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“History  is very much on the side of the incumbent President and unless we have a  double-dip recession with a significant increase in unemployment I  don’t believe Obama will lose 2012,” Papasavvas said in an interview  with CNBC on Thursday.
“On  the economic side, any signs of a deteriorating economic environment  will see the Fed enacting QE3 (the third round of quantitative easing,  or creating money) and hence indirectly reducing the probability of the  economy derailing Obama,” Papasavvas added.
With  the Republicans divided and no major rival yet to emerge, Papasavvas  believes the American right wing will keep its powder dry for 2016 when  four years of fiscal austerity will play into their hands.
“With  no credible Republican heavyweight to face Obama, even those who have  indicated their intent to run like Mitt Romney are unlikely to burn  significant political or actual capital for 2012 preferring instead to  wait for the 2016 election,” said Papasavvas.
Strong Dollar Policy? 
John  Snow, the US treasury Secretary during George W. Bush’s first term as  president, spent a lot of time talking up his strong dollar credentials.
The  problem for Snow was that no one believed a word he said as he stood by  and allowed the period of benign neglect in which the dollar remained  weak as the US economy recovered from September 11 and the collapse of  the dotcom bubble.
Now  Tim Geithner is spending a lot of time talking up his strong dollar  credentials and the market is beginning to think the current US Treasury  Secretary is beginning to sound an awful lot like Snow during the first  term of the Bush administration.
“The  market has been interpreting the Geithner comments on the dollar at  face value, this is now changing as the evidence of a weaker dollar  makes people skeptical about rhetoric,” Papasavvas said.
“What  Tim Geithner actually means is that he wants to protect the purchasing  power of Americans, not intervene to make the dollar rise against  foreign currencies,” he added.
“It  must be remembered that the US is a domestically-biased economy. The  big costs like healthcare are not exposed to a weak dollar. What  Geithner is trying to do is stop domestic inflation that will be felt by  the average American,” he added.
By: Patrick Allen taken from http://www.cnbc.com/id/42794512
By: Patrick Allen taken from http://www.cnbc.com/id/42794512
 
 
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