|         Dear Subscriber,          I've  given plenty of arguments in my Money and  Markets columns over the past couple of years as to why I think the  pontifications about the dollar's demise are greatly exaggerated. The fact is,  the dollar is still with us! And it's been trending higher against a basket of most widely-traded currencies since the  global crisis erupted.   Make  no mistake: I'm not a permabull on the dollar. I simply side with the evidence.  And on a relative basis, given the scale of global economic problems, the  dollar is still a front runner in the least ugly contest.   Here  are three reasons why ...   Reason  #1:       Money Is Moving Out       of Emerging Markets ...   The  wave of monetary policy tightening in the emerging market world is threatening  a sharp slowdown in what has been a refuge of growth in the midst, and wake, of  one of the worst global economic downturns on record.   With  the writing on the wall, stocks in these markets have rolled over. Several have  already visited double-digit loss territory for the year — including the likes  of Chile, Indonesia and India.   And  capital has moved away from these countries in favor of the developed markets —  the precise opposite flow most  experts were expecting for 2011. In fact, the weekly outflows in emerging  market ETF's hit record levels earlier this month.   With  that, I think the dollar has the fuel to make its next leg higher. And I think  it can go a lot further and extend a lot longer than many people expect. Especially  when you factor in that the U.S. is expected to outgrow the UK, Japan and the  euro zone this year by nearly 3 to 1.    Meanwhile  market interest rates in the advanced economies have screamed higher in recent  weeks, but the impact has not yet been felt in the dollar.       Reason  #2:       The Dollar Is Losing Merit       as a Funding Currency ...   Both  the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen were the most widely-used funding  currencies when the carry trade (i.e. borrowing low yielding currencies to fund  the purchase of high yielding currencies) was at peak popularity.    This  is because, while most global short-term interest rates were near or well above  5 percent in the late stages of the global credit boom, interest rates in  Switzerland and Japan were still closer to zero. And that made it most  appealing to borrow Swiss francs and yen to fund highly leveraged carry trades.      But  with other developed-market interest rates scraping along the bottom in recent  years, there have been other alternatives to fund carry trades — namely U.S.  dollars.   Now that  is changing ...    As  market interest rates have risen across the board in recent weeks, and as the  bond markets have begun pricing in more risk and more inflation pressures, so  has the appeal of higher market interest rates in the U.S. — like a 10-year  Treasury sniffing toward 4 percent.   Consequently,  we're seeing the early stages of the "carry trade of old" return. And this  dynamic has been most clearly expressed in the dollar/Swiss franc and  dollar/Japanese yen exchange rates.   The  dollar has broken eight-month downtrends against both the Swiss franc and the  Japanese yen. And given the Swiss exposure to European sovereign debt crisis  and Japan's problematic fundamental outlook, this trend break for the dollar  could prove the early stages of a long-term trend change.   Reason  #3:      The Charts Confirm the Dollar       Is in a Good Spot to Buy    When  we hear a report from mainstream media on how the dollar is faring, it's  typically a reference to the trading performance of the dollar index. While  currencies are only valued on a relative basis, against the value of another  currency, the index is a gauge of how the dollar stands against a basket of  widely traded currencies — namely the euro, the Japanese yen, the British  pound, the Canadian dollar, the Swedish krona and the Swiss franc.   You can see in the chart below that the  cycles on the dollar index tend to last around 7 years on average. And based on  this history, the cycles continue to argue the buck is less than half-way  through a bullish cycle. To be sure,  it's been a choppy one.    But the dollar continues to trend higher,  making higher lows along the way. And I think we can see a new high in this  cycle this year. That's 15 percent higher from current levels.      For more perspective, the following weekly  chart going back to the failure of the Bretton Woods system shows the historic  bottoming formations in the dollar over the past 40 years.    This chart is designed to look back and  see what happened to the dollar in the past when the chart pattern looked like  it does now. You can see the slope of this current uptrend (in the green box)  is consistent with prior bottoms, particularly the bottom in 1978 (the white  box), which initiated a big bull cycle in the dollar.      Finally, the next chart shows the last two,  dollar cycles. You can see the key channel support for the dollar (the red  channel), which presents an extremely attractive low risk/high reward place to  buy dollars.      So when you add it up all the evidence, despite its naysayers, and the avalanche of challenges  surrounding its future, the dollar is looking more and more appealing to global  investors.    Regards,   Bryan   P.S. Are you looking for clear, concise instructions on how to get the  biggest possible payoff from fluctuations in the dollar, the yen and other  world currencies? Click here then, to view my latest presentation.   	                Bryan Rich began his currency trading career with a $600 million family office hedge fund in London. Later, he was a senior trader for a $750 million leading global hedge fund in South Florida. There, he helped manage and trade a multi-billion dollar foreign exchange options portfolio. Today, Bryan is the editor of World Currency Trader, a service designed to give you everything you need to trade currencies that offer the greatest profit potential with the least amount of risk.    	   About Money and Markets     For more information and archived issues, visit http://www.gliq.com/cgi-bin/click?weiss_mam+200101-4+MAM2001+computerdiy@yahoo.com     Money and Markets (MaM) is published by Weiss Research, Inc. and written by Martin D. Weiss along with Nilus Mattive, Claus Vogt, Ron Rowland, Michael Larson and Bryan Rich. To avoid conflicts of interest, Weiss Research and its staff do not hold positions in companies recommended in MaM, nor do we accept any compensation for such recommendations. The comments, graphs, forecasts, and indices published in MaM are based upon data whose accuracy is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Performance returns cited are derived from our best estimates    but must be considered hypothetical in as much as we do not track the actual prices investors pay or receive. Regular contributors and staff include John Burke, Marci Campbell, Amber Dakar,   Maryellen Murphy, Jennifer Newman-Amos, Adam Shafer, Julie Trudeau, Jill Umiker, Leslie Underwood and Michelle Zausnig.    Attention editors and publishers! Money and Markets issues can be republished. 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