Monday, October 4, 2010

America's National Parks and the U.S. Dollar

"No one is speaking English" whispered my companion. as we hiked through the Bryce National Park last week. We encountered a surprising stream of hikers on the back country trails.

Young (take it with some perspective, I'm 61), fit, and friendly, the trekkers seemed everywhere. Germans, Dutch, Asians, Australians, and people from I have no idea where, all cheerfully waving as they strode by. Americans that actually live in the USA?  Well, I'm sure some were around, but if so, they made themselves scarce -- perhaps whiling away the time in nearby Las Vegas.

The torch of leadership in the world is changing.  The U.S. still has its natural wonders  and a flood of visitors  is eager to see the unrivaled beauty of the American West.  The allure of the wild west draws back which fled over seas.

Consider:  It is hard to believe you could mail a letter in the U.S. with a 1 cent stamp at one time. Now it takes 44 cents (with rumors of more to come).  At least National Parks haven't devalued like stamps and other paper assets such as the U.S. dollar.
The U.S. still has its natural wonders.  A flood of overseas visitors  is eager to see the unrivaled beauty of the American West.  The Wild West entralled Europeans 150 years ago.  Now, the rest of the world has joined them.
However, the torch of leadership in the world is changing.  The U.S. dollar has lost 10% of its value just since last June. Our leaders seem hell bent on devaluing it even more as they try to perpetrate the illusion that we can have $30/hour manufacturing jobs and compete with people who work for $3.00/hour or less.

We are a deeply indebted nation and Asians (remember the "starving Chinese" your mother told you about) are calling the shots.  Fortunately, we grow,  most of our own food, so no need starvie.  Yet selling food overseas may soon become more profitable.

You got this crazy scheme:  The U.S. government prints money and then lends it to banks at zero percent interest (ostensibly to "stimulate" the economy).  The banks take the cheap money, buy longer dated treasuries (who else would buy them?) for risk free profits on the spread as they try to repair their balance sheets.  With the possible exception of "Cash for Clunkers" very little ends up in the hands of the American public.  The longer this charade goes on, the more impoverished America becomes.

We simply cannot afford social security, national healthcare, high minimum wages, highly paid government employees anymore but our leaders don't seem to get it.  The dollar is strong only when European crisis erupts -- they have similiar, possibly worse problems.

Even more disturbing a weakening dollar robs Americans of their savings by stealth. The bank statement may look good but the dollars buy less and less.  Forget about traveling overseas.  Cash and treasuries are a loosing game to everyone but the banks.  Most of us just aren't aware of it yet.
As the U.S. continues to sink into a recessionary quagmire you might consider investing in international blue chips, commodities, and emerging market ETFs, assets which have more than paper backing them.

Nervous about picking foreign stocks?  Use ETFs!  Since ETFs invest in multiple companies, most practically eliminate corporate risk by investing in dozens if not hundreds of companies.  You may wish to consider EEM (ishares MSCI Emerging Markets Index), GMF (SPDR S&P Emerging Asia Pacific), BKF (ishares MSCI BRIC Index), or DGS (WisdomTree Emerging Mkts SmallCap Div).

Its a little riskier but TBF and TBT provide protection and profit opportunities against the inevitable rise in U.S. interest rates as reality sets in.  And the flood of overseas tourists visiting the U.S?  Thank them!  They are returning some of the vast amount of dollars that have fled to foreign shores in recent years.


Disclosure: Long BKF, DGS, TBT

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