Is the dollar
really getting stronger?
by Don Hank
You’ve probably heard that the dollar is getting stronger these
days. Short sighted investors are pretending this means that the USD will never
fall as long as they walk the earth.
They look at this short term growth in the dollar against other
deeply troubled currencies and crow that the good old USA is as sound
economically as ever. Further, they bad mouth perceptive deep economic analysts
like Tyler Durden, for example, calling them every foul name in the book, but --
aside from supplying short term
charts and out-of-date commentaries -- without providing a single fact
to prove that those analysts are wrong. To top it off, many of them cheekily
call themselves ‘conservatives’ and quote other establishment
conservatives-in-name-only to prove their points. This creates the mistaken but
indelible impression among some thinking people that conservatives are
hopelessly naïve. Yet deep analysts are edged out of the field and forced to
publish their own commentaries on the web. In this regard, these dollar bulls
are the spitting image of the Russophobes, who also practice desperate ad
hominem attacks with a breath taking lack of logic, facts and gray matter. I
often wonder what would happen if they had to deal with a populace having as
much understanding of macroeconomics as they have of household
budgets – an understanding matching their chronological age -- instead of
a gaggle of silly teenagers in adult bodies.
There is an unwritten rule in the West that as long as no one
notices that the emperor is naked, then he is not. Woe unto anyone who dares
state otherwise, for there is an unwritten ban on speaking negatively about the
US economy.
What these poor souls forget, and want us
to forget, is that the dollar is only getting strong against other
‘Western’ currencies (I use quotes there as I am including the Japanese yen in
that, Japan being clearly within the US sphere of
influence.)
But there is a bullet train headed right for the USD bull market
and its initials are RMB (renminbi, or the yuan).
You might want to get off the track. Either that or get on track
number CNY (Forex ticker name for Chinese yuan).
Here is what Bloomberg says about this trend
“The average Chinese Yuan conversion rate over the last 12 months
was 6.15.
The average rate over the last 10 years was 7.01. A lower Chinese Yuan to
US Dollars exchange rate over the last 12 months compared to the average
currency rates over the last 10 years serve as an indicator that the long term
rate trend in CNY/USD is down (weakening US Dollar against the Chinese
Yuan).”
The average rate over the last 10 years was 7.01. A lower Chinese Yuan to
US Dollars exchange rate over the last 12 months compared to the average
currency rates over the last 10 years serve as an indicator that the long term
rate trend in CNY/USD is down (weakening US Dollar against the Chinese
Yuan).”
Did you get that? The dollar is weakening
against a currency in a country that does not
play Ponzi games with its currency. Or in other words, a country that is run by
adults. So why is the US dollar so strong against the euro, for example? If you
need to ask, you will not pass Economics 101, but here ya go in case you need
it.
Answer: The US-imposed sanctions
against Russia and their fallout, including Russia’s own sanctions against the
EU. For example, I was reading several months ago on a Greek site that the
Greeks are suffering heavy economic losses because Russia is no longer buying
their fruit. Of course, if Greece were to drop out of the euro zone, that would
bring back their Russian clientele and pretty much fix everything else for them
(although not enough Greeks seem to have thought of that option yet or want to
stay on what they perceive as a potential gravy train). Now, as you also may
realize, left-wing political party Syriza is gaining
ground among Greeks and is anti-austerity. That is very close to being anti-EU
and it is a sign that, while the Greeks may not be ready to exit the EU
(so-called Grexit), they are tired of taking orders from Brussels to be poor and
like it. If Greece wakes up and notices that the anti-Russia sanctions are
cutting considerably into their GDP, and that exiting the EU and defaulting on
their debt would give them some much-needed breathing room, we could see a
revolt, which would in turn trigger revolts EU-wide, ultimately driving the last
nail in the EU coffin. The problem is, the EU probably can ill afford to make
all the anti-austerity parties in Europe happy enough to keep them from going
over the edge. They are already extended to the max. Besides, if the EU Masters
ease up on Greek austerity, then they must do the same for others. At some point
they would be reliant on the lender of last resort, China. But China would want
a serious quid pro quo, quite likely the end of anti-Russian
sanctions
But I digress. My thesis in this commentary is that the optimism
over the dollar’s apparent strengthening as against Western currencies is
justified only if we ignore the
Chinese yuan, the only serious challenger and of course, the one no one is
watching.
As I pointed out before, based in
large part on my translation of an absolutely seminal interview with China’s top
monetary policy expert Chen Yulu, the USD is falling against the RMB simply
because China has a real economy
based on diversified manufactured goods and service offerings, while the US is a
debt-based economy whose government has long been unable to pay its bills out of
receipts, resorting instead to rampant issuance of dizzying amounts of dollars
The key fact here is that other Western powers are using the same failed
strategy of borrowing and printing as opposed to spending real receipts, and
worse, they are devout Keynesians who believe as a matter of faith that you can
stimulate your sick economy well. It’s for all the world like a drug addict who
believes that stimulants provide energy, not realizing that energy
can only come from foods, and that stimulants only induce the body to utilize this energy. (By way of
reference, there is not one calorie
in caffeine).
In a nutshell, the EU top deceivers and their accomplices in
national governments are not about to disengage with the US, no matter how much
Washington and its deceptocrats abuse them.
But below this rarefied stratus of bureaucracy is a seething mass
of real people who are increasingly dissatisfied with the status quo. The
increasingly roiling discontent is obvious in the Greek Syriza, the Freedom
Party in Holland, the UK Party UKIP, Marine LePen’s Front National, and in
lesser parties scattered around Europe, and the issues are much more complex
than simple economics – including as they do the impression of an increasingly
unwelcome Islamization or the potential addition of another Greece-like basket
case to the collection of misfits. The most popular parties in the rich North
are now anti-EU, and that is scarier
for the Brussels bureaucrats than the anti-austerity sentiment in the South,
although taken together, they could easily be
fatal.
No matter where you look the EU is under heavy fire and seems
headed for collapse.
So here is my point: if analysts can make the US economy look
good only by comparing it to the
above described certified European losers, what does that tell you about the
dollar?
We would do well to call off the dogs of cold economic warfare
before Russia and its BRICS allies decide to walk away from us once and for all
and Europe decides to follow them, leaving the US high and
dry.
“Encirclement” will have come full
circle.
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