentum.
Naturally, this
doesn’t preclude corrections. But we’re looking to use them as
buying opportunities. (See our latest
report.).
Why The Dollar
Decline Is Not Just a Blip
If the dollar disaster
were driven strictly by the ebb and flow of international hot money, all
this might be little more than a temporary blip on the charts.
But, unfortunately, the
dollar disaster is rooted in immense, immutable imbalances that have
been building up like a pressure cooker for many years:
The biggest trade deficit of all time ...
The greatest debt to foreigners of any country in history, and ...
The steadily declining competitive powers of America’s largest
manufacturing industries.
For a while, these
issues were buried or ignored. As long as international investors could
count on a healthy U.S. economy ...
Or as long as they
could earn a hefty premium on their cash held in dollars ...
Then they were usually
willing to hold their nose, overlook this ugly picture, and stick with
their U.S. dollar investments. But now, those two saving graces are
fading fast:
Even without a recession, the U.S. economy is already among the weakest
of all major nations, and ...
Even without any action by the Fed, foreign investors are already
anticipating that they’re going to get less interest on their cash in
the U.S. and more interest on their cash elsewhere.
These are the
immediate, most obvious triggers of the dollar’s latest fall. But,
alas, global economics and international finance are just the tip of the
iceberg.
The Decline of
the Dollar Reflects America’s Sliding Influence As a World Power
I have not been
counting the years since Dad died. To me, it feels like yesterday; and
the last time we talked about the U.S. dollar, like last week.
Dad was devoutly
American.
Whenever he predicted
the dollar’s decline, it was with great pain; whenever he talked about
its eventual recovery, it was with great pride.
And today, I share the
same feelings when I warn about the traumatic transformations that are
eroding America’s hegemony as a world economic power.
Iraq Unraveling
Despite all our hopes,
the dire reality is that Iraq is coming unglued, and events on the
ground are moving faster than any “new solutions” that could be
served up by Congress.
Just in the past few
days ...
Iraq’s battle lines for an all-out civil war have been more clearly
drawn — many police units fighting with the Shiites; many army units
fighting with the Sunnis.

Iraq’s central government is in paralysis, as Shiites loyal to radical
anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr — the largest single power block
in parliament — threaten to walk out.
Iraq’s already-fragile social fabric is in shreds. Schools are
shuttered. Essential services are shutting down. Most government
agencies are nonfunctional. And ...
Iraq’s last hopes — diplomatic initiatives to rally regional support
— are either on hold or in danger of being torpedoed.
This, too, is a dollar
disaster, and in more ways than one. It undermines America’s
political, military and economic influence in the Middle East and
beyond. It opens the door to the spreading influence of Iran. And it’s
a mounting threat to world oil markets.
Already, nearly $25
billion in Iraqi oil revenues have been lost due to attacks and
sabotage. Now, far more oil is in jeopardy, potentially fueling energy
cost inflation, which, in turn, hurts all paper currencies, especially
the dollar.
Meanwhile ...
Nigeria
is on shaky ground as its oil-rich Niger Delta region again comes under
attack from anti-Western rebels, threatening one of America’s largest
sources of oil imports.
Ecuador,
Latin America’s second-largest oil exporter, looks like it has just
chosen Rafael Correa as its new president — a man who has threatened
to reduce payments on Ecuador’s $16.1 billion foreign debt and shift
the nation into the leftist camp of Hugo Chávez.
Iran
has just announced it will move forward on its own with its Arak nuclear
facility to produce plutonium — one more act of defiance that’s
likely to destabilize the region. And that’s despite a direct rebuff
by the UN’s atomic watchdog agency, which flatly rejected Iran’s
request for technical assistance late last week.
President Bush recently
summed things up this way:
“You
can imagine a world in which these extremists and radicals got control
of energy resources. ... They would use energy as economic blackmail ...
and be able to pull millions of barrels of oil off the market, driving
the price up to $300 or $400 a barrel.”
I doubt we will see oil
prices go that far in our lifetime. But even oil at $100 per barrel
would have far-reaching consequences, helping to drive the dollar still
lower and world commodities sharply higher.
Conclusion: This is the
worst time to hitch your wagon to the Dow and the ideal time to profit
from investments that naturally rise when the dollar falls. That
includes ...
- Gold, gold shares,
mutual funds and ETFs
- Energy shares and
ETFs
- Select foreign
securities and ETFs, especially in countries like China, still on
track for near-double-digit growth in 2007.
Plus, stick with a good
measure of money allocated to Treasury bills or a Treasury-only money
fund. Despite the decline in the dollar, it’s a must for your ultimate
cushion of safety and liquidity.
Good luck and God
bless!
Martin

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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