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Michael Pento

Michael Pento

Posted: October 26, 2009 02:26 PM

Please Mr. Geithner, Don't Pass the Buck on the Dollar

What's Your Reaction?

It seems nobody in this country wants to take responsibility for the secular decline in the value of the U.S. dollar. When Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is asked about the currency's decline, he refers the query to the Treasury Department. When the president is asked about the dollar, he often gives the tired old platitude that the U.S. has a strong dollar policy, but his vacuous words seem more like perfunctory utterances than a bona fide dollar-boosting strategy.
Recently, in an interview with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had some startling comments about the world's reserve currency. When asked about its chronic weakness, and what specifically he was doing to safeguard the dollar, Mr. Geithner said, "...if you look generally, you know, I don't talk about developments in the exchange markets." He continued, "If you look at what's happened over the last year, you've seen really a lot of confidence in the U.S. economy. When the crisis was at its peak ... you saw the dollar rise when people were most concerned about the future of the world."

Now that the U.S. dollar is once again caught up in a vicious secular bear market, losing nearly 16% of its value since March alone, the Treasury Secretary is once again opting to plead the fifth. Even worse, he claims that last year was a good example of global confidence in the currency, even though it was down over 8% for the year.

Can he really be counting on another collapse in the global economy to pull the dollar out of its downtrend? To use the previous year as an example of confidence and strength in the country, or the currency, is spurious in nature. It illustrates that our Treasury Secretary either tacitly condones a falling dollar or has no idea what causes a currency to be weak.
The progenitor of our weak dollar is the skyrocketing monetary base, which reached an all-time record high of $1.86 trillion last week. The Fed's monetization of banks' assets has caused real interest rates to become negative and increased interest rate differentials with the currencies of more sober central bankers, like Glenn Stevens from Australia. In addition, our profligate spending habits have caused record budget deficits and even caused our healing trade deficit to reverse course and head higher. Unfortunately, all those trends seem firmly intact and are actually growing worse.

There is, however, no shortage of gurus who will tell you that a weakening dollar is great for America. They'll tell you that it boosts exports and the earnings of domestic companies that conduct business on foreign soil. Their logic is flawed. First off, a falling dollar has actually pushed our trade deficit higher -- not lower. If a weak dollar bolsters our economy and our manufacturing base, then why has the trade deficit surged since 2001, even as the dollar lost nearly 40% of its value based on a basket of the six currencies of our largest trading partners?
A specific example is illuminating in disproving the theory that you can balance a trade deficit by crumbling your currency. China announced in 2005 plans to increase the value of its currency and abandon its decade-old peg to the U.S. dollar in favor of a link to a basket of world currencies. Since then the Yuan has rallied from 0.1208 to 0.1465 to the dollar.

This rise in the Yuan, and fall in the dollar, has had a negligible effect on U.S. exports. For all of 2005 the U.S. deficit with China was $201 billion. In 2008, three years into the dollar's devaluation, it soared to $266 billion. Why didn't the falling dollar help boost exports? Because the price of goods produced in the U.S. went up.

That means foreign importers were immune from our made-in-America inflation, not that they could afford to buy more of our goods. There just isn't any amount of dollars the Fed can create that can serve as a substitute for manufacturing and producing more of the things that foreign countries want to purchase.

Multinational corporations are also better protected from the falling dollar than companies that strictly sell their goods inside the U.S. The foreign currency MNCs earn translates to more dollars once the cash is repatriated. But the purchasing power of those dollars becomes attenuated.

So again, there just isn't as much real return produced from owning multinationals as many investors espouse. And it certainly isn't worth the price we pay for rampant inflation at home. To claim that a falling dollar is great because it boosts the earnings of MNCs is tantamount to saying a rise in the number of car crashes would be wonderful for Americans because they can invest in air bag makers.

It would be better if the Chinese allowed their currency to strengthen rather than to pursue a homegrown U.S. policy of dollar weakness. There is a big difference if the former occurs. If the dollar loses its value because we pursue inflationary domestic policies, it means all Americans will suffer from the loss of their currency's purchasing power right here in the U.S.A. If, however, the Chinese sell dollars accumulated from their trade surplus, the Yuan will rise without the destructive inflation being generated here at home -- provided that the U.S. repents from its profligate spending habits.

That doesn't mean the Chinese will necessarily buy more U.S. goods, but they might. The problem is that if the Chinese no longer need to park their savings in U.S. debt, Treasury prices will fall and yields soar. The dollar will suffer greatly in the short term as measured against the Chinese currency. But again, that is inevitable and much better in the long run for the U.S.
Finally, I'm tired of hearing there's just no substitute for the U.S. dollar, as if saying it enough will make it so. Or that the Chinese will be compelled to ruin their environment, work like dogs and squander their savings forever and remain powerless to do anything about it.

Does it make sense for them to keep buying Treasuries if their prices fall and the currency they are denominated in continues to crumble? Wouldn't it make sense to diversify their holdings into other currencies and commodities? In fact, that is exactly what they are doing. They have moved their holdings of Treasuries to the short end of the curve for an easy exit and are buying more Euros, gold and commodities.

In 2008 the 16 countries that use the Euro currency have an economy that is more than 76% the size of that in the U.S., according to Wikipedia. So is it incredulous to believe that the Chinese could, and should, diversify out of their current $800 billion-plus in Treasury holdings, or from their $1.3 trillion in U.S. reserves, or from having 65% of their reserves in the dollar?

It looks like the plan the U.S. wants to pursue is to continue to discourage foreign investment, punch our bankers (the Chinese) in the nose and punish those who are savers by crumbling our currency. But please, Mr. Geithner, let's not pretend it benefits anyone except those who are heavily in debt--chief among them our government. Unfortunately, even the U.S. government will be surprised to learn that the price of devaluing that debt through the process of inflation is the eventual destruction of our own economy.

Michael Pento is the Chief Economist for Delta Global Advisors and a contributor to greenfaucet.com

 
 
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10:44 AM on 10/28/2009
Well, the trade balance benefits from a weaker currency aren't direct - they're supposed to come from depressed consumer spending as a result of not being able to buy as much with the same money. We should have been buying less, because we had less to buy with.

Instead of contracting our spending, we tapped continually greater amounts of debt to sustain it. Turns out, that was incredibly, collectively, stupid of us.

What we need to do, is stop buying things, and make things instead. Then our trade balance will improve regardless of the strength of our currency.

Of course, it'll be a lot easier to not be buying anything when the money we have isn't worth anything. Think of weak currency as the global economy encouraging a healthy, austere lifestyle!
08:26 AM on 10/28/2009
Those who advocate a strong dollar need to do some research. America hit peak oil in 1971. We went off the gold standard in 1971. Coinkidink. I don;t think so, since from that moment on we would be sending money to other countries for energy, we could not maintain a stable currency base becasue if we did we would have very few dollars left. Year after year, sending more and more dollars to oil rich nations, as Warrne Buffet put it "Selling off a little bit iof the farm every year". We had to debase the currency.And as we buy more and more of our oil from overseas, we WANT to pay them with cheaper and cheaper dollars. How does it all end? We'll see. You want a stronger dollar, convert your car to run on natural gas. Today we send $500 billion annually overseas for energy. If every American went to nat gas we could cut that by more than half. Then our dollars would stay put right here and circulate amonst us.
12:07 AM on 10/28/2009
Michael Pento has it backwards. Right now we live in an era of neo-mercantilist competition, with governments setting the price of every bilateral currency market with the idea of promoting their products and discouraging imports. Even Canada has manipulated their currency at our expense. When NAFTA passed they had the highest labor cost. So they quietly sold Canadian dollars and bought US dollars and drove their dollar down to 60 cents American. For a $2 billion investment, they reaped over $100 billion in US investment and today employ 3% more of their population than the United States does. 90% of China's exports to the US would not occur if our currency was at purchasing power parity with theirs. The economic argument that they hurt their workers more than they hurt ours by such a policy is childishly wrong when it hurts our workers. If we set our currency at $50 to the euro, we could drive the French wine industry and German car industry out of business, assuming free trade regimes in those countries. But they would never allow it and the whole world wonders why we have allowed this. Yes it allows us to run a permanent deficit and export inflation. But it cannot be sustained, and the dollar must be devalued, and in the case of the yuan by more than half. Right now the US would do better with no trade than trade under current conditions.
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Michael Pento
08:11 AM on 10/28/2009
I just don't get it. The US dollar has been manipulated down already against our 6 largest trading partners. Yet our trade deficit has increased. There is zero evidence that a falling currency is all that is needed to boost exports. But there is a ton of evidence that creating the inflation it takes to bring the US dollar down 40% in the last 8 years destroys the economy.
09:29 AM on 10/28/2009
You know very well that because we spend three times as much on foreign oil as we do in China the increase in manufacturing jobs doesn't offset the increased cost of energy. That is not say devaluation is not a good thing in that it slows the tide of jobs offshore, increases the level of the stock market and shores up the housing market in big cities. Inflation at this point is not a problem because China is manipulating their currency. You'd make a better case if you said a devaluing dollar causes asset bubbles. Or that globalization is not working properly because China has their finger on the Yuan.
04:48 PM on 10/27/2009
A strong dollar only helps the investor class and people that have jobs with energy prices. It does not create jobs or in the long term stop the lost of jobs in America and therefore leads to a death spiral.
We need to create a market to get out of this economic mess. By using the other tool the government has to create a market, for instance, by raising taxes on imported oil. Using a U-shaped model with the most tax breaks in the early years and the most taxes in the later years over a ten-year time frame. This at least has the potential to be deficit neutral and also add-in the 700 billion dollars a year spent in this country instead of abroad with the multiplier effect.
Next we need an energy audit of every home and business to get some market research, completed by the utility companies, so that manufacturers, homeowners and businesses know what the current market is like. The audit is also done to front-load the workload providing a bridge between the green jobs of tomorrow and the lack of jobs today.
Finally, there is nothing like a threatened tax increase to stimulate Americans, businesses and lending because they know the future. Now we would have a plan that addresses our biggest infrastructure problem and also creates good-paying jobs.
And keep saying “No Market = No Private Sector Jobs” and “Market = Private Sector Jobs” until unemployment is at 5%.
04:16 PM on 10/27/2009
"Never sell America short"
That is what a friend of my father's told him in the late seventies, when many people were long-term bearish on the US. Today, even though...

http://raphaelkahan.blogspot.com/2008/08/never-sell-america-short.html
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
02:51 PM on 10/27/2009
Now that y'all have noticed that the dollar is declining, I'll take it as an indicator that we are near the bottom. Finally.
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
02:40 PM on 10/27/2009
Tim Geithner is doing to the U.S. economy what he did to the Indonesian economy - he apparently only knows how to ruin economies, not fix them!
10:31 AM on 10/27/2009
The only way to save the dollar is to audit and nationalize the Federal Reserve. If the Federal Reserve remains in private hands, the decisions on the value of OUR money will be made by the private banks who own the Fed. If we nationalize it, the decisions will be made by the Treasury, which we have some control of through elections. The Constitution clearly states that the power to create money belongs only to the government. The Federal Reserve's independence is illegal.
09:42 AM on 10/27/2009
There's nothing like comparing apples to oranges and blatant falsehoods to make a case for anything you want. The title of article should have been called “Please Mr. Geithner, Let them eat cake”. Everyone knows the 700 billion dollar gorilla in the room is the importing of foreign oil. There are only three ways to fix it: Wait around for the holy grail of energy (like we have for the last 30 years), tax it so that it makes other forms of energy reasonable or have the price of foreign oil increase because it's pegged to the dollar by letting the dollar devalue. Until we fix the foreign oil issue we will never have a strong dollar or security. You can choose to buy or not buy a Chinese made good but it's much harder not to drive to work or heat your home..
09:40 AM on 10/27/2009
Panama uses the US dollar. Are there any Panamanians out there who can say what effect loose money and a depreciating currency have on your country?
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usna73
We are all in this together
07:50 AM on 10/27/2009
Mr. Pento, I read all your work. Always spot on.

We need to learn to think long term. But we are not powerless over the Chinese either.

Our policies can be aimed at both a sound currency and incentives to save and invest.

My strategy can be summed up in one word: "Factories". I'll let everyone argue and fill in the details.
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Michael Pento
03:30 PM on 10/27/2009
Imagine that. Someone else who believes Americans need to go back to work instead of leaning on inflated assets to supplant real wealth. Thank You!
08:41 PM on 11/01/2009
You need to eliminate unions first. Without that, everything else is condemned to fail.
07:42 AM on 10/27/2009
Russia and China have pretty much agreed to use Rubles and Yuan in trade between the two (including for pricing) and Russia would like to dump the dollar altogether as a reserve currency. This will happen more and more soon...
03:14 AM on 10/27/2009
While some adjustment in the foreign exchange value of the dollar is inevitable, I think Mr. Pento is right that a narrow devaluation relative to the yuan would be far more desirable than a general depreciation resulting from higher levels of domestic inflation. That would be extremely painful, but seems to be the direction in which we're headed at the moment.
sej
nothin' micro about my biology
10:36 PM on 10/26/2009
"Since then the Yuan has rallied from 0.1208 to 0.1465 to the dollar."

It used to take 0.1208 yuan to buy a dollar. Now it takes 0.1465 yuan to buy a dollar. Therefore the yuan depreciated, not appreciated over that time frame.
05:50 AM on 10/27/2009
Backwards, I think.
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usna73
We are all in this together
07:46 AM on 10/27/2009
Review your math. Used to be appx 8:1 ratio, now requires only about 7:1. Fewer yuan to buy $1.

Stronger currency.
sej
nothin' micro about my biology
09:18 PM on 10/27/2009
review your math. The 8 is the dollar. The one is the yuan. It used to take roughly 8 dollars to buy one yuan. Now it takes about 7 dollars to buy one yuan. So the dollar has appreciated and the yuan has appreciated.
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sposton
right to tell what they don't want to hear
10:07 PM on 10/26/2009
Part 2 of 2

Our system needs a new aim, different than those that have guided our policies for the last three or four decades. More of the same policies means more of the same results except with downward acceleration resultant. Of all of the countries in the world we alone do not care if our jobs are exported. All others work hard to keep what they have and then create new jobs. China has a national economic policy and we have a policy that actively benefits the globalist capital. Our results are a reflection of our aims. Want change? Change aims and then do everything to advance those aims. Our problem is that our current aims are determined by people whose interest are diverging from the rest of us. This must change or we are heading over the cliff sooner than most of us can imagine.