russia-insider.com 
<http://russia-insider.com/en/dont-get-too-attached-weak-ruble/ri9387>  


Don't Get Too Attached to a Weak Ruble. The Dollar Is Coming Down


Marko Marjanović

Seeing how at this very moment ruble is getting hammered by the dollar 
<http://news.yahoo.com/russias-ruble-eight-month-low-market-dips-over-075150687.html>
  predicting a ruble appreciation seems like a very bold statement indeed. 
However, if one contrarian investor is right that is exactly what we should 
excpect. 

Peter Schiff <http://www.schiffradio.com/>  is a financial analyst who made his 
fame and fortune by going against the grain. He is most known for having 
predicted <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgRGBNekFIw>  and warned about the 
housing bubble and the financial crisis of 2008. Broadly speaking he is bearish 
on US economy and the US dollar and bullish on commodities, gold, foreign 
stocks and foreign currencies.

He would sum up his position something like this:

The much vaunted US recovery since the 2008 crash has not been real. Economy 
and disposable income of most people have not improved significantly, or at 
all, since then.

As such the gains made by US stock markets are not based on the state of the US 
economy. They are the outcome of loose money policies of the US Federal 
Reserve. 

When crisis hit instead of allowing a corrective recession that would have 
liquidated malinvestment (as well as wiped out profits for numerous investors) 
the Fed re-doubled its easy money policies. It ushered in an unprecedented 
seven year period of zero percent interest rates, and undertook three massive 
money-creation campaigns - each bigger than the previous - the so called 
“quantitative easing” (“QE”) programs.

The result has been that in the place of a housing bubble, a much larger 
stock-market bubble has been blown up. The high US stock market is simply a 
consequence of trillions of new dollars chasing after the same amount of stocks 
- along with money from real people who re-invested into the markets because 
they seemed like the only thing that was going up.

This has escaped most people who buy the explanation that due to the “stimulus” 
by the Fed the US stock market is now fundamentally sound. Therefore, when at 
the end of 2014 the Federal Reserve announced the end of their QE3 program 
<http://www.marketwatch.com/story/fed-ends-qe3-and-sends-upbeat-signals-on-economy-2014-10-29>
 , numerous investors believed a raise in interest rate was also around the 
corner.

Indeed this would have made every sense - if the markets were now sound, there 
was no longer a need for a heavily interventionist policy of the Fed. Indeed 
the Fed itself signaled 
<http://www.forbes.com/sites/advisor/2014/03/27/fed-on-target-to-raise-interest-rates-in-spring-2015/>
  and has been signaling since that it will set a higher, more conventional 
interest rate.

It was this expectation of a return to (relatively) hard money policies in the 
US that contributed to the fall of oil and emerging market currencies compared 
to the dollar and which is perhaps the main reason 
<http://russia-insider.com/en/business/ri>  for the latest tumble in the oil 
price. 

(At the time QE programs were taking place dollar wasn't depreciating on 
foreign currency exchanges because central banks all over wanted to prevent 
this from happening and instituted lose money policies of their own - the 
Chinese are already paying the price for this having blown up a stock market 
bubble of their own in the process.)

However, Schiff, at least, believes A.) that actually raising the interest rate 
and ending a supply of free credit would set US markets for a free fall and B.) 
that the Fed knows this. Therefore his expectation is that the Fed will 
continue to prop up the phony high stock market with zero percent interest and 
eventually go on to restart the programs of quantitative easing starting “QE4”.

If this happens, or if the rest of the investors come to believe it will, it is 
inevitable the dollar will surrender all of its gains compared to commodities 
and foreign currencies. Both of these would push the US currency down and the 
ruble up. (In fact there is a possibility - albeit no guarantee - it may even 
serve to dramatically expose the oversupply of US dollars and burst the entire 
US currency bubble - albeit it just as likely this will take many more “QEs”.)

And that's a great thing for Russians. While there are those who argue that a 
weak ruble is “good for Russia” I don't agree.

It's true that an undervalued currency can help sell you more goods, however, 
we have to remember the goal of trade isn't to sell the greatest number of 
goods, but to earn the greatest amount of foreign currency. If you can earn the 
same amount of foreign currency by selling fewer goods then that's a great 
thing.

It means you still get to import the same amount of foreign goods, but you can 
redirect some of your production capacity away from exports and to domestic 
consumption. 

A hard, highly valued currency therefore helps you achieve the goal of 
economics - which is enjoying a high standard of living and satisfying the 
greatest number of your material needs. (Not assembling tons of stuff and 
shipping them overseas.)

Chances are that in six to twelve months Russians can go back to having that - 
unless their government follows the US in enacting hare-brained inflationary 
policies of its own.

 

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