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Thread: The housing market and the dollar

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    Featured Member Vamp's Avatar
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    Default The housing market and the dollar

    The dollar tumbled to a near a 15-year low against sterling yesterday on fresh signs of economic trouble in the United States.
    An 8.3pc crash in US industrial orders and an admission by the Federal Reserve chairman that Washington does not know how bad housing really is set off another day of wild gyrations on the currency markets.


    US house prices fell 3.5pc to an average $221,000, the third month of declines. Stocks of unsold homes rose to 7.4 months' supply, the highest since 1993. The US consumer confidence index fell sharply to 102.9.
    The "truckers index" of tonnage shipped by US haulage companies was down 1.8pc in October, a leading indicator of contraction. Merrill Lynch called the fall "borderline recessionary".
    The dollar continued its slide against the euro, dropping to $1.3194 after the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, said the housing slump "would be a drag on economic growth into next year". Mr Bernanke said official figures did not pick up the "sharp increase" in cancellations on house deals and might understate the inventory glut.

    "Any significant effect on consumer spending arising from further weakness in housing would have important implications for the economy," he said.


    The pound briefly touched $1.95 and surged to eight-year highs against the yen.
    The Japanese currency has been in freefall for months on repeated weak data. It suffered a fresh blow yesterday after retail sales fell for a second month, increasing fears that Japan's export-dependent economy may slow in lock step with America.
    The OECD club of rich nations gave warning yesterday in its bi-annual economic outlook that the world's second-biggest economy was still too fragile after years of debt deflation to risk a rapid rise in rates from 0.25pc.
    "The return to price stability is proving longer and less assured than expected. Further monetary tightening should wait until a fully-fledged exit from deflation finally materialises," it said.
    The OECD downgraded its global growth forecast for the 30 leading economies from 2.9pc to 2.5pc in 2007, and said the US might need to start cutting interest rates next year.
    Chief economist Jean-Philippe Cotis said there was no cause for alarm, arguing that the US would achieve the "soft-landing" it eluded after the dotcom bubble in 2000. "What the world may be facing is a rebalancing of growth," he said. "In the euro area, recent hard data suggest that a solid upswing may be under way. Growth should remain buoyant in China, India, Russia and other emerging economies."
    In a rare piece of good news that helped calm Wall Street after the equity rout on Monday, Mr Bernanke said inflation had been "somewhat better behaved of late".
    David Lereah, chief economist for the US National Association of Realtors, said there might be light at the end of tunnel for the housing market, citing a slight rise in transactions.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/mai...cndollar29.xml

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    Default Re: The housing market and the dollar

    Quote Originally Posted by Vamp View Post
    The dollar tumbled to a near a 15-year low against sterling yesterday on fresh signs of economic trouble in the United States.
    An 8.3pc crash in US industrial orders and an admission by the Federal Reserve chairman that Washington does not know how bad housing really is set off another day of wild gyrations on the currency markets.
    Yup and because of this you wouldn't believe the amount of brits travelling to the US for the weekend to do their holiday season shopping.

    I wonder how long it will take before the dollar is no more

    Seraya.


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    Default Re: The housing market and the dollar

    Personally Im hoping Australian trend follow, our interest rates are shocking here!

    Great if you have savings tho :-)

    I want to buy a house outright.

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    Default Re: The housing market and the dollar

    ^^^ well, one of the reasons that the Aussie $ is so strong IS those high interest rates. Basic international financial theory says that the spread in available interest rates between one currency and another creates incentives / disincentives for the 'hot money' international investors to shift their investments from one country's currency to another in search of maximum return ... but as more and more 'hot money' attempts to say sell US dollar investments and buy Aussie dollar investments it drives down the US dollar exchange rate and drives up the Aussie exchange rate.

    Ultimately, the historically low interest rates available re US dollar vs other major currencies tend to indicate that the US dollar has a lot further to fall unless the US Fed starts ratcheting up US dollar interest rates. But the US Fed is stuck in a catch 22 because raising US dollar interest rates in order to support the US dollar exchange rate would also hasten the bankruptcy of millions of Americans whose floating interest rate debts i.e. ARM's, credit cards would suddenly become immensely burdensome.

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