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  (#211 (permalink)) Old
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Default 19th December 2008

Euro slightly lower now, $1.38299, seems to be stable....for now atleast.
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Default 23rd December 2008





Europe has the Euro. Are you ready for The Amero?
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Default 23rd December 2008

Quote:
Originally Posted by J. Abizeid View Post
Forex Players Look to Stabilization - MarketWatch Video
The euro will beat its own record of $1.60 first quarter of 2009, like it always does.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see it reach $1.85 by the end of 2009.
Europe except for Britain will get out of its recession in the next few months while the US will be going through a deep depression during 2009 and 2010. That’s exactly what Obama means when he says: we will have to do lots of sacrifices before we recover.
Bankrupt economies cannot afford strong currencies.
Take Japan for example, they are in a recession but they have the money to bail themselves out. The US is bankrupt. It needs to either borrow or print more dollars for its bailouts next year. Either way, the dollar pays the price.
French consumer spending recovered in November - MarketWatch


French consumer spending recovered in November
By Aude Lagorce
Last update: 4:15 a.m. EST Dec. 23, 2008
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- French consumer spending unexpectedly rebounded in November, up 0.3% compared to a 0.5% decline in October, the French national statistics office Insee said Monday. It suggests stimulus measures and the continued decline in oil prices are helping cushion the economic downturn.
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Default 24th December 2008

I am attaching 2 charts For the EUR VS USD ( for people who believe charts are a compass for future movements in the currency)

The first chart is a history chart expanding to a 10 years period , on the chart you can notice the trendline and how the EUR falled sharply after it break the line at 1.39 , and it reached a low of of 1.23 (this happened 2 month ago ) , during this month rebound of the EURO , it passed through the same trendline which is around 1.39 and reached a high of 1.47 , however it was not able to hold that level and it drawback to below the trendline as we see on the chart .



the second chart is a short term chart , and we can analyse the following from reading technically the chart:

1) if the EURO is able to break again the 1.40 -1.415 level it will continue its uptrend and reach to its previous high of 1.47 .

2) if the Euro breaks below it is previous low of 1.3840 , it will go down till the 1.35 level and maybe below that .



The first 2 weeks of the new year will tell us which option is the correct one .
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Default 24th December 2008

Just stay away from the fast ups and the fast downs. The market so lottery like, nothing makes sense anymore.
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Default 26th December 2008

Bloomberg.com: Asia

Japan Should Scrap U.S. Debt; Dollar May Plummet, Mikuni Says


By Stanley White and Shigeki Nozawa
Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Japan should write-off its holdings of Treasuries because the U.S. government will struggle to finance increasing debt levels needed to dig the economy out of recession, said Akio Mikuni, president of credit ratings agency Mikuni & Co.
The dollar may lose as much as 40 percent of its value to 50 yen or 60 yen from the current spot rate of 90.40 today in Tokyo unless Japan takes “drastic measures” to help bail out the U.S. economy, Mikuni said. Treasury yields, which are near record lows, may fall further without debt relief, making it difficult for the U.S. to borrow elsewhere, Mikuni said.
“It’s difficult for the U.S. to borrow its way out of this problem,” Mikuni, 69, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television broadcast today. “Japan can help by extending debt cancellations.”
The U.S. budget deficit may swell to at least $1 trillion this fiscal year as policy makers flood the country with $8.5 trillion through 23 different programs to combat the worst recession since the Great Depression. Japan is the world’s second-biggest foreign holder of Treasuries after China.
The U.S. government needs to spend on infrastructure to maintain job creation as it will take a long time for banks to recover from $1 trillion in credit-market losses worldwide, Mikuni said. The U.S. also needs to launch public works projects as the Federal Reserve’s interest rate cut to a range of zero to 0.25 percent on Dec. 16. won’t stimulate consumer spending because households are paying down debt, he said.
U.S. President-elect Barack Obama wants to create 3 million jobs over the next two years, more than the 2.5 million jobs originally planned, an aide said on Dec. 20. Obama takes office on Jan. 20.
Marshall Plan
Japan should also invest in U.S. roads and bridges to support personal spending and secure demand for its goods as a global recession crimps trade, Mikuni said.
Japan’s exports fell 26.7 percent in November from a year earlier, the Finance Ministry said on Dec. 22. That was the biggest decline on record as shipments of cars and electronics collapsed.
Combining debt waivers with infrastructure spending would be similar to the Marshall Plan that helped Europe rebuild after the destruction of World War II, Mikuni said.
“U.S. households simply won’t have the same access to credit that they’ve enjoyed in the past,” he said. “Their demand for all products, including imports, will suffer unless something is done.”
The plan was named after George Marshall, the U.S. secretary of state at the time, and provided more than $13 billion in grants and loans to European countries to support their import of U.S. goods and the rebuilding of their industries
Currency Reserves
The Japanese government could use a new Marshall Plan as a chance to shrink its $976.9 billion in foreign-exchange reserves, the world’s second-largest after China’s, and help reduce global economic imbalances, Mikuni said.
The amount of foreign assets held by the Japanese government and the private sector total around $7 trillion, Mikuni said.
Japan will also have to accept that a stronger yen is good for the country in order to reduce excessive trade surpluses and deficits, he said. The yen has appreciated 23 percent versus the dollar this year, the most since 1987, as the credit crisis prompted investors to flee riskier assets and repay loans in the Japanese currency.
“Japan’s economic model has been dependent on external demand since the Meiji Period” that began in 1868, Mikuni said. “The model where the U.S. relies on overseas borrowing to fuel its property market is over. A strong yen will spur Japanese domestic spending and reduce import prices, thereby increasing purchasing power.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Stanley White in Tokyo at swhite28@bloomberg.net; Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at snozawa1@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: December 23, 2008 22:22 EST
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Default 29th December 2008

Weaker Dollar Worries Japan, Germany - WSJ.com

DECEMBER 29, 2008 Weaker Dollar Worries Japan, Germany

Currency Depreciation Can Spur Boom In Exports, Lead to Economic Recovery

By JOANNA SLATER

The dollar's sharp turn weaker into the end of the year is threatening to reshuffle winners and losers in global trade amid the toughest economic conditions in decades.
For countries like Japan and Germany, it is a source of anxiety, since a stronger currency makes exports less competitive as global demand shrinks. For the U.S., it is a more welcome development and might also help counteract declining prices. In some emerging markets, a weaker dollar is a relief for companies that must pay debts denominated in dollars.



Still, in today's environment, few countries want to be the last one standing with a strong currency. Some economists worry that countries could actively seek to weaken their currencies in an effort to gain an advantage over their trading partners, setting off a round of devaluations that ultimately damage world trade.
Until recently, the dollar was one of the most robust currencies around, surging against everything except the Japanese yen. But in recent weeks -- and particularly after the Federal Reserve slashed a key interest-rate target to near zero -- the dollar has abruptly changed course.
On Friday, the dollar slipped against the euro, with one euro buying $1.406 late in New York. The dollar has weakened about 10% versus the euro and 8% against the yen since the start of November.
That is good news for U.S. exporters, but it is raising concerns in places like Japan and Germany, which are both gripped by recession.
In Japan, officials are so concerned by the strengthening yen that they have sent signals they might intervene to stop it. Earlier this month, Honda Motor Co.'s president warned that the pumped-up yen could cause the "hollowing out of Japanese industry."
"Both countries are very dependent on exports, with very little domestic growth," says Adam Posen, an economist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "Bad news is coming, and the dollar going down is additional bad news for them."
Of course, there are upsides to a having a stronger currency in some corners of the globe. The dollar's turn lower has brought a modicum of relief in emerging markets, where currencies have been battered in recent months. That is easing the burden on companies with debts to pay in foreign currencies.
For the U.S. in particular, a weaker currency could be a welcome help on another front -- avoiding a cycle of declining prices.
"There is a pretty compelling argument both in theory and in history that if your problem is deflation, then pushing down the exchange rate is an effective way of addressing that problem," says Barry Eichengreen, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley.
Mr. Eichengreen notes that, during the Great Depression, it was difficult to use a weaker currency to export more because of protectionist policies in place around the globe. However, it was a useful way to change people's expectations about prices, since imports become more expensive. When the U.S. devalued the dollar in 1933, he said, the prices of some commodities, which had been spiraling lower, suddenly began to go up.
One fan of this line of thinking: Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. In a 2002 speech, Mr. Bernanke noted that the devaluation of the dollar and the rapid increase in the money supply in 1933 and 1934 "ended the U.S. deflation remarkably quickly." He described the episode as an illustration of what can be achieved "even when the nominal interest rate is at or near zero."
That, of course, describes where the Fed's key interest-rate target sits today. The fact that the Fed has been willing to embrace unconventional and aggressive lending measures carries an implicit message, says David Gilmore of Foreign Exchange Analytics, a Connecticut research firm, namely that "a weaker dollar in an orderly way is certainly a desired outcome." He adds that the Treasury Department has avoided its usual mantra in recent months in which it reiterates its support for a strong dollar. The current problem, he says, is that "every country on the planet needs a weak currency right now, and not everybody can have one."
In late November, China briefly pushed its currency, the yuan, sharply lower against the dollar, raising fears that it could be seeking a competitive leg-up. Since then, the yuan has recovered those losses. In Vietnam, where the local currency, the dong, is pegged to the dollar, the central bank devalued the currency on Wednesday for the second time this year. The move will help facilitate exports and control the trade deficit, the central bank said in a statement.
In the late 1990s, a number of emerging markets from Asia to Russia faced financial crises and were forced to devalue their currencies. Eventually, that helped spur economic recoveries by touching off export booms at a time of buoyant demand elsewhere. Today, though, the whole world is reeling, making it difficult for a country to export its way out of trouble.
"The world can't depreciate [its currency] against Mars and export to the rest of the solar system," says Simon Johnson, a former IMF chief economist.
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Default 2nd January 2009

Euro's now $1.38962 ....sometimes going above $1.4 and then returning back below the barrier.
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Default 5th January 2009

Euro's now $1.35730
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Default 5th January 2009

euro is expected to drop below 1.3 in the coming few days...
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