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The U.S. Federal Reserve has Perfected the Incredible Shrinking Dollar

December 7th, 2006

December 7, 2006 - I must pre-qualify this blog entry as I’m writing it from a café, that unlike previous blogs about the direction of the U.S. dollar, I have not looked at any technical charts regarding the current weakness of the dollar before writing this. However, I will say that as weak as the dollar is (and trust me, anyone, American, Spanish, Cuban, French, German and so on, knows how much the dollar has fallen if you own any dollars at all), I believe that the dollar has much further to all. Not a just a little bit, but a LOT more. I know, sorry, that’s terrible news for all you dollar holders out there.

shrinking_dollar.gifBut let me now qualify that statement above. I don’t believe the dollar will go the way of toilet paper overnight. In fact, it’s possible, more likely even probable, that the dollar will experience temporary episodes of strength. Since the dollar has been overdue for a pop higher, I wouldn’t be at all shocked if we receive one soon. However, none of these episodes of strength will come close to matching on the upside, the precipitous falls that it has recently experienced. Furthermore, a temporary bump higher, when and if it happens, will by no means mark a trend reversal. The dollar is firmly set on a downward path for the long term and the even longer term. The Fed has a decision to make.

In Asia and South America, as local currencies have strengthened significantly against the dollar, exporters have complained loudly about their inability to compete due to the dollar’s weakness though their complaints have for the most part, fallen on deaf ears. A weak dollar helps the U.S. in that it makes American goods more attractive to the foreign market and will help close its massive trade deficit. However, in order to put much more than a tiny cosmetic dent in this massive deficit, the dollar needs to weaken much more than even its current pathetic state. And this, I believe is the most likely scenario that will happen.

So what should you do about this problem? From a personal wealth perspective, holding dollars will just make you poorer in the long term. Many people don’t factor in the erosion of purchasing power from currency into their wealth but they should. If you own a lot of dollars and your investment portfolio or business profits have increased in the past couple of years by 40%, but your purchasing power has decreased by 15% because of the incredible shrinking dollar, this loss of purchasing power is a tangible loss in wealth.

So consider converting your dollars to anything but dollars if you already haven’t done so – gold, silver, Euros and Pounds Sterling.

__________________

J.S. Kim is the founder and Managing Director of SmartKnowledgeU™, a comprehensive online investment course that uses novel, proprietary advanced wealth planning techniques and the long tail of investing to identify low-risk, high-reward investment opportunities that seek to yield 25% or greater annual returns.

More on this topic (What's this?)
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Fed to Bloomberg: “F*** off”
Guest Post: Fed Transparency Watch
Read more on Federal Reserve, U.S. Dollar (USD) at Wikinvest

Entry Filed under: Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, & Recession Proof

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. none  |  December 9th, 2006 at 6:17 pm

    Well currencies can rise and fall at the drop of a hat and any whiff of investor panic. In reality I don’t think there is any real non-emotionally based reason why the dollar should decline significantly. American companies are reasonably competitive. A 30% drop on dollar value implies a massive competitive edge which in turn would drive significant capital investment and a rehardening of the exchange rate.

    Most of the “dollar is going down” criticisms are emotionally and politically based, driven by the desire to see both a weak dollar and a faltering economy. Long term (unless the capitalist economy is reformed) you can’t get both because a weak currency stimulates the economy.

  • 2. J.S.  |  September 20th, 2008 at 2:37 am

    It’s two years later now and the dollar has lost tremendous value against a basket of other major global currencies now, particularly the Euro and the Pound (even with the recent rally). The death of the dollar has nothing to do with a political agenda. If one understands monetary policy of the U.S. Federal Reserve, it was blatantly obvious the dollar was going to weaken considerably two years ago just as it is obvious today that, in light of these massive bailouts of financial institutions, it will continue to weaken significantly.

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