Posts Tagged Swiss franc
The Dollar Is A Third-Rate Currency
Posted by Oksana Grebenjuk in Currency on Октябрь 25th, 2010
To many investors’ surprise, the Yankee dollar’s earned only a third-place ribbon for its depreciation against gold over the past 12 months.
With all the recent hoopla and headlines about gold making new highs against the greenback, the destruction derby of the world’s reserve currencies is actually won by the euro, with sterling close behind.
Over the past year, the U.S. dollar lost 29.8 percent vs. bullion compared with a 39.7 percent tumble for the European common currency and a 34.5 percent decline in the British pound. Bringing up the rear is the Swiss franc, with a 23.1 percent loss, and the Japanese yen, which gave up 16.4 percent to gold.
Oddly enough, the U.S. dollar’s the least volatile reserve currency when it comes to bullion purchasing power. Its standard deviation is just 15.3 percent over the past year. This may not seem like a testament to the Fed’s steady hand on the nation’s economic tiller, but it’s something. It actually bespeaks the wait-and-see attitude of the central bank after last year’s stimulus and accommodation.
The likelihood of Fed intervention increases when commodity prices—a basic metric of inflation—rise or fall significantly compared with Treasury securities. In the chart below, the red Fed Indicator line dances within a neutral zone—a condition that compels the central bank to watch, but not act. A sustained move in the indicator above the upper band would signal an increased likelihood of accommodation—or lower money rates and a weaker dollar. A dip below the lower band flashes a higher probability of tightening, or higher rates and a stronger dollar. Read the rest of this entry »
WORLD FOREX: Euro Choppy After Middling US Retail Sales Data
Posted by Oksana Grebenjuk in Currency, Favourites on Ноябрь 17th, 2009

The euro traded in choppy waters early in New York Monday, after a slight improvement in U.S. retail sales failed to spark an extension of its overnight gains.
The retail sales report came on the heels of data that showed an expansion in Japanese economic activity, which set the stage for the euro and other higher-yielding currencies to rise against the low-yielding dollar.
But until more convincing data supporting the global economic recovery are released, the euro and its higher-yielding counterparts are likely to remain in their recent ranges, analysts said.
With the morning’s U.S. economic reports out of the way, attention will shift to the 12:15 p.m. EST speech of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in New York for clues as to any changes in monetary policy or the state of the U.S. economy. Read the rest of this entry »
Dollar Falls to 8-Week Low After Fed Projects Deeper Recession
Posted by Oksana Grebenjuk in Currency on Май 21st, 2009
The dollar traded near an eight-week low against the yen amid speculation the U.S. Federal Reserve will print more cash to boost purchases of assets as it seeks to counter the global slump.
The U.S. currency weakened most against the Taiwan and Canadian dollars after the Fed projected a deeper recession in 2009. New Zealand’s dollar rose for a fourth day after a government report showed immigration growth accelerated. The euro traded near a four-month high against the dollar after a German manufacturing and services survey beat economists’ forecasts.
“The Fed may expand its asset-purchase program, which would increase the supply of greenbacks,” said Yuji Saito, head of the foreign-exchange group in Tokyo at Societe Generale SA, France’s third-largest bank. “This could undermine the value of the dollar and spur investors in the U.S. to put their funds overseas.”
The U.S. currency traded at 94.81 yen as of 8:38 a.m. in London from 94.88 yesterday in New York. It fell to 94.29 earlier, the lowest level since March 20. Japan’s currency strengthened to 130.62 per euro from 130.77. The euro was little changed at $1.3777 from $1.3780 yesterday, when it reached $1.3830, the strongest level since Jan. 5. Read the rest of this entry »





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