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- 18 April 2007
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I am getting ready for a period of high, if not hyper inflation. Get out of cash get into hard assets - commodities, real estate, mining companies. China is doing this right now. The days are numbered for the US dollar. The only reason it is holding up is there is no ready alternative for a world currency. Change that and the US dollar becomes about as valuable as a peso.
We are heading into inflation - not if, when. I give it till the end of the year when we see the signs of inflation hitting.
Interest rates rise because of the “lack” of money as what appears to be beginning now. (deposit interest) Remember it’s not the interest rates it’s the money supply. RBA has no control over rising interest rates unless they start printing excessive amounts of the stuff. Food goes up and basic living items because the loans which produce these products and get them to our tables, have risen. What about the other items? The items we don’t really need! They want to put them up but no one is buying them. So they continue to drop in price just to get a sale.
Meanwhile contractors and manufacturers are lowering their quotes and the average persons wage can now drop. I am still having trouble seeing how inflation comes into the equation without more leverage by the public.
Now is the time to get out of cash?
Is it? I keep thinking it’s not. I get into real estate as you suggest. The properties both sides are reduced in value because of the “lack” of cash causing foreclosures etc. Your/my new property is now valued as per next door. We just lost money because it could have been better spent.
I‘m saying “Now is too early.........”
I would like to be convinced otherwise.....
On a side note:
China has a tonne of US dollars which if they converted will unpeg their currency from the US, makes China’s currency rise which in turn makes China less competitive in exports. Could China be buying metals by the likes of Copper because it’s better than holding US dollars? Inflation? If the US domestic consumption is slow to return and China happens to get it's domestic economy increasing strongly "beyond stimulas". The Chinese won't want their Yuan pegged to the USD anymore will they!