Death of the Dollar

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We’ve all done it, haven’t we? Chucked something in the wash and turned it on too high, only to see it pop out at the end of the cycle and it ends up the size of your hamster. Well, Obama has been doing the same. Except this time it’s not your winter woollies that he’s shrinking, it’s the greenback.

The US currency is shrinking as a percentage of world currency today according to the International Monetary Fund. It’s still in pole position for the moment, but business transactions are showing that companies around the world are today ready and willing to make the move to do business in other currencies.

The US Dollar has long been the world’s number one denomination in world currency supply. It represents 62% of total holdings in foreign exchange in central banks around the world. But, it is in for a tough race from up-and-coming strong currencies. The Japanese Yen and the Chinese Yuan are both giving the Americans a good run for their money. The Swiss franc is too (surprisingly). There is $6 trillion in foreign exchange holdings around the world at any given time, on average and the US Dollar represents almost two-thirds of that.

The fact that Brazil and China have also just signed a currency-swap deal worth something to the tune of $30 billion stands as living proof that the dollar may be further on the wane. China will exceed all expectations in the future as the world’s largest economy. The US will be overtaken. The Chinese currency will one day overtake the Dollar too. Has to be!

Although, it’s not quite there for the moment. China is not near being the world’s reserve currency yet. In order to be the world’s reserve currency there would be the need to produce enormous quantities of what the world wants. China has got that one off pat already. Then, countries holding the reserve currency would need to be able to spend that currency elsewhere in other countries or find a place to put it while waiting to do so. World capital markets are currently in dollars (40%), which means that there would be no possibility of using the Chinese currency. But, that’s only a matter of time. Some are predicting this will happen pretty soon.

The Federal Reserve has come in for some strong criticism over the unconventional Quantitative Easing methods that have resulted in 3 trillion spanking new dollars rolling off the printing presses. This has certainly brought about some degree of worry around the world that the dollar is not quite as safe as it might have been thought to be in the past. Is the world worrying that the dollar is not as safe a bet as it used to be in world domination. Are central banks worried that it will shrink in the wash and the colors will run?

Some are predicting that the dollar will shrink rapidly over the next two years and it will lose its top place as the world’s reserve currency by 2015. In the 1950s the dollar was 90% of total foreign currency holdings around the world. The dollar has definitely lost out to other currencies that are stronger. If there is a continued move and the dollar shrinks, then the resulting catastrophe that will ensue will have a spiral effect on the already enormous US budget deficit (over $1 trillion a year on average).

The only reason the Federal Reserve has been in a position to print more money recently is simply because they are in the strong position to be able to do so as the world’s leading reserve currency. If that changes, then the Americans won’t have the possibility of just hitting the button and setting the printing presses rolling. That means the US will be in no other position than to end up having to pay their debt back.

The US economy and the market are starting to show signs of recovery. Signs. It’s not sustained, hope as they might. If the dollar loses its attraction, then it won’t be used as the international reserve currency. Businesses will start using another currency and the dollar will lose out further still.

Some experts are saying that the problems of the dollar are like a time-bomb ready to explode. Ultimately, it will bring about the death of the dollar. As we stand on and watch, huddled around the coffin as it is lowered into the ground, we know it’s all too late. The flowers have been sent and the Stars and Stripes has been played in recognition of loyal service for the nation.

The QE methods are nothing more than aiding and abetting the already problematic situation of the greenback. We might look back in years to come and reminisce over whether it was the right (long-term) solution to use QE, whether printing bucks sent the greenback to an early grave, or whether it just reached the end of its life and croaked peacefully without making too much noise.

But, criticism of and worry over the dollar and its longevity have been hot topics for years now. The US dollar is a fiat currency that can easily lose status, deriving its value from government regulation and law. But, then again, so is the Euro. So, people living in Europe shouldn’t start throwing stones…they live in glass houses too…and that’s before they start.

Originally posted: Death of the Dollar

You might also enjoy: You’re Miserable USA! | Emerging Markets: Lock, Stock and Barrel | End of the Financial World 2014 |  Kristallnacht on Wall Street? Bull! | China’s Credit Crunch | Working for the Few | USA:The Land of the Not-So-Free  

 


    



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Why Scalia Is Right to Worry About Another SCOTUS Internment Ruling

The U.S. Supreme Court was designed to be an anti-democratic
institution, one that would reject what’s politically popular and
instead do what’s constitutionally right. In the words of James
Madison, the judicial branch is supposed to act as an “impenetrable
bulwark against every assumption of power in the legislative or
executive.” Or at least that’s the theory. In practice, the Supreme
Court has often done something else.

Justice Antonin Scalia
admitted as much
on Monday when he told a law school audience
at the University of Hawaii that “you are kidding yourself if you
think” the Court will not someday issue another decision comparable
to Korematsu
v. United States
, the notorious 1944 ruling where the
Supreme Court upheld President Franklin Roosevelt’s wartime
internment of Japanese-Americans.

“In times of war, the laws fall silent,” Scalia said. “That’s
what was going on — the panic about the war and the invasion of the
Pacific and whatnot. That’s what happens. It was wrong, but I would
not be surprised to see it happen again, in time of war. It’s no
justification, but it is the reality.”

Unfortunately, he’s right. The history of the Supreme Court is
replete with examples of the Court deferring to the very worst sort
of government actions—and not just in time of war. Buck v.
Bell
, for example, a 1927 decision by Progressive
hero
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, allowed the state of
Virginia to forcible sterilize a teenage girl on the eugenicist
grounds that she was “socially inadequate” and an “imbecile.”

As Scalia acknowledged, we’re kidding ourselves if we think
today’s judges are any less susceptible to prejudice or panic, and
would therefore be any less deferential to government power during
trying times. It’s a sobering thought, but one that we are wise to
bear in mind.

But there is one more lesson to be drawn from such history and
it is this: The judiciary has been at its historic best when it
refuses to accept the agendas of lawmakers and presidents. That was
the case in 1917’s Buchanan
v. Warley
, when the Court struck down a popularly-enacted
Jim Crow residential segregation law for violating property rights,
just as it was the case in 1952’s Youngstown
Sheet and Tube Co. v. Sawyer
, where the Court invalidated
President Harry Truman’s unilateral attempt to nationalize the
steel industry during the Korean War.

The Supreme Court was designed to act as a check on the other
branches of government. Our country is better off when it does its
job.

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Why ‘Snow-mageddon’?

“Snow-mageddon.” That’s what many tagged our horrific encounter with the snow, ice, and traffic fiasco of last week. Do you know why this word is invented for such events and where it comes from? Well, let me put on my “theologian’s hat” and take us through some pretty intriguing and often controversial territory. I am not an expert on this topic, but here is how I understand it.

The original word is Armageddon, a name occurring only once in the Bible and designating the place, Mount Megiddo, where the last great epic battle of the ages, good vs. evil, will take place (Revelation 16:16).

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About That 0.397994999 Service Worker: Why Does ADP Goalseek Their “Data”?

A funny thing was found when scouring through the provided ADP excel source data (excel link here) which is used to backfill into the jobs data: nothing less than proof that ADP is goalseeking their final payrolls number.

Exhibit A:

As can be seen in screenshot of the ADP excel sheet, cell J157, which is supposed to represent the 160K service workers added in January, is in reality 159.561397994999, or somehow ADP, which is supposed to be able to poll specific workers with granularity to the individual worker level, saw the added “benefit” of 159,561 round number workers, and an additional .397994999 worker. This amounts to about one arm and half a leg.

The same can be seen in the next door neighbor cell, which indicates that 15,832 “round number” goods workers were added, and then added an additional 0.756476997 worker, or roughly two legs and one arm.

What does this mean? Simple – instead of actually using definitive numbers, ADP is goalseeking the final result based on a predetermined final outcome it wants to hit, and then varies for the growth rate or the monthly addition variable.

Our question is: why does ADP do this if it has any hopes of being credible (when we already know is merely mimics the NFP data with a one month lag), and in order to salvage some credibility, when will ADP finally start providing not seasonally adjusted data like the BLS’ Nonfarm payrolls report?


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1jfrGwf Tyler Durden

About That 0.397994999 Service Worker: Why Does ADP Goalseek Their "Data"?

A funny thing was found when scouring through the provided ADP excel source data (excel link here) which is used to backfill into the jobs data: nothing less than proof that ADP is goalseeking their final payrolls number.

Exhibit A:

As can be seen in screenshot of the ADP excel sheet, cell J157, which is supposed to represent the 160K service workers added in January, is in reality 159.561397994999, or somehow ADP, which is supposed to be able to poll specific workers with granularity to the individual worker level, saw the added “benefit” of 159,561 round number workers, and an additional .397994999 worker. This amounts to about one arm and half a leg.

The same can be seen in the next door neighbor cell, which indicates that 15,832 “round number” goods workers were added, and then added an additional 0.756476997 worker, or roughly two legs and one arm.

What does this mean? Simple – instead of actually using definitive numbers, ADP is goalseeking the final result based on a predetermined final outcome it wants to hit, and then varies for the growth rate or the monthly addition variable.

Our question is: why does ADP do this if it has any hopes of being credible (when we already know is merely mimics the NFP data with a one month lag), and in order to salvage some credibility, when will ADP finally start providing not seasonally adjusted data like the BLS’ Nonfarm payrolls report?


    



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PTCUMC’s Global Impact Celebration starts today

Peachtree City United Methodist Church’s Global Impact Celebration (GIC) starts this evening at its Worship Ministry Center, 225 Robinson Rd. The event continues through Feb. 9.

The celebration is open to the public and will feature speakers from around the world and around the neighborhood, with events for all ages.

More than 20 missionary guests will participate, including local organizations like Fayette Samaritans, Healing Bridge Clinic and Square Foot Ministry, as well as regional and international organizations. Call 770-487-6499 to register; most events are free.

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Religion Briefs 02/05/14

LDS plans Valentine Dance
The Peachtree City Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS) will host an Adult (ages 18 and up) Valentines Dance Saturday, Feb. 8, from 7 – 10 p.m., at the church, 101, Peachtree Pkwy. South. There is  no charge; everyone is welcome.

COS will have ‘soul music’ service

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Bondservant Bible Study class rescheduled; starts tomorrow

Potential Bondservant Bible studyers are invited to several informal, informative, and informational mini-receptions, all scheduled for Thursday mornings from Feb. 6 through May 29, anytime between 10 and 11:30 a.m.

Come and get a cup of coffee or tea, and leaf through a complete copy of the Bible Study and talk with the authors, Pastor Knox and Dr. Dee Herndon.

read more

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Three new vestry members elected at Nativity Episcopal

Three new members have been named to the vestry (governing board) of Episcopal Church of the Nativity in Fayetteville.

Hazel Hinkson and Louis LeBlanc were elected to three-year terms. Joan Tillirson was named to complete the one year remaining in the term of a vestry member who has resigned.

The election was held Sunday, Jan. 26 at the annual parish meeting. Presiding was the Rev. Rita L. Henault, who on Feb. 1 will mark her seventh year as Nativity’s rector.

read more

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