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In light of much of what has been going on - from a macro economic perspective
- I felt it might be appropriate to review some of the fundamental factors
that affect [or should affect] a currency's worth. As we can see below,

the U.S. dollar [as measured by the U.S.
Dollar Index] has been strengthening from roughly the Spring of 2005.
Let's examine some of the fundamentals to ascertain whether or not this rise
in the dollar's value has been warranted.
Forces
Behind Exchange Rates
According to Jason Van Bergen at Investopedia.com,
Fiscal policy is
the means by which a government adjusts its levels of spending in order to
monitor and influence a nation's economy. It is the sister strategy to monetary
policy (see Formulating
Monetary Policy), with which a central
bank influences a nation's money supply. These two policies are used
in various combinations in an effort to direct a country's economic goals.
Well, we certainly do not need to go on ad nausea in this space about U.S.
fiscal policy. Suffice to say that policies in place have led to arguably unsustainable
deficits of the current [trade imbalance] and fiscal [government spending]
accounts.
The responsibility of administering the monetary policy in the U.S. falls
on the shoulders of the Federal Reserve. The tools at the Fed's disposal to
carry out this task are most commonly thought to be interest rates. While interest
rates are indeed a powerful 'lever' in determining demand for credit - and
thus the economy's fortunes - it is not the only tool the Fed has at its disposal.
The Fed sets Reserve
Requirements for the banking system. By altering the level of reserves
that deposit taking institutions must hold in their vaults or on deposit
with the Regional Fed Banks - the Fed can directly affect the aggregate money
supply in circulation.
The Fed has another powerful tool in its bag - called Open
Market Operations - that enable the Fed to rapidly inject or withdraw
vast amounts of money into the banking system via repos [short term borrowing
- or purchase and resale - of securities from the market place] or matched
sales [short term selling and subsequent repurchase] of securities through
member banks and investment houses. This powerful tool [open market operations],
in effect, allows the Fed to be seen to be acting with constraint [reigning
in inflation] in the economy whilst simultaneously opening the monetary or
liquidity spigots [doing exactly the opposite] in terms of injecting 'short
term' cash in the banking system. Needless to say, over the past 12 Fed hikes
in interest rates [dating back to June 04] - which have seen the Fed raise
rates from an historic low 1% to the current 4% - virtually all open market
operations undertaken by the Fed have been through the repo [monetary
aggregate add] mechanism. Interesting, in my opinion, from a group that
preaches how vigilant they are on preventing inflation.
So, there you have it folks, on the fiscal front - an accident looking for
a place to happen and on the monetary front - a central bank [the Fed] that
seems [by empirical observation] to want to have it both ways. Many would argue
that this is decisively fundamentally negative, yet the dollar appreciates?
But Why?
In a fiat monetary system where no money is backed by the discipline of the
gold [or equivalent] standard - governments and central banks are ultimately
free to create as much currency as they desire - at virtually no cost - unless
you want to consider misallocation of resources and asset bubbles "costly." We
certainly do have our fair of these now, don't we?
In a globalized world - one that depends on international trade to the extent
ours does - countries tend to act in mercantilist self interest, not allowing
their currencies to appreciate against their counterparts to ensure the vitality
of the export sectors [and accompanying jobs] of their economies. As such,
under a fiat money regime - when an export led economy sees their currency
start to rise in value [lessening foreign demand] - they simply "print" their
domestic currency to buy "or prop" the devaluing currency to maintain the status
quo. A negative side effect of all this is, left unchecked, all this money
printing tends to be 'highly inflationary.'
Has anyone [with the exception of the Fed, of course] noticed any inflation?
And If All Else Fails
If your currency fundamentally wants to "fall" in value [meaning foreigners
want to liquidate] - and you want to protect or project an image of the opposite
- there are other ways you might consider 'picking up the slack,' so to speak.
Consider this if
you will:
Chavez Moves Venezuelan Money Out of U.S.
Associated Press
Venezuela has moved its central bank foreign reserves out of U.S. banks,
liquidated its investments in U.S. Treasury securities and placed the funds
in Europe, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Friday.
"We've had to move the international reserves from U.S. banks because of
the threats," from the U.S., Chavez said during televised remarks from a
South American summit in Brazil.
"The reserves we had (invested) in U.S. Treasury bonds, we've sold them
and we moved them to Europe and other countries," he said.
Chavez, a sharp critic of what he calls "imperialist" U.S.-style capitalism,
has often criticized foreign banks for the power they wield in international
financial markets at the expense of poorer countries.
Chavez again proposed the creation of a South American central bank that
would hold the foreign exchange reserves of all the central banks in the
region.
"I'm ready right now with the Venezuelan central bank ... to move $5 billion
(euro4.15 billion) (of Venezuelan reserves), to a South American bank," Chavez
said.
Central bank officials could not be immediately reached for more details.
Chavez has also argued against central bank autonomy, saying excess foreign
reserves should be spent on economic development projects.
Under his presidency, Venezuela's mostly pro-Chavez Congress changed central
bank laws earlier this year so the government could tap reserves for spending,
despite criticism that it would lead to devaluation of the local currency
and higher inflation.
Every year the central bank must now compute an "optimum" amount of reserves
and hand over the rest to a newly created national development fund.
Money held in the fund will be used for overseas purchases and to pay off
outstanding debt.
Foreign exchange reserves held by the central bank stood at $30.434 billion
(euro25.27 billion) as of Sept. 28, according to central bank data.
I recently wrote about this happening [outlined above] - here at
Financial Sense. I've also written quite extensively about the Pirates
of the Caribbean/irregularities in TIC data. Well, consider if you will
- that Venezuela is an OPEC country and they "dumped" their U.S. government
bonds in September/05 [to the tune of 15 - 20 billion as reported above]. Now
look at the U.S. Fed/Treasury reporting on TIC data just
released this past week for the month of Sept./05:
MAJOR FOREIGN HOLDERS OF TREASURY
SECURITIES
(in billions of dollars)
HOLDINGS 1/ AT END OF PERIOD |
| Country |
Sep '05 |
Aug '05 |
Jul '05 |
Jun '05 |
May '05 |
Apr '05 |
Mar '05 |
Feb '05 |
Jan '05 |
| Japan |
687.3 |
684.6 |
683.3 |
681.2 |
686.2 |
685.7 |
680.5 |
680.7 |
679.3 |
| Mainland China |
252.2 |
248.0 |
242.1 |
243.7 |
243.5 |
240.5 |
223.5 |
224.9 |
223.5 |
| United Kingdom 1/ |
182.4 |
174.2 |
160.0 |
145.5 |
132.5 |
125.2 |
122.2 |
111.6 |
101.1 |
| Caribbean Banking Centers 2/ |
102.9 |
103.4 |
102.9 |
106.8 |
125.5 |
124.6 |
137.2 |
104.7 |
94.2 |
| Taiwan |
71.8 |
71.6 |
72.3 |
71.3 |
70.9 |
70.6 |
71.1 |
68.5 |
68.3 |
| Germany |
63.5 |
65.0 |
61.9 |
61.1 |
61.2 |
60.8 |
56.0 |
53.0 |
53.8 |
| Korea |
61.7 |
59.1 |
59.2 |
59.6 |
58.7 |
55.9 |
57.1 |
53.1 |
53.6 |
| OPEC |
54.6 |
53.8 |
52.7 |
57.0 |
62.6 |
60.6 |
62.2 |
67.6 |
67.0 |
| Hong Kong |
48.1 |
47.4 |
48.5 |
48.2 |
47.6 |
47.2 |
45.2 |
45.2 |
45.3 |
| Canada |
47.8 |
48.4 |
46.7 |
43.8 |
41.1 |
42.1 |
38.4 |
38.0 |
35.4 |
| Luxembourg |
41.3 |
42.3 |
41.1 |
43.1 |
44.6 |
45.3 |
42.2 |
42.9 |
41.7 |
| Switzerland |
37.5 |
38.2 |
37.4 |
40.1 |
42.0 |
43.3 |
44.1 |
44.3 |
40.8 |
| Mexico |
35.0 |
35.8 |
35.0 |
31.9 |
31.2 |
31.6 |
32.5 |
33.0 |
33.5 |
| Norway |
33.4 |
41.8 |
43.8 |
45.3 |
37.7 |
29.8 |
16.9 |
33.8 |
35.1 |
| Singapore |
28.2 |
28.6 |
28.6 |
28.9 |
30.3 |
30.0 |
30.8 |
29.2 |
29.9 |
| Brazil |
26.2 |
23.7 |
23.2 |
20.8 |
16.8 |
16.2 |
14.7 |
13.6 |
13.8 |
| France |
24.3 |
24.2 |
22.1 |
18.9 |
27.9 |
22.2 |
25.0 |
27.0 |
21.0 |
| Sweden |
19.3 |
19.3 |
19.0 |
19.4 |
17.9 |
16.8 |
16.9 |
16.3 |
15.8 |
| Belgium |
16.2 |
16.3 |
16.1 |
15.9 |
15.8 |
15.7 |
15.3 |
16.7 |
16.8 |
| Italy |
15.9 |
16.4 |
15.9 |
14.6 |
14.4 |
14.7 |
14.6 |
13.8 |
13.1 |
| India |
14.5 |
16.7 |
17.6 |
16.1 |
16.9 |
18.0 |
18.3 |
18.1 |
15.9 |
| Netherlands |
13.9 |
14.4 |
15.1 |
14.7 |
15.2 |
17.0 |
18.1 |
16.5 |
16.8 |
| Turkey |
13.2 |
14.0 |
15.2 |
13.8 |
10.1 |
10.7 |
11.4 |
10.4 |
12.9 |
| Poland |
11.9 |
11.1 |
11.2 |
11.4 |
11.8 |
11.9 |
11.4 |
10.6 |
10.2 |
| Thailand |
11.2 |
12.2 |
12.1 |
12.8 |
13.3 |
11.1 |
12.1 |
13.0 |
13.3 |
| Ireland |
10.8 |
10.7 |
14.7 |
13.8 |
17.7 |
13.3 |
17.2 |
17.8 |
15.6 |
| Israel |
10.5 |
10.1 |
9.2 |
9.5 |
10.3 |
11.6 |
14.6 |
14.3 |
14.9 |
| All Others |
129.9 |
131.8 |
127.3 |
123.4 |
124.6 |
128.6 |
128.3 |
128.4 |
126.5 |
| Grand Total |
2065.5 |
2063.1 |
2034.2 |
2012.6 |
2028.3 |
2001.0 |
1977.8 |
1947.0 |
1909.1 |
| Of which: |
| Foreign Official |
1229.8 |
1240.9 |
1235.5 |
1233.6 |
1241.7 |
1236.1 |
1227.9 |
1242.5 |
1238.3 |
| Treasury Bills |
195.4 |
205.4 |
203.2 |
204.9 |
229.0 |
230.1 |
235.8 |
235.5 |
242.6 |
| Notes and Bonds |
1034.4 |
1035.5 |
1032.3 |
1028.7 |
1012.8 |
1006.0 |
992.0 |
1007.0 |
995.7 |
| Department of the Treasury/Federal Reserve Board
11/16/2005 |
1/ Estimated foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury marketable
and non-marketable bills, bonds, and notes reported under the Treasury
International Capital (TIC) reporting system are based on annual Surveys
of Foreign Holdings of U.S. Securities and on monthly data.
2/ United Kingdom includes Channel Islands and Isle of Man.
3/ Caribbean Banking Centers include Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands,
Netherlands Antilles and Panama. |
Notice that the total of U.S. debt obligations for OPEC actually increased
in the month of September? On Thursday, November 17, 05 - CNBC's Steve Liesman
did a segment on the TIC data and explained that the Caribbean is a proxy for
hedge fund buying of U.S. debt, and the U.K. is actually where the bulk of
OPEC holdings are captured. Well, the U.K. holdings increased in September,
too!
I wonder who really bought Venezuela's 20 or so billion they "pitched." Whoever
it was, perhaps their last name ends with Snow or Greenspan.
In conclusion, there are more ways than one might suspect to create the myth
[or reality] of a strong currency - at least temporarily!
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