My comment: Again, time to be very cautious. This wave will be worse
than the 2008 one. This is the very begining of the wave, if you have
a chance to get ride of US dollars (and therefore USdollar-alike
assets such as US treasuries) and to enter, or to bet stronger, on
other investments such as farmland or some commodities (an expert on
commodity markets knows which ones are apropiate nowadays) it will not
make you hyper-wealthy if you are not it already, but at least you
will not be at risk to lose everything or a lot.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=acQdAx5Opn4w&refer=home


April 15 (Bloomberg) -- Expectations for a weaker dollar increased to
the highest level in a year after the Federal Reserve diluted the
currency to lift the economy out of a recession, a survey of Bloomberg
users showed.

Participants turned bearish on the dollar over the next six months for
the first time since January, according to 1,349 respondents from
Paris to New York in the Bloomberg Professional Global Confidence
Index. They were most bullish on Brazil’s real since August and
expected the Mexican peso to rally for the first time since January,
as the Group of 20 nations pledged on April 2 to spend $1 trillion to
revive global economic growth.

The Fed’s broad dollar index has declined 4.7 percent against 26 of
the U.S.’s major trading partners, since touching a 4 1/2-year high on
March 3. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke joined central bankers in Japan,
Switzerland and the U.K. on March 18 by printing money to buy debt
assets after exhausting other monetary-policy tools. Bernanke said
yesterday there are signs that the “sharp decline” in the U.S. economy
is slowing.

“We are likely to see a gradual decline of the dollar,” said Jack
Spitz, managing director of foreign exchange at National Bank of
Canada in Toronto, a survey participant. “The economic stimulus will
pay off. Optimism has fed into commodities and commodities currencies
at the expense of the dollar.”

‘Limited Upside’

The dollar weakened against 15 of the 16 most traded currencies in the
past month, falling as much as 11 percent against New Zealand’s
dollar. Only the yen fared worse, losing 1 percent versus the U.S.
currency. The greenback depreciated a record 3.4 percent versus the
euro on March 18, when the Fed unexpectedly announced a plan to buy as
much as $300 billion of Treasuries and increase purchases of mortgage
securities.

The index of expectations for the dollar fell to 42.87, a level last
seen in April 2008, from 53.41 in March. The measure is a diffusion
index, meaning a reading above 50 indicates participants expect the
currency to appreciate. Participants were last bearish on the dollar
in January, when the index dropped to 45.53. Bloomberg began compiling
the data in December 2007.

“There’s limited upside for the dollar,” said Maxime Tessier, head of
foreign exchange in Montreal at Caisse de Depot et Placement, which
has C$120 billion ($98.7 billion) under management. “Since the
beginning of the year, we’ve been gradually reducing our exposure to
the dollar.”

Fiscal Stimulus

Participants’ confidence in the global economy rebounded to 21.2, the
highest level since May 2008, from 8.49 in March, according to the
Bloomberg survey. Expectations for the yield on 10-year Treasury notes
to rise increased to 59.66, from 56.83 a month earlier.

Economic sentiment improved after global governments and central banks
beefed up efforts to combat the worst economic crisis since the Great
Depression. The U.S. government and the Fed have spent, lent or
committed as much as $12.8 trillion to shore up the nation’s banking
system and economy. In Japan, the government announced a record 15.4
trillion yen ($153 billion) stimulus package on April 10, bringing
total spending to 25 trillion yen.

“I am fundamentally optimistic about our economy,” Bernanke said in
Atlanta yesterday. “Today’s economic conditions are difficult, but the
foundations of our economy are strong, and we face no problems that
cannot be overcome with insight, patience, and persistence.”

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News estimate the economy contracted
5 percent in the first quarter of this year, compared with an 6.3
percent annual rate in the final three months of 2008.

Brazil, Mexico

“We are fairly bearish on the dollar,” said Jonathan Xiong, who
oversees $18 billion as vice president and senior portfolio manager at
Mellon Capital Management Corp. in San Francisco. “Some of the risk
aversion has decreased in the market place.”

Participants in Brazil turned upbeat on the real, with the index
rising to 54.41, from 48.41 in March. The index for the Mexican peso
climbed to 64.36 from 41.50.

The real gained 4.2 percent in the past month to 2.21 per dollar,
while the peso advanced 10 percent to 13.24. The rally came after
world leaders at the G-20 summit agreed to triple the amount the
International Monetary Fund can lend to crisis- stricken countries and
offered cash to revive trade. The peso also advanced as Mexico said on
April 1 that it will seek a $47 billion credit line from the IMF to
shore up its foreign reserves.

“I would see Brazil attractive if we do incorporate a strategy” of
buying emerging-market assets, said Xiong.



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