Saturday, 11 June 2011
Last week  the U.N. warned of a possible collapse of the
 US dollar –if its value against  other currencies continues to decline.
 The U.N. mid-year review of the world  economy did not get extensive 
coverage. Their economic division said that a  crisis of confidence in 
the dollar, stemming from the falling value of foreign  dollar holdings,
 would imperil the global financial system.
 This trend had  recently 
been driven by interest rate differentials between the U.S. and other  
major economies and growing concern about the sustainability of the U.S.
 public  debt, half of which is held by foreigners including the Chinese
  government.   
There is  a real sense of both 
desperation and denial about the debt crisis and the  global nature of 
the debt crisis. On Friday Moody’s threatened the U.S. with a  downgrade
 if the ‘ceiling’ is not raised by mid-July. Bad labor figures made QE  3
 more of a possibility and we see a continued slowdown in the developed 
world  economies.
The  solution of creating more public 
debt to cure a private debt crisis will be  seen as a blunder and will 
likely lead to greater financial and economic woes.  Part of the 
solution will be to utilize gold in the monetary system in hopes  that 
it will support and shore-up the monetary system. What else is there 
that  is trusted globally?
Is the  U.N. economic division incompetent? Are their opinions of little  consequence? 
The  statement they made is huge. A 
collapse of the US dollar! Maybe the news is too  much for the media and
 the world to cope? Maybe we’re in denial. “So far, so  good!” said the 
man who fell off the 50-storey building, as he passed the 12th  floor…
                    Importance  of the US Dollar
 The
 US dollar replaced gold as the fulcrum of  the global money systems of 
the world in 1971 at a time when its value was  falling alongside the 
British pound. It was accepted back then because it was  tied to the oil
 price.   This made the US  dollar indispensable. If you used oil you 
needed the dollar to pay for it. You  had to convert every other 
currency to get oil. Everyone sold it in the US  dollar.
The
 US dollar replaced gold as the fulcrum of  the global money systems of 
the world in 1971 at a time when its value was  falling alongside the 
British pound. It was accepted back then because it was  tied to the oil
 price.   This made the US  dollar indispensable. If you used oil you 
needed the dollar to pay for it. You  had to convert every other 
currency to get oil. Everyone sold it in the US  dollar.
Moreover, the U.S. persuaded Europe 
(at the time  led by President Charles de Gaulle) to stop converting 
their dollars into gold  and accept them as vital currency. The link to 
oil forced their hand. The  dollar had no other virtues at the time, and
 so that ingredient changed their  thinking.   
We had thought many times that the oil
 producers  themselves would have broken the link as the dollar’s 
reputation floundered.  But they all realized that their country’s power
 was, in a way, permitted by  the kind permission of the U.S. –as we saw
 in Kuwait, then in Iraq and no  doubt, by extension in Libya. The U.S. 
guarantee of security has made them  putty in U.S. hands. 
Even O.P.E.C. realizes that things are
 changing  and their oil is all they have. Middle Eastern oil producers 
discussed setting  up a Persian Gulf currency the year before last, but 
nothing has come of it.  There will most likely be no Gulf currency 
unless monetary chaos ensues. If the  dollar collapses, their incomes 
will collapse with it, and in turn their power  base. They mostly likely
 have a plan B.  Until then they will keep oil prices in the US dollar and raise them as the  dollar falls.   
Russia is another kettle of fish. They
 are not  part of O.P.E.C. and will accept the Yuan in payment of their 
oil as well as  the dollar. Iran is fearful, but independent of the U.S.
 and has discarded all  their dollar reserves as well as priced their 
oil in Euros. But the rest of  O.P.E.C. will keep their oil priced in 
the dollar.   
Since the oil price fell back to $35 
in the  credit crunch, they have demonstrated that they can manage the 
oil price. For  the last year we’ve seen the price of oil more than 
compensate for the fall in  the US dollar. Right now it is holding the 
$100 level up from $80 last year,  countering the fall in the dollar 
against hard currencies. As a result the oil  price has been steady in 
the euro. 
Now that the U.S. consumer (and the 
U.S.  recovery) is faltering we hear loud calls for increased oil 
supplies.   This would drop the oil price, but be  unacceptable to 
O.P.E.C. The U.S. government will accept higher oil prices  because of 
the importance of the $:oil link.
It looked as though the world was stuck with the  US dollar. Until two new elements emerged to change the  picture…
Mismanagement  of the US Dollar
Apart from U.S. gold reserves, there 
are only a small  amount of currencies to protect the U.S. if the dollar
 were to become  unacceptable for international payment. U.S. foreign 
exchange reserves are  structured so that the dollar is the only global 
reserve currency. It’s rather  like the use of English in the world. Why
 learn another language when English  is the globally-accepted language?
 To date foreigners have had to accept the  dollars because there is no 
viable alternative.   If the States needs more they print  more.   
Because of its connection with oil, 
the dollar  will be used until other nations can pay oil producers in 
other currencies, and  if that occurs then usage of the dollar will 
shrink considerably. Furthermore,  The U.S. balance of payments 
developed this perpetual trade deficit, a form of  tribute exacted from 
the rest of the world. Over the last forty to fifty years,  this has 
worked well as developing countries use the dollar to promote growth.  
It would work even better if the management of the dollar were handled 
with its global reserve status in mind and not  the U.S. economic situation as the priority. Who cares the world boomed over  the last half century?
Once dollar issuance increased to fund
 imports  –as well as to counter the credit crunch—global economic 
interests were subject  to the health and integrity of the U.S. economy.
 From the day the euro was  first issued in 1999 until now we have seen a
 46% decline in the value of the  dollar against the euro alone. The 
rest of the world cannot afford to allow the  U.S. to continue to take 
advantage of the world. Still worse, the government  deficit in the U.S.
 has ensured that they are getting increasingly reliant on  the 
reinvestment of foreign (mainly Asian and oil-producing nations) 
surpluses  into the U.S. for its solvency.   
Now the U.S. is facing a downturn and 
is heavily  extended on the credit front. Nations are closer to making 
changes to the  currency hierarchy in hopes they can overcome a 
potential dollar collapse.  There is a point when actions against the 
dollar will be precipitous. The poor,  Friday labor report has us 
watching the dollar fall and points to levels beyond  €1: $1.50.
 Holders
 of dollars have to act in the interests of retaining  the value of 
their reserves. This can mean supporting the dollar on foreign  
exchanges or it can mean selling the dollars for assets, resources and 
other  foreign currencies. At some point, it will mean not accepting the dollar in payment of foreign goods.
 It is only a  matter of time for the dollar to be removed from its pole
 position, where it is  already causing so much volatility and damage to
 profits.
Holders
 of dollars have to act in the interests of retaining  the value of 
their reserves. This can mean supporting the dollar on foreign  
exchanges or it can mean selling the dollars for assets, resources and 
other  foreign currencies. At some point, it will mean not accepting the dollar in payment of foreign goods.
 It is only a  matter of time for the dollar to be removed from its pole
 position, where it is  already causing so much volatility and damage to
 profits.
The biggest potential damage that 
could  blindside the dollar is a switch by Asian nations from pricing 
their products  in the U.S. dollar to the Yuan or other currencies. This
 is so they stop  accumulating dollars; however, they still need it for 
as long as oil is being  sold in the dollar.   
This position can only be changed if 
oil  producers (other than O.P.E.C.) accepting currencies other than the
 dollar.  These changes are needed now, but they will not come until the
 damage to the  dollar’s value can be ‘contained’ by the surplus 
holders. China is already  using Roubles and the Yuan to pay Russia for 
oil and the day may not be far off  when Europe does the same. If 
O.P.E.C. felt the pain of a dollar collapse (or  even excessive 
inflation inside the U.S.) it might accept other currencies from  buyers
 (U.S. excluded). O.P.E.C. cannot continue raising the dollar oil price 
 because of the outcry it would cause in the U.S.    
The  Emergence of Asia
U.S. global wealth and power is on the
 decline.  China is the world’s second largest global economy. If the 
current rate of  development is sustained it is only a matter of time 
before China becomes the  world’s largest –before the Yuan becomes the 
world’s reserve currency. It is  only a matter of time before nations 
will need Yuan in their reserves to pay  for Chinese imports.   
Part of the emergence of Asia is the 
replacement  of the dollar in global trade. The only dollars reserved 
are to pay for U.S.  goods and oil. When other currencies are used in 
place of the dollar, the  purchasing power of the US dollar will 
decline. This is happening fast!
There is nothing to convince us that 
the will  stop declining. From now until then, the gold price will move 
in the opposite  direction.
Gold in  the Monetary System, at what price?......  
….Subscribers  only – Subscribe through www.GoldForecaster.com and www.SilverForecaster.com
Julian Phillips 
 Category:
Gold Saving / Investment
Category:
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