http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,960213,00.htmlThe darling of the Democrats bets against the dollar. Oh yes, the two-headed beast has got you covered!
Soros bets against the dollar
David Teather in New York
Wednesday May 21, 2003
The Guardian
George Soros, the billionaire investor dubbed "the man who broke the pound", yesterday added to the mounting pressure on the dollar when he admitted publicly he was betting against the currency.
In an interview with US cable channel CNBC, Mr Soros disclosed that he had recently begun to sell. "I now have a short position against the dollar," he said. "I have listened to what the secretary of the treasury is telling me. Who am I to stand in the way?
"We continue to sell the US dollar against the euro, the Canadian dollar, the Australian dollar, the New Zealand dollar and gold."
Mr Soros played a significant role in forcing the pound from the European exchange rate mechanism in 1992 when he bet against sterling. His firm was said to have made $1bn after the pound was ejected.
US treasury secretary John Snow signalled a policy shift at the weekend, suggesting he was at ease with the recent slide in the dollar. He said the currency's 20% decline against the euro over the past year was "really fairly modest".
That was interpreted as a reversal of the White House's strong dollar policy and an indication that the treasury will not be shoring up the currency by buying in the open market. The euro was yesterday trading a fraction below Monday's four-year high of $1.1738, just below its January 1999 launch price. The dollar fell further against the yen after the Bank of Japan said it would ease monetary policy again. The BoJ has spent billions to halt the yen's rise against the dollar.
Mr Soros was fiercely critical of the White House policy shift. "It's a beggar thy neighbour policy," he said. "I think [Mr Snow] was somewhat irresponsible by talking down the dollar."
He said the policy shift was an attempt to stimulate the US economy at the expense of other countries. "This administration is happy to hurt France and Germany but that won't help the US very much. It will make US exports more competitive, but to whom are we going to export?"
He joined another billionaire, Warren Buffett, in a stinging attack on the White House tax cut plan centred on the ending of tax on dividends. The senate is expected to approve the tax cuts by next week.
"The administration is basically using the recession to redistribute income to the wealthy," Mr Soros said. Mr Buffett dubbed the cuts "voodoo economics" in yesterday's Washington Post.
Forecasters are increasingly concerned about the Bush administration's stewardship of the economy. A quarterly survey of economists yesterday from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia found them cutting full year forecasts for GDP growth from 2.5% to 2.2%.