Sorry for opening a thread on something related to commodity marketing, but did anyone hedge the dollar a couple of days ago on the low?
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Not yet but im watching very close. Do you think we have seen the bottom? Banks are still saying we will be parity and beyond but yikes... Seems anything can happen in these troubled times, it doesnt really have to make sense. If we see it go below .90 I will definately be hedging a large percentage of our farms sales.
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If you guys can tell us if USA will continue to be the best of the worst and/or if Europe/Spain/Greece have hit there lowest point, then we can discuss weather or not the dollar has hit it's low. Impossible to pick a bottom or top in the currency market. You can not speculate on currency and pick a bottom to the similar extent that you can on grain.
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I Agree Dave444 but the dollar is a big part of our pricing system particularly anything trading in US$, and it is something to be mindful of but needs to be part of a larger Marketing Strategy. Certainly you have to also take into consideration who your competitors on the world stage are for each commodity and evaluate their currency as well. For example Yellow Peas, Flax and Canola might be more affected by the Euro. But a partial hedge on Lentils for example in a situation where you felt strongly the dollar was going to rise in a "significant" way against the USD should be looked at. Anyone working for anything less than 5% is going to get burned but if an opportunity is there for closer to 10% it has to be looked at.
There are several speculators playing forex every day and you have to be prepared for volatility, but that is precisely the reason we see opportunities like the one that may be upon us. Time as always will determine the winners and the losers.
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1. Keep your eye on the US bond market.
Mainly China and Japan are UK buying. What if they stop buying?
2. A lot of global corporations are in debt up to their necks. There is a possibility you may not get paid by some of them.
3. The US is only buying time. Pars
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Im starting to rub off on you eh pars,lol.
The largest buyer of us bonds is actually the us
government.
This is the definition of monetization of debt.Which
is never talked about by people who liked to talk
about the markets.Which baffles me.
The other funny thing is the us government spends
more on the military than it did during ww2.Think
about that fact for a second.
Did i say funny i ment scary.
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