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Diminution of the dollar V.
Anantha Nageswaran DXY is the US dollar exchange rate index against six other currencies —the Euro, Japanese yen, British pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona and the Swiss franc. The index is on the cusp of breaking down below its 20-year low. If it does, experts who analyse charts for patterns suggest that it would open the bottom for the US dollar. We don’t know if the event will occur this week or next or even later. The question in my view is one of WHEN and not IF. Of all the things happening in global financial markets, the US dollar outlook is one of the few that are explicable in a rational framework. There is a risk perception about the health and the healthy foundation of the US financial system that has been created by the extension of mortgage loans to ineligible borrowers and the entire ponzi financing structure built on such shaky underlying loans. This is not the first time. In less than a decade, the world has witnessed in the US, the dotcom boom and bust, the collapse of Enron and WorldCom, lack of integrity in the investment research community, the legislative overreaction that scared investors off from listing in stock exchanges in America and, now, the financing and securitization of housing mortgages that are increasingly in default.
Of course, we are talking about the US, not an emerging
economy. Credit rating agencies would not downgrade American treasuries
to anything less than AAA investment grade. It is too much to expect
them to rationally price the risk of a scandal-prone financial system
such as America’s. For reasons that are too numerous to be listed
here, they were too slow to react to signs of trouble in mortgage-related
instruments. Moreover, investors know that American monetary authorities
have a tradition of responding to investors’ distress calls. Wall
Street is too big to be allowed to fail and America’s global superpower
status is partially derived from that. That is how the Greenspan Put
was born. Bernanke is yet to be tested on his readiness to write a put
option for Wall Street to exercise. However, he gave hints of it in
a speech in 2002. He said that when faced with the risk of a deflation,
any central bank intent on fighting that could, in theory, run the printing
presses full time and flood the economy with currency, thus creating
inflation. This suggests that he would not hesitate to debase the dollar
to preserve growth, jobs and, perhaps, asset prices, too. Arguably,
among the central banks of the developed world, the Federal Reserve
is the most politically sensitive institution. The preservation of the
value of the dollar is easily a matter of lower priority. Given such an evolution of the soundness of the US financial system and its practices in recent years, it is a matter of surprise that it has taken so long for the US dollar to begin its decline. Investors are right to expect that other central banks—the European Central Bank in particular— would be relatively more willing to defend the value of their currencies than America’s Federal Reserve. Of course, it won’t be easy. Politicians and business
lobbies would howl. The newly elected French President Sarkozy has already
given enough hints of his intentions to use the currency as a trade
weapon, as Japan and China, are doing so at present. Nonetheless, investors
should expect to be surprised by the extent to which the euro would
strengthen against the US dollar in the coming year or two. Second,
precisely because there is a limit to how far it could rise, other currencies
such as the Singapore dollar or the Swiss franc should be part of investors’
portfolios. Third, “currencies” such as gold and silver
which hurt when they fall on the feet should also be picked up at current
levels. Theunravelling of the US dollar would be the dominant feature
of the financial landscape for the next few years.
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