Is Kafka Running
by William Pesek Jr.
Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) -- It's THE question in global currency markets: What force of nature prompted
On Tuesday, the dollar was plunging amid a comment by
Dumping dollars would be a logical move for the world's fourth-largest holder of reserves after
Or maybe it was
Franz in Charge?
Conspiracy theories aside, markets could be excused for wondering if Franz Kafka is roaming the halls of
Kafka, of course, is famed for tales possessing bizarre, illogical and nightmarishly complex qualities. And there are some rather Kafkaesque aspects to recent events, not only in
``Bretton Woods II'' economists have dubbed the system that unofficially replaced the original post-World War II currency regime, which was based on a gold standard that collapsed in 1973. In gold's place, many nations adopted the U.S. dollar as an anchor, formally or informally pegging their currencies to it. We may be seeing the demise of this new system, with
`Risk Is Growing'
``The risk of a disorderly unraveling of Bretton Woods II -- a sharp correction of the U.S. dollar and of the U.S. bond market, a surge in U.S. long-term interest rates, and a sharp fall in the price of a wide variety of risky assets such as equities, housing, high-yield bonds and emerging-market sovereign debt -- is growing,'' Nouriel Roubini of New York University's Stern School of Business and Brad Setser of Oxford University said in a research paper this month.
As their findings suggest, the current system is looking more and more like a huge pyramid scheme. As long as Asian central banks stick together and buy dollar-denominated securities, things are fine. Once they start selling, virtually everyone loses -- central banks experience capital losses and economies become less competitive. Central banks have an interest in keeping the game going and hoping others do, too.
Yet this week's events underline ``how vulnerable the dollar is to negative news,'' says Carl Weinberg, chief global economist at High Frequency Economics, referring to the dollar's biggest drop against the euro in six months. The news, Weinberg says, ``unwrapped a lot of tightly-wrapped traders who were spring- loaded to sell greenbacks on adverse news.''
No Altruism
Sure,
Central banks here don't buy
This may be as good a time as any for the region's monetary authorities to avoid losses ahead of a possible surge in
Yet it's a complex issue for Asian economies, which find themselves in a ``damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't'' situation.
Devalue vs Reform
Hopefully the rest of Asia will follow
The Kafkaesque state of the global financial system may leave
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Prudent Investor says
Should Mr. Pesek's wish come true, it would mean a BIG "OUCH" for the US dollar and its economy.
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