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Where Have All the European Investors Gone?
***** Dollar Doldrums
Where have all the European investors gone?
By Daniel Gross
Posted Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2003, at 2:24 PM PT
Several months into the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, frayed
trans-Atlantic ties show no signs of mending. Last week, having
failed to make any progress on its own, the Bush administration
brought former Treasury Secretary James Baker off the bench to
negotiate a workout of Iraq's debt, much of which is held by France,
Germany, and Russia. This week, the Pentagon explicitly banned
France, Germany, and Russia from bidding on reconstruction work in
Iraq.
Of course, the United States needs European cooperation to finance
something even more crucial than the reconstruction of Iraq. We rely
on Europe-Old and New-to finance our private companies and, to a
lesser extent, our government. After all, the United States' biggest
exports today aren't movies or software programs. They're paper
products-stocks, bonds, and other securities. The Europeans are among
the biggest purchasers of these goods. But recent data and recent
currency market action, which has seen the dollar plummet to record
lows against the euro, suggest our erstwhile continental friends may
not be buying what we're selling. If that continues, it could spell
trouble for the already weakened dollar.
The United States exports dollars to buy food, oil, and manufactured
goods. Our foreign trading counterparts tend to send dollars back to
America by purchasing U.S. government bonds, U.S. dollars, so-called
agency debt-which consists largely of mortgage-backed securities-and
corporate stocks and bonds. By recycling the capital we export,
foreigners fund our debt, keep interest rates low, and keep currency
ratios relatively stable. In 2002, foreigners bought a net $547
billion in U.S. assets. In the first nine months of 2003, they
purchased a net $523 billion in U.S. assets. (To see the data, go
here <http://fms.treas.gov/bulletin/b43cm5.doc> and open the file as
a Microsoft Word file. Chart CM-V-1 shows totals for the last several
years; CM-V-3 breaks down the data by country and region.)
The main sources of capital are Europe and Asia. Asia-particularly
Japan and China-accounts for a decent chunk of U.S. government and
agency debt. But the private sector relies largely on Europe, the
broad swath of countries from Turkey to Great Britain. In 2002,
Europe accounted for nearly two-thirds of net corporate stock sales
and 60 percent of net corporate bond sales. This chart
<http://www.treasury.gov/tic/exhibitsc&d.pdf> shows that the United
Kingdom is our most stalwart ally in economic matters, in addition to
geopolitical ones.
Since the beginning of 2002, the dollar has fallen by about 25
percent compared with the euro. That means an espresso at that café
just off the Ponte Vecchio in Florence now costs an American tourist
$2.50 instead of $2. On the flip side, European purchasing power is
higher in U.S. markets than it has ever been. As a result, one might
expect European purchases of dollar-denominated goods-whether they're
Disneyland tickets or Disney's stocks and bonds-to be growing.
But in September, as chart CM-V-1 shows, net foreign purchases of
U.S. assets were less than $16 billion, down dramatically from $62.4
billion in August and $75 billion in July. In September, Europeans
collectively sold about $400 million in U.S.-denominated assets.
Are Europeans going on a buyer's strike in a fit of pique over Iraq?
Not necessarily. For the first nine months, inflows from Europe were
$224 billion. And one month's data does not a trend make. But more
recent data isn't exactly encouraging. Last week the Wall Street
Journal reported that "at November's auction of two-year U.S.
Treasury notes held last week foreign investors bought just 32% of
the $26 billion issue. That compares with the 42% foreigners snapped
up at October's auction of the same size." . . .
Daniel Gross (www.danielgross.net) writes Slate's "Moneybox" column.
You can e-mail him at moneybox@xxxxxxxxxx
<http://slate.msn.com/id/2092348/> *****
--
Yoshie
* Bring Them Home Now! <http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/>
* Calendars of Events in Columbus:
<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>,
<http://www.freepress.org/calendar.php>, & <http://www.cpanews.org/>
* Student International Forum: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osudivest.org/>
* Al-Awda-Ohio: <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Al-Awda-Ohio>
* Solidarity: <http://www.solidarity-us.org/>
- Thread context:
- Re: Texas redistricting & fairness, (continued)
- Where Have All the European Investors Gone?,
Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 12 Dec 2003, 07:41 GMT
- Richard Gott's _Our Empire Story_,
Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 12 Dec 2003, 07:09 GMT
- CAFTA-FTAA fallout,
Eubulides Fri 12 Dec 2003, 06:09 GMT
- FW: UNFORTUNATE MEMO SHOCKER,
Devine, James Fri 12 Dec 2003, 04:42 GMT
- Iraq and labor,
michael Fri 12 Dec 2003, 04:29 GMT
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