Dollar crown intact as central banks emulate Fed
tightening pause
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[February 22, 2019]
By Tommy Wilkes and Ritvik Carvalho
LONDON (Reuters) - It was supposed to be
the start of a dollar downturn. Instead, investors are scaling back
those bets as a dovish shift by the Federal Reserve is emulated by
central banks worldwide - keeping intact the greenback's interest rate
premium over other currencies.
The dollar gained 4.4 percent in 2018 - its best year since 2015 - as
strong economic growth allowed the Fed to raise rates repeatedly, even
as most other developed economies struggled with weaker momentum.
Traders began in late 2018 to bet the dollar was heading for a fall from
18-month highs amid signs the Fed was nearing the end of its three-year
long policy tightening cycle. Many reckoned it would stop shrinking its
balance sheet as well.
Other central banks, from the European Central Bank to Australia, were
primed to kick off rate rises.
But after falling in December and January, the dollar has recovered, and
is up 1 percent so far in February. Against some currencies such as the
Australian dollar, it has jumped more than 2 percent.
The reason? Economic momentum looks worse elsewhere, forcing
policymakers to ditch, postpone or soften policy tightening plans.
So even though the Fed confirmed its dovish shift this week in the
minutes from its last meeting, it looks like the dollar will continue to
enjoy a yield advantage over rivals.
"The dollar's resilience this year has come as a surprise to some,"
BlackRock investment strategist Richard Turnill said.
"Yet the same factors keeping the Fed on hold – slowing global growth
and tightening financial conditions – are pushing other central banks
toward a more dovish stance."
DOLLAR SUPPORT
Take for instance the European Central Bank. Bets on a 2019 rate rise
have been slashed right back and many reckon the ECB is set to kick off
a new stimulus round via cheap bank loans.
Japan said it could inject more stimulus if required, while Australia
and Sweden signaled they could rethink planned rate rises.
(Dollar yield differentials, YTD performance - https://tmsnrt.rs/2U07GmC)
JP Morgan Asset Management's currency chief investment officer, Roger
Hallam, notes the euro is widely forecast to appreciate in 2019 toward
$1.20 from $1.13 currently. But the trade slowdown and signs of
above-trend U.S. economic growth could hamper the single currency, he
said.
Crucially, the market may also need to adjust further to a more dovish
ECB, Hallam said, adding that "relative interest rate differentials are
now more likely the move in the U.S. dollar's favor in the coming
months."
[to top of second column] |
An employee counts U.S. dollar banknotes at a currency exchange
office in Jakarta, Indonesia October 23, 2018. Picture taken October
23, 2018. REUTERS/Beawiharta
Even if U.S. interest rates fail to rise further, they compare favorably with
sub-zero rates in the euro zone, Japan, Scandinavia and Switzerland. Australian
interest rates stand at 1.5 percent.
The dollar has weakened this year against emerging markets, where bigger yields
are luring investors, but there are signs that the rate hiking cycle in
developing countries has come to a halt too. India this month cut rates and is
forecast to cut again in April.
As for global liquidity, the collective balance sheets of the Fed, ECB and the
Bank of Japan shrank in late-2018 for the first time since 2015.
(G3 central bank assets, change year on year - https://tmsnrt.rs/2Em8s8p)
While that was mainly down to the Fed, the shrinkage is predicted to move slower
from here -- the U.S. central bank this week confirmed it would soon announce
plans to stop reducing the size of its balance sheet.
Steve Donze, senior macro strategist at Pictet Asset Management, forecasts the
Fed shrinkage will conclude at end-2019 with the balance sheet at $3.75 trillion
- and then growing in line with GDP.
Minutes from the latest Fed meeting suggest the central bank may not be as
dovish as markets believe, however. Split views among Fed policymakers suggest
the central bank may not yet have ended its three-year campaign to raise rates,
but has merely put it on an extended pause.
"The market has gotten ahead of itself in how much dovishness we can expect from
the Fed. The market will have to correct itself and that should provide some
support for the dollar," said Andreas Koenig, global FX head at Amundi Asset
Management, Europe's largest fund manager.
Investors, however, are not predicting huge gains from here - on a
trade-weighted basis the dollar's real effective exchange rate is already above
20-year averages, potentially limiting further upside.
(Dollar valuations - https://tmsnrt.rs/2TXhu0F)
Speculators, meanwhile, have pared back their dollar positions but they remain
net long the greenback by a large margin.
(Speculative dollar positioning - https://tmsnrt.rs/2TUOS8d)
(Editing by Sujata Rao and Toby Chopra)
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