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it's the economy, stupid
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Message #5262 posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 15:19:11 ET


U.S. housing slump deepens
Last Updated: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 | 1:27 PM ET
CBC News

The fallout from the U.S. housing slump and related credit crunch deepened on Wednesday with news of thousands of mortgage-related job cuts and the release of the weakest home building figures in 14 years.

GMAC Financial Services said it will chop 3,000 jobs, or about a quarter of the work force at its Residential Capital mortgage division.

It blamed "sharp downturns in the U.S. residential real estate markets and the global dislocation of the mortgage finance and credit markets."

The U.S. Commerce Department reported that the construction of new homes last month fell by a much larger than expected 10.2 per cent to its lowest level since March 1993.

In another negative sign, applications for building permits fell dramatically in September — also hitting a 14-year low.

The reports increased fears that the U.S. consumer will curtail spending and push the economy into recession.

The International Monetary Fund, in its latest global economic forecast, lowered its prediction of U.S. economic growth to an anemic 1.9 per cent this year and next. If that forecast pans out, it would be the weakest annual growth for the world's biggest economy in five years.

On Tuesday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson warned that the housing crisis poses a big danger to the prospects for future U.S. growth. "The housing decline is still unfolding and I view it as the most significant current risk to our economy," he said.




Re: it's the economy, stupid
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Message #5263 posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 15:39:40 ET
In Reply to: it's the economy, stupid posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 15:19:11 ET

A Weak Dollar Is Bad For America
Carl Delfeld, Chartwell Advisor 10.17.07

Martin Feldstein, the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors under President Reagan, wrote an article for the Financial Times this week, which outlines why he believes that a more "competitive" or weaker U.S. dollar is good for America.

Even though I am a rock-ribbed Reagan Republican, I cannot overstate how strongly I believe that this opinion is incorrect. "Strong Dollar, Strong Currency" is more than a mantra for me since economic history indicates that no country has ever achieved greatness nor maintained it by debasing its currency.

Feldstein rolls out a litany of reasons why he believes America benefits from a weaker dollar. In short, increasing exports as well as maintaining growth and employment.

Here is my case for why a weaker dollar hurts America.

First, a weaker dollar translates into a cut in the real spending power of American consumers--in effect, a reduction in real income.

Second, a weaker dollar weakens the role of the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency. Why should investors and central banks around the world invest in US assets when their value is steadily declining?

Third, the chances of a weaker dollar leading to a sharp reduction in America's trade deficit is highly unlikely since 40% of the current balance is due to oil imports that are denominated in U.S. dollars. An additional 20% is due to trade with China, which is, of course, controlling the value of its own currency.

Fourth, a weaker dollar is inflationary since it increases the cost of imports.

Fifth, business leaders know that discounting prices may bump near-term revenue and profits but at a real cost to long-term profitability, not to mention inflicting damage to the brand name. This is what we are doing to the brand of America by trying to increase exports by lowering their price in the global marketplace. Better to stand firm on price and sell into global markets on the basis of what is great about American products: superior quality, innovation and service.

Sixth, investors seem to like a weaker dollar since the profits of American multinationals get a boost from foreign earnings being translated into U.S. dollars. Again this is short-term thinking and vastly overstated since most multinationals have sophisticated treasury departments that hedge currency exposures.

What a weaker dollar really does is to encourage American and international investors to invest in non-American markets. The more the dollar drops, the more global equities rise. Many Asian currencies are hitting record highs against the U.S. dollar.

The Australian dollar has climbed to a 25-year highs, while the Singapore dollar has touched 10-year highs. The Brazilian real, which has jumped 18% in value against the U.S. dollar this year, and the Indian rupee's sharp appreciation against the U.S. dollar during the past year, have supercharged U.S. dollar investors' returns in those markets.

According to EPFR Global, investors are pouring money into global funds--with net inflows of $96.94 billion into world equity funds so far in 2007, while taking out $9.6 billion out of U.S. equity funds. Brazil's local stock exchange, the Bovespa, reported that investors have injected $1.2 billion into the market in September alone.

Foreign investors slashed their holdings of U.S. securities by a record amount as the credit squeeze intensified, according to the U.S. Treasury Department. The Treasury said net sales of U.S. market assets--including bonds, notes and equities--were $69.3 billion in August after a revised inflow of $19.5 billion during July. The August outflow exceeded the previous record decline of $21.2 billion in March 1990.

Last and perhaps most importantly, I view a policy of weakening the U.S. dollar to improve America's competitive position as the path of least resistance.

Let's not roll up our sleeves and cut federal spending, greatly simplify our tax code to encourage productivity and achievement or reduce corporate tax rates and excessive regulation. Let's just wink and weaken and let our nation's currency drift lower on automatic pilot.

My view is that the value of a nation's currency reflects the perceived value of country in the global marketplace. Maintaining and strengthening the value of our nation's currency is in the best interest of American consumers, businesses and investors.

Carl Delfeld is editor of Chartwell Global ETF Advisor.





graph of US dollar vs canadian dollar:


Click Here to View 5263.png
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it's the debt, stupid
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Message #5264 posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 16:09:10 ET
In Reply to: Re: it's the economy, stupid posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 15:39:40 ET

http://www.cbo.gov/budget/data/budproj.pdf

below are the most recent congressional budget office projections for the US national debt which will be increasing every single year for the next decade...the debt is already more than $100 billion higher than the projected year end figure for 2007 so it could be much higher than projected in 2017


2007 - $8.899 trillion (current national debt = $9.058 trillion)
2008 - $9.364
2009 - $9.875
2010 - $10.501
2011 - $10.982
2012 - $11.301
2013 - $11.645
2014 - $11.970
2015 - $12.278
2016 - $12.597
2017 - $12.870


in february 2001, in the presidential address to congress, george bush promised to reduce the national debt by $2 trillion to $3.7 trillion by 2010...7 years later, the CBO projects the national debt will be $10.5 trillion in 2010...george bush blew $6.8 trillion in a single presidency but americans know less about that than britney spears' parenting skills



"Because America needs more than a temporary expansion, we need more than temporary tax relief. I urge the Congress to act responsibly, and make the tax cuts permanent. (Applause.)"
- George Bush, State of Union Address, 2006




it's the speculators, stupid
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Message #5280 posted by forged registration (Info) October 18, 2007 17:45:56 ET
In Reply to: it's the debt, stupid posted by forged registration (Info) October 17, 2007 16:09:10 ET

the laws of supply and demand no longer apply to oil


Oil bubbles toward $90 US
Last Updated: Thursday, October 18, 2007 | 3:28 PM ET
The Associated Press

Oil prices surged Thursday as the falling U.S. dollar drew new foreign investors and speculators to dollar-denominated energy futures.

"The main driving factor today is … the [U.S.] dollar making an all-time low against the euro," said James Cordier, president of Liberty Trading Group in Tampa, Fla.

While oil prices have risen sharply in dollar terms in recent days, the steadily weakening dollar means oil futures are seen as a bargain overseas. Data released in recent weeks shows speculative buying of oil futures is on the rise. Buying by foreign investors sends prices up, which draws more speculators into the market.

"It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy," said Brad Samples, commodities analyst at Summit Energy Services Inc. in Louisville, Ky.

***Many analysts feel that the underlying fundamentals of supply and demand do not support oil prices near $90 US a barrel.*** On Wednesday, the U.S. Energy Department reported that oil and gasoline supplies rose more than expected last week, countering suggestions that supplies are tight.

"Fundamental reasons, we're kind of running out of them," Cordier said.

However, crude supplies at the closely watched Nymex delivery point of Cushing, Okla., fell last week. And several reports in recent days have predicted oil supplies will tighten in the fourth quarter.

On Thursday, light, sweet crude for November delivery rose $2.07 to settle at $89.47 US on the New York Mercantile Exchange.




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