Inflation and the Dollar
June 26,
2009
Whenever,
therefore, people are deceived and form opinions wide of the
truth, it is clear that the error has slid into their minds
through the medium of certain resemblances to that truth.
Socrates BC 469-399, Greek Philosopher of Athens

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/money-supply
Inflation is
defined as an increase in the money supply and not as many
economists falsely refer to it as an increase in the cost of
goods. The price increase is a direct result of inflation,
but it is not the definition but just a symptom of
inflation. If one looks at the above two charts one
immediately spots how dramatically the money supply has
risen in the last 12 months. In less than 12 months the
money supply has risen to a level that is double that of
2003. M1 is increasing at levels not seen for over 40 years;
take a moment to digest this fact, when the economy is
broken, when savings are low, when companies are scaling
back, we have drug addicts driving the printing press to the
breaking point. 1+ 1 always equal two and pushing the
printing press into over drive must equate to some form of
very strong inflation and most likely hyperinflation.
History
clearly indicates that when the money supply increases,
inflationary forces increase and the more dramatic the
increase the more profound the inflationary effects are. It
goes without saying that the current rate of expansion is
basically illustrating that hyperinflation is moving closer
to a reality with the passage of each day.
Note that the
current administration has many ambitious plans, improve
funding for Medicare, improve social security, provide
universal health coverage, improve the infra structure,
increase troop levels in Afghanistan, the future money this
administration will be forced to lend banks once the
commercial mortgage sector starts to crumble, etc. All these
programs need extra money, money this country does not have
and the only way to create this extra money is to print it
as no nation is going to lend this country the trillions of
dollars it will need to fund all these ventures. It,
therefore, goes without saying that, unless this
administration dramatically cuts down on spending or
increases taxes by a back breaking amount, inflation and
then hyperinflation are going to hit this economy soon.
Now in the
not so distant past, the world at large was busy proclaiming
that the US economy no longer had as much as an impact on
the rest of the world’s economies as it once used to. Well,
that myth has come to an end; when the US housing market
tanked and the credit markets froze, the rest of world
crumbled also. Thus the old saying still applies, when the
US sneezes the rest of the world catches a flu and in some
cases bronchitis or Pneumonia. Thus whatever happens here
will have a global effect and other nations are not going to
be able to come out and say that it’s different this time,
for the reality is that it's not.
For a long
time individuals in the Euro zone assumed that they were
better off, the reality is that the situation is a lot more
troubling in the Euro zone than it is in the US. Several of
the countries that make up this zone are in deep trouble so
the long term prospects for this zone are not very bright at
least not for the next few years. The question now comes
down to which location is less ugly for most nations are in
deep trouble. It is for this reason we are strongly
advocating commodities based investments for regardless of
the currency they trade in, we expect them to trade
significantly higher in the years to come. If we had to
choose between the EURO and the Dollar, we would not, but
instead deploy our money into the following currencies, the
Canadian Dollar, the Hong Kong Dollar, the Chinese Yuan
(probably the main one) and maybe the Australian Dollar.
Those looking to invest in currencies should spread their
money in at least 2-3 of the above currencies. Note we are
strictly speaking in terms of investing in currencies
directly or via currency ETF’s and not the futures market.
Believe it or not inflation and hyperinflation provide
incredible opportunities to make even more money in the
stock and Futures markets provided one holds the right
investments and usually a good advisory service is required
to help with timing of such transactions. Assets always
over inflate to compensate for inflationary pressures, so if
the dollar were to lose say 20%, certain based commodities
assets could increase in value anywhere from 60%-100% if not
higher.
As we have
stated before, the next 6-9 years are going to produce
profound changes, these changes will be so extreme and deep
that it will literally stun the unprepared, for the majority
have not and will most likely never again be exposed to such
dramatic forces again in their life times. Hyperinflation
means that you go out today to buy a loaf for 3 dollars and
when you come back tomorrow the cost has risen to 4 or 5
dollars. We had a brief taste of this last year when
petrol prices kept increasing on a weekly basis.
We would
therefore, once again strongly advise all our subscribers to
eliminate all debt, live 1-2 standard below your means and
use a large percentage of this money saved to purchase
bullion and commodities based stocks; buy during strong pull
backs and or corrections. The time to prepare is when the
sun is shinning, for once it starts to rain it’s usually too
late.
Not all the
currencies we mentioned have ETF’S and so one could invest
directly in them by opening a bank account (a offshore
account that allows you to invest in a basket of currencies)
or one could choose from the following ETF’S
Canadian
Dollar= FXC Australian dollar=
FXA
A wild
speculative play would be the Russian Ruble
Russian
Ruble= XRU
Other means
to hedge oneself against the side effects of inflation is to
deploy money into commodities and the following commodity
based ETF’s would and should perform well in an inflationary
and hyper inflationary environment.
Oil= USO
Gold= GDX Silver= SLV
Natural gas=
UNG Gold miners= GDX
Dollar
The Chinese
by nature are very respectful when addressed by leaders and
therefore, what occurred a few weeks ago when Treasury
secretary Geithner addressed the students at the prestigious
Peking university is very telling.
"Chinese
assets are very safe," Geithner said in response to a
question after a speech at Peking University, where he
studied Chinese as a student in the 1980s.
His
answer drew loud laughter from his student audience,
reflecting scepticism in China about the wisdom of a
developing country accumulating a vast stockpile of foreign
reserves instead of spending the money to raise living
standards at home.
Full story
The fact that
these students laughed loudly clearly indicates that the
Chinese have no faith that the US government is concerned
with preserving the value of the dollar. As of March China
had 786 billion dollars invested in treasuries. As we have
repeatedly stated in the past Chinese are very advanced
chess players and what makes them even more formidable is
their capacity to be extremely patient. China basically
controls the US now, those that control the strings of the
purse control the nation. If china threatens to sell its
treasury holdings it would literally break the bond market
and drive interest rates to record levels in a matter of
days.
While the
above story is a good measure of the dollars' long term
demise, it is not accurate in terms of its short to
intermediate term direction. There is a very good chance
that the dollar could actually go on to test its 2008
Oct-Nov highs, and possibly even put in a new high. The
testing of its old highs will mark the beginning of the end
for the dollar; from there it could lose up to 60% of its
value before it stabilises, which means commodity prices
will literally explode across the board.
However, for
this short term scenario to remain valid the dollar cannot
trade below 78 for more than 3-4 days in a row; if it does
then the chances of it rallying to new highs will have
diminished significantly. The dollar traded as low as 78.35
and then immediately rallied from these levels; this is a
good initial sign for it shows that the 78 price point level
is a zone of strong support. The rally we are expecting in
the dollar coincides very nicely with the rally that is set
to occur in the bond markets; when individuals purchase
bonds, they are indirectly opening up long positions in the
dollar (in other words, other words they are buying the
dollar). As with the bond market we are expecting the
dollar to put in its final high in the next 6-12 months and
then embark on a long down trend that could result in a
total loss of up to 60% of its former value.
www.stockcharts.com

As long as
the Dollar does not close below 78 for more than 3 days in a
row the outlook will remain bullish; ideally, it should not
trade below its June lows of 78.35. It initially mounted
a rally but then shed most of those gains and is now
attempting to rally again. It needs to trade past 82.50 for
roughly 3 days in a row and penetrate down trend line in the
1 year chart; a break past this level for 3 days in a row
should be enough to propel the dollar all the way to the
85.50-86.00 ranges. If the dollar breaks below 78.00 the
next target becomes 74, and it will also suggest that the
downward slide in the dollar is occurring at a faster rate
than was initially projected. The current pattern calls for
a rally that should lead to a test of its recent highs or
potentially to new 52 week high before it embarks on a long
downward journey.
Www.stockcharts.com

The 2 year
chart confirms the outlook of the 1 year chart. To move
higher the dollar needs to trade past its main down trend
line, which falls roughly in the 82.50-83.00 ranges, and a
break below 78 would take it at the very least down to the
74 ranges. In the 2 year chart, we notice how important the
78 price point level is; it's a zone of support that
stretches back almost 2 years and thus a break below this
level would be a very decisive move.
The dollar
still has time to move higher and the action in the bond
markets is suggesting that it should move higher as the bond
markets appear to have put in an intermediate bottom that
could result in them rallying for up to 9 months and thus a
rally in the bond markets should drive the dollar higher.
We are not
expecting the dollar to mount another long term rally; this
rally will be the last strong rally for sometime to come.
Once this rally is over (current targets are now in the
88-90 ranges, but it could rally as high as 92), we expect
the dollar to resume its long term down trend and shed up to
60% of its value. As long as the dollar can remain above 78
the picture will remain somewhat bullish, a close above
82.50 for 3 days in a row or a weekly close above 83 will
turn the hourly, daily, and maybe even the weekly trends
bullish.
One rather
strong bullish factor for the dollar is the fact that when
it traded to new 6 moth lows, gold did not respond by
trading to new highs; this is a rather strong intra market
negative divergence signal and usually such signals indicate
that the weaker market (in this instance the weaker market
is the dollar) is going to mount a rally.
Risk takers
could deploy funds into the dollar now with the intention of
closing these positions out the moment the dollar tests its
old highs and then redeploying this money back into their
original currencies.
The current
pattern indicates that the Dollar could trade to the 90-92
ranges; this represents roughly a 15% gain from current
levels; in currency markets such moves are considered
massive.
'Tis but an
hour ago since it was nine, and after one hour more twill be
eleven. And so from hour to hour we ripe and ripe, and then
from hour to hour we rot and rot. and thereby hangs a tale.
William Shakespeare 1564-1616, British
Poet, Playwright, Actor
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