Sunday, November 11, 2007

The returning wave


As Japanese currency is getting out of risky investments and heading home, Brady Willett lists the factors putting the dollar under downward pressure:

In recent weeks the markets have speculated that the Saudis may drop their peg, that other Gulf states and sovereign wealth funds in the area are lightening their exposure to the dollar, and that OPEC continues to eye settling in Euros instead of dollars. Also recently China and Japan dumped a combined $33 billion in U.S. Treasuries (in August), and Chinese officials have continued to discuss reducing exposure to the dollar. Suffice to say, that against an already uncertain backdrop U.S. dollar holders are coming forward threatening to fan the flames and talk of the dollar era being over is running hot is hardly encouraging. Less encouraging still is the fact that those who previously cheered the dollar’s decline are turning scared.

He wonders whether we may see an emergency support plan for the dollar.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Whatever happened to that business about "if I owe you a thousand that's my problem but if I owe you a million that's your problem"? Doesn't it apply any more? What we need is an Enhanced Cliche Applicability Criterion. It would help everyone suffering from Arse-Elbow Distinction Difficulty Syndrome.