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Canadian Dollar Suffers from U.S. Slowdown!

Subscribe to Aridni Author: Guest Writer - forex,Investing
Have you ever seen someone make a mistake and not only do they suffer for it but someone else does as a result also? Well, this is exactly what’s happening to Canada right now.  

You see, most of last year, you could say that the Canadian dollar was falling because of falling commodity prices. Since Canada exports so many widely used commodities like oil and lumber, when prices fall, so do their profit margins. It costs them about the same amount to produce the product but what they can get for it in the market is determined by where those commodities are trading at the time.  

USD/CAD Pushes Towards 1.30 Once Again!

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Last Year the Commodities Crash Killed the Canadian dollar. This Year it’s the U.S. Economic Crash that’s Killing Them! 

So that was what hurt them much of last year. Now we roll into 2009, and they get killed by another dynamic: the increasing slowdown of the U.S. economy! 

For three months in a row now, the U.S. economy has shed around 600,000 jobs or more back to back! The unemployment rate seems to be going somewhat parabolic at this point. It jumped from 7.6% previously to 8.1% now.  

On top of this, to buffer the blow of the slowdown, Canada’s central bank had to lower interest rates once again (to 0.50%) which put it at the lowest their interest rates have EVER been! 

While this is a dynamic that will eventually be good for their economy, it hurts their currency right now for sure.  

They also stated that they may implore “Quantitative Easing”. What the heck is that? Well, in simple terms it means that they will print money out of thin air and load up the banks with so much excess cash that they are more likely to lend money and thus spur economic growth.  

While that may eventually give their economy a boost, it kills their currency. Why? Look at it this way. Anytime something becomes more abundant, it becomes worth less. Anytime something becomes scarce, it becomes more valuable. (This is why a Corvette in the 1960’s may have gone for $3,000 then and would sell for $30,000 to $60,000 today. These days, they are scarce…yet they weren’t back then).  

So when the market is flooded with more money (Canadian dollars), that money gets devalued and is worth less. Therefore it takes more (Canadian) dollars to buy the same amount of goods.  

The U.S. is Printing Money too, but Right Now they are Saved Because they are the World’s Reserve Currency (and thus a “Safe Haven”). 

Now, you may say but isn’t the U.S. doing the same thing? After all, their economy is slowing down. They are printing money too.  

I would say, while I won’t deny that point, the U.S. dollar presently benefits from what is called the “safe haven bid”. What does that mean? It means that investors all over the globe are running to the safety of the U.S. dollar because it’s the world’s reserve currency right now.  

In other words, if there’s one currency on the face of the earth that you are most likely to keep and continue to use, it’s the one that most of the goods are priced in all over the world. For example, gold, oil, wheat, soybeans, lumber, etc. are all priced in U.S. dollars.  

Therefore in crazy times like this, it enjoys the benefit of being the world’s reserve currency. However, once the global economy finally does return to normal, then this “benefit” will suddenly go away and the dollar will just have to stand on its own fundamentals once again. We all know that once that happens, the buck doesn’t have that much to stand on. Therefore, the “dollar party” may come to an end ONCE the global economy normalizes.  

In the mean time, Canada’s currency (and economy) will continue to suffer as the U.S. lays off more workers and continues to slow down. Remember, they derive about 79% of their exports from the U.S. That’s huge! In fact, it’s so huge…it’s the largest trading relationship between two countries according to Canada’s trade department.  

This really is huge, because the U.S. hasn’t had three back to back months of layoffs this big since they started keeping records on it back in 1939. So from at least as far as our records go back, this has never happened on this scale before! 

So when you add all of this up, you come up with the fact that the U.S. dollar has a high probability of continuing to rise against the Canadian dollar. So with that said, I think you may find the USD/CAD rate to break the 1.30 barrier in the coming weeks to months.  

Therefore, if you would like to take advantage of this situation and profit from the pressure on the Canadian dollar, then take these three steps: 

  1. Get Educated about Currencies and What Makes them go up and down: You can get your an online education here that comes with live instructors that are there to answer your questions.
  2. Get a FREE demo account here that comes with REAL TIME quotes and charts. This way you can learn how to place trades before risking one cent of your money in the currency market.
  3. Then once you’ve gotten educated over the course of 8-10 days in your course and you are familiar with your demo trading station, then open up your live trading account here. If you start with a micro account, then I would suggest putting in $300 to $2,000 in the account. Start small. If you choose to start with a mini account, then you might fund your live account with $2,000 to $10,000. Start with enough capital to be practical while trading only 1-2 lots per trade at first.

Sean Hyman is today’s guest writer, he is the head instructor at MyWealth.com  
 


Spoiled in the Ghetto- Behind the Scenes of Nonprofits

Subscribe to Aridni Author: Danielle - Philosophy of the Wealthy

When I talked to my friend Heather* the other night, she had just gotten home from a long day at her nonprofit internship in Virginia and her voice was shaking. “I’m so scared, Danielle” she said. “You won’t believe what this cab driver told me.” Heather was living in an area that those in her wealthy suburban neighborhood in Massachusetts would consider a ghetto.

“Now, I don’t want to scare you or anything,” the cab driver told her, “but I feel it would be an injustice if I didn’t warn you about the area where you’re living.” The driver continued, “I actually cringed when I pulled up and saw you waiting outside for me.” Heather gripped her wallet for the duration of the drive. When they reached her house, he said “I would get your key ready before you get out of the car and run for the door. Don’t stand around outside fiddling for your key. Some of my friends even say that if they were cab drivers, they ‘sure as hell wouldn’t go to that area’” Heather thanked the driver for his warnings and gave him a large tip. Not until she had walked up the “rotted, splintered” steps did Heather realize how fortunate she was. Many of the regular employees at her company lived in this area year round because it was all they could afford. Here she was, a privleged suburban kid living on her parents’ dime. “My mom would have gladly paid for a nicer place,” Heather told me, “but there aren’t any good neighborhoods for miles around.” Lucky for Heather, in six months she will return to the safety of her hometown, but for hundreds of people at her nonprofit this was all they could afford.

Heather’s story is not unique. When I interned at the American Cancer Society, my supervisor explained that he wanted to take me out to dinner to thank me for my hard work, but couldn’t afford it. Other friends I have talked to in the nonprofit world can barely make ends meet. The majority of the employees at Heather’s organization earn under $28,000 a year with the president only making $31,385. Heather is only making $50 a week on her stipend and on an average day she spends $15 of that on cabs because she is afraid to walk alone in her neighborhood or for that matter to the grocery store. Therefore, she also relies on private transportation to eat her dinner every night in a restaurant. The catch- she wouldn’t be able to afford to live even in the ghetto without her mom’s credit card.

Why is it that those of us who are committed to making a difference with our lives are forced to scrape by while the CEOs of Fortune 500 companies are earning millions in stock options alone? A DC lobbyist I know once commented that the best nonprofit employees either have extensive credentials and are only willing to devote their services if they get competitively paid OR are so passionate about a particular cause that they would be willing to work for free. I do not believe this is healthy for our global society, for it makes it difficult for anyone except the independently wealthy to afford to live comfortably while donating their time to a good cause. If nonprofits want to attract and retain a talented workforce, they need to start compensating their people better.

As a result of her internship experience, Heather who has dreamed of being an animal rights advocate since her sophomore year of college, become more cognizant of the personal sacrifices that would entail. As she put it, “I realized that, in order for me to turn my passion into a career, I would be forced to live in areas that I never imagined myself even visiting.” Heather feels torn between what she senses is her purpose in life and the hard shell of the real world. “I want to have a career that is meaningful,” she told me tonight online, but maybe a nonprofit isn’t the best way to go.” I feel the same way in the area of cancer advocacy. The bottom line- how can the children of nonprofit employees make their mark on the world if their parents are barely getting by? We need to consider the next generation of workers in America and how their college educations will be paid for.