Friday 24 July 2009


The Dollar Should... Rise? 
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

So, you think the dollar's going to crash, eh?

Then what are you going to run to... the euro? Ha! You might just be jumping from the frying pan to the fire...

What makes a euro better than a dollar? Nothing.

They're both paper money. The U.S. dollar is "backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government." I'm not sure what that gets me. But the euro is backed by... what exactly?

The U.S. and Europe were both hit by the Great Recession. As I've showed you recently,
the U.S. appears to be coming out of it. Europe isn't. The Economist forecasts the Euro-area economy will shrink by 4.4% this year.

Well, then, you must get paid more for putting your money in Europe, right? Nah... Benchmark 10-year bonds in Germany pay less interest than their U.S. counterparts. No interest-rate advantage.

OK... Then Europe must not face the kind of inflation we're likely to see in the U.S., right? Wrong again. For 2009, inflation in the U.S. will likely be
negative (-0.4% is the consensus forecast, believe it or not). While in Europe, inflation is expected to be positive (+0.4%).

Well there's got to be some reason to buy the euro... How about because it's cheap relative to the dollar? Wrong again! And this is the one that really gets me...

The euro is actually more than 30% overvalued today versus the U.S. dollar. That's according to one of my favorite currency indicators – the
Economist's "Big Mac Index."

Once or twice a year, the
Economist finds the prices of a McDonald's Big Mac all over the globe. You see, a Big Mac is essentially the same all over the world. So in developed countries, all things being equal, a Big Mac should cost roughly the same. When you start seeing big discrepancies, you know something is out of whack with the currency.

I've tracked this Big Mac Index for 20 years. The track record has been pretty good... When a Big Mac gets cheap in Europe (relative to the U.S.), the euro eventually rises. And when a Big Mac gets expensive in Europe (relative to the U.S.), the euro eventually falls.

See for yourself:

The Big Mac Index Shows the Euro Is Way Overvalued

Right now, the euro is overvalued at $1.42, based on the Big Mac Index. It's only been up at these heights once before... back in 1995 (I'm using the German mark as a proxy). The euro crashed over the next six years, bottoming in 2001.

When the world economy started to unravel in 2008, investors wanted dollars, not euros. Now that we've had a few months of sunshine, investors like euros again. But why?

What makes a euro better than a dollar? Nothing.

 
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So before you consider getting your money out of the dollar and into the euro, think about what you get for your money... With the euro, what you get is a currency that's 30% overvalued – with no advantages over the dollar whatsoever.

I'm not excited about the future of the U.S. dollar. But I'd rather keep my cash in dollars than euros right now...

Good investing,

Steve

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