Central banks rebuilding foreign- exchange reserves at the
fastest pace since 2004 are crowding out private investors seeking U.S.
dollars, boosting demand even as the Federal Reserve considers printing more
currency, Bloomberg reports.
After falling to an all-time low of 60.5 percent in the
second quarter of last year, the dollar’s share of global reserves rose 1.6
percentage points to 62.1 percent in December, the latest International
Monetary Fund figures show. The buying has left the private sector with $2
trillion less than it needs, according to investment-flow data by Morgan
Stanley, which sees the dollar gaining 8.2 percent in 2012, the most in seven
years.
While the Fed has created more than $2 trillion under its
stimulus programs since 2008, the flows signal that there may actually be a
shortage of dollars to meet demand as Europe’s debt crisis deepens and the
global economy slows. The dollar has risen 3.5 percent since the end of April
against a basket of the most-widely traded currencies even amid speculation
that the Fed, which meets this week, may undertake the type of stimulus
measures that weakened it in the past.
Read all about it at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-18/dollar-shortage-seen-in-2-trillion-gap-says-morgan-stanley-1-.html
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