SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mark Adams who wrote (4673)6/10/2001 3:37:15 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
>>The Buck That Didn't Stop
Confounding Experts, Dismaying Industry, Damping Inflation, the Dollar Has Only Gotten Stronger

By John M. Berry
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 10, 2001; Page H01

By now the U.S. dollar was supposed to be on the ropes. That's where many economists and policymakers confidently
predicted it would be as a result of the sharp slowdown in economic growth, big declines in interest rates and steep fall in
previously high-flying stock prices.

All of those developments were expected to turn off the foreign investors who had been pouring hundreds of billions of dollars
into the United States as they snapped up companies, built new factories and made large investments in U.S. stocks, bonds and
real estate. To make such investments, foreign individuals or firms have to swap their own currencies for dollars, which drives
up the value of those currencies.

But foreign investors haven't been turned off at all and the dollar has continued to outshine all the world's other major currencies.

As of Friday, a broad index of the dollar's value compared with the currencies of 38 countries -- including the 12 that use the
euro -- stood 27 percent higher than it did at the beginning of 1997. Even adjusted for differences in inflation rates, an important
factor in determining exchange rates, the dollar has appreciated by nearly one-fourth over that period.

The dollar is now so strong that some beleaguered industries are crying for help. The high dollar has hurt their sales abroad by
making U.S. exports much more expensive for foreign buyers. Meanwhile, the high dollar has made foreign goods much
cheaper in this country, encouraging more imports of goods that often compete with U.S.-produced products.

On the other hand, as Federal Reserve officials have been quick to note, the strong dollar has also played an important role in
holding down U.S. inflation at a time when businesses' costs have been increasing.

The driving force behind the relentless rise of the dollar has been the flood of foreign money into U.S. assets. A number of
analysts and policymakers say foreign investors have largely ignored this country's current economic difficulties because they
believe the long-term outlook for profits, adjusted for risk, is higher here than in other countries.

The Japanese economy, for instance, is virtually dead in the water with little prospect for revival soon, and other East Asian
nations' growth has sagged, analysts point out. European countries generally are in much better shape, but uncertainties abound.

Many analysts and investors question whether the European Central Bank will be able to adequately manage growth in the
nations that have adopted the euro as their shared currency. When the ECB cut short-term interest rates recently, its
explanations left currency traders confused about whether the central bank was focusing on the deteriorating prospects for
economic growth or the region's rising inflation rates.

Some economists have speculated that nervousness about the upcoming transition to euro cash, in which the 12 countries will
retire their national currencies and exchange them for euro bills and coins, may have prompted some Europeans to park their
money in dollars for safekeeping.

Furthermore, most European countries face long-term structural problems, including overly rigid labor markets and seriously
underfunded social welfare systems that could lead to higher taxes in the future, a prospect that deters some long-term
investments, analysts say.

These and other factors have undermined confidence in the European outlook to the point that on Friday the euro was worth
about 85 cents, 28 percent less than it was when the currency was introduced at the beginning of 1999.

In sharp contrast, the dollar has blossomed as investors have put a steadily rising amount of money in the United States.

The Commerce Department reported last week that foreign investors spent just more than $320 billion last year to acquire or
establish U.S. businesses. That was a 17 percent jump over 1999 in "foreign direct investment." As recently as 1997, such
investment was only about $70 billion.

Complementing that flow of direct investment was more than $450 billion worth of portfolio investment -- that is, net purchases
of stocks, bonds and other such long-term securities. And the portfolio flow has continued to soar this year.

According to recent U.S. Treasury figures, portfolio investment reached $155 billion in the first three months of the year, by far
the highest level in history. Almost $100 billion of that money came from Europe, though a portion of it may have been
purchases made by European financial institutions or brokers on behalf of individuals or firms in other parts of the world.

One continuing attraction for portfolio investments is that U.S. financial markets are the largest and most liquid in the world,
which means that dollar-denominated assets of all types can be more easily traded with lower transaction costs than in other
markets.

Another attraction has been the rapid acceleration of productivity growth in the United States, which has so benefited the
country in recent years. Similar gains have yet to appear in other industrial nations. In some cases, productivity growth
elsewhere has slowed rather than accelerated.

Nevertheless, most analysts and policymakers are still taken aback by the great strength of the dollar in the face of so many
problems in this country.

In a speech in Edinburgh, Scotland, late last month, Federal Reserve Governor Laurence H. Meyer acknowledged just how
puzzled he is about the situation -- and while he didn't say so, his central bank colleagues are just as uncertain about the forces
at work.

"Normally, we would expect the exchange rate in the country [where growth is] slowing down to depreciate, more so if the
country was aggressively cutting policy interest rates," Meyer said. "And we would expect even more depreciation if concerns
about returns on capital were sharply depressing equity prices.

"The prevailing view until late 2000 was that the U.S. dollar was strong against a broad group of currencies -- and especially
against the euro and several other European currencies -- because, to a large degree, internationally mobile capital sought higher
rates of return in the United States," Meyer said. "Following this logic, a slowing of the U.S. economy, a decline in expected
profits and a correction of asset prices should have weakened the dollar."

It may be, Meyer said, that investors expect "the current slowdown in the United States . . . to be only temporary, and capital
flows may be influenced more by differentials in long-term growth prospects than by shorter-run cyclical fluctuations. The
prospect of a return to robust growth in the United States that is above the longer-run expected rate of growth in Europe may
therefore continue to favor dollar-denominated assets."

Even in the shorter term, the recent advantage in growth Europe has enjoyed may be fading. Year-over-year growth in the 12
euro nations has dropped steadily, to 2.5 percent in the first three months of this year from 3.7 percent nine months earlier, and
some forecasters expect it to run at less than a 2 percent rate for the rest of this year.

U.S. economic growth has hovered around 1 percent for the last nine months, but many economists and policymakers expect it
to rise slightly later this year and get up to around 3 percent by the middle of next year.

Whatever the calculus that has produced the very strong dollar, it has made some industrialists very unhappy.

Earlier this month, Jerry J. Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, met with Treasury Secretary
Paul H. O'Neill to ask for a "clarification" of Treasury policy on the dollar. That is in order, Jasinowski said in a letter sent to
O'Neill last week, "to be certain that it is not seen as endorsing an ever stronger dollar irrespective of the economic
fundamentals."

Those fundamentals include rapid declines in production and profits and the loss of a half-million factory jobs since the middle of
last year, Jasinowski said.

The presidents of five other groups -- the Aerospace Industries Association, the American Forest and Paper Association, the
Association for Manufacturing Technology, the Automotive Trade Policy Council and the Motor Equipment Manufacturers
Association -- also signed the letter.

A Treasury spokesman said O'Neill told Jasinowski "that current policy is not going to change" and that O'Neill has a "strong
faith" in the ability of entrepreneurs to succeed even under such circumstances.

The current policy, the spokesman said, was summed up in O'Neill's most recent public statement on the issue: "The strong
dollar has served us well."

At the same time, the Bush administration agreed last week to file a case with the International Trade Commission seeking
authority to set quotas on steel imports. U.S. steelmakers have been arguing for years that government subsidies have allowed
foreign steel producers to compete unfairly against them. The high dollar adds to the industry's competitive difficulties.

However, a significant weakening of the dollar, while it might help some industries, would also have a broad impact on U.S.
economic and financial conditions.

David Gilmore of Foreign Exchange Analytics told his firm's clients last week that if the dollar were to fall and foreigners cut
back on their investments here, "interest rates will rise and the economy will be at greater risk of recession."

Furthermore, Gilmore said, "the United States is sensitive to the problems Japan faces in implementing painful structural
adjustment" in its economy. "Sanctioning dollar weakness means yen strength. The last thing Japan need in coming months is a
rising yen."<<

washingtonpost.com



To: Mark Adams who wrote (4673)6/10/2001 3:46:40 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
>>The contents of that briefing- perhaps titled 'The importance of a strong dollar' would make fascinating reading, IMO.<<

Strong dollar = low inflation = low CPI = low COLA for Social Security, federal government workers, federal government retirees = lower taxes, maybe?



To: Mark Adams who wrote (4673)6/10/2001 3:50:33 PM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74559
 
The Commerce Department reported last week that foreign investors spent just more than $320 billion last year to acquire or
establish U.S. businesses. That was a 17 percent jump over 1999 in "foreign direct investment." As recently as 1997, such
investment was only about $70 billion.


That's a big chunk of the current account deficit Noland and his followers are screaming about, just wanted to make sure you saw that.

Doubt very seriously we have to worry about that money being repatriated anytime soon.