As you guys know, I’m a trader. I eat, sleep and breathe the $4 trillion Forex market on any given day.
But that’s just my day job.
The other half of my life is spent at home. I live in Texas. I’m married, I have four kids and I’m paid in U.S. dollars like 300 million or so other Americans.
That means my wife and I have to pay for our groceries, gas, kids’ school supplies, DVD rentals, etc. with dollars just like everyone else here in the U.S.
So like you, I have a vested interest when the U.S. dollar buys me less. In economic terms, that’s known as purchasing power.
Now as a trader, I can tell you the dollar has lost against nearly all major currencies in the Forex market since the late ‘90s. (See the sidebar below for more.)
But I’d like to step outside of the Forex world for just a moment and discuss just how the dollar has sunk beyond of the realm of currency trading, for all of you, who like me have to pay for your items with dollars…
1998 Dollars and 2011 Dollars Are NOT the Same Thing
Just to show you how weak the dollar is for consumers, let’s look at how many “extra dollars” it now takes to buy things nowadays.
To illustrate this, let’s review the common goods you would have purchased roughly 10 years ago (1998 actually).
Back in 1998…
How Currencies Have Jumped vs. the Dollar in the Forex Market (From 1998 – Present Day) Japanese yen: Up 57% |
An average house cost $129,000. Now it’s $172,000 (33% increase)…and that’s after the real estate market crashed.
A gallon of gas was $1.15 and now it’s almost three times that at $3.15 (actually 274% higher)!
A loaf of bread was $1.26. It’s now $2.79 (121% higher).
A dozen eggs cost 88 cents, now $2.89 (228% higher).
A postage stamp was 32 cents.
Fast forward to 2011, and its 44 cents (38% higher).
What can we thank for the higher prices?
Well, as strange as it sounds in this current post-recession, still deflationary environment, inflation stole your dollar’s value over the last decade.
Why Most Americans Don’t See the Dollar is Dropping
Inflation – especially over the years – is so subtle that most people don’t notice.
It’s a lot like boiling a lobster in a pot.
If you drop a lobster into boiling water, your lobster will try to escape. But if you drop a lobster into warm water, and slowly turn up the heat, lobsters won’t realize it and before they know it…they are boiling.
Guess who’s the lobster now? The American consumer.
The U.S. government and its close cousin, the Federal Reserve is pretty slick. They turn up the inflation heat by eroding your dollars slowly. But it’s consistent enough to where your dollar is worth much less just 10 short years later.
Think about it. If I’d told you that tomorrow morning you will pay 274% higher for gas and 121% higher for a loaf of bread…you would freak out. There would be rioting in the streets. (A lot like what’s happening in Tunisia today.)
Of course, the U.S. government knows that too.
So the Federal Reserve ratchets up inflation just fast enough to help their causes (like paying back their debts with cheaper dollars)…but they do it slow enough to where most Americans won’t notice.
The Dollar’s Purchasing Power Has Dropped 27% Since 1998
Now sure you can look at gas prices, and see inflation creeping back into the market. But the reality is the costs of EVERYTHING you need are going up astronomically and the dollars in your pocket buy less and less all the time.
What’s even worse is that while the costs of goods are on the rise again…unemployment is hitting its highest levels in 26 years. So that means that companies won’t raise salaries to keep up with the ever-rising cost of living.
And unfortunately prices are only going higher from here. In fact, in the next decade, prices could be another 50-100% higher than they are now.
Three Ways to Protect You and Your
Family Against the Falling Dollar
You don’t have to be a Forex trader to be affected by the falling dollar. No, just make a trip to the grocery store or try to fill up your tank, and you also have a vested interest in how the dollar performs.
Now of course, none of us can stop inflation. But there is a way to hedge against it, and the falling dollar. Here are a few ideas how…
• Diversify at least 15% of your portfolio into stronger foreign currencies including the Canadian dollar and Aussie dollar. You can do this easily with currency ETFs if you’re not ready to jump into FX trading.• Calculate how much you have to spend on stocks and bonds for the next year, and then drop 5-10% of that into gold or silver. Again, you can easily do this with gold or silver ETFs.
• Look at your retirement plan. If your entire IRA is in dollars, consider upgrading with a long-term foreign currency CD.
Bottom line: The dollar is losing on all counts. As a trader, I can see the dollar’s overall decline happening on a day-to-day basis. But as a consumer, you can feel the dollar dropping where it really hurts – your wallet. Take action now to protect yourself.
Thanks for reading!
Sean Hyman, Editor Currency Cross Trader
Blog: http://wcw.worldcurrencywatch.com/
I still enjoy reading Hymans various postings I see online but don’t make the mistake of signing up for his trading signals. OUCH. I did after many months of reading his editorials or postings as you see above. He is a good writer but not a good signal provider.
I enjoy his writings too, but to be honest I never tried his signal service and I don’t plan to. I prefer to trade on my own and make my own winning or losing decisions.
Thanks for sharing your experience though. If you wish to chat with me and other traders about topics such as these I invite you to join the Forex Nirvana forum where I hang around at:
http://www.forexnirvana.com