| Initial Thoughts: G7 Meeting Signals Wall Street's Next Bailout |
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| Written by Eben Esterhuizen | |
| Monday, 14 April 2008 | |
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"Since our last meeting, there have been at times sharp fluctuations in major currencies, and we are concerned about their possible implications for economic and financial stability," says the statement from this weekend's G7 meeting. It was the first time since the Prague meeting of 2000 that the G7 have united to voice explicit concern about moves in major currencies. Does this signal the bottom for the U.S. dollar? Probably not. "The lack of specific reference to the dollar suggests the G7 remains concerned about volatility rather than specific levels," says Danica Hampton at BNZ. “At some point in the coming weeks, we'd expect dollar sellers to return as the market tests the G7's resolve on coordinated intervention." In other words, the G7 is trying to buy the beleaguered dollar some time. Disclosure: I don't have any currency positions, I don't have any positions in U.S. stocks. Comments
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written by David Neubert , April 14, 2008
When do you think jawboning becomes co-ordinated intervention? And it needs to be co-ordinated because history has shown that financial markets will overwhelm any individual central bank efforts.
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