Category Archives: Currencies

"’We interrupt regular programming to announce that the United States of America has defaulted …’ Part 2"

We’ve cribbed the title of a provocative post by Satyajit Das at Eurointelligence. He argues that the US’s days of continuing to borrow abroad with little worry as to the consequences may be nearing an end. A good companion piece is Menzie Chinn’s Implications of adjustment to riskier dollar assets in a portfolio balance framework, […]

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China to Slow Yuan Appreciation?

Nouriel Roubini and Brad Setser appear to have called this one correctly. Simply staggering amounts of hot money have been flowing into China, betting on faster appreciation of the yuan. or better yet, a significant revaluation. In fact, this level of weight of money would normally be a self-fulfilling prophecy. Hot money is highly stimulative, […]

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Global Economy at "Point of Maximum Danger"?

As he is often wont to do, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard worries, in dire terms, about the poor prospects for growth and stability, It would be easy to dismiss him as histrionic were it not for the fact that some commentators who have been right so far about the progress of the credit crunch, are also hyperventilating. […]

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Vote of No Confidence: Dollar Tanks (And More on Fannie and Freddie)

So much for the notion that the not-quite-a-rescue-plan for Fannie and Freddie would calm troubled markets. Equities gave a raspberry yesterday and overnight, the TED spread widened 11 basis points to 133 basis points (a sign interbank funding trouble may be nigh) and today the currency markets, which initially seemed to take the news in […]

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Henry Kaufman: Treasury Needs to Stand Behind Freddie, Fannie

Henry Kaufman, aka Dr. Doom for his prominence and prescience in reading the bond markets during the painful early 1980s credit crunch, said not surprisingly that the Federal government needed to assist Fannie and Freddie. Unfortunately, the more important part of Kaufman’s message is likely to be ignored. The former Salomon Brothers chief economist also […]

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Roubini’s on the Endgame for Bretton Woods 2

Nouriel Roubini has an excellent, and typically sobering piece on what he sees as the denouement of what he calls Bretton Woods 2, the system we have of less than floating exchange rates (i.e., many East Asian countries + the Gulf States maintain hard pegs; China has a dirty float). Conventional wisdom has been that […]

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Are Trichet’s Rate Hikes 1930 All Over Again?

Readers have taken to throwing brickbats when I post material that suggests that raising interest rates (at least in advanced economies) might not be a good move right now. We’ve said before that the reason the Fed kept rates too low too long was it looked at inflation as strictly a domestic phenomenon and ignored […]

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Credit Market Warnings Escalate: Barclays, Fleckenstein Sound Alarms

Alert readers pointed us to new sightings of heightened credit market worries from Barclays via the Telegraph and Bill Fleckenstein via Calculated Risk. What distinguishes them from normal patter about the debt markets is the urgency of their alarms (hat tip Dwight and doc) The irony here is that the Fed, as Tim Duy points […]

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The Economist on Hot Money and the Dramatic Growth in China’s FX Reserves

I had grumbled recently that the financial press had not paid any attention to the simply stunning rise in China’s foreign exchange reserves, which were estimated to have increased by $75 billion in April alone. Brad Setser and Michael Pettis have been reporting regularly on this beat, but it has gone undernoticed in the wider […]

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