Classic Realcent Archives
Classic Realcent Archives
Home | Profile | Active Topics | Active Polls | Members | Private Messages | Search | FAQ
Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 Bullion Coins and Metals Investing Forums
 Silver Bullion, Gold, & other Bullion Metals
 Ignore the Dollar Index
 Forum Locked
 Printer Friendly
Author Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  

Ardent Listener
Administrator


USA
4841 Posts

Posted - 03/30/2010 :  16:01:53  Show Profile Send Ardent Listener a Private Message
Why The Silver Investor Should Ignore the Dollar Index


<--Of Course, we Know That Silver is Not an "investment", It's a Vehicle For Maintaining Buying Power Into The Future
You must be logged in to see this link.
Many a silver investor takes the dollar index to heart.

Often thrown around as the end-all solution for tracking the value of the US dollar, the dollar index is one of the poorest indicators for the true performance of the currency itself. Silver investors who pay heed to the dollar index will certainly be led astray, as there are fundamental reasons why the index simply is not accurate.

Understanding the Dollar Index

The US dollar index tracks the daily price of the US dollar against a basket of world currencies. By doing so, it provides a very simple and basic indicator to track the change of the dollar's value without complicated futures contracts and foreign exchange contracts. All told, it is a very easy way to track the value of the US dollar, but only against the value of other currencies.

Why the Index Fails

The reason the US dollar index isn't a good indicator is due to the way it is calculated. The index itself is made up of only six currencies, which represent 20 nations. The Euro, Yen, Pound, Canadian Dollar, Kronas and Francs are all included in the index.

As you can see from the list itself, the dollar index is relatively un-diversified, even though it includes all the major currency pairs. However, it’s also flawed in that it tracks the value of a fiat currency against many other fiat currencies.

Thus, for the sake of discussion, if the US dollar were to lose half its value while the six major currencies in the index also lost half their value, the US dollar index wouldn't move at all. Silver investor take head!

Ignore the Index

Of the six included currencies, virtually all are represented by central banks that employ essentially the same monetary policy with a few minor exceptions. The European central bank is perhaps slightly “tighter” with monetary policy, as is the Swiss bank; however, the remaining four are practically all in bed with one another. That is, if one nation is inflating, you can count on the others to do the same. Most of this is conducted in the guise of protecting international trade, but often it’s done to devalue the debt that each of these nations owes to others.

Case in Point

To 2002 to 2010, the dollar index plunged from 120 to 80, a change of -33%. However, during that time period, real money – namely, gold and silver – rose by nearly 400%. This is due to the fact that fiat currencies fell equally to gold and silver, with the US dollar losing slightly more ground than the average of the other six components.

If you were to look at the US dollar index and ignore the price of gold and silver, you would think that gold and silver had risen 33%, while the US dollar had fallen 33% – which we know is completely inaccurate.

An Important Component of Precious Metals Investing

Although we often hear the media and prominent investors suggest gold and silver are purely hedges to the US dollar, they're also hedges to every other fiat currency around the globe. This is an important point often lost on new investors: their real money holdings of gold and silver aren't just anti-dollar, but they're anti-fiat.

Realcent.forumco.com disclosure. Please read.
All posts either by the members, moderators, and the administration of http://realcent.forumco.com are for your edification and amusement only. It is not the intent of realcent.forumco.com or its host to provide investment, medical, matrimonial, legal, security or tax advice and nothing posted here should be considered to be so. All rights reserved.


Think positive.

beauanderos
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
2408 Posts

Posted - 03/31/2010 :  18:43:12  Show Profile Send beauanderos a Private Message
For anyone who wants to read up on silver from a "why should I invest in it angle," Dr. Jeff presents some excellent rationales on his website silver-coin-investor.com He's also a frequent contributor to Kitco commentary

Hoard now and hold on!

http://coppermillions.blogspot.com/
http://wherewillyoubein2012.blogspot.com/
Go to Top of Page

Ardent Listener
Administrator



USA
4841 Posts

Posted - 03/31/2010 :  19:05:25  Show Profile Send Ardent Listener a Private Message
"<--Of Course, we Know That Silver is Not an "investment", It's a Vehicle For Maintaining Buying Power Into The Future."

In my opinion, it's both.

Realcent.forumco.com disclosure. Please read.
All posts either by the members, moderators, and the administration of http://realcent.forumco.com are for your edification and amusement only. It is not the intent of realcent.forumco.com or its host to provide investment, medical, matrimonial, legal, security or tax advice and nothing posted here should be considered to be so. All rights reserved.


Think positive.
Go to Top of Page

Be Nice to BankTellers
Penny Sorter Member



USA
77 Posts

Posted - 03/31/2010 :  22:18:58  Show Profile Send Be Nice to BankTellers a Private Message
I get the point of this article, but beware of the statistical bias.

By using 2002 as a base year, the returns of precious metal are overstated.

By using a different set of data, I would like to point out that an ounce of gold in 1980 would cost close to 1300 Swiss Francs, silver at $15/oz in 1980 (admittedly not the high point, mind you) would cost 19 Swiss francs. Today, gold costs about 1300 Swiss francs, and silver about 18 per ounce. Maybe the lesson is fiat is ok if it is built by the Swiss. :)

Grandpa always told me, "Back in 1964..." I listened.

Selling copper cents @ $2.50/lb. + shipping.
Go to Top of Page
  Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  
 Forum Locked
 Printer Friendly
Jump To:
Classic Realcent Archives © 2000-2010 Realcent.org Go To Top Of Page
This page was generated in 0.12 seconds. Powered By: ForumCo v3.4.05
RSS Feed 1 RSS Feed 2
Powered by ForumCo 2000-2008
TOS - AUP - URA - Privacy Policy