
The flight to safety in the dollar was enhanced on Friday when the greenback reached a 22 year high against the British pound and a six week high against the Euro. Considering that the US economic woes are significant, this highlights how bad the Euro and British economic outlook is – at least from the perspective of the Forex traders. The pound sunk 1.4% to 1.361 against the dollar and the Euro fell nearly ½ a percent to 1.292 against the US currency. The tumble started after data released on Friday showed that the British economy tightened at a greater rate than was expected, 1 ½ percent to be exact, which confirmed on paper that the British economy was now officially in a deepening recession.
The Yen also made significant gains against the Euro and Pound on Friday, with the Euro closing down ½ of a percent to 114.66. The status of the US and Japanese currencies as a safe bet amongst Forex Brokers underscores the dire shape of the overall global economy. It is not a matter of who is doing well anymore; rather it is a factor of who is not doing as bad. The trading and investing communities are just looking for something to cling to as the Daily FX charts are becoming more and more confusing to traditional technical and fundamental traders.
The surge, or should it put, strength of the dollar was also helped by the US Treasury Secretary designate, Timothy Geithner, who commented in front of a Senate panel that a strong dollar was in the best interest of the US, prompting broker trading firms to speculate that once confirmed, he will do all he can to prop up the greenback. Considering the mountain of debt that the US economy needs to climb out of which grows each day by billions of dollars, it is difficult to see how any one man can accomplish this feat.
The week was capped off by a peculiar stunt by Canada’s ruling conservative party which pre-announced (it was an intentional leak) that when it reports its budget deficit projections on Tuesday the 27th, it will show a $52 Billion (US) shortfall the next two years and will not return to positive territory for another five. The move was seen as Canada’s way of minimizing the short-selling and thus overall decline of the Canadian dollar in the Forex trading arena. Aside from this, we can read between the lines into the actual numbers and see a truly disturbing picture. Canada’s economy, and currency for that matter, are intrinsically tied to commodities, oil and metals to be specific.
A projected shortfall of this magnitude means that Canadian economists and actuaries are not too optimistic about a short term global recovery that everyone is hoping for. What this simply means is that Canada is looking at a two year period of global declines followed by a three year recovery period. This essentially puts the crisis in a situation where its affects last five years, a really gloomy scenario that Canada is using to set policy. We hope they are wrong.
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