Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: Are Iran, Russia, China behind dollar's free-fall?

  1. #1
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Are Iran, Russia, China behind dollar's free-fall?


    NEW WORLD DISORDER
    Are Iran, Russia, China behind dollar's free-fall?

    Some see 'Currency Cold War' meant to bring U.S. to its knees

    Posted: October 2, 2007
    1:00 a.m. Eastern


    © 2007 WorldNetDaily.com



    WASHINGTON – The hottest selling book in China right now is called "Currency Wars," which makes the case that the U.S. Federal Reserve is a puppet of the Rothschilds banking dynasty and it has persuaded some top officials Beijing should resist America's demands to appreciate its own undervalued currency, the yuan.


    This might not be news of concern to most Americans if the U.S. dollar were not in precipitous free-fall, having reached record lows against the euro yesterday.
    What would it mean if China ever threw its economic weight around by dumping dollars in a major way?


    Suffice it to say it is referred to in some quarters as China's financial "nuclear option," because it would be the economic equivalent of detonating a thermonuclear weapon in the world's financial markets.


    But the American dollar's fate is hardly in the hands of the Chinese alone. Other foreign parties suspected of participating in a new "Currency Cold War" are Iran, Russia and Venezuela.


    Diane Francis, a financial reporter for the National Post in Canada, says it plainly and boldly: "There is a Currency Cold War being waged by Russia, Iran and various allies such as Venezuela."


    The grand strategy being engineered by Vladimir Putin, she writes, is to force the use of euros as the international monetary standard as a transition to the Russian ruble.
    "This is simply a monetary version of the old Cold War, minus the missiles," she writes.


    Experts don't see any short-term reprieve for the falling value of the dollar. Kathy Lien, chief currency strategist with DailyFX.com in the US, told Bloomberg she expects the American dollar to slide even further, forcing more lending rates cuts in the U.S. to stave off recession.


    "It seems like every single passing day we have a new record low in the dollar, and a new record high in the euro, and it's driven by the fact that U.S. data is continuing to deteriorate," she said.


    If other nations do not follow the U.S. in cutting rates, the slide in the value of the dollar would most likely continue.


    If the dollar trend continues spiraling downward, the risk is that nations like China – or Japan or Saudi Arabia – which have been buying U.S. Treasury bonds and thereby funding America's deficit, would stop that practice.
    That would be the nuclear option.


    China, with $1.3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves as a result of the massive and growing $260 billion U.S. trade deficit, has taken huge losses with the falling dollar, given that some 80 percent of China's $1.3 trillion in foreign reserves is held in U.S. dollar assets, largely in U.S. treasury securities.


    Meanwhile, Song Hongbing, the author of China's runaway bestseller, "The Currency Wars," says he's pleasantly surprised at the 200,000 copies his book has sold. He is probably not eager to see the dollar punished as he lives in Washington, D.C.


    "I never imagined it could be so hot and that top leaders would be reading it," he says during a book tour in Shanghai. "People in China are nervous about what's going on in financial markets, but they don't know how to handle the real dangers. This book gives them some ideas."


    Among the research findings that shocked him most was that the Fed is a privately owned and run bank.


    "I just never imagined a central bank could be a private body."


    Some, meanwhile, are standing on the sidelines cheering the currency wars – seeing them as a way of reducing the power and influence of the "imperialistic" U.S.


    Rohini Hensman, who describes himself as "independent scholar, writer and activist based in India and Sri Lanka," says it's about time the U.S. got its comeuppance.


    "As the bombs started falling on Iraq in 2003, I wrote and circulated an appeal entitled 'Boycott the Dollar to Stop the War!,' arguing that although the military strength of the U.S. was enormous, its economy was in a mess; with a massive gross national debt, the only reason it could finance its foreign wars and occupations was because of the inflow of over a billion dollars a day from countries accumulating foreign exchange reserves in dollars because it was the world's sole reserve currency. The denomination of the oil trade in dollars made it additionally desirable. With the advent of the euro, however, there was the possibility of an alternative world currency; therefore individuals, institutions and countries opposed to the war on Iraq should refuse to accumulate dollars or use them outside the U.S., because these were activities that helped to finance U.S.-Israeli aggression against Palestinians, Iraqis and Afghanis. After the World Social Forum meeting in 2004, the Boycott Bush Campaign adopted the dollar boycott as part of its strategy."


    In early trading today, the dollar advanced slightly, prompting gold prices back from 28-year highs set yesterday. The dollar's value against a basket of six major currencies rose slightly to 77.950 from a lifetime low of 77.657 a day earlier. The dollar traded at $1.4223 per euro, stronger than a record low on Monday of $1.4283.


    WND has reported the Federal Reserve is in a dilemma.


    The stock market has demanded rate cuts, wanting to return to the free credit policies of the Federal Reserve that fueled the liquidity bubble that has boosted home prices and pumped the Dow Jones Industrial Average since 9/11.


    Yet, the Fed giving in to stock market demands and lowering rates threatens an international dollar sell-off that could lead to a dollar collapse.


    Former Fed Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan also sparked controversy by suggesting in his recently published book, "The Age of Turbulence," the euro is rivaling the dollar as the international foreign exchange reserve currency of choice.


    The Wall Street Journal recently quoted a rule of thumb advanced by Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist for the International Monetary Fund. According to Rogoff’s "back-of-the-envelope" calculation, a 20 percent drop in the dollar's exchange value reduces Americans' income by 3 percent, adjusted by inflation.
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




  2. #2
    Expatriate American Patriot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    A Banana Republic, Central America
    Posts
    48,612
    Thanks
    82
    Thanked 28 Times in 28 Posts

    Default Re: Are Iran, Russia, China behind dollar's free-fall?

    In a related story.....

    PREMEDITATED MERGER
    U.S. for sale to foreigners by Texas hold'em rules
    Officials at secret confab learn of 'lawyer feeding frenzy' over release of infrastructure
    Posted: September 27, 2007
    1:00 a.m. Eastern

    By Jerome R. Corsi
    © 2007 WorldNetDaily.com

    Establishing public-private partnerships that give away control of U.S. infrastructure to foreigners is like playing the casino game "Texas hold'em," a top Texas Department of Transportation official told the EuroMoney conference meeting yesterday in the plush Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City.

    James Bass, the chief financial officer of TxDOT, was speaking on the second day of a two-day seminar devoted to teaching state government officials how to lease public assets to foreign investment interests.

    "Sure, you can expect political objections," Bass told the conference, "but if you play your cards right, you'll win."

    WND reported last week EuroMoney shut out WND from the conference, refusing the $1,999 registration fee because WND was "too political" to attend.


    Throughout the conference yesterday, various attendees telephoned WND to provide detailed, inside accounts on conference proceedings.

    As WND has reported, campaign contributions to Gov. Rick Perry paved the way for TxDOT to build the Trans-Texas Corridor, a four football-fields-wide truck-car-train-pipeline to run parallel to I-35. In the PPP deal, Cintra, a Spanish investment concern, will own the toll rights on the superhighway for 50 years after it is built.

    Speaking to the conference about a deal in Colorado, Denver attorney Edward Icenogle said, "It was a lawyer feeding frenzy."

    "We had so many lawyers involved in the deal that we almost ran out of law firms in Denver to hire," he said.

    Icenogle is a lead lawyer for the 11-mile Northwest Parkway, a Denver-area toll road that locals widely call the "Billion Dollar Boondoggle."

    Hostile questioners from the EuroMoney conference audience pressed Icenogle to justify millions of taxpayer dollars required to hire the "army of attorneys" needed to structure the Northwest Parkway private-public partnership, or P3, deal.

    Icenogle rejected characterizing the Northwest Parkway as a "conspiracy of lawyers," but he did concede the P3 deals were lawyer-intensive, generally demanding complicated revisions of state law and negotiations with foreign attorneys in multiple languages.

    Icenogle appeared on a panel giving an update to the Northwest Parkway, along with Karen Stuart, the mayor of Broomfield, Colo., who is leading the move to lease the toll road under a P3 deal with Portugal and Brazil.

    Stuart defended a move to accept some $500 million from a private investment consortium composed of Portugal's Brisa Auto-Estradas and their Brazilian partner Companhia de Concessoes Rodoviarias. The foreign firms want to operate the toll road under a 99-year lease in which they would receive the tolls.

    At the conclusion of the Northwest Parkway panel, a questioner from the audience asked Stuart why, if the P3 deal was so good for the Portuguese and Brazilian investment concerns, was the project taken from public ownership?

    Stuart answered that there were complex risks involved in getting enough toll-road riders to cover construction costs.

    Locals in the Denver area joke that children should use the Northwest Parkway central lanes as bicycle paths given the lack of motorists.

    Critics in Colorado argue the Northwest Parkway is bankrupt and Fitch, a bond rating agency, has downgraded some $420 million in outstanding Northwest Parkway bonds to CCC+ grading, with a "negative" rating outlook, a status usually reserved for junk bonds.

    Ray Medina, president of Citizens Involved in the NW Quadrant, has been quoted as criticizing Broomfield for making "a poor decision to financially support an ill-conceived toll road," arguing the Northwest Parkway has "saddled Broomfield taxpayers with a huge debt that the Broomfield government is scrambling to find a way out."

    Stuart defended the deal but was forced to concede the Northwest Parkway was struggling to meet traffic projections and its high tolls remain a barrier.

    The conference ended with Mark Florian and Gregory Carey, managing directors from Goldman Sachs, explaining how state lotteries and sports stadiums could be privatized to foreign investors under P3 deals.

    Elizabeth Rao, assistant general nanager and head of "FasTracks" at RFD transit in Denver, told the group her department retained outside lawyers and hired additional staff as they prepared to explore P3 foreign financing to privatize Denver's light rail.

    Rao claimed the savings to the taxpayers would only be in the range of about 5 percent after the deal was done.

    Approximate 300 attendees, including officials from state and city departments of transportation, listened for two days as lawyers and investment bankers explained the legal documents and financing structures needed to sell a wide range of public infrastructure to foreigners.

    "Under P3, the USA is up for sale," a conference attendee told WND by telephone at the conclusion of the meeting. "Whatever the public now owns – roads, ports, waste management water systems, rail lines, public parking facilities, airports, even lotteries and sports stadiums – are up for grabs and the only requirement is that the foreigners have the cash."
    Libertatem Prius!


    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.




Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •