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Is the Euro Safe For You?

Is the Euro Safe For You?

The Euro was launched as an electronic currency in the beginning of 1999 and then became the official legal tender early January. It has been called “the single currency” and has been touted as the “new” reserve currency of the world, supposedly the candidate to replace the dollar as the world’s preferred currency. Given the depreciation of the dollar over the last two years, this lent further credibility to the Euro. The Euro is now as ubiquitous as the dollar, but is it really all its cracked up to be?  What few realize is that the Euro is not the first attempt by the Euro zone to create a single monetary currency. In the late 70’s, the system of pegging currencies to the dollar was abandoned and the EU leaders attempted to created a new monetary system by “interleaving” the European currencies called the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM). Britain was a member of this system, however, it was Germany that was the dominant player based on its strong hand towards inflation. This system however came under immense pressure due to a particularly strong dollar and caused significant problems for the weaker European countries. The ERM required that the pound appreciate against the Dollar which was fatal for a struggling UK economy. George Soros forsaw this and shorted the pound forcing Britain to leave the ERM and forced to devalue the pound, in addition to other EU members forcing devaluation of their currencies too.  In 1991 the Maastricht treaty was signed, forming the basis for the Euro. Although 15 countries joined, Britain conspicuously opted out. Not just anybody could join – you had to be approved based on your budget, inflation targets and interest rates. In order to administer this, a new European Central Bank (ECB) was formed.  After around 20 months, the Euro had lost nearly 30% of its value when compared to the dollar. This caused the ECB to work with other central banks in an attempt to boost the value of the Euro.  Then, the terrible terrorist attacks of Sept 11th changed the dynamic: Money left the dollar and went to ‘safer’ currencies such as the Swiss Franc, and for the first time, to the Euro. This was the first time the Euro started to take its place as an alternate reserve currency to the dollar.  The rise of the Euro, both in value and popularity, is now legendary. Part of this has been due to the role of the Euro as an alternative to the dollar, and part of it has been due to dollar depreciation. However, the strong Euro comes at a price to the EU zone. And with the first global financial crisis the Euro has to contend with, it remains to be seen how it functions. The dollar is enjoying renewed interest as nervous investors retreat to the historically safe haven: the dollar. Compound this with the fact that many of the EU countries will now face their own crisis.  The leader of the EU pack, Germany, is now officially in a recession. It remains to be seen if they will continue to support the poorer E...

Dollar gains on Trade Deficit

Dollar gains on Trade Deficit

A rather startling drop in the February Trade Deficit sent the dollar on a war path against the other currencies. The Trade Deficit for February dropped billion, going from billion to billion. In addition, Imports dropped 5.1% and Exports actually went up. Export strength is a side effect of the stronger dollar. We told our iFXG readers last month that we are bullish on the Dollar -  a somewhat contrarian view since all the media have been calling for a dollar collapse.  Yes, we agree, the fundamentals are awful – but it is all relative. Choose the pile of garbage that stinks less! The dollar buying that occurred as a result of the trade deficit figures is in all likelihood not grounded on any scientific or economic principal. It’s merely people thinking that the new number must mean the US economy is on the mend. And, as with all investing, market psychology is the driver.   Add to this the fact that the Euro Zone recorded its largest EVER decline in the 4th quarter of 2008 and the US Dollar still being a save haven in trouble times, it all points to a stronger dollar. The US will recover before the EU recovers. In fact, the Euro has not merely declined against the dollar, its declined against most major currencies. Finally, we have a triple play – not only do we have positive trade figures, a weakening EU – we also had better than expected unemployment claims coming out from the US. This triple play of good news was all that was needed to send the dollar up over 2.8% against the Euro this week.   

 

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Dollar gains on Trade Deficit

indyA rather startling drop in the February Trade Deficit sent the dollar on a war path against the other currencies. The Trade Deficit for February dropped $10 billion, going from $36 billion to $26 billion. In addition, Imports dropped 5.1% and Exports actually went up. Export strength is a side effect of the stronger dollar.

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Is the Euro Safe for You ?

imageThe Euro became the official legal tender early January 1999. It has been called “the single currency” and has been touted as the “new” reserve currency of the world, supposedly the candidate to replace the dollar as the world’s preferred currency. But is it ?

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