The Dollar Bounce

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Wednesday, January 5, 2005

---------------------

*** Reflecting and putting things in perspective...
sticking to our beat...  

*** Jolly, parasitical spending continues... the "good
times" keep on coming... 

*** The rarity of deflation... the swirling waters of
debt... tough questions... and more!

---------------------

Today, at noon, London will fall silent again. For three
minutes, all of Europe will keep quiet in honor of the
150,000 people killed by the "Death Wave." 

Since the New Year has barely begun... we are still in a
reflective mood. We wonder what it all means... 

Why should we care what happens on Wall Street today, when
so many bodies lie rotting in the tropical sun? We have
been trying to come to grips with the scale and balance of
things. More people die from AIDS in Africa each year, says 
a colleague. Nobody gets too excited about that...  

And that's the point of having money, anyway... so you can
vacation in Thailand in the winter!

In Britain, the papers have all gone a bit gaga, in their
typical mad and reckless way. Did the Americans give too
little aid, too late? Was the White House stingy? And here
come the celebrities, opening their wallets and their
mouths! But where was Tony Blair? They ask how could the
British Prime Minister could take a vacation at a time like 
this ... as if he should fly to the beaches of Thailand,
blow the breath of life into putrid lungs himself, and
bring the dead back to life!

But that is what the media does - turn the sorrow of
millions into a public spectacle.

But money is our beat... and we will stick with it. There's 
nothing particularly amusing about a real tidal wave... 

But, oh, a tidal wave of debt - that's another matter!

We have been writing about the Great Mystery - why do bonds 
not sell off, as the dollar falls?

The underlying reason, we think, is that the world is
headed into deflation - a credit contraction - that will
help hold up prices on solid, fixed-return securities.
Commodities are low already. Gold is correcting - down to
$429. The economy is still not creating many new jobs. And
TIPS, the inflation-adjusted 10-year securities offered by
the government, trade at a narrow premium over regular
10-year notes; if there is inflation ahead, the bond market 
still doesn't see it. 

But there's also a more immediate explanation: The
foreigners are still buying U.S. bonds. Each day, nearly $2 
billion worth of U.S. current account deficit flows out of
the United States - which must be absorbed by foreigners
and somehow make its way back to the United States to
balance the books. But each day, according to figures
provided by Stephen Roach, foreign central banks, chiefly,
buy more than $2 billion worth of U.S. securities. This is
what keeps the dollar from collapsing altogether. It is
also why U.S. bond yields remain low, and why Americans are 
able to continue borrowing at such low rates.

Macro-economists, such as Roach, wait for the current
account deficit to correct. One nation cannot live for long 
at another nation's expense, they point out. But the United 
States continued its jolly, parasitical spending in 2005,
at an even faster pace than 2004. A drop in the dollar
seemed to have little effect. As long as the foreign
central bankers continue to buy U.S. bonds, the good times
will roll on. 

But there's another way to correct the imbalance in the
world's current accounts. A slump, a slow-down, a recession 
in America would reduce consumer spending. Instead of
borrowing and spending, people would cut back. They might
even save. The dollar might fall a little... or a lot. But
what would correct America's current account deficit would
be a huge fall-off in demand. Instead of buying things they 
don't need with money they haven't got, Americans would
begin holding onto the money they do have... and leaving
the things they don't need on Wal-Mart's shelves and
China's loading docks.

Foreign investors will need higher real yields to continue
buying U.S. dollar securities, says Roach. But they might
get them in an unexpected way - by falling rates of price
inflation... just as in Japan. Deflation is rare... and
strange. As prices fall, real rates of return on savings go 
up. Buyers hesitate; if they wait to make a purchase, their 
money will be more valuable... and the price of the thing
they are buying will be lower. The slump gets worse... 
Then businesses go broke. Jobs are lost. People at the
margin can no longer make their mortgage payments. House
prices drop. Stocks collapse. Look out!

We are just guessing, of course, that a tidal wave of debt
is headed our way in 2005. The year ahead will tell its own 
tale in its own good time... and maybe we will be wrong...
but we would stay off the beach anyway. 


More news, from our team at The Rude Awakening:

--------------

Tom Dyson, reporting from Baltimore... 

"But markets are fickle creatures... and even though the
dollar's exchange rate is moving lower just as we said it
would, we must never stop questioning our position. We've
made good money buying gold and shorting dollars recently
but a sudden trend change could wipe it all away. Mr.
Market delights in punishing complacency." 

For the whole story, and for more market updates, see
today's issue of 

The Rude Awakening
http://dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=4389

--------------

Bill Bonner, back in London:

*** The issuance of junk bonds hit a new record in '04,
says today's news. Loans to marginal borrowers, denominated 
in a slippery currency, sold on to people who people who
have no idea what they're getting into, at some of the
lowest yields in history... giving them almost no margin of 
safety. 

So much of what goes on in the world is humbug, fraud and
poppycock, we recall saying the other day. The buyers of
these junk bonds use historical data to justify their
decisions. But the data was collected over many years when
many fewer bonds were sold... from healthier borrowers...
in a credit expansion (not at the beginning of a credit
contraction) ... at a time when the dollar was still a
strong currency... and when junk bond buyers required much
higher yields to make up for the risk!

*** A Canadian reader asks a tough question: 

"I am a regular reader of the Daily Reckoning, and I
especially appreciate the moral perspective that your
essays bring to the often dehumanized topics of global
finance and macroeconomics. A belief in the possibility of
something for nothing, whatever its guise, is at root an
immoral belief that disregards the concepts of real value
added and wealth creation.

Sadly, such beliefs are today widespread, as Western asset
markets rise in the face of steadily decreasing productive
capacity and steadily increasing consumer appetites. Kudos
to Bill Bonner for drawing attention this dynamic, and for
placing it in a moral context. 

"I write you today with a moral, and somewhat personal,
question. I read with interest in your Christmas Eve essay, 
"Over the Top", your humble protestations that Agora Inc.
(if that is the parent entity of the Daily Reckoning) did
not make the extraordinary amount of money that was
apparently the subject of marketplace rumors. It reminded
me of a thought that has often occurred to me as I have
enjoyed previous DR missives: I wonder just how Agora earns 
its money, and how the firm would hold up if Bill Bonner's
moral lens were turned on itself and applied to his own
operation. 

"As you so often phrase it, does Agora get what it
deserves, or does it get what it wants through feeding at
the same trough of limitless liquidity as the reckless
lenders and speculators it so often criticizes? 

"Some clues are available. For example, while enjoying your 
daily email, I am often interrupted by advertisements
proposing to sell me trading systems and ideas that will
deliver "jumper stocks" and triple-digit returns in days.
In DR emails, notice has been given that you are looking to 
recruit individuals with trading experience, suggesting
that Agora likely trades its own capital as well. And of
course there is Bonner and Wiggin's wonderful book, which I 
bought and read last year. 

"None of this should be surprising to anyone, I suppose.
Agora's revenue comes from a mixture of proprietary
trading, advertising, book publishing, and possibly
subscription newsletters or portfolio management. It is
natural that Agora would be first and foremost a creature
of the financial markets and publishing. The DR newsletter
must be funded, and Agora clearly has skills that are
highly marketable in the investment world.

"The indelicate question I would like to pose is this: How
does earning money through short-term trading schemes fit
into your moral universe? You wisely admit to being unable
to predict the near future, but claim to have a good idea
of how things should eventually resolve in the long-term.
Where do the speculators (even contrarian speculators!) who 
advertise in your emails fit into this ideal long-term
resolution?

If you are in some way a profiting participant in the
financial folly you lament, what do you deserve, dear
editors?

"I do not want to question the integrity of the DR
newsletter. It brings a very valuable perspective, I read
it free almost every day, and I imagine I would love to
work at a place such as Agora Inc. I pose this question
only because I think your response would help me understand 
my own productivity, and how, if it is a conceit to believe 
a nation can earn money by thinking while the rest of the
world sweats, any individual can rationalize in moral
terms
being no more than a thinker."

We respond:

Dear Canadian reader:

Here at the Daily Reckoning our only virtue is our
humility. But we have so much of it we are sure that it
makes us superior in almost every way. 

Well, this extreme self-deprecation leads to an always
interesting and occasionally lucrative business philosophy: 
since we don't know what will work... we're perfectly happy 
to offer customers the advice and information and opinions
that they actually want.

The editors of the Daily Reckoning, for example, do not
trade options... or currency futures... or stocks... or
baseball cards. We can walk through the lobby of the
Venetian in Las Vegas with no desire to pull a single
lever. (We have other weaknesses... in abundance.)

But we're not fool enough to think we have the answers to
all the world's problems... or the magic formulas to
wealth. We have, in fact, only our own ideas and
opinions... which we offer to you, unvarnished, and we
might add - for free - every day. You may take them or
leave them. Or, you may wish to try the advice and opinions 
of others. We have been in this business for more than a
quarter of a century. We have met many, many investors with 
many, many different approaches to making money - options,
trend following, currency hedges, IPOs, insider trading
information, technical systems, charts or astrology. As
near as we can tell, none of them work particularly well
forever... but all of them seem to work from time to time.
We recall our old friend Mark Hulbert telling us that the
one of the best investment records he had ever seen was
made by a service that relied on the stars for its trading
signals. In another period, a top performer was one where
the editor never seemed to make a trade; he merely left his 
followers in T-bonds. We don't know which approach will
work or when it will work... but we are pleased to be able
to let readers find out for themselves.

You may want to think of us as book publishers (which, in
fact we are). We don't claim to know which author has the
ULTIMATE TRUTH; as far as we know each of them might have a 
little part of it.

Our personal point of view is on display here in the Daily
Reckoning every day. We are neither investors, gamblers,
speculators, analysts, nor economists... but moral
philosophers, merely trying to figure out how the pieces
fit together... and wondering if the knee-bone really is
connected to the thighbone. We make no pretense of trying
to make you wealthy, dear reader. Our only hope is that we
all leave these daily reckonings no poorer... perhaps a
little wiser... and much humbler.

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---------------------

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: As far as everyone is
concerned, the long-term outlook for the dollar spells
disaster, as Dr. Richeb�cher showed us in this space
yesterday. But for the short-term, Doug Casey isn't
convinced that the dollar will do what everyone thinks it
will... he says it may actually rally! Read on... 

THE DOLLAR BOUNCE
by Doug Casey

Especially since the IS of Nov 2000, which was devoted
almost entirely to the pending collapse of the U.S. dollar, 
we've spent a lot of time here explaining why the dollar is 
in such trouble. In the period from its peak in February
2002 to the time of this writing, the dollar has lost 57%
against the euro, 75% against the NZ$, and 112% against the 
chronically pathetic South African Rand. It's down 25% from 
its peak against Turkish lira, which suffered 20% domestic
inflation last year, leading the government to make a
decision to knock 6 zeros off its banknotes. The U.S.
dollar has even lost 124% against the latest incarnation of 
the Argentine peso, traditionally one of the world's
strongest competitors for the toilet paper of currencies.

But now, not despite the dollar being all over the world's
media as a disaster, but because of it, it's probably time
for a bear market rally. By definition, the masses are
trend followers, not contrarians. Regardless of what the
long-term fundamentals of a currency may be, in the short
term its price is set by the psychology of buyers and
sellers. Right now everyone knows how badly it's done, and
they're all sellers. As I write, the euro has hit a new
all-time high of $1.36 against the dollar.

Everyone and their dogs have finally become aware of the
dollar's problems. Therefore, I suspect that it's almost
time for Business Week to run a cover story projecting the
death of the dollar, ringing the bell for a temporary
bottom. But the dollar is still (for the moment) the
world's currency. The recent anti-dollar hysteria will wear 
off and sellers will buy back a lot of dollars, simply
because the dollar is still, for all its faults, a liquid
and convenient holding.

A rebound, however temporary, in the U.S. dollar will be
helped along by the U.S. Government (USG) which, wanting to 
forestall the inevitable, is taking action to shore up the
dollar by raising interest rates, making it a more
desirable holding. I wouldn't be at all surprised to see
the unit stabilize, or gain 10-15% over the next two or
three months.

The prospect of dollar strength is almost certainly bearish 
for gold, because so far the strength in gold has been as
much a mirror image of the dollar's weakness as anything
else. 

Within that statement, however, are two big positives for
readers of this publication:

First, the strong correlation between the U.S. dollar and
gold over the last few years confirms that there is a
significant subset of the world's financial community that
now, correctly, views gold as a global currency. Foreigners 
know that their own currencies are little better
fundamentally than the dollar - they're just pieces of
paper that are temporarily strong against the dollar. The
eurozone countries have all the problems of the U.S. dollar 
(like bankrupt national pension plans) and more, stemming
from an even more socialistic approach to problems. At
least, perversely, the USG can ultimately support the value 
of its currency by taxing Americans: with the
implementation of the European Union, and considering
already high tax burdens across the eurozone, Brussels
can't steal the assets of Europeans nearly as easily. 

The cycle that is unfolding is, at this point, fairly
predictable. Namely that the sheer volume of negative
attention paid to the intrinsic flaws of the U.S. dollar
will lead, in a natural progression, to a comparison with
competing currencies, the euro and gold in particular. At
that point people will increasingly begin turning to gold
(and electronic forms of same) to preserve purchasing
power. 

This is not going to happen overnight, but it is going to
happen. In the meantime, I expect the U.S. dollar to stage
a rally. 

The second positive is that the gold stocks will move down
as the dollar rallies, providing us with what I would
consider a last-train-out chance to load up our portfolios
with the best of the best. Does that mean that we should
now sell, in anticipation of such a downturn? My
inclination is, other than normal house cleaning and profit 
taking, no. Far too often, once a stock is sold it is
forgotten...  until you read about it taking off to the
moon without being on board. In addition, provided you own
stock in quality companies - well-run, financially sound
operations with big projects - a dip in the stock shouldn't 
be concerning at all.

As you'll see in the quarterly company reviews that make up 
the majority of this edition, there are a lot of very
attractive companies to pick from, but given my view on the 
short-term outlook for the U.S. dollar, you may want to be
a bit cautious to adding to positions over the next month.


Despite my contrarian instinct that gold might have a rough 
month or two, nothing is changed about my mid- to long-term 
views on gold (it's going to the moon) or the U.S. dollar
(it's going down the drain). 

In support of that outlook, I need only take a quick look
at the global perception of the U.S. dollar. 

Take the OPEC countries. They certainly have no incentive
to either own the dollar or keep assets in the U.S. If I
were them, I'd be very afraid that the USG might hold my
U.S. assets hostage in the so-called War on Terror, wherein 
all Muslims (correctly) see themselves as the enemy of
choice. 

That's one reason why OPEC reports show that its member
nations have cut their holdings of dollars from 75% to 61%
of deposits in the last three years. It's true that Arab FX 
reserves are small, totaling only about $65 billion for
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE - a mere tenth of
the Chinese reserves, for example. And I doubt they'll ever 
grow much beyond that, simply because practically every
economy in the OPEC is chronically corrupt and socialistic. 
But as OPEC countries move away from the dollar, the world
will see it as one more straw in the wind. That's on top of 
the gold-backed dinar, created by Malaysia, which I expect
will gain favor.

Even should I be right in believing the euro will
ultimately share the same fate as the dollar, I am of the
opinion that OPEC member nations are going to begin pricing 
their oil, and hold larger percentages of their currency
assets, in euros, not dollars...  if only because Europe is 
a much bigger trading partner for them than the U.S. OPEC
imports from Europe rose 29% between 2001 and 2003, while
those from the U.S. fell by 14%. The way I see it, that
trend is likely to accelerate (unless the collapse of the
dollar prices U.S. goods at giveaway levels), mainly
because the Europeans haven't positioned themselves as
enemies.

Moving to the East, we are beginning to see the Chinese,
(soon to be followed by other big potential bag-holders of
U.S. dollars) divest themselves of their U.S. dollar
positions by trading for real assets. IBM has just sold its 
laptop division to a Chinese company for $1.3 billion, and
the Chinese are bargaining to acquire Noranda in Canada. No 
doubt they'll be spending scores of billions in the U.S. on 
capital assets in the near future, while Americans are
spending hundreds of billions on worthless trinkets from
the Chinese. It's almost as if the Chinese will be doing to 
Americans what Americans did to the Indians when they
bought Manhattan. It never makes economic sense to trade
capital goods for consumer goods. And, unlike the Japanese, 
who managed to shoot themselves in the foot by top-ticking
every market they entered in the late '80s, I suspect the
Chinese will be shrewd buyers. The only thing stopping them 
is that they're probably afraid, like the Muslims, that the 
USG could go psychotic and freeze their assets on some
pretense.

While the Japanese Central Bank has recently been making
noise about redoubling its efforts to support the U.S.
dollar, it is increasingly helpless to do much about it.
They simply don't have enough money to keep the floating
abstraction of the dollar afloat. 

How will all of this end up? As nationalistic and paranoid
as the United States has become, it's entirely possible
that the government might do something irrational in the
military or economic arenas, where it is most powerful.
Militarily, I expect it to continue the present trend of
pointless adventurism. That's an easy call.

Economically, however, I suspect we'll see a reversal of
what has been a longstanding trend towards freer trade and
freer markets. As the USG sees capital leaving the U.S. and 
the world dumping dollars, it's not going to solve the
problem by controlling itself - which is the only, and
ultimate, solution to the problem. What they're going to do 
(and I recognize this is a radical prediction) is put
capital and FX controls in place. We have already seen
attempts by Bush to erect trade barriers; capital and FX
controls are just points further up the continuum. Of
course they will be completely counter-productive.
Disastrous. But desperate men with power do desperate
things. 

The bottom line? Although I think the dollar is in for an
upward bounce, the long-term downtrend is still very much
intact. You should continue to buy gold and other
commodities, especially on weakness. And get as many assets 
as possible outside of the United States now, while you
still can. In that regard, in the months to come I'll draw
your attention to well-positioned international real estate 
investments.

Regards,

Doug Casey
for The Daily Reckoning

Editor's Note: Doug Casey, Chairman of Casey Research, LLC
is one of the world's most respected authorities on
investing in natural resource stocks and editor of the
International Speculator, now in its 27th year.

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