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    "If you can't predict the future, then you need a system that can handle breakdown" John M. Keynes

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    "The birth of economics as a discipline is usually credited by Adam Smith, who published "The Wealth of Nations" in 1776. Over the next 160 years an extensive body of economic theory was developed, whose central message was: Trust the Market." _ Paul Krugman
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    "One fear is that foreign investors will stop buying U.S. debt, just as Washington needs to borrow more. Such a turn could lead to a dollar collapse, causing spikes in long-term rates and inflation. The less the U.S. need to borrow from abroad, the less downward pressure on the dollar - and the greater the balance in the global economy." _ James C. Cooper

Archive for the ‘inflation’ Category

Heading of Economics: Gold and Inflation

Posted by Robin Thieu on September 8, 2009

From: Bloomberg

Gold Jumps to 18-Month High on Weaker Dollar, Inflation Outlook

By: Nicholas Larkin, Halia Pavliva and Kim Kyoungwha


“The market thinks inflation is coming,” Leonard Kaplan, the president of Prospector Asset Management in Evanston, Illinois, said by telephone. He has been trading gold for more than 30 years and believes gold won’t stay above $1,000 for long. “With interest rates so low, money is chasing money and the dollar is getting murdered.”

Governments have cut interest rates and boosted spending to fight the worst recession since World War II, spurring investors to buy bullion as a hedge against the prospect of accelerating inflation and currency debasement. Gold, silver and palladium holdings in exchange-traded funds have reached records.

$1,200 ‘Possible’

Gold may set a record within five sessions and “it’s possible” that it will touch $1,200 within weeks, Prospector’s Kaplan said. “And if a new record doesn’t come soon, it doesn’t come in the near future,” Kaplan said. “Markets think that the Fed isn’t going to withdraw stimulus money fast enough and that would cause inflation.”

Oil Climbs

Crude-oil futures, used by some investors to forecast inflation, surged as much as 5.5 percent today and have soared 59 percent this year in New York.


From: Telegraph


China, Bernanke, and the price of gold

By: Ambrose Evans-Pritchard


“If they keep printing money to buy bonds it will lead to inflation, and after a year or two the dollar will fall hard. Most of our foreign reserves are in US bonds and this is very difficult to change, so we will diversify incremental reserves into euros, yen, and other currencies,” he said.


From: The Economist

World economy
U, V or W for recovery

Aug 20th 2009

The world economy has stopped shrinking. That’s the end of the good news

IT HAS been deep and nasty. But the worst global recession since the 1930s may be over. Led by China, Asia’s emerging economies have revived fastest, with several expanding at annualised rates of more than 10% in the second quarter. A few big rich economies also returned to growth, albeit far more modestly, between April and June. Japan’s output rose at an annualised pace of 3.7%, and both Germany and France notched up annualised growth rates of just over 1%. In America the housing market has shown signs of stabilising, the pace of job losses is slowing and the vast majority of forecasters expect output to expand between July and September. Most economies are still a lot smaller than they were a year ago. On a quarterly basis, though, they are turning the corner.

Posted in Economics, inflation | Leave a Comment »

America’s stagnation

Posted by Robin Thieu on August 29, 2008

America Recession

Source: http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11964819

Economics focus

Lessons from a “lost decade”

Aug 21st 2008
From The Economist

Will America follow Japan into a decade of stagnation?

AS FALLING house prices and tightening credit squeeze America’s economy, some worry that the country may suffer a decade of stagnation, as Japan did after its bubble burst in the early 1990s. Japan’s property bubble was also fuelled by cheap money and financial liberalisation and—just as in America—most people assumed that property prices could not fall nationally. When they did, borrowers defaulted and banks cut their lending. The result was a decade with average growth of less than 1%.

Posted in Economics, Mortgage, Recession, US, inflation | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

China’s inflation

Posted by Robin Thieu on August 20, 2008

China

China

Source: http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11920640

Economics focus

Inflated claims

Aug 14th 2008
From The Economist

Why China is not to blame for the surge in global inflation

MANY people in America and Europe think that the recent surge in inflation, like almost everything else these days, is “made in China”. For a number of years, cheap Chinese goods helped to reduce prices in rich economies, but more recently wages and prices have surged in China. On top of this, the hungry dragon’s insatiable appetite for food, energy and other raw materials has given cartoonists an emotive image for the surge in global commodity prices. As a result, it is claimed, China is no longer exporting deflation to the rich world, but inflation.

Posted in BRIC, inflation | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

US: the triple threats

Posted by Robin Thieu on June 21, 2008

US triple threats

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_25/b4089024764736.htm?chan=search

by Peter Coy

June 11, 2008, 3:48PM EST

“The Fed’s Plan: More Talk

With little room for the Fed to make a course adjustment safely, Bernanke’s balancing-act comments carry even greater weight than usual

Bernanke expressed mild optimism about the economic outlook, and he promised that the Fed will “strongly resist” an upward creep in inflation expectations.

Inflation is a case in point. In recent years, when the Fed insists that it will keep inflation low, the public believes it, and therefore, as if by magic, inflation really does remain low: Trusting workers don’t ask for higher pay and companies don’t jack up prices. Even though oil prices have more than doubled over the past year and gasoline is $4 a gallon, the consumer price index rose a relatively modest 3.9% from April, 2007, through April, 2008. And recent history shows that when inflation is under control, growth tends to be steadier, too—the best of both worlds.

…”

Posted in FED, US, inflation | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Bernanke sparks a bond sell-off with new inflation warning

Posted by Robin Thieu on June 20, 2008

US bondsT-bill

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2008/06/tuesday-is-sett.html

Los Angeles Times

8:49 PM, June 9, 2008

Government bond yields have been on the rise in the U.S., Europe and Japan since mid-March as investors have become less fearful about a global economic slowdown — and more fearful of inflation, given soaring energy prices…

http://www.economist.com/research/articlesBySubject/displaystory.cfm?subjectid=348876&story_id=11543672

Too hot or too cold?

Jun 12th 2008
From The Economist

Investors are caught between the desire for growth and the fear of inflation

Posted in Bonds, FED, Government, US, inflation | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Vietnam’s inflation

Posted by Robin Thieu on June 20, 2008

Is dangerous overheating contagious?VNIndex

http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11599015

Flu symptoms

Jun 19th 2008 | BANGKOK
From The Economist print edition

Is dangerous overheating contagious?

EVEN by the standards of Asia’s booms and busts, the turnaround in Vietnamese investors’ sentiment has been remarkable, veering from wild optimism a few months ago to deep pessimism today. Surging inflation—it is now over 25% year-on-year—has aggravated a slump in the Ho Chi Minh City stockmarket, previously one of Asia’s most bracing (see chart). From worrying about upward pressure on the dong, the authorities now fear a currency collapse. Some economists worry this could spill over to other Asian countries where inflation is also reaching alarming levels.

The central bank has announced a 2% devaluation, hoping to relieve the pressures on the currency. It also raised its base interest rate from 12% to 14%. The moves, however meek, briefly supported the stockmarket, which had fallen for 25 trading days in a row. But offshore trading in dong futures is pricing in a further devaluation of around 30% within a year.

It has been clear for months that Vietnam’s economy is overheating. The trade deficit from January to May was over $14 billion, about the same as for all of 2007. Like the stockmarket, property prices have tumbled, leading to fears about the country’s banks, which lent heavily for speculation in both assets. The government is already thought to be providing discreet liquidity support to a dozen small banks. For all these concerns, foreign investors still see Vietnam as “the next China”. It is the Vietnamese who are gloomy, and fears of hyperinflation run deep after some bruising encounters in the past.

Already, there are signs that people are hoarding gold. Tim Condon, an economist at ING in Singapore, notes that although Vietnam imported 43 tonnes of gold in the first four months of this year, the precious metal is trading in Ho Chi Minh City at a big premium to the international price.

Meanwhile, the government is trying to curb currency speculation by restricting foreign-exchange booths from selling dollars. To reduce imports, it is said to be allowing the central bank to sell dollars only to businesses that have its approval for their foreign purchases (such as buying capital goods). This, however, may push others towards the black market or offshore, further undermining the credibility of the official exchange rate.

Despite the recent increases, real interest rates remain negative. Meanwhile, a daft law bans banks from pricing loans at more than 150% of the base rate and this has all but stopped lending. That, in turn, has increased the risk of a hard landing, says Dominique Dwor-Frecaut, an economist at ABN AMRO in Singapore: better to let the market set the price of credit.

To make matters worse, the government has stopped publishing timely figures on the banking system and foreign reserves. Word is that the reserves are not far short of the $23 billion-worth the country had in December, despite its efforts to shore up the currency. But the absence of official figures “makes people think the worst”, says Mr Condon.

Could Vietnam’s difficulties be a harbinger of trouble elsewhere in Asia? The optimists say no, arguing that inflation could peak later this year, the government’s measures could restore lending and imports to sensible levels and a moderate devaluation could relieve the pressure on the dong. Moreover, Vietnam’s current-account deficit—13% of GDP, according to the IMF—is one of the widest in Asia. Its currency problems are in a category of their own.

However, Vietnam serves as a timely reminder of how quickly inflation can get out of control, and the speed with which that can shatter confidence. Policymakers across Asia should be taking note.

http://www.economist.com/finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10976054

The fall of Ho Chi Minh City

Apr 3rd 2008 | BANGKOK
From The Economist

The bursting of Vietnam’s first stock market bubble

Posted in Stock Market, inflation, vietnam | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »