Thanks for the info eagl, interesting(not sarcasm), but how does it disprove the fact the dollar is not stronger than the euro? Maybe I misread it, maybe he meant the dollar is stronger this week than before, not more than the euro.
Confusedly yours,
Mensa
I did not intend to imply that the dollar was stronger than the euro, only that it had strengthened recently and that will have a lot of implications. Oil will be cheaper, but that will lead some oil producers to tighten supply. The price of gold and other commodities initially dropped as expected, but then some commodities, such as gold, rebounded as they are seen as a save haven in times of economic fluctuation no matter how strong the dollar is.
And on top of that is the fact that oil prices were inflated by up to 50% due to out of control speculation on oil futures as a hedge against future demand and continued dollar weakness. So the price of oil drops to where it *should* be (near $100/bbl before the dollar strengthens, a bit less than that if the dollar improves) but other prices remain high as investors look for ways to mitigate losses in the US stock market and keep their assets from going poof when their retard bank "invests" in bundled sub-prime mortgages that have no real value.