China’s
“Confrontational” Move Succeeds
Global Markets Are Plummeting
Stes de
Necker
Stock
market watchers were horrified on Monday morning 24 August 2015 as the Dow Jones Industrial average dropped precipitously over
1,000 points just after the opening trading bell.
Though
there were roller coaster-like efforts at recovery throughout the day, the
market ultimately closed down by 588 points, which came on the heels of several
days in a row of major market losses last week.
The
massive Monday dip is largely being blamed on China’s market correction of
more than 8.5 percent, along with the European markets slipping into a
full-blown bear market, causing the Volatility Index, or “fear index” to spike
by nearly half.
The
crashing global markets have resulted in plunging prices for commodities,
including crude oil, which looks good at the gas
pump, but creates dangerous ripples that can adversely affect other parts of
the economy.
Possible
reasons for the crashing markets include a major slowdown in China’s economy, financial uncertainty in Europe, most notably
Greece, as well as the ever-present threat that the Federal Reserve will
finally raise interest rates, something they have refrained from doing for too
long.
According
to Business Insider, Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid
said Monday, “We’ve long felt that the only thing preventing another financial
crisis has been extraordinary central bank liquidity and general interventions
from the global authorities which we still expect to continue for a long while
yet.”
Reid
added, “So when policy changes, risks arise. The genesis of this recent
sell-off has been the threat of the Fed raising rates next month, but China’s
confrontational move two weeks ago and the subsequent knock-on through EM have
accelerated us towards something more serious.”
Speaking
of China’s “confrontational move,” conservative radio and TV host Glenn Beck
recently addressed the issue with a financial expert last week, saying the
deliberate devaluation of China’s currency could mean “all-out economic
warfare” against the West, according to The Blaze.
“They’ve
launched all-out economic warfare,” chief economic researcher Jason Buttrill
said. “China devalued their currency, kicking off the biggest fall in over two
decades.”
He
went on to explain how a weak currency helps China, due to their economy being
largely based upon cheap exports, but notes how their move could lead to a
“tsunami of deflation” in western economies.
He
further explained how China’s move to deflate Western economies could allow
them to shift from a cheap export-based economy to a more consumer-centered
one, like that of America.
“Here’s
the second part, and this is crucial,” he concluded. “China is trying to
destroy the dollar.
They want to be the world reserve currency, and if severe
deflation kicks off a depression in the Western world, the opportunity will be
there for this to actually happen. … We’re seeing the beginnings of a
dangerous, non-conventional war.”
The
global economy is most certainly in flux right now, and China’s deliberate
devaluation of their own dollar is proving to be one of the more dangerous
aspects of the volatile uncertainty right now.
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