NZ
makes the headlines on Max Keiser
New
Zealand opens new front in currency war
In
this episode of the Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert in
the second part of a two part currency war special focus on George
Osborne hoping a rising stock market will convince voters his
economic policies are working and the new front in the South Pacific
as New Zealand launches defensive measures against global currency
devaluations. In the second half, Max talks to Jim Rickards, author
of Currency Wars, for the second half of their interview focusing on
currency wars and hot wars.
Here is the original item -
In
global currency war, a new front opens in the South Pacific
May
14, 2013
From
(way) down under comes a new front in the push and pull over world
currency values: Stung by the rise in the New Zealand dollar,
affectionately known as the kiwi, the country’s central bank last
week acknowledged that it had intervened in foreign exchange markets
to try to fight any further appreciation.
It
was a cautionary move, New Zealand Reserve Bank Governor Graeme
Wheeler said, to “take . . . the tops off rallies” and curb
what New Zealanders worry is a runaway property market driven by
global money rushing into the country, according to reports in the
New Zealand Herald.
If
the currency fight has been joined in Wellington, can it be anything
less than a global war?
That
is the renewed concern as more countries react to the ocean of money
released into the world financial system by major central banks, and
nations with large trade deficits — such as the United States —
struggle to boost their own exports.
Exchange
rates play an important role in world trade, shaping where companies
buy their parts or commodities, determining the prices consumers pay
for imported goods, and influencing financial and investment
decisions. While savvy international firms have ways to buffer what
they do against daily exchange rate movements, the actions of a
determined central bank can alter the prospects of nations around the
world — acting in effect like a tax or other trade barrier. China’s
peg of its currency to the value of the dollar at what many consider
an artificially low level, for example, has helped expand its exports
by making them cheaper than products from other countries.
Recent
steps by Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, have now become
a central concern. The impact of the country’s aggressive new
monetary policy has been quick and broadly felt — kindling debate
over whether the Bank of Japan is using its last resort tools to
boost growth, or actively trying to influence exchange rates to give
its exporters an advantage. As with any such effort, the concern is
that other countries might react in kind — touching off a corrosive
competition that leaves everyone worse off.
In
a global economic review, PIMCO chief executive Mohamed El-Arian said
central banks were pushing the world economy toward a dangerous fork
in the road — one path leading to renewed and stable growth, one
leading toward crisis and intense competition among countries for
shrinking economic returns. To date, he said, the evidence points to
loose monetary policy pushing up asset prices and currency values to
potentially dangerous levels.
“By
venturing deep into experimental policy territory . . . they have
inserted a remarkable wedge — a disconnect — between market
prices and underlying economic and financial fundamentals,” he
wrote.
The
yen has fallen sharply against the dollar this year, crossing the
threshhold 100 level, and import prices from Japan consequently have
fallen for three months running, according to the U.S. Labor
Department. Australia and Korea cut interest rates in recent days to
try to boost lagging growth, in part out of concern over the rise in
the value of their currencies against the yen and the dollar.
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