Takes a lot more dollars to buy slightly improved stocks!?!
What we have is not a stock market rally but an adjustment to global market prices. Fully 80% of the movement in the S&P can be explained by the movement in the dollar index. [/] That is a profile well known to emerging market investors. Whenever the Brazilians would pull another currency devaluation, stock prices rose to compensate, as tradeable assets floated up to world market prices. The bank bailout has made Americans poorer relative to the rest of the world and created the illusion of a stock market recovery. [My emphasis]
From a Asia Times blog post by Spengler, If Asset Prices Are Dropping, Why Are Banks Rising?, more below:
Our author made quite a few dollars for himself and for his then employer, the Bank of America, a few years back. As Spengler of the Asia Times he has been a top notch explainer of Obama.
I report and link. You decide. - BJon
Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the LORD our God. - Psalms 20:7
More from a Asia Times blog post by Spengler, If Asset Prices Are Dropping, Why Are Banks Rising?
If Asset Prices Are Dropping, Why Are Banks Rising? [/] Stock Market Rally or Dollar Devaluation? [/] August 21st, 2009 [/] By David Goldman [aka Spengler]
[[See chart at above link.]] The chart below shows the SPX (vertical scale) vs the dollar bullish ETF UUP (horizontal scale) for the year to date: [/] Fully 80% of the movement in the S&P can be explained by the movement in the dollar index.
Statistical analysis confirms the visual impression that the two variables are moving in lockstep. In the chart below [[See chart at above link.]] we see the rolling three-month correlation between daily returns to SPX and the dollar bullish ETF UUP, which mimics the dollar index DXY. [/] Something ominous is at work here. Typically, a stronger dollar goes together with a stronger stock market. That is what we observe prior to the bank bailout last fall. Starting in the third quarter of 2008 and going to the present, the correlation turns sharply and persistently negative. A cheaper dollar means higher stock prices, as US assets are marked down for global investors.
What we have is not a stock market rally but an adjustment to global market prices. Fully 80% of the movement in the S&P can be explained by the movement in the dollar index. [/] That is a profile well known to emerging market investors. Whenever the Brazilians would pull another currency devaluation, stock prices rose to compensate, as tradeable assets floated up to world market prices. The bank bailout has made Americans poorer relative to the rest of the world and created the illusion of a stock market recovery.
That does not necessarily mean that inflation will return to the US, as some analysts believe. Foreign investors are not likely to buy homes in Cleveland (although the dollar devaluation certainly should help real estate prices in New York or San Francisco). And the combination of high unemployment and deferred retirement (greeter jobs at Wal-Mart will be in great demand) will keep wages down. The price of international tradeables, though, will affect US inflation, which is why I continue to recommend classic commodity hedges (including gold and oil) rather than TIPS. […] [My ellipses and emphasis]