Iran, Oil and the U.S. Dollar

Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

If the dollar collapses the Euro and Europe won't be far behind. They are tied to the same banking system. Our enemies would be better off letting the dollar slide so they could get U.S. technology at bargain prices. Iran and Venezuela don't seem to understand what the repercussions of a collapsed U.S economy would be, a world depression and runaway inflation would hurt them a lot more than it hurts us.
 
Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

"Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad, Iran's president, said after the leaders' meeting that the falling dollar meant oil producers were subsidising the US. "They get our oil and give us a worthless piece of paper," he said. "We all know that the US dollar has no economic value," he said".


:smh:

This mess was predicted when we got of the gold standard. This is what we get. They pay people with advanced degrees and "experience" to make F'ed Up miscalculations like this?!?!?!:angry:

Unless, it's NOT an accident, but design...hmmmmm:hmm:
 
Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

If the dollar collapses the Euro and Europe won't be far behind. They are tied to the same banking system. Our enemies would be better off letting the dollar slide so they could get U.S. technology at bargain prices. Iran and Venezuela don't seem to understand what the repercussions of a collapsed U.S economy would be, a world depression and runaway inflation would hurt them a lot more than it hurts us.

Or they could introduce a new currency
 
Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

I wouldn't read to hard into this. Now if OPEC breaks with the dollar...then I'd get concerned. :eek:
 
Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

Last year when the market was running upward even though we were in 2 wars, losing jobs and having massive layoffs I was on this board saying the Market is seeing a world where America is not a superpower anymore. Now I believe these 2 dictators are saying what a lot of people are thinking, America is collapsing, whether thats true or not I don't know. I do know I get a bad feeling when I look at the economy but what really bothers me is Bill Clinton was a NAFTA's biggest supporter, that agreement cost this country 3 of our biggest industries and now his wife is the leading candidate for the Democratic nomination, WTF.
 
Re: CBI breaks with the US dollar

I do know I get a bad feeling when I look at the economy but what really bothers me is Bill Clinton was a NAFTA's biggest supporter, that agreement cost this country 3 of our biggest industries and now his wife is the leading candidate for the Democratic nomination, WTF.
That tells his wife will continue what he and President Bush started they are big time Globalist :smh: this going to lead to the end and destruction of America as we know it today.
 
Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=158769
TEHRAN (AFP) -- Major crude producer Iran has completely stopped carrying out its oil transactions in dollars, Oil Minister Gholamhossein Nozari said on Saturday, labeling the greenback an ""unreliable"" currency.

""At the moment, selling oil in dollars has been completely halted, in line with the policy of selling crude in non-dollar currencies,"" Nozari was quoted as saying by the ISNA news agency.

""The dollar is an unreliable currency, considering its devaluation and the oil exporters' losses,"" he added.

Iran has massively reduced its dependence on the dollar over the past year in the face of U.S. pressures on its financial system and the fall in the dollar.

Nozari did not specify in which currencies Iran was now being paid. In the past, officials have said most oil income was in euros, with a significant percentage in yen.

Japan, which purchases 20 percent of Iran's crude oil, has recently agreed to pay for the crude oil in yen, officials have said. The UAE dirham has also been mooted as a possible payment currency.

Iran has in the past months been whittling down the proportion of dollars in its oil revenue. Officials in October said that dollars accounted for only 15 percent of payments and predicted the amount would fall to zero.

Iran has reduced its dollar assets held in foreign banks and urged OPEC to take collective action to price oil in other currencies such as the euro, instead of the U.S. currency which is used across the world at present.

The fall of the dollar, which has weakened considerably against the euro and other currencies in the past 12 months, has affected the revenues of OPEC members because most of them price and sell their oil exports in the U.S. currency.
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

Bush keep fucking up it's gonna get worse, Irans President is a media mogul who knows how to use savvy to outwit The US & Special Interest. Dayum Hillary needs to hurry into office
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

Bush keep fucking up it's gonna get worse, Irans President is a media mogul who knows how to use savvy to outwit The US & Special Interest. Dayum Hillary needs to hurry into office

The next step is to watch how Wall Street reacts on Monday. This could mean that the markets will fall like Bush's ability to tell the truth.
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

BushCo is reading this and trying to figure out how quick they can bomb Iran.
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

this is because the fuckin national debt is ova nine trilion dollars. NINE FUCKING TRILION DOLLARS!! its not only an unpayable debt, but also it will mean that the US dollar everywhere will become worthless.
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

BushCo is reading this and trying to figure out how quick they can bomb Iran.

Yep..!:yes::yes: How long do you think it will be before we have another "incident"..?:smh: Sounds like the Economic Hit Men failed..:cool: how long before they call on the jackals..?:confused::smh::eek:

[FLASH]http://www.youtube.com/v/WjPoeQRewiE&rel=1[/FLASH]
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

As many before, look for other countries to follow suit, it's a reality, the almighty dollar is becoming more and more worthless..
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

Yep..!:yes::yes: How long do you think it will be before we have another "incident"..?:smh: Sounds like the Economic Hit Men failed..:cool: how long before they call on the jackals..?:confused::smh::eek:

[FLASH]http://www.youtube.com/v/WjPoeQRewiE&rel=1[/FLASH]
preach!!!
 
Re: Iran has officially dropped the US dollar

China and the Arabian Peninsula
as Market Stabilizers


Strategic Forecasting, Inc.
Geopolitical Intelligence Report
By George Friedman
December 11, 2007

The single most interesting thing about today's global economy is what has not occurred. In 1979, oil prices soared to slightly more than $100 a barrel in current dollars, and they are approaching that historic high again. Meanwhile, the subprime meltdown continues to play out. Many financial institutions have been hurt, many individual lives have been shattered and many Wall Street operators once considered brilliant have been declared dunderheads. Despite all the predictions that the current situation is just the tip of the iceberg, however, the crisis is progressing in a fairly orderly fashion. Distinguish here between financial institutions, financial markets and the economy. People in the financial world tend to confuse the three. Some financial institutions are being hurt badly. Those experiencing the pain mistakenly think their suffering reflects the condition of the financial markets and economy. But the financial markets are managing, as is the economy.

What we are seeing is the convergence of two massive forces. Oil prices, along with primary commodity prices in general, have soared. Also, one of the periodic financial bubbles -- the subprime mortgage market -- has burst. Either of these alone should have created global havoc. Neither has. The stock market has not plummeted. The Standard & Poor's 500 fell from a high of about 1,565 in mid-October to a low of 1,400 on Oct. 19. Since then, it has rebounded as high as 1,550. Given the media rhetoric and the heads rolling in the financial sector, we would expect to see devastating numbers. And yet, we are not.

Nor are the numbers devastating in the bond markets. By definition, a liquidity crisis occurs when the money supply is too tight and demand is too great. In other words, a liquidity crisis would be reflected in high interest rates. That hasn't happened. In fact, both short-term and, particularly, long-term interest rates have trended downward over the past weeks. It might be said that interest rates are low, but that lenders won't lend. If so, that is sectoral and short-term at most. Low interest rates and no liquidity is an oxymoron.

This is not the result of actions at the Federal Reserve. The Fed can influence short-term rates, but the longer the yield curve, the longer the payoff date on a loan or bond and the less impact the Fed has. Long-term rates reflect the current availability of money and expectations on interest rates in the future.

In the U.S. stock market -- and world markets, for that matter -- we have seen nothing like the devastation prophesied. As we have said in the past, the subprime crisis compared with the savings and loan crisis, for example, is by itself small potatoes. Sure, those financial houses that stocked up on the securitized mortgage debt are going to be hurt, but that does not translate into a geopolitical event, or even into a recession. Many people are arguing that we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg, and that defaults in other categories of the mortgage market coupled with declining housing markets will set off a devastating chain reaction.

That may well be the case, though something weird is going on here. Given the broad belief that the subprime crisis is only the beginning of a general financial crisis, and that the economy will go into recession, we would have expected major market declines by now. Markets discount in anticipation of events, not after events have happened. Historically, market declines occur about six months before recessions begin. So far, however, the perceived liquidity crisis has not been reflected in higher long-term interest rates, and the perceived recession has not been reflected in a significant decline in the global equity markets.

When we add in surging oil and commodity prices, we would have expected all hell to break loose in these markets. Certainly, the consequences of high commodity prices during the 1970s helped drive up interest rates as money was transferred to Third World countries that were selling commodities. As a result, the cost of money for modernizing aging industrial plants in the United States surged into double digits, while equity markets were unable to serve capital needs and remained flat.

So what is going on?

Part of the answer might well be this: For the past five years or so, China has been throwing around huge amounts of cash. The Chinese made big, big money selling overseas -- more than even the growing Chinese economy could metabolize. That led to massive dollar reserves in China and the need for the Chinese to invest outside their own financial markets. Given that the United States is China's primary consumer and the only economy large and stable enough to absorb its reserves, the Chinese -- state and nonstate entities alike -- regard the U.S. markets as safe-havens for their investments. That is one of the things that have kept interest rates relatively low and the equity markets moving. This process of Asian money flowing into U.S. markets goes back to the early 1980s.

Another part of the answer might lie in the self-stabilizing feature of oil prices, the rise of which should be devastating to U.S. markets at first glance. The size of the price surge and the stability of demand have created dollar reserves in oil-exporting countries far in excess of anything that can be absorbed locally. The United Arab Emirates, for example, has made so much money, particularly in 2007, that it has to invest in overseas markets.

In some sense, it doesn't matter where the money goes. Money, like oil, is fungible, which means that if all the petrodollars went into Europe then other money would flow into the United States as European interest rates fell and European stocks rose. But there are always short-term factors to consider. The Persian Gulf oil producers and the Chinese have one thing in common -- they are linked to the dollar. As the dollar declines, assets in other countries become more expensive, particularly if you regard the dollar's fall as ultimately reversible. Dollars invested in dollar-denominated vehicles make sense. Therefore, we are seeing two massive inflows of dollars to the United States -- one from China and one from the energy industry. China's dollar reserves are derived from sales to the United States, so it is stuck in the dollar zone. Plus, the Chinese have pegged the yuan to the dollar. The energy industry, also part of the dollar zone, needs to find a home for its money -- and the largest, most liquid dollar-denominated market in the world is the United States.

The United States has created an odd dollar zone drawing in China and the Persian Gulf. (Other energy producers such as Russia, Nigeria and Venezuela have no problem using their dollars internally.) Unhinging China from the dollar is impossible; it sells in dollars to the United States, a linkage that gives it a stable platform, even if it pays relatively more for oil. Additionally, the Arabian Peninsula sells oil in dollars, and trying to convert those contracts to euros would be mind-bogglingly difficult. Existing contracts and new contracts managed in multiple currencies -- both spot and forward managed -- would have to be renegotiated. Any business working in multiple currencies faces a challenge, and the bigger the business, the bigger the challenge. The Arabian Peninsula accordingly will not be able to hedge currencies and manage the contracts just by flipping a switch.

This provides an explanation for the resiliency of U.S. markets. Every time the news on the subprime situation sounds so horrendous that it seems the U.S. markets will crash, the opposite occurs. In fact, markets in the United States rose through the early days, then sold off and now have rallied again. Where is the money coming from?

We would argue that the money is coming from the dollar bloc and its huge free cash flow from China, and at the moment, the Arabian Peninsula in particular. This influx usually happens anonymously through ordinary market actions, though occasionally it becomes apparent through large, single transactions that are quite open. Last week, for example, Dubai invested $7 billion in Citigroup, helping to clean up the company's balance sheet and, not incidentally, letting it be known that dollars being accumulated in the Persian Gulf will be used to stabilize U.S. markets.

This is not an act of charity. Dubai and the rest of the Arabian Peninsula, as well as China, are holding huge dollar reserves, and the last thing they want to do is sell those dollars in sufficient quantity to drive the dollar's price even lower. Nor do they want to see a financial crisis in the U.S. markets. Both the Chinese and the Arabs have far too much to lose to want such an outcome. So, in an infinite number of open market transactions, as well as occasionally public investments, they are moving to support the U.S. markets, albeit for their own reasons.

It is the only explanation for what we are seeing. The markets should be selling off like crazy, given the financial problems. They are not. They keep bouncing back, no matter how hard they are driven down. That money is not coming from the financial institutions and hedge funds that got ripped on mortgages. But it is coming from somewhere. We think that somewhere is the land of $90-per-barrel crude and really cheap toys.

Many people will see this as a tilt in global power. When others must invest in the United States, however, they are not the ones with the power; the United States is. To us, it looks far more like the Chinese and Arabs are trapped in a financial system that leaves them few options but to recycle their dollars into the United States. They wind up holding dollars -- or currencies linked to dollars -- and then can speculate by leaving, or they can play it safe by staying. In our view, these two sources of cash are the reason global markets are stable.

Energy prices might fall (indeed, all commodities are inherently cyclic, and oil is no exception), and the amount of free cash flow in the Arabian Peninsula might drop, but there still will be surplus dollars in China as long as it is an export-based economy. Put another way, the international system is producing aggregate return on capital distributed in peculiar ways. Given the size of the U.S. economy and the dynamics of the dollar, much of that money will flow back into the United States. The United States can have its financial crisis. Global forces appear to be stabilizing it.

The Chinese and the Arabs are not in the U.S. markets because they like the United States. They don't. They are locked in. Regardless of the rumors of major shifts, it is hard to see how shifts could occur. It is the irony of the moment that China and the Arabian Peninsula, neither of them particularly fond of the United States, are trapped into stabilizing the United States. And, so far, they are doing a fine job.


stratfor.com[/lurl]
 
Dollars No Good at Indian Tourist Sites


NEW DELHI (AP) — No dollars, just rupees please.

In a sign of how the once mighty U.S. dollar has fallen, India's tourism minister said Thursday that U.S. dollars will no longer be accepted at the country's heritage tourist sites, like the famed Taj Mahal.

For years the dollar was worth about 50 rupees and tourists visiting most sites in India were charged either $5 or 250 rupees.

But with the dollar at a nine-year low against the rupee — falling 11 percent in 2007 alone and now hovering at around 39 rupees — that deal has become a losing proposition for the tourism industry.

The country's tourism minister said, though, that the decision was only in part a reaction to the currency's plunging value.

"Before the dollar lost its value, there was a demand to have (admission tickets) just in rupees," Tourism Minister Ambika Soni told the CNN-IBN news channel.

Soni said that charging only rupees would not only be more practical, but would save money because "the dollar was weaker against the rupee."

The Taj Mahal, India's famed white marble monument to love, which had charged tourists $15 or 750 rupees, has been refusing to accept dollars since November.

The move makes visits pricier for American tourists, who now have to shell out nearly $20.

And it's likely to get worse.

"We expect a slight appreciation of the rupee to continue, although it won't be as dramatic as last year," said Agam Gupta, head of foreign exchange trading at Standard Chartered Bank in India.

The dollar has fallen against most major currencies, and it has lost ground against the rupee due to an influx of foreign capital into India, said Gupta.

Soni said she was not worried about the decision affecting tourism numbers as India provided more than just budget attractions.

"I always say it's not numbers I am looking for or working for. I am working for tourists to have a complete experience," she said.
 
Iran Dumps Us Dollar For Oil Trades

Here is the real reason for the neocon push towards war with Iran.
index.html

---------------------------------------------

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Iran, OPEC's second-largest producer, has stopped conducting oil transactions in U.S. dollars, a top Oil Ministry official said Wednesday, in a concerted attempt to reduce reliance on Washington at a time of tension over Tehran's nuclear program and suspected involvement in Iraq.

Iran has dramatically reduced dependence on the dollar over the past year in the face of increasing U.S. pressure on its financial system and the fall in the value of the American currency.

Oil is priced in dollars on the world market, and the currency's depreciation has concerned producers because it has contributed to rising crude prices and eroded the value of their dollar reserves.

"The dollar has totally been removed from Iran's oil transactions," Oil Ministry official Hojjatollah Ghanimifard told state-run television Wednesday. "We have agreed with all of our crude oil customers to do our transactions in non-dollar currencies."

Click here for the rest of the article
 
<font size="5"><center>Secret US-Iranian Dialogue Brings Oil Prices
down, Shakes up Mid East Alliances</font size></center>


From DEBKA-Net-Weekly 354 Updated by DEBKAfile
July 8, 2008


Oil prices suddenly slumped Tuesday, July 8, as predicted by DEBKA-Net-Weekly on June 27, under the impact of the secret American-Iranian talks embarked on last month to solve burning issues by diplomatic engagement.

These talks between the US and Iranian delegations, representing President George W. Bush and Iranian supreme ruler Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, have yielded ad hoc understandings on controversial issues. One is an agreement not to allow the price of oil to rocket past $150 the barrel.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s exclusive Gulf and Iranian sources disclosed that the bilateral negotiations were deliberately masked by the war fever engineered by Washington in the form of a stream of leaks indicating that a US or Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear installations was imminent.

At the same time, neither nation has sheathed its military option. Those understandings are ad hoc and could well break down in the volatile climate generated by hard-line elements of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, which are dead against deals with Washington.

The last in a string of belligerent statements issued by IRGC chiefs came from Ali Shirazy, senior Navy cleric, who said Tuesday, July 8: If the US attacks Iran, “we will immediately strike back at Tel Aviv. Our first target is Tel Aviv and only then will we attack US shipping in the Persian Gulf; their destruction will represent Iran’s crushing reprisal.”

Behind the saber-rattling, however, DEBKA-Net-Weekly’s sources reported common ground was covered for three key objectives:
1. The American side was willing to refrain from military action against Iran before the end of the Bush presidency in January 2009, but could not promise Israel would not act unilaterally. In a bid to hold Israel’s hand, sources in Washington have been putting out semi-official comments that Israel is short of the intelligence and military capability for striking Iran without help.

2. Iran undertook to open the way for the US military to continue to go from strength to strength in fighting al Qaeda and the Sunni guerrilla insurgents in Iraq, to allow President Bush to claim his Iraq campaign had ended successfully before leaving the White House. DEBKAfile’s military sources report that Tehran ordered Iranian intelligence officers working undercover in Iraq to halt attacks on US troops by pro-Iranian militias, including Moqtada Sadr’s Mehdi Army. This has left US and Iraqi government force with free hands for large-scale operations against al Qaeda.

Iranian officers are also sharing useful intelligence on conditions in the field with American commanders.

3. In the background of the secret dialogue is the Bush administration’s ambition to help fellow-Republican Senator John McCain get elected to the White House.​
DEBKAfile’s Iran experts comment that the revolutionary regime in Tehran has traditionally preferred a Republican over a Democrat in the White House since the days when its founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, helped Ronald Reagan defeat Jimmy Carter.

Some of these understandings are still work in progress, but the oil price ceiling of $150 was definitely agreed and resulted in the sharp fall in prices Tuesday, July 6 by $3.92 a barrel. Some traders attributed it to an ease in geopolitical tensions related to Iran’s nuclear program and a strengthening US dollar.

DEBKAfile’s sources question the first part of this assessment, finding no real ease in tensions around Iran’s nuclear program.

Monday, July 8, the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet announced American, British and Bahraini vessels were to launch a new exercise in the Gulf called “Stake Net,” to practice tactics and procedures for protecting maritime infrastructure such as gas and oil installations.

The exercise was launched in response to threats by more than one Iranian military chief to control shipping in the Gulf and Strait of Hormuz if Iran was attacked or its regional interests jeopardized.

The ball was picked up by the Revolutionary Guards which launched a retaliatory naval maneuver the next day.

Tuesday, too, the New York Times ran an article called “Nearer to the Bomb” by nuclear physicist Peter D. Zimmerman, former chief scientist of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He wrote that all of Iran’s activities, especially in uranium enrichment, are evidence that its “near-term ability to make nuclear weapons is gathering strength.”

He further warned that once Iran begins enriching uranium to weapons grade on an assembly-line basis, “it could transfer this material to groups such as Hizballah and Hamas.” They could then “fabricate low-technology nuclear explosives with yields nearly as high as the bomb which destroyed Hiroshima.”

The understandings unfolding between Washington and Tehran have clearly impacted on Syria and Lebanon. One result was last month’s Doha accord for the election of Lebanese president Michel Sleiman, which has produced a new government in Beirut headed by the pro-Western Fouad Siniora with veto power for Hizballah ministers.

Washington has for the moment lowered the heat of political, economic and intelligence pressure on Iran’s close ally, Syrian president Bashar Assad and even Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah, permitting them to assume a role in political processes in Lebanon and the Middle East at large.

The bilateral understandings on Iraq have strengthened its Shiite prime minister Nouri al-Maliki, but even more dramatically revalued the Syrian president’s international legitimacy, although some aspects of his position are still under discussion between Washington and Tehran.

All the same, a senior Saudi official conversant with Lebanese and Syrian affairs put it this way: “On the face of it nothing has changed in Washington’s attitude towards Damascus, but in reality, it has undergone a transformation.”

The threats to the Assad regime have receded, notably the international tribunal for prosecuting the assassins of the former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri, and Washington has withdrawn its support for Syrian opposition factions.”

The Saudi official further commented: “A US-Iranian earthquake is rumbling under the surface of the Middle East, especially in Syria.”

http://www.debka.com/article.php?aid=1356
 
<font size=" 5"><center>Iran Says Weak dollar
caused 30 percent of oil price rise</font size></center>


Reutgers
Saturday, August 2, 2008

COLOMBO (Reuters) - The falling value of the dollar is to blame for around a third of the rise in the price of oil, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Saturday.

"Thirty percent of the increase (in the price) of oil is because of the decrease in the value of the dollar," he said on the sidelines of the South Asia Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo.

He did not say what time period he was referring to. The dollar has dropped 33.8 percent against a basket of six currencies since U.S. President George W. Bush took office on January 20, 2001, according to the New York Board of Trade's dollar index .DXY.

Oil has seen a heavy selloff since hitting a record high above $147 on July 11, but U.S. crude futures ended higher on Friday on concerns about Nigerian supply snags and the West's dispute with Tehran over Iran's nuclear programme.

The West suspects Iran is pursuing nuclear technology in order to build weapons, a charge Iran denies. On Saturday its President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said the country would not retreat "one iota" from its nuclear rights.

His comments were an apparent rebuff to Western powers who had set Saturday as an informal deadline for Iran to respond to their offer to hold off from imposing more U.N. sanctions on Iran if it froze any expansion of its nuclear work.

Mottaki also said unspecified behind-the-scenes actions had played a role in the oil price increase, and that Iran supported "the stability of the oil price in the market".

(Reporting by Shihar Aneez; writing by Jon Boyle; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersComService_3_MOLT/idUSL27987120080802
 
<font size="5"><center>
Tehran Struggles to Defend Currency </font size></center>



Wall Street Journal
By MARGARET COKER
ROSHANAK TAGHAVI
AUGUST 6, 2009


DUBAI -- Iranian economists are predicting double-digit currency depreciation by year-end, amid expectations that already high levels of capital flight will increase over fears about Iran's economic direction.

The government has managed to keep depreciation mostly under 5% a year since 2001, despite the U.S.-led sanctions that limit trade with and imports to the Islamic Republic. But economic problems snowballed after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took office in 2005. His lavish spending plans and subsidized loan programs to government insiders have exacerbated inflation and decreased currency reserves.

As the president begins his new term, anecdotal evidence shows that the central bank is battling to defend the currency at official exchange rates as more Iranians look to move their wealth to safer places.

A steep drop in Iran's currency would be a heavy blow to Mr. Ahmadinejad, who is already facing rifts among the country's ruling elite and battling to quash widespread public outcry over his controversial June 12 re-election.

Tehran has limited access to international credit markets because of the sanctions. Monetary policy is facilitated by currency deals conducted through a network of 50 Iranian-run money-exchange dealers inside the Islamic Republic, the wider Middle East and Europe. Members of this exchange network say the government is selling $180 million to $250 million daily to keep the exchange rate steady within the 9,700 to 9,900 rial-to-dollar corridor set by the central bank.

That spending exceeds the amount of revenue the country is taking in from the 2.4 million barrels of oil exported daily -- the country's only major source of foreign currency. Oil prices this year are averaging $60 a barrel. Unless that price strengthens to at least a consistent $70 a barrel, the rial could fall as much as 15% by December, according to a former Iranian central-bank official.

A government adviser disputes the claim, saying Tehran has the tools necessary to keep the rial stable.

"Ahmadinejad's government has so far followed a simple policy that they will not devalue the currency. There will be serious budgetary pressures, but they will go through austerity measures first, not emergency measures," said the adviser.

Iran doesn't release official economic statistics in a timely fashion. The last official estimate of its foreign reserves published in mid-2008 showed $80 billion in central-bank coffers. Iranian economists say that figure has dropped approximately 25% in the past year, as oil prices have fallen, but the government hasn't cut its $290 billion budget that runs through March 2010.

Unlike other Gulf oil producers, Iran has failed to parlay its oil wealth into a well-endowed rainy-day fund, leaving it vulnerable to new economic challenges such as depreciation.

Even ordinary Iranians without ties outside the country are hedging their bets by turning in rials for hard currency. A 29-year-old Tehran taxi driver said that immediately after the election he exchanged $5,000 worth of rials into dollars. "Things are going to get worse, so I'm waiting for the right time to change the rest of my savings," he said.

Write to Margaret Coker at margaret.coker@wsj.com and Roshanak Taghavi at Roshanak.Taghavi@dowjones.com

Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A7

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124951839472809583.html
 
A 29-year-old Tehran taxi driver said that immediately after the election he exchanged $5,000 worth of rials into dollars. "Things are going to get worse, so I'm waiting for the right time to change the rest of my savings," he said.

dumbazz! he's better off investing with Madoff
 
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