Originally posted by santafe2
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Being that Canadian mortgages are full recourse loans and if we assume that most of the buyers aren't Chinese kleptocrats (I still have trouble believing this), I just don't see how Canada will condemn a good number of its citizens to debt peonage. Without some way of quickly deflating the debt, they'll either have to work the rest of their lives to pay off the mortgage or maybe they'll emigrate.
These are the factors I see in the Canadian dollar going down:
- The massive housing bubble going bust which will trigger some sort of government intervention that depreciates the currency.
- The commodities bubble bust (see Grantham's latest news letter) that may not recover. Canada needs to hope that the Chinese people ditch the RMB and buy an excessive amount of nickel, potash, aluminum, iron ore, etc. as a store of value. Failing that, hope that India goes on some massive infrastructure binge and creates the next commodities bubble.
- Continued low oil prices thanks to the shale fields in the U.S.
I'm probably not going to short the Canadian dollar simply because there are too many moving parts. It seems in this day and age, the only things that can be shorted, assuming you have a good reason to trade, are gold, crude oil, and frauds. Everything else gets juiced up to maintain the appearances of the Potemkin economy.
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