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Dollar Rally? Mystery Solved
James Turk,
www.goldmoney.com 08/07/08
On
July 15th the US Dollar Index closed
at 71.87, the lowest close since
reaching its record low in April. This
index was in the process of breaking
down, and in fact it had actually
fallen out of its uptrend channel on
the following chart.

However, rather than continue lower
and fall off the edge of the cliff,
the Dollar Index suddenly and
mysteriously reversed course. It has
now risen on 12 of the 17 trading days
since reaching that low, and closed
today at 74.55, a 5-month high. What
caused this index to suddenly pull
back from the brink and then reverse
course to shoot higher over the past
three weeks?
The
Federal Reserve did not suddenly
contract the amount of dollars in
circulation. Its latest H.6 report
shows that both M1 and M2 expanded in
recent weeks, so there was no shortage
of supply.
The
Federal Reserve did not raise interest
rates during this period.
Consequently, inflation adjusted
interest rates remain negative. In
other words, the annual inflation rate
is higher than the amount of interest
one can earn on a 1-year dollar
deposit, which is highly inflationary
and a major disincentive to holding
dollars.
There
has not been any news exceptionally
favorable to the dollar. In fact, the
banking problems in the United States
continue to mount, while the federal
government's deficit continues to soar
out of control. On July 28th Reuters
reported that "The Bush
administration on Monday plans to
project the
U.S.
budget deficit will soar to a new
record...because of the slowing
economy and an economic stimulus plan
approved this year."
So
what happened to cause the dollar to
rally over the past three weeks? In a
word, intervention. Central
banks have propped up the dollar, and
here's the proof.
When
central banks intervene in the
currency markets, they exchange their
currency for dollars. Central banks
then use the dollars they acquire to
buy US government debt instruments so
that they can earn interest on their
money. The debt instruments central
banks acquire are held in custody for
them at the Federal Reserve, which
reports this amount weekly.
On
July 16, 2008 (the closest date of the
weekly reports to the July 15th low in
the Dollar Index), the Federal Reserve
reported holding $2,349 billion of US
government paper in custody for
central banks. In its report released
today, this amount had grown over the
past three weeks to $2,401 billion,
a 38.4% annual rate of growth. To
put this phenomenally high growth rate
into perspective, for the twelve
months ending this past July 16th,
assets in the Federal Reserve's
custody account grew by 17.3%, which
is less than one-half the growth rate
experienced over the past three weeks.
So
central banks were accumulating
dollars over the past three weeks at a
rate far above what one would expect
as a result of the US trade deficit.
The logical conclusion is that they
were intervening in currency markets.
They were buying dollars for the
purpose of propping it up, to keep the
dollar from falling off the edge of
the cliff and doing so ignited a short
covering rally, which is not too
difficult to do given the leverage
employed in the markets these days by
hedge funds and others. So central
banks pushed in one direction and
funds and traders then stepped on
board. In other words, central banks
ignited the fuse of a bear market
rally.
With
this intervention, central banks have
bought some time. But alas, they have
not fixed the problem. Central bank
intervention does not make the dollar
"as good as gold", the description
that once accurately described the
dollar.
In the
final analysis, it is fundamental
factors that determine the course of
markets and the process of price
discovery that results from them.
Central bank intervention - like fiat
currency itself - is ephemeral. In
contrast, gold lasts throughout the
ages. So what would you rather own? A
sick dollar that it requires central
bank intervention to prop it up? Or
gold?
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