Showing posts with label global reserve currency. Show all posts
Showing posts with label global reserve currency. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

John Hathaway: Meltdown for the World's Monetary System?

John Hathaway, writing today for Bloomberg, asserts boldly that
The world’s monetary system is in the process of melting down. We have entered the endgame for the dollar as the dominant reserve currency, but most investors and policy makers are unaware of the implications.

Friday, May 15, 2009

World Cup Final: Green Shoots vs. Yellow Weeds

The match was on when President Obama spoke of "green shoots" as signs of economic recovery. Nouriel Roubini quickly countered by pointing to "yellow weeds" signaling possible continued recession. In recent days the ball has been more on the Green Shoot's half of the field, with the Yellow Weeds getting somewhat the better of the play in a midfield game. No big scoring opportunities for either team over the past week.

Notably (at least for this observer) the Weeds have been unable to get their game-changing player onto the field: he's Dollar Crisis, the story of the dollar's beleagured status as the world's global reserve currency. In London he appeared for a moment with the May 12 FT story on "America's Triple A rating is at risk". But not in the U.S., where American financial media ignored (suppressed?) his brief appearance. CNBC Europe mentioned him here - but not CNBC U.S., so far as could find at the CNBC site. We've been tracking the fate of the dollar here since March 23. I'm amazed at paucity of coverage of this story in the U.S. Mainstream financial media reject it as mere chatter of the Goldbugs who yearn for a dollar bust and a gold boom. Goldbug are always talking up the immanent collapse of the dollar, yet goldbugs like Jim Willie are well worth following - just take a look at what he said in January of 2008:
The year 2008 will be the year that THINGS JUST PLAIN BREAK. It will be a truly deadly year, unavoidably lethal to the US Economy and especially to the banking sector. Nothing has been repaired. Some tangible solutions will be offered in the next section [of his post], all legitimate in a real world. However, we do NOT live in a real world, but rather in a Fairy Tale world of US Hegemony and Wall Street with a choke hold around the entire system.
Willie is a libertarian investor with a strong populist streak. He is not alone in his thinking and I suspect central bankers keep a close eye on folks like him. If and when the Weeds finally get their man Dollar Crisis onto the field - watch out. Meanwhile, or failing that, here are some notable Shoots vs. Weeds takes on the topic of economic recovery.
  • Nouriel Roubini and his team dig deep and offer a region-by-region global survey in "Green Shoots or Yellow Weeds?" (Forbes 5/14)
  • Maria Bartiromo interviews Nouriel Roubini and Harvard Economist Ken Rogoff in this CNBC video. Roubini sees more Weeds than Shoots; Rogoff too. At 5 min 20 sec note their responses to Maria's question about the possibility of the Obama administration's growth forecast of 4% in 2011. (5/15)
  • The Economist's Special Report on the fat green shoots for international banking looks like yellow weeds in reader comments. (5/14)

  • Samuel Brittan at FT weighs "Green Shoots and Dud Forecasts." (5/15)
  • David Brooks discusses neither Shoots or Weeds but the health care dilemma confronting President Obama: "If you . . . talk to enough experts, you come away with a stark conclusion: There are deep structural forces, both in Medicare and the private insurance market, that have driven the explosion in health costs. It is nearly impossible to put together a majority coalition for a bill that challenges those essential structures. ("Fiscal Suicide Ahead", NYT 5/14)
  • In this entertaining 7-minute video, New York financial consultant Howard Davidowitz demolishes the Shoots story (rhetorically at least - and at least somewhat substantially - listen to his comments on commercial real estate). (Yahoo Finance Tech Ticker 5/15) (Thanks, Yves)
  • Big one for the Green Shoots? Donald Luskin writes that Northwestern University economist Robert J. Gordon, pointing to reduced numbers of "jobless claims" - claims from the unemployed for jobless benefits - says the recession is over. (Smart Money 5/15)
  • Alan Blinder, Princeton economist and former Federal Reserve chairman, likes the Green Shoots but warns against premature tightening of the economy like that of Roosevelt in 1936 that plunged a recovering America back into recession. (NYT 5/16)
  • Martin Wolf of FT casts an influential if cautious vote for Green Shoots and for the future of capitalism (5/19)
World Cup Final? Let's go it one better. Imagine a global civic media contest with an audience of billions participating in a contest of contests to find best solutions to the world's economic plight. This contest could happen today except for resistance from the world's governments and financial elite, who seem to want it not to happen. The technology for it exists: the contest would integrate the resources of American Idol, telephony, a TV channel like Discovery or CNBC and social networks like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Wow. China, Backing Russia in Advance of G20 Summit, Calls for Replacement of Dollar as Global Reserve Currency

Doubtless in anticipation of the April 2 G20 meeting in London, China today joined Russia in calling for the dollar to be replaced as the world's global reserve currency by a basket of currencies managed by the I.M.F. Here's the story in the Financial Times, the International Herald Tribune, Agence France Presse and the Prudent Investor. (Question: did Nouriel Roubini see this coming? He's been saying that even though "the American Empire" is on the decline, the dollar, despite rough spots, looks secure as the global reserve currency over the next twenty years.)

The news from China strikes me as a game-changer. (My buddy Big Bill says it's just sabre-rattling.) But I don't see it mentioned on the New York Times or Wall Street Journal. Or CNBC. U.S. markets seem unperturbed. In fact, the Dow is up 300 points at the moment on the strength of a surprisingly strong housing report and positive response (including from global markets) to the Obama administration's release this morning of its $1 trillion private-public plan to save America's financial system without nationalizing the big banks. On CNBC, guest host lefty Democrat Howard Dean supported the Treasury plan in several clips and righty Republican Dick Armey opposed it one clip. While Dean is an able advocate, and although I've felt the Armey is a blowhard, I find myself feeling sympathy towards Armey's assertion that he has never thought any bank as "too big to fail". Interesting to compare his take on the Fed with those of lefty Fed critics like Matt Taibbi and Mike Whitney. Interesting similarities. Also worth reading is Mike Hudson's critique of the "house burning down" metaphor used by Ben Bernanke in his "60 Minutes" interview March 15 (at Mike's site, scroll down to "Articles").
  • Jim Willie, an avowed friend of gold and foe of the dollar, reading Asia News, says the Chinese are planning to replace the dollar with the yuan as global reserve currency (3/27)
  • Asia Times - good source for news and commentary on the yuan/dollar story
  • Celestine Bohlen at Bloomberg says the time has not yet come for the dollar's replacement as global currency (3/31)
  • This three part video interview of economist Anantha Nageswaran in the Financial Times argues that the dollar's days are numbered (3/31) Here's Nageswaran's Blog
  • "New York Stock Exchange Runs out of Gold Bars: What Happens Next? (Market Sceptic, 3/31/09)
  • Paul Krugman says that China’s call for a new “super-sovereign reserve currency” is a sign of troubles ahead for a global economic recovery (4/3)
  • John Tamny of RealClearMarkets argues for the universal benefit (including to the U.S.) of a new global reserve currency that he says will brings a stability the dollar can no longer provide (4/7)
  • "China Slows Purchases of U.S. and Other Bonds" (NYT 4/12)
  • Economist Andy Xie argues "If China loses faith the dollar will collapse" (FT 5/5)
  • Gwen Robinson of FT gives the views of investor Jim Rogers, Black Swan auther Nassim Taleb, and three other analysts on the possibility of a dollar collapse (ft.com/alphaville 5/12)
  • America’s triple A rating is at risk U.S. financial media ignored story that was front-aged in FT. The gist: "Prices have risen on credit default insurance on US government bonds, meaning it costs investors more to protect their investment in Treasury bonds against default than before the crisis hit." (FT 5/13)
  • Nouriel Roubini discusses the possibility of an "Almighty Reminbi" and says the US must invest "in our crumbling infrastructure, alternative and renewable resources and productive human capital — rather than in unnecessary housing and toxic financial innovation [in order to] "slow down the decline of the dollar, and sustain our influence in global affairs (NYT 5/14)
  • The Economist concedes that the world's new economic order "is more likely to be made in Beijing" than in the West, given the sway of creditor nations (5/14)
  • Investor Sahm Adrangi, in a thoughtful review of Richard Duncan's "The Dollar Crisis," predicts "that the dollar will collapse, and its ramifications could be as violent as when the credit markets cracked in July 2007." (Clusterstock via John Carney and Hunter at Distressed Debt Investing" 5/18)
If this happens, how about the chinese word for harmony - tao or tiao - as the name for the world's new global currency?