Financial Sense

Gold USD Euro, why the USD is rallying

by Christopher Laird, PrudentSquirrel.com | September 5, 2008

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Back in April, we alerted subscribers that the USD appeared to be bottoming. At the time, it was floating at about 70-72 on the USDX. A whole lot has happened since then to cause this reversal, with the USD now at 78 plus on the USDX (US dollar index currency basket heavily Euro weighted). There are many reasons for the rebound of the USD and its rise is likely to continue. Many of the long term trends that acted since 2002 to weaken the USD have reversed. The exceptions are the continuing US trade and fiscal deficits, but those USD bearish forces are being overridden by these other big bullish USD drivers that have now appeared in 08.

Let’s make a list of the USD bullish drivers:

Most of these huge macro trends, that are USD bullish, became clear this year. Hence, the USD rallied from 70 on the USDX to 78, an 11.4% increase in only a few months since April. While it’s possible the USD could correct a bit within that range, it appears the USD is headed higher, and for a while too.

Stronger USD means commodity correction

This means that the commodity correction is likely to continue and precious metals likely to continue their correction to levels that were concurrent with the USD in the 80’s on the USDX. This would place gold in the $600 to $700 range. Remember, gold is a foreign exchange asset and central bank reserve asset, and should be considered in that context. Its primary valuations are based on currency exchange rates. The speculative froth in gold is exactly that, froth, and not a primary gold driver. This is why we have told subscribers to look at gold as savings and not to demand big gains, but to see gold as savings. The speculative froth in gold comes and goes.
One caveat on that gold price is if there are any new serious credit meltdowns. The credit crisis was a primary driver for gold to rise from $660s in August 07 to over $1000 this year. And, as always, a war in the Mid East would be super gold and oil bullish.

Again, we point out that while the USD has terrible fundamentals related to the US trade and fiscal deficits, the other gold bullish factors we list above are overriding those bearish deficit factors at this time. These present USD bullish factors are very big macroeconomic drivers, and are big changes from recent years. That means the USD can rally and stay rallying for a good while.

We believe that precious metals should be kept against a USD devaluation event that will likely happen within several years, but for now the USD rallies, and has good reasons to rally for the present.

 

Copyright © 2008 Christopher Laird
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Christopher Laird | Los Angeles, CA USA | Email | Website

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