Saturday, February 7, 2015
U.S. Winning (Losing) Currency Wars
With anemic global growth, most central banks are in a race to the
bottom in an attempt to devalue the country's domestic currency. Over the
past year, the U.S. dollar has gained 16 percent
versus a basket of 26 major trading partners. And U.S. exporters are
beginning to feel the crunch. For example, Proctor & Gamble blamed a
31 percent drop in second quarter profits on the stronger U.S. dollar.
The stronger dollar expanded the U.S. trade deficit to $46.6 billion,
the highest level in two years.