If You Think the Dollar Is Doomed, Read This

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Warren Buffett has been called a sage, an oracle, and a genius. So when he says something as startling as the following, your ears should perk up: "In the future, I would predict that the U.S. dollar will decline. ... Force-feeding the rest of the world $2 billion a day is inconsistent with a stable dollar."

This is scary stuff. Except one thing: Buffett made that statement at the beginning of 2008, before (1) the U.S. dollar went on to have a pretty good year versus most other currencies, (2) the U.S. government announced the $800 billion bailout and $789 billion stimulus that will force-feed the world billions of additional dollars of U.S. debt, and (3) China's central government proposed replacing the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency.

Passing on the buck
Now, we're not policy wonks, Ph.D. economists, or long-winded talk-radio hosts, so we'll leave the politics aside and focus on the implications for your bank account instead. By adding to our massive federal deficit, the TARP and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 could have a devastating effect on the dollar ... a side effect that should scare the dickens out of you.

Similar to inflation, a declining dollar acts like a time bomb in your portfolio. When the dollar is weak, goods purchased from foreign countries -- like, you know, almost everything we buy -- become more expensive.

The good news is that we haven't seen this yet. After last year's volatility, investors around the globe got spooked and flocked en masse to the safety and stability of Uncle Sam. Thus, the dollar strengthened and American investors who owned dollars fared quite well relative to Americans who were invested abroad, despite the fact that many foreign markets had returns better than our own as measured in their local currencies. Take a look:

Country

2008 Return (in U.S. dollars)

2008 Return (in local currency)

United States

(38.6%)

(38.6%)

Chile

(43.6%)

(27.8%)

Canada

(49.1%)

(36.3%)

New Zealand

(52.4%)

(37.4%)

Australia

(54.5%)

(42.7%)

Brazil

(57%)

(43.7%)

Returns based on Dow Jones Global Indexes. Source: The Wall Street Journal.

A couple of conclusions
You got hit hard no matter where you invested last year, but you were hit particularly hard if you'd used your dollars to buy stakes in companies that earned Chilean pesos, Canadian dollars, or Brazilian reais.

Now, we know this may be abstract, but it's important. Even more important is the realization that while the dollar had a pretty good 2008, it won't always be this way. When the current calamity subsides, the same investors who bought the dollar this year for its "safety" will remember that:

  1. The United States has a massive and growing deficit.
  2. The United States continues to generate significant trade deficits.
  3. The United States has become oh-so-willing to print money out of thin air to meet its obligations.

When that happens, the tables will turn ... and investors who use their strong dollars today to buy stocks that earn Chilean pesos, Canadian dollars, and Brazilian reais will be rewarded as those currencies strengthen against the dollar in the future. Smart investors like the aforementioned Warren Buffett see this coming, and they're taking one step -- a simple step you can take yourself -- to protect themselves.

Get ready for action
In fact, Buffett has been doing this for years: simply purchasing shares of businesses that do business in other currencies. Current holdings Sanofi-Aventis, GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK), and the now-divested position in PetroChina are a few examples.

As Buffett wrote in his 2005 letter to shareholders, "We ... purchas[e] equities whose prices are denominated in a variety of foreign currencies and that earn a large part of their profits internationally."

Combine this currency diversification with businesses offering superior returns on capital, and you've got a very compelling addition to your portfolio. The simplest ways you can do this are to look for companies that generate a substantial amount of their sales outside the United States, or to look for companies headquartered abroad:

Company

Percentage of Non-U.S. Revenue

Return on Capital

Headquarters

ABB (NYSE: ABB)

82%

20%

Switzerland

BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP)

92%

32 %

Australia

PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP)

48%

21%

United States

Alcon (NYSE: ACL)

55%

23%

Switzerland

Accenture (NYSE: ACN)

58%

69%

Bermuda

Data from Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

Your next move
Putting aside policies and politics, you needn't be a George Soros-like currency trader to see that the dollar may be in for a rough patch. Instead of being caught off guard, you'd do well to think about positioning your portfolio now. Regarding buying equities with substantial sales in foreign currencies, Buffett wrote that "Charlie [Munger] and I prefer this method of acquiring non-dollar exposure."

If you're looking for additional international exposure, our Motley Fool Global Gains service is 100% dedicated to finding superior international investments. We deliver two stock picks each month, a list of our top five buys for new money, and comprehensive asset-allocation advice to help you fine-tune your foreign exposure. You can tour the entire service for 30 days -- on our dime -- by clicking here for a free trial.

In four years of writing columns together, this is the first time Tim Hanson and Brian Richards have used the phrase "scare the dickens out of you." Tim owns shares of ABB. Brian does not own shares of any company mentioned. Accenture is an Inside Value recommendation. Glaxo is a former Income Investor selection. Alcon and ABB are Global Gains selections. The Fool has a very stable disclosure policy.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On May 11, 2009, at 4:25 AM, thisislabor wrote:

    i hate to ask a stupid question, but can you have deflation and a declining dollar at the same time?

    or is there a reference link you know of that explains conceptually the difference between a declining dollar and inflation?

    -thanx, tony.

  • Report this Comment On May 11, 2009, at 11:49 AM, emferguson wrote:

    Tim, Brian, it seems like you're forgetting that economists, Treasury, and the fed were worried sick about deflation. It seems like printing money and fiscal stimulus were vital for avoidnig a deflationary spiral. Also, TARP and ARRA didn't print any money, They borrowed a lot, and normally we'd worried that would suck a lot of credit out of the economy, but with no one lending anyway, it seems in a fiscal sense it just takes advantage of cheap credit. When it comes to printing money, you're thinking of loans the fed made to the banks. Now those were created out of thin air and amount to printing money, but again, when the problem is deflation, that doesn't seem threatening. When the banking crisis is over and the economy recovers, then the printing can stop and emergency spending can be scaled back. Until then, inflation is the last thing I'm worried about.

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