DislikedOK, but could that be inflation from rising commodity prices rather than from Fed policy?Ignored
Don't wish it were easier, wish you were better. ~ Jim Rohn
US Dollar Index + AUD, CAD, CHF, EUR, GBP, NZD, JPY Dollar Index Indicators 22 replies
When do dollar bears become dollar bulls? 22 replies
DislikedOK, but could that be inflation from rising commodity prices rather than from Fed policy?Ignored
DislikedSO, the question would be how much could the EUR rise before investors turn their focus back to Europe debts.Ignored
DislikedInflation is about to be a huge problem in the U.S. Walmart CEO just announced that everything in the store is going rise in price and consumers need to brace themselves for the shock.Ignored
DislikedAll the above plus increase cost of goods since Chinese labor is getting paid more. So basically every angle that can increase price is pretty much in the works. Transportation (oil costs), clothing (cotton prices), Fed money printing, etc, etc.Ignored
DislikedDon't you think the rising commodity prices (especially when denominated in dollars) might be a consequence of the Fed policy?Ignored
DislikedDon't you think the rising commodity prices (especially when denominated in dollars) might be a consequence of the Fed policy?Ignored
DislikedHeck England has been doing that on and off for centuries without destruction of the pound. .Ignored
DislikedDepends what you consider 'deconstruction'.
Over tha last 150 years the pound has fallen from $10 to the pound to what it is today, around $1.60.Ignored
DislikedRight, but most of those factors are global rather than US specific, and the same kind of inflation is happening here in the UK.
So in the context of the question that started this thread, perhaps inflation isn't a major factor?Ignored
DislikedI think this correlation between currencies shows the power of each country. How powerful was England and how weak was USA.Ignored
DislikedI don't have empirical evidence, but consider the following.
Every commodity, including gold, is a hedge against inflation. The Fed has been pumping the monetary base. Austrian economics suggests that a rise in the monetary base leads to consumer price inflation, and these inflationary expectations resulted in excessive sums of money flowing into hedge instruments including commodities.
Through the concept of purchasing power parity, inflationary expectations also lead to a depreciation of the US dollar.
The two results are rising commodity...Ignored
DislikedEdit: does anybody have a correlation coefficient of the oil and eurusd instruments over, say, the last 6 months?Ignored
DislikedThe U.S. is exporting inflation.
So yeah, prices all over the world are going to go up.Ignored
Disliked.............. In Russian schools children learn that it was they who beat the Germans, and there's a point to that.Ignored
DislikedYes, I agree with you that it is the government that is in debt, not the FED. But when the fed inflate its balance sheet, it may incur...Ignored