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The Euro vs Dollar Currency War is back on the front burner. For years, it
used to be a cold war, but now it's hot again - and Bernie can't take the heat;
it gives him headaches.
Poor Bernie.
He should have anticipated that when he accepted Bush's appointment as 'fedicopter'
pilot-in-chief. With his Ph.D. in Economics - or whatever it is that he's got
hanging on his office wall - he should have known that inverted pyramids invariably
topple over but, alas, that's just common sense. They don't teach that in the
economics departments of major US universities. It's too basic.
Bernie really can't complain. Maybe his predecessor could have complained,
had he stuck around. At least there was no such thing as a "euro" when Greenspan
became Fed chief. There was no way he could have anticipated the euro and its
effect on the dollar when Reagan appointed him back in 1987.
But Bernie did know.
The euro's function as reserve-currency spoiler was fully known to him when
he assumed office. He also knew that the ECB wasn't about to follow him into
the interest rate ditch when push came to shove - but there's always hope,
I guess.
The really stressful part in all of this is that there really isn't anything
he can do in his position, given the tools at his disposal. All he can do is
use traditional ways of messing around with the US money supply, or try to
find more novel ways to affect US interest rates - but therein lies the problem.
He has no power to affect the interest rate targeted by the Fed's sister institution
in Europe.
The Headache's Pathogenesis

Why is this man hurting?

Answer: Because this man just
poked him in the eye
Bernie's headache is caused by "Tricky" Trichet's announcement that he will
raise the ECB's target interest rate in July. Bernie just can't match that
without terminally locking up the US economy's gears.
The dollar train has been powering downhill full steam ahead. Bernie can't
suddenly throw the gears into reverse without stripping them, but yet he also
can't just let the train run off the cliff, not if he wants to have some kind
of a 'legacy', one day.
So, he has to stand pat. His hands are tied. Not that this would necessarily
keep him from going off half-cocked into some new, stupid direction. Common
sense never does seem to intrude on his decision-making process all that much
- but in the meantime, Trichet's action does indeed give Bernie this really
bad, splitting headache.
The European press and political figures are already clamoring for Trichet
to lower his rates. They still don't understand that he won't do it. Not only
can he not afford to do it at this point in time (with 3.7 percent inflation
EU-wide and 4.7 in Spain alone), it's simply not in his job description.
His sole and exclusive mandate is to keep euro zone inflation at just below
two percent. So far, he obviously didn't do a very good job at it, so now he
needs to play catch-up - and that's what he is doing.
Tricky's Euro-Ache
Now, Tricky isn't without his own chronic headaches. He is facing a crisis
of confidence in the euro that severely threatens the common currency's structural
integrity.
Germans - who were never consulted and who never had a chance to vote against
euro-accession - are selling any euro notes with serial numbers that reveal
they originate from a southern European country like Italy, Spain, Portugal,
or Greece. Germans have of late been exchanging those southern notes for euros
printed by the German Bundesbank.
In essence, they are doing with the southern euros what the world is doing
with the dollar:
Sell.
This does not have an immediate effect on the different notes' buying power
because they are by law exchanged at a one-to-one ratio. Yet, over time, if
this process continues, it cannot help but undermine the structural integrity
of the entire euro system.
Germans Are Hoarding Cash
The fact that this is happening means, first of all, that Germans are hoarding
cash. That makes cash scarce. It also means that many Germans are preparing
for either a serious crisis or a final and complete break-up of the euro-zone's
monetary union. They fear that, if the union does break up, the notes circulated
by these southern states of the EU will be worth less due to their flailing
respective economies, their crashing housing markets, and their prolific price-inflation.
In that way, the eventual breakup could be forced by these Germans' very fear.
By force of the supply/demand dynamic, these southern notes should have a lower
value relative to the German ones, but the legal framework forces banks to
exchange them for German notes on a one-to-one basis.
Another 1933?
This is very similar in principle to what brought the gold standard to its
knees here in the US. Over-printing of paper notes caused Americans to reject
them and to demand gold coins until the banks ran out of gold coins. If the
German notes are compared to gold and the overly circulated southern states'
notes are compared to paper dollars in the early 1930s, we can see how this
system could easily break down.
If the people of other northern states follow suit, these states' euro banknotes
will experience vastly increased demand from being privately pulled out of
circulation, while southern notes will wash back into their respective countries
of origin, kicking their already bad inflation problems into overdrive.
It is a very strange aspect of the euro system that the ECB has the final
money-issuing authority while the individual states central banks can determine
how many of their country's notes and coins should be circulated at any given
time. The individual CBs request them and the ECB determines if it should print
them, and all euro notes show on their face which (former) country they are
from, even though they are all just "euros."
This quirky system may well be what will ultimately do the euro in, but don't
bet on the world rushing back to the dollar in a desperate "flight to quality." Not
unless a world-wide dysentery epidemic breaks out, that is - because the dollar
will essentially be reduced to toilet paper by then.
The most likely result of this problems will be a new EU law that prohibits
banks from allowing their customers to discriminate between northern and southern-issue
euro banknotes. The EU is an even more centralized and despotic bureaucracy
then the US is turning out to be. Hey, what's the big deal with yet another
law - as long as it's all for the good of the bankers, right?
Nothing new on that front.
The Effect on Gold
All in all, the dollar's and the euro's woes are not be lost on individual
investors, traders, and savers around the world. Price-inflation is
rampant everywhere, and not just because it is driven by high demand for commodities.
Credit has been far too loose in emerging economies as well as in the West.
In fact, the emerging economies of East Asia, India, and Russia outdid the
US and Europe on that scale by several orders of magnitude.
All of this is resulting in a world-wide, growing distrust of fiat currencies.
Even central banks have been seen to turn into net buyers of gold - for the
first time in almost three decades.
Asian countries are already rushing into gold. Tiny Vietnam even became the
world's largest importer of gold during the first quarter of 2008! The country
also has a huge price-inflation problem. It registered at 11.6% in 2007. That
means the Vietnamese people are the smartest people in the world when it comes
to investment choices. The rest of the world will soon have to follow them,
like it or not, albeit at much higher gold prices.
China's currency is rising in value internationally while price-inflation
kills its purchasing power at home. As other Asian countries import more Chinese
goods to take up the slack from waning US demand, their prices are rising as
well. Meanwhile, inflation is just as rampant in Europe while US figures show
that the actual rate at which inflation rises here rivals that of Vietnam -
at least if pre-Greenspan-era formulas are used to calculate it.
At the same time, M1 (consisting of cash plus bank accounts, aka "demand-deposits")
is seriously declining in the West as a result of the credit crunch - and that
spells "credit-deflation" even though prices are rising.
That's bad news for the banks.
Will Deflation Crash the Gold Price?
There is probably enough that could be written on this topic to warrant an
entire article, maybe even a book, but the question also has a very quick and
easy answer. The answer is "no" because gold is primarily money, not
a commodity. It is good for almost nothing except for making jewelry and for
using it as money. That's why it's so valuable. Even jewelry is a latent form
of money, if you think about it.
As the money stock decreases during a credit deflation, it becomes more valuable
relative to goods and services, and so its buying power increases. Non-western
people know this. Westerners will have to re-learn this lesson the hard way.
They will keep their money in interest-paying loser-investments because they
believe that cash and gold are "non-performing" assets that earn no interest.
In other words, in a deflation, "cash is king" - and gold is cash. In fact,
gold is better than paper cash. That should tell you where to focus
your investment dollars.
Got gold?
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