Analysis-As dollar roars higher, few dare to stand in its way
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[July 16, 2022] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - An epic rally in the
dollar has investors wondering how much further it can run, though many
are biding their time before turning bearish on the U.S. currency.
The dollar is up about 13% this year to a two-decade high against a
basket of peers and is on pace for its best year since 1997, lifted by a
hawkish Federal Reserve and investors seeking a haven from global
economic uncertainty.
Its steady climb has rippled through markets, helping push the euro to
its lowest level in more than two decades and weighing on the earnings
of U.S. corporations such as Microsoft and BlackRock.
The extent of the dollar's strength has taken markets by surprise.
A model used by BoFA Global Research comparing macroeconomic
fundamentals in different economies, for example, last month showed the
dollar was overvalued against the currency of every G10 country.
Moreover, history shows that while the greenback tends to strengthen
before a Fed hiking cycle, it begins to fall soon after, a pattern it
has so far deviated from.
Still, the dollar’s momentum has made investors hesitant to stand in its
way.
"Almost any currency looks attractive compared to the dollar on a
longer-term basis, but investors have to ask themselves ... what happens
if you put on a position and the dollar keeps on strengthening?" said
Brian Rose, senior economist at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Though recession worries have flared in the U.S. as the Fed tightens
monetary policy, the outlook for many other economies appears even
gloomier, increasing the dollar’s allure. A potential energy crunch in
the euro zone, for example, has investors doubting the European Central
Bank can raise rates far without hurting growth.
"One cannot have a weak USD (dollar) without a strong EUR (euro), and
right now, the latter is in the midst of a structural shift that will be
incredibly painful," analysts at TD Securities wrote. They believe the
euro could fall as low as $0.85, after breaching $1.00 this week for the
first time in 20 years.
Meanwhile, the Fed has raised interest rates faster than expected in an
effort to tame inflation, putting yields in the U.S. higher than those
in many developed countries. Higher rates make the dollar more
attractive to investors.
That gap may narrow as other central banks accelerate their own monetary
policy tightening. The Bank of Canada raised rates by 100 basis points
on Wednesday -- though this week’s blistering U.S. inflation reading has
bolstered expectations for a similar move from the Fed.
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U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken,
February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/
At the same time, positioning in rate futures markets shows investors expect
policymakers to raise rates swiftly this year before easing in early 2023, as
growth slows.
"The moment the U.S. economy runs into some kind of growth problem, the U.S.
dollar is going to turn," said Thanos Bardas, senior portfolio manager at
Neuberger Berman, who has reduced his dollar bets but remains bullish on the
currency.
The median forecast in a Reuters poll earlier this month showed analysts expect
the dollar to fall 8% against the euro over the next year. Most also see it
strengthening in the next three months, however.
"If you close your eyes for 12 months, the dollar will probably have depreciated
by the time you open them, but there will likely be significant volatility in
the meantime," said Francesca Fornasari, head of currency solutions at Insight
Investment, a UK-based asset manager, with about 817.1 billion pounds ($968.51
billion) in assets under management as of March 31.
Investor positioning shows the dollar likely has room to run, Fornasari said.
Net bullish futures bets on the dollar stood at $18.20 billion in the latest
week, compared with a $35 billion peak in 2019, data from the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission showed.
Dollar bears are not completely extinct.
Jack McIntyre, portfolio manager at Brandywine Global, is underweight the
dollar, betting that the near-20% drop U.S. stocks have experienced this year
will weigh on the economy and increase the likelihood of the Fed ending its
tightening cycle earlier.
"As equities continue to weaken, that is a big tightening of financial
conditions. That is going to hurt the U.S. consumer," he said.
Others, however, believe little can stop the dollar from strengthening until
there’s evidence that the Fed’s policy tightening is peaking.
"The USD remains king of FX and it will be incredibly brave and naive to assume
otherwise," wrote TD’s analysts.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Graphic by Vincent Flassuer; Editing by Ira
Iosebashvili and Jonathan Oatis)
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