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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4359)5/9/2003 9:38:48 AM
From: 4figureau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5423
 
Dollar's Descent Has Currency Watchers on Edge


By Paul Blustein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, May 9, 2003; Page E01

A long slide by the dollar has turned into a rout in recent days, providing a new competitive edge to American manufacturers but arousing worries about potential instability in the global financial system.

Against the euro in particular, the U.S. currency's descent is gathering extraordinary speed. Late yesterday the exchange rate for one euro surged to $1.15, the highest level for the 12-nation European currency since January 1999, the month it began trading. As recently as April 29, rate was $1.09 per euro.

The plunge against the euro comes as the dollar is losing ground against other major currencies as well. The U.S. currency hit a 51/2-year low against the Canadian dollar this week, and it fell yesterday morning to a 10-month low of 116.01 Japanese yen per dollar before recovering late in the afternoon to 116.88. As is always the case for big currency moves, the dollar's weakness has both benefits and costs. It helps American industry compete with foreign firms by making U.S.-made goods cheaper on world markets, and that should eventually help shrink the massive U.S. trade deficit. But a tumble in the dollar risks getting out of hand by prompting foreign investors to dump their holdings of U.S. stocks and bonds, which could drive interest rates up and choke off U.S. economic growth.

"If it falls a moderate amount, that's a welcome correction," said Kenneth Rogoff, the chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, who has long viewed the dollar as overvalued because of the size of the trade gap. "But if it falls too precipitously, that could certainly create problems." Of particular concern, he said, is that a sudden drop in the dollar's value "might lay bare weaknesses in the financial system" by inflicting severe losses on major market players that have engaged in complex trades and hedging strategies, some of which may depend on a stronger or more stable greenback.

Although the dollar has fallen rapidly on other occasions without triggering financial disaster, "one could liken it to diving off a cliff into water," Rogoff said. "If there's enough water below, it's fine, but it's a risk every time you take one of those big dives."

Desmond Lachman, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, agreed that the dollar's decline "is generally a healthy development" but said "what gives pause now is that it looks like this process is gathering momentum. If we get the dollar declining in a disorderly fashion, and it becomes self-fulfilling, people will move money out of the States in a way that could be very disruptive to U.S. financial markets."

The reasons for the dollar's fall are clear: As a country that imports far more than it exports, the United States needs huge amounts of investment from abroad to balance the scales -- roughly $500 billion a year. But persuading investors to put their funds in the United States has become increasingly difficult because yields in many overseas markets are higher than they are in this country.

The result, a shift from U.S. securities to foreign ones, lowers the value of the dollar. That has become much more pronounced in recent days, in part because markets have perceived that the Federal Reserve is more likely to lower interest rates in coming months than other central banks, the European Central Bank in particular.

The ECB announced yesterday that it was holding its benchmark rate unchanged at 2.5 percent, which is double the U.S. federal funds rate. Wim Duisenberg, the ECB president, indicated that he shares some of Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's concern about deflation -- a decline in the general price level -- but he suggested he wasn't worried nearly as much about it. With the end of the war in Iraq, "risks to growth have diminished," he said, a comment that traders interpreted as reducing the chances for an ECB rate cut in the near future.

The resultant drop in the dollar was an additional source of delight to Frank Vargo, vice president for international economic affairs at the National Association of Manufacturers, an organization that has long complained that the dollar's excessive strength is hurting American industry. "We're very pleased to see the currencies move the way they have, especially the euro and the Canadian dollar," he said.

The dollar, Vargo said, was "most overvalued" in February 2002, when it peaked at about 30 percent above the October 1997 level based on a Fed index of many currencies. "Today it's down to 10 percent over the 1997 level, so we've recovered two-thirds of the damage," he said.

The manufacturers group still believes that major Asian countries, notably Japan and China, keep their currencies artificially low to spur exports. Indeed, Japanese Finance Ministry officials warned yesterday that the recent rise in the yen has been too fast, and that they would take "firm action" to keep the currency from strengthening further. They disclosed that the government had secretly sold $20.4 billion worth of yen in the first three months of the year in an effort to brake the yen's rise.

washingtonpost.com



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4359)5/9/2003 9:43:27 AM
From: 4figureau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5423
 
Bankers Are Next Big Target in Wall Street Probe
Fri May 9,12:46 AM ET

Securities regulators are looking into the actions of investment bankers in their stock-research probe, focusing on former Salomon Smith Barney unit of Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C - News) , Friday's Wall Street Journal reported.

Securities regulators first set their sights on stock analysts.

As regulators look further up the Wall Street food chain to assess culpability for misconduct alleged in the recent $1.4 billion stock-research settlement, they are weighing the actions of investment bankers, who allegedly pressured analysts at their firms to keep positive ratings on stocks that they wanted to downgrade.

Investors are impatient for "charges against managers who supervised the research and investment-banking divisions of the banks," said Sen. Richard Shelby (R., Ala.), who chaired a Senate Banking Committee hearing on the pact on Wednesday.

Among the companies expected to come under the most scrutiny is Salomon. That is where the highest penalties were assessed for allegedly fraudulent research. And that is the firm where regulators mentioned that two investment bankers -- Eduardo Mestre and John F. Otto Jr. -- allegedly pressured the firm's former star telecommunications-stock analyst, Jack Grubman (News), in 2001.

A Citigroup spokeswoman said none of the individuals at the firm were available for comment. Noting that regulators have said they "are still looking at supervisory issues," she added that Citigroup "will cooperate with any further inquiry," but couldn't comment further.

Neither Mr. Mestre, head of investment banking, nor Mr. Otto, head of telecom banking, were cited by name in the civil complaints filed by regulators. But both were cited by their titles at the time in the regulatory complaints filed on April 28 by the Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites) (News - Websites), the National Association of Securities Dealers and the New York state attorney general, according to people familiar with the case.

Salomon, since renamed Citigroup Global Markets (now that the research and retail-brokerage and retail-brokerage operation has been split off into a new Smith Barney unit), is one of three firms charged with issuing fraudulent research. But Citigroup's settlement payments of $400 million were twice those of the other two firms charged with fraud, Merrill Lynch & Co. and the Credit Suisse First Boston unit of Credit Suisse Group. And Mr. Grubman paid penalties of $15 million to settle related charges against him, compared with $4 million for former Merrill analyst Henry Blodget. None of the participants admitted or denied wrongdoing, as part of the pact.

story.news.yahoo.com