I have kept on revising what I think will be the bottom in the exchange, first it was 8,000, then 7,000 maybe, now I believe we are actually headed lower. I will still be a buyer again (probably) soon.
I also think that by one definition of a depression - we will seal that in the first half of this year...... the one definition is a 10%+ contraction in GDP (multi-year drop). It is almost like we were a 747, with 4 engines, we had 4 engines running at full throttle, we lost one to birds, then all of a sudden we lost all 4 engines..... we are now in a steep dive, and the earliest we can restart the engines is when we drop below 10,000 feet (we were cruising at 33,000 feet). Of course there is always a chance we could just crash right into the ground -- but if that is the case - what will money be worth then
I was talking to my taylor here in Bangkok, and he said it was far far far far worse than the 1997 asian crisis for companies like his (although he was hurt probably more by the airport closure). When it was the Asian crisis, tourism continued, sales continued - business was still good. This is global, and he has lost three of his neighbours who did not own their own property (rent on that street for shops like his - which is not large - is around $9,300 CAD per month). Even owning his property outright, he lost money during the last 3 months last year. People that were renting, hung on for 3 months then had to throw in the towel. I have no hope on recovery this year, but I am still hopeful on 2010 - that we will start a long slow recovery.
He was visits China regularly (serveral cities in the south I think), the first time - 15,000 factories had shut - the second time it was up to 75,000. That being said - I believe this is the beginning of a realignment which will see China/Asia coming out in more of an economic leadership position, just like things sort of shifted from UK to United States last time. It is not to say that the United States won't recover, I believe it will - but we will return to having 2+ engines of world economic growth afterwards - which is actually more healthy for the world economy.