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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index

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To: John Koligman who wrote (233888)12/21/2009 6:11:57 PM
From: James HuttonRead Replies (1) of 306849
 
"Housing and jobs fail to revive. An outsized first-quarter 2010 GDP (up 4.5.%) print is achieved despite a still moribund housing market and without any meaningful improvement in the labor market (excluding the increase in census workers) as corporations continue to cut costs and show little commitment to adding permanent employees.

The U.S. dollar explodes higher. After dropping by over 40% from 2001 to 2008, the U.S. dollar continued to spiral lower in the last nine months of 2009. Our currency's recent strength will persist, however, surprising most market participants by continuing to rally into first quarter 2010. In fact, the U.S. dollar will be the strongest major world currency during the first three or four months of the new year.

The price of gold topples. Gold's price plummets to $900 an ounce by the beginning of second quarter 2010. Unhedged, publicly held gold companies report large losses, and the gold sector lies at the bottom of all major sector performers. Hedge fund manager John Paulson abandons his plan to bring a new dedicated gold hedge fund to market.

Central banks tighten earlier than expected. China, facing reported inflation approaching 5%, tightens monetary and fiscal policy in March, a month ahead of a Fed tightening of 50 basis points, which, with the benefit of hindsight, is a policy mistake."

These wouldn't be all that surprising, especially as to gold given the ferocity of the dollar's jump. What I find funny about that is that over the last couple weeks, all of the "experts" I've heard have said everyone is short the dollar, so I'm long the dollar. I haven't heard anyone lately say they were short the dollar. Of course, some of them are lying, but it seems as though the "long dollar" trade is pretty crowded. Doesn't mean it won't go on for awhile.
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