Markets plunge on near-$100 oil, a record-low dollar, and billions in distressed debt
Posted by: in Stocks Money NewsFiled under: After the bell, Major movement, Bad news, China, Market matters, Oil
The New York Times reports that the Dow lost 360 points — or 2.64% — back to where it was before Ben Bernanke cut the Federal Funds Rate an unexpectedly large 50 basis points last week. My message to Bernanke is that cutting rates just to keep the market from falling is not a winning strategy.
The Fed is supposed to keep inflation in check, and it’s failing at that job. How so? At $96.37, the price of oil is near an unprecedented $100, and gasoline prices — which blessedly dropped during the fall — are poised to rise about 50% to $4.50 a gallon, just as people step up their driving during the holidays. On January 19, 2001, oil was $24 a barrel – it has since quadrupled. Meanwhile, the cost of heating a home is hitting a record — $3.05 a gallon for home heating oil in Massachusetts. It may be higher elsewhere.
Then there’s the little problem that the Fed has engendered through its rate cuts — a dollar that’s plunging like a knife. Relative to the euro, the dollar has lost 13% from $1.30 at the beginning of January 2007, to its current $1.47. And since January 19, 2001, the dollar has lost 60% of its value! Back then, one euro bought 92 cents. In addition to Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen, China is now seeking to switch from the dollar to the euro. So the dollar drop is feeding on itself.
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