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by Ashraf Laidi
Posted: May 20, 2009 20:02
Comments: 87
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This thread was started in response to the Article:

Dollar Slashed as Fed Goes Shopping

Fed's latest bond buybacks triggers fresh dollar damage, while VIX downside does not spell out the end of equity selling.
 
Peter B
Posted Anonymously
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 3:15
So, do we see EUR/USD by mid July going over 1.4 ?

Peter
Dubai
Dan
New York, United States
Posted Anonymously
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 2:16
Ashraf, what's the best anti-dollar play in the next couple of months, EUR or JPY? Thanks.
Ashraf Laidi
London, UK
Posts: 0
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 1:41
I mentioned AUD/JPY earlier today that it's offering a fresh opportunity for shorts. we're already down at 1.2730s, looking for initial target at 1.2650s, followed by 1.25 with stop at 1.2810

Ashraf
Ashraf Laidi
London, UK
Posts: 0
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 1:26
jamshed, thks for that. and when you suggest more tsry purchases by the Fed (which is very likely), the dollar will have nowhere to go but down...as you predict. and any positive impact from equity selling would have to be less potent on the dollar than before. these Fed purchases are such a game-changer.

Rob, what's that saying about "peter & paul"? the Fed is an independent organization accountable to Congress and in this situation aims at preventing long term rates from shooting up as the folks at the US Treasury are going wild with the nation's credit card. but as Treasury withdraws cash from the CC and drives up its interest charges, the central banks rushes to stabilize by buying some of that debt. and so the money goes back and forth between the two..the only problem is that the Fed is buying a 1/3 of what treasury borrows. http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/frseries/frseri.htm

apache, because the Fed has ran the biggest bond purchasing scheme in the world (more than BoE or anyone). yes other currencies are also falling against gold but USD suffers from a severely swelling Fed balance sheet and escalating alternatives to put your money i.e commodity, EM currencies. etcc

Ashraf

apache99sg
Singapore, Singapore
Posts: 8
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 1:05
hi Ashraf,
One thing that confuses me is that most of the central banks of the major currencies are doing some kind of qualitative easing which would reduce the value of the currency.

Given this, then, I am confused on why there is rally on the majors (egs: EUR, GBP, CAD) to rally against USD. Would you be able to comment?

Is the rally largely driven by risk appetite? thanks again for your valuable input
Rob
New York, United States
Posts: 305
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 0:58
Regarding your IMT about the 1USD/3USD - WHY would the government do that? Who OWNS the Fed, where does the extra money go to???
jamshed
Pakistan
Posts: 57
15 years ago
May 21, 2009 0:42
Hi Ashraf,

Interesting comments.

I am looking at the Long / Short positions for futures at the CFTC, and the positioning has turned short the USD for the last few weeks. Also, for the last year there is an evident correlation between the trend in long /short positions and the direction of the eruo dollar.

At the same time, I have turned, only recently, quite bearish on the Eurozone fundamentals. However, do you think that a longer recession but tighter fiscal policies (relative to US) in eurozone should mean a strenthening euro?

Overall, I think the only way Fed gets the US out of prolonged recession is by printing money and devaluing the dollar. I think China will slowly be decreasing its purchase of the US debt and move into commodities etc. The Fed will have to increase its Tresury purchases by maybe another 300-700b this year pushing the euro dollar towards 1.5 by year end of much before.

I did read your book & picked up many useful insights like your commentory on gold oil ratio, inverting yield curves and their useful to predict a slowing economy.
One thing lacking in the book and more so in this website is a critical reivew from your side on your developed ideas and how do they pan out.

good luck and hope you run your own curreny fund,
jamshed