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World News See other World News Articles Title: Safe-Haven Currencies: If You Want to Flee the U.S. Dollar, Here Are Four Places to Hide As a young British banker in the inflation-ridden 1970s, I got used to carrying large amounts of German deutsche marks, Swiss francs and Japanese yen in my wallet to have some security against the lousy performance of the British pound sterling. While paying for a pizza in London with this foreign cash was difficult, having those safe-haven currencies in hand helped me sleep at night. Weve reached that point again. In light of the escalating debt-ceiling debacle thats unfolded in Washington, the potential for a U.S. credit-rating downgrade no matter the outcome, and the likelihood that a long stretch of dollar-killing stagflation is headed our way, its time to take refuge in todays safe-haven currencies. And Im going to show you the safest of those safe havens. I know that many of you are extremely worried about what will happen if Standard & Poors downgrades U.S. Treasury debt from its top-tier AAA credit rating. But Im telling you that theres a much bigger cause for concern. While I concede that having our federal debt lose its top-tier credit rating wouldnt be good, the bigger cause for concern is what happens to us if the U.S. dollar stops being regarded as AAA meaning its no longer good for settlement of all international transactions. If that happens, you have to ask yourself two questions: The answer to the first question is clear: The fallout will be worse than you imagine. And that means that, even now, you need to be searching for refuge in the very best of the worlds safe-haven currencies. With the Aug. 2 deadline for raising the debt ceiling approaching fast, the U.S. dollar took another beating and fell against safe-haven currencies yesterday (Monday), after Washington failed to reach agreement on the nations $14.3 trillion debt ceiling. The Swiss franc actually reached an all-time high against the dollar, which has slipped 25% against that currency in just the last 12 months. What a lot of folks dont realize is that the fate of the U.S. dollar is closely tied to that of U.S. Treasury bonds. If U.S. inflation takes off to serious levels as Im almost certain it will both Treasuries (except Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, which are inflation-protected) and the dollar will tank simultaneously. After all, the United States has been running balance-of-payments deficits of $500 billion or more for almost a decade now much longer than the country has been running $500 billion budget deficits. The dollar is also almost certain to drop if the vast U.S. budget deficit causes a crisis in the Treasury bond market. Finally, the advent of modern communications technology has made global manufacturing much easier, lowering the market premium of U.S. wage levels above emerging-market-wage levels (thats one reason unemployment has been so stubbornly high this time around). The easiest way for these wage levels to be equalized again, necessary for U.S. unemployment to fall, is for the dollar to decline sharply against emerging-market currencies. For these reasons, we can expect the dollar to be generally weak against other currencies. That will unsettle international traders who receive payments in dollars. They will look to get paid for their goods and services in other safe-haven currencies. The challenge, of course, is to determine exactly which safe-haven currencies were talking about
The answers will surprise you. So if were searching for safe-haven currencies, which ones should we look at? The European euro? That wont do theres too much of a chance of it splitting in two. That would be either good or bad good if the weak-sister PIIGS of Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain split off to form their own weak bloc (leaving the euro strong), or bad if Germany and a few stronger countries split off (leaving only the weaker currencies in the euro). Either way, the euro is a risk, and a big one: After a split, the currencies would probably shift by 20% to 30% against each other, to give the weaker countries a chance of exporting their way out of problems. The British pound sterling? What a very sweet, old-fashioned idea. If this were 1911 or, better still, 1821 this would be the ideal safe haven. But its 2011, and Britain has all the same problems as the United States only to a greater degree. The Japanese yen? Japan has a much worse debt problem than the United States, and only the fact that Japan owes all that money to itself is keeping the Japan Government Bond (JGB) market stable. The Chinese renminbi? A fashionable solution, but the reality is that China still wont let its own citizens get their money out freely. Whats more, there is a huge glop of bad debts in the Chinese banking system that at some stage will cause big problems so big, in fact, that the 2008 financial-system crash and collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings (PINK: LEHMQ) will seem like a springtime stroll. Such afterthoughts as the Brazilian real, Australian dollar or Canadian dollar? While Ill grant you that Canada is much-better run than the United States, the ugly truth is that Brazil and Australia are no better run than any other country. In fact, all three of these countries had the great fortune to be heavily dependent on commodities at a time when commodity prices happened to soar. If commodity prices decline, the innate problems facing each of these currencies problems will become painfully apparent. As our trip around the world There are thus very few safe-haven currencies for you to invest in. There are actually four clear winners: Even when you know what currencies you want to be in, buying them is not all that easy. Generally, the currencies themselves can be bought at any major commercial bank, although you may get killed on the rate. However, this will give you a pile of paper money with no yield and a danger of being eaten by mice. A better alternative is to buy bank deposits. Here our friends EverBank can help you; it offers a bank-deposit service in a wide range of foreign currencies. Three of our four currencies are on EverBanks list; you can open accounts in Norwegian crowns, Singapore dollars and Swiss francs but not in Chilean pesos. Foreign-currency bonds are another alternative, although not all brokerages allow you to buy them. The difficulty here is the minimum amounts are generally large, and there is a substantial bid-offer spread. Still, this is probably your best alternative for Chilean pesos, where the government is currently rated AA for Chilean-peso obligations and 10-year peso government bonds yield about 2.4%. Safe-haven currencies gave me such a sense of security when I turned to them during the economically tumultuous 1970s that I still can recall the feeling today nearly 40 years later; now its time for you to seek out that kind of security.
Poster Comment: ======================================================== We are literally witnessing the bankruptcy of the United States of America.
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#1. To: HAPPY2BME-4UM (#0)
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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one. "Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters." ~ Ben Franklin "For my part, whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to know the whole truth, to know the worst, and to provide for it. ~ Patrick Henry
IMHO unless the currency is backed by hard assets, such as gold or silver, it's basically fiat, and backed only by pickled-egg and beer farts.
The IQ and the life expectancy of the average American recently passed each other in opposite directions. - George Carlin
Guns, ammunition, copper and non parishable food. Do NOT trust ANYTHING owned or controlled by the ROTHSCHILD CRIME FAMILY including GOLD AND SILVER.
Do they own or control all gold and silver? What's wrong with owning gold or silver, please? : )
You'd think Americans are just a pack of pussies when every other word being used these days is flee, hide, or some terror expression.
"Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else." Frederic Bastiat
We're going to witness the same corruption and cowardice that resulted in the mortgage crisis. This time the rating agencies that will not down rate the FRN because of the obvious consequences will lose their credibility and be replaced with new agencies peopled with the same swindlers. But, it will allow the filthy rich (and their just plain filthy servants, relatives and hangers-on) to dump their paper while the ordinary folks get hosed in the collapse. And, if everyone knows that the FED's greenbacks and digital tally sticks are worthless but they're waiting with bated breath to see if the truth will be announced, just how much sympathy do these people deserve? Most were untroubled to grow their wealth through financial, inflation-based swindles ("trickle up economics") that leave honest folks holding the bag. And, if they don't care about us, then.....
All currencies are fiat and are declining against Gold.
LOL! Good one--careful, the terriers are gonna getcha!
Liberty is not a means to a higher political end. It is itself the highest political end. Lord Acton He (Gordon Duff) also implies that forcibly removing Obama, a Constitution-hating, on-the-down-low, crackhead Communist, is an attack on America, Mom, and apple pie. I swear these military people are worse than useless. Just look around at the condition of the country and tell me if they have fulfilled their oaths to protect the nation from all enemies foreign and domestic. The only difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits. Albert Einstein
This could be part of the reason for the Norwegian PsyOp. The reason Gaddafi was targeted was in no small part his refusal to allow a central private bank and his attempts to set up an independent banking system in Africa.
Swiss Government Bonds are partially backed by Gold. However, Gold is a commodity which, like any "fiat" currency, has value only because we, as a culture, agree it has value.
There is nothing wrong with it if YOU PERSONALLY own it. What I'm talking about here is the govertnment hooking itsxelf into another Debt / Usury system only using gold and silver rather than paper because of the usurer control over the lions share of these metals.
Banker cleansing is the only means of returning to an honest monetary policy and system. (I ain't talkin about a bath or shower either).
"Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else." Frederic Bastiat
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