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Price of gold one good sign its on shaky ground. Massive debt/endless printing ("quantitative easing") has established the US dollar as the firm leader to hit the bottom first. Aussie and Canadian dollar almost at par.

I hope Americans here take notice of what's going on with your currency and take appropriate action asap.
 

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yes, I guess that means Americans will be forced to purchase goods produced inside the USA. As the dollar lowers in value, American goods and services will be cheaper to outside countries and foreign goods and services will become more expensive.
 

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US dollar falls to eight-month low against euro
Posted: 06 October 2010 0527 hrs

NEW YORK: The US dollar slipped on Tuesday, reaching its lowest level against the euro in eight months as expectations grew for a Federal Reserve injection of cash into the economy.

Speculation that the Fed would print yet more dollars as it tries to kick-start the economy was boosted after Japan's surprise move.

The euro was trading at 1.3834 dollars around 2100 GMT, sharply up from 1.3683 dollars late Monday in New York to its highest reading since February.

The dollar also declined against the Japanese currency to 83.21 yen from 83.38 on Monday.

The move by the Bank of Japan "suggests that the threat of further Fed easing remains the key and overwhelming factor for the currency markets, implying further near-term vulnerability for the greenback," said Wells Fargo Bank analyst Vassili Serebriakov.

In late New York trade, the British pound rose to 1.5884 dollars from
1.5829 on Monday.

The dollar fell to 0.9664 Swiss francs from 0.9719.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

FOREX-U.S. dollar sinks to 15-year low against the yen
Wed Oct 6, 2010 12:39pm EDT

* Dollar falls to 15-year low against the yen

* Dollar index drops to 8-1/2 month low

* Euro up but struggles as Fitch downgrades Ireland (Recasts with additional details on technical levels and updates prices)

NEW YORK, Oct 6 (Reuters) - The dollar tumbled to a new 15-year low against the yen and an 8-1/2 month low against a basket of currencies on Wednesday on rising expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will further ease monetary policy.

The euro rose above its 200-week moving average around $1.3921, hitting a fresh eight-month high as the U.S. dollar extended losses.

The yen climbed to levels where the Bank of Japan last month sought to weaken it. Investors were reluctant to push the dollar too low against the Japanese currency over fear of a new intervention.

Dollar losses accelerated after a report showed U.S. private employers unexpectedly cut 39,000 jobs in September after an upwardly revised gain of 10,000 in August. [ID:nEAP103400]. The private-sector report from ADP, a payrolls processor, gives a glimpse of the labor market ahead of Friday's government data on U.S. non-farm payrolls for September.

"It all adds to the case for the Fed coming in to create more stimulus," said Eric Viloria, currency strategist at Forex.com in New York.

The comments of Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Evans, quoted as saying the central bank should do much more to spur the economy [ID:nN05203033], also kept negative dollar sentiment firmly intact. This has intensified speculation the Fed will resume quantitative easing, possibly in November, by buying more bonds.

Midway through the New York session, the dollar dipped as low as 82.75 yen JPY=EBS on electronic trading platform EBS before recovering to 82.86 yen, still down 0.4 percent on the day JPY=. The session peak was only 83.27 leaving the dollar/yen trading in a tight range despite the extreme low.

Wednesday's low was below the 82.87 level where the Bank of Japan moved to weaken the yen on September 15. The greenback was well below the high of 83.99 yen it hit on EBS after the Bank of Japan (BOJ) announced easing steps on Tuesday.

The dollar was down 0.5 percent against a basket of currencies .DXY at 77.370, having fallen as far as 77.361.
 

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yes, I guess that means Americans will be forced to purchase goods produced inside the USA. As the dollar lowers in value, American goods and services will be cheaper to outside countries and foreign goods and services will become more expensive.

Unfortunately not much being produced in the US anymore. It really could get bad...quickly.

Most dismiss the notion of this "extreme" idea but it might be wise to stock up on some survival basics. Supply of food/water at the minimum.
 

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Fiat money doesn't have a good track record.

Zimbabwe-One-Hundred-Tril-001.jpg
 

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strong dollar
weak dollar

doesn't matter, either one is not good or bad

they are just different.

they each act differently on each sector of the economy.
 

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Situation playing out will be leading towards a ZERO dollar, which will be bad. The US economy cannot recover at this point, QE phase 2 will be announced next month and the madness will lead to a deeper, longer depression.
 

your worst nightmare
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Situation playing out will be leading towards a ZERO dollar, which will be bad. The US economy cannot recover at this point, QE phase 2 will be announced next month and the madness will lead to a deeper, longer depression.

Huh?:think2:

That's not what Obama says. You calling him a liar? @)
 

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Price of gold one good sign its on shaky ground. Massive debt/endless printing ("quantitative easing") has established the US dollar as the firm leader to hit the bottom first. Aussie and Canadian dollar almost at par.

I hope Americans here take notice of what's going on with your currency and take appropriate action asap.

I don't think most people realize how bad things will be if our dollar tanks. This is very real. The problem is that Gold is so high right now. People are so fed up with the stock market that many aren't even investing in stocks through their 401K's.

We have to have tariffs on all Chinese goods. These guys are laughing at us all the way to the bank.
 

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As I can determine by the move to the financial forum unfortunately the potential seriousness of this isn't grasped by the many.

Husker Peter Schiff is a solid guy to listen to, follow his videos on youtube. He reiterates the basic fundamental problems with the US economy right now. Bob Chapman is a good guy to follow as well.

The only real question seems to be when not if. I find it hard to believe 5 years from now it will be status quo. I hope I'm wrong.
 

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oh i completely agree....i dont see a total collaspe of the currency but things are already getting bad...i was telling my brother the other day i went to BK to get some lunch and ordered a small fry (fwiw the small fries are SMALL those holders are tiny) and it was $1.89 almost 2bucks for a small fry...take a look at the price of deodorant next time your in the food store...its going to get to the point where those average american's making 15-20dollars an hour are going to be spending a high % of their paychecks on just food and basic necessities....


i love schiff i follow him religiously!
 

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oh i completely agree....i dont see a total collaspe of the currency but things are already getting bad...i was telling my brother the other day i went to BK to get some lunch and ordered a small fry (fwiw the small fries are SMALL those holders are tiny) and it was $1.89 almost 2bucks for a small fry...take a look at the price of deodorant next time your in the food store...its going to get to the point where those average american's making 15-20dollars an hour are going to be spending a high % of their paychecks on just food and basic necessities....


i love schiff i follow him religiously!


Big fan of Peter as well

I find it amazing that gold has run from 800 and change, to 1350, and no one, and I mean no one, that I know, owns any gold or gold mining shares

The dollar is doomed, and QE2 could be the final nail in the coffin ( along with our marxist president who welcomes the collapse )

Hopefully some of you guys have been following the stocks from the National

inflation Association. They have some great ideas
http://inflation.us/stocks.html


I have been buying a few heavy lately

FEED, HL, AUY, AND EXK
 

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Price of gold one good sign its on shaky ground. Massive debt/endless printing ("quantitative easing") has established the US dollar as the firm leader to hit the bottom first. Aussie and Canadian dollar almost at par.

I hope Americans here take notice of what's going on with your currency and take appropriate action asap.


um, don't kid yourself-- if US is 'going down', Canada will follow. She's dependent on the big guy's health. And this US currency decline is NOT good for Canada (see trade deficit and finance minister's most recent warnings to Canadians regarding future growth.....hint...... SAVE, Canadians love to spend, just like their neighbors)
 

your worst nightmare
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@)


...........................................

Why QE2 Isn't the Answer


What's that great ship coming over the horizon to rescue us? Is that the QE2? Or is it the Titanic?

That's what the markets want to know now, as they eagerly await word from the Federal Reserve on whether it will launch an additional round of quantitative easing, nicknamed QE2. If the Fed announces that it will indeed buy hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of Treasurys or some other security, it could make a real difference to the markets. At this point, with QE2 pretty widely expected to arrive—at least in some form and quantity—my sense is that the biggest impact could come if the Fed fails to act. The markets could be very, very disappointed.

What will QE2 accomplish for the economy? Maybe nothing at all, which makes the whole thing rather silly.

It's called QE2, but it should really be called QE4. The first QE was in November 2008, back when the banking crisis was still in full swing and the Fed and the Treasury were actively engaged in bailing out Citigroup in various ways. The Fed committed to buying $500 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities and $100 billion in the direct debt obligations of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The next step—and this is the one that should be called QE2—was in March 2009, about a week after stocks hit their final bear market bottom. The Fed announced that it would add $750 billion to its MBS buy and $100 billion to its Fannie and Freddie debt buy, and that it would start an entirely new program of buying $300 billion in long-term Treasury notes and bonds.

The most recent step, which should be called QE3, was this August, when the Fed announced it would buy long-term Treasury notes and bonds with the income thrown off from its MBS portfolio.

So what would QE4 look like? Some highly pedigreed economists think it could be as much as a trillion dollars in Treasury bond purchases. Others—the majority, I'd say—expect it to be a more modest amount, perhaps $100 billion, with the assurance that more will come if necessary.

I doubt the Fed will buy more mortgage-backed securities. It already owns about 20 percent of that market. I doubt it will buy corporate securities—that would be pretty controversial, because the Fed would have to get into the business of picking which companies to support and which not to. And I doubt it would buy municipal securities, even though it might be a good idea to give a little support to the states that are having such terrible budget problems, including New Jersey, Illinois and my own state of California.

So let's say it's Treasuries. What would the effect of that be?

Obviously, it would make Treasury yields lower than they would be otherwise. Or would it? Shortly after the Fed announced its Treasury purchases in March 2009, yields actually went up.


Published October 5, 2010
 

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um, don't kid yourself-- if US is 'going down', Canada will follow. She's dependent on the big guy's health. And this US currency decline is NOT good for Canada (see trade deficit and finance minister's most recent warnings to Canadians regarding future growth.....hint...... SAVE, Canadians love to spend, just like their neighbors)

Of course here in Canada the economy will suffer, don't think its going to be smooth sailing. The severe plight of the US dollar will effect many nations. The competitive devaluing going on around the world will eventually lead to a scenario where the fiat system will crumble. Then I suppose the elites will come to the rescue with a new equally corrupt system, probably all electronic.

Need to prepare for the worst at this time, it looks bad.
 

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Unfortunately not much being produced in the US anymore. It really could get bad...quickly.

Most dismiss the notion of this "extreme" idea but it might be wise to stock up on some survival basics. Supply of food/water at the minimum.


REALLY?

USA is the top GDP country on our planet, by a country mile

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)

they are top 5 (or higher) in all these important categories:

wheat production
oil production (surprising, eh?)
steel production


not bad for a country that 'doesn't produce much anymore'




a bit paranoid, are we?
 

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And your comments on the GDP to debt ratio? Including unfunded liabilities the debt number is staggering.

Total-US-Debt-As-A-Percentage-Of-GDP.jpg
 

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