Boom and Bubble Blog

An analysis of US economic trends and their relations with world development dynamics

Friday, January 01, 2010

Periphery reflating - PrudentBear Dec 31, 2009

To an extent never before imagined, economies around the globe could partake in aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus, rapidly expand Credit, reflate markets and economies – and have little worry about currency vulnerability or an outflow of speculative finance (a far cry from the ‘90s). The world had changed, and global asset prices were revalued based on a backdrop of expected ongoing dollar devaluation and newfound resiliencies in Credit system and financial flows to (“undollar”) “Periphery” economies and non-dollar asset classes.


i will suggest that 2009 marked a historic inflection point in global finance. I have argued that years of policy mismanagement led to the breakdown in the dollar reserve “system” - that for more than 60 years worked (with varying success) in restraining global Credit expansion. This year saw key inflationary/reflationary biases move decidedly from the “Core” (U.S.) to the “Periphery” (notably China, Asia, Brazil, India and the “emerging” markets). Importantly, a discredited dollar and the prospect of ongoing U.S. policy-induced currency devaluation created a backdrop of extraordinary market accommodation for “Periphery” Credit systems.

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