Fraying central bank consensus spurs dollar and market stress: McGeever
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[May 04, 2022] By
Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) -The highest
inflation in decades is unraveling whatever policy consensus there was
between the world's major central banks since the Great Financial Crisis
and global markets could buckle under resulting waves of stress and
volatility.
A turbo-charged dollar, which often both reflects and fuels financial
market stress, risks a vicious cycle as a scramble for dollars
intensifies, tightens global financial conditions and increases
volatility.
The dollar's surge to its strongest level in 20 years not only reflects
how aggressive investors expect the Federal Reserve to be in raising
interest rates, but also how fragmented the global central bank
landscape is.
While the U.S. monetary authority appears strapped in for the most
aggressive tightening cycle since 1994 both in scale and speed, others
are at various stages of the battle against inflation, and with varying
degrees of appetite for the fight.
The Fed's expected path stands in stark contrast to its three biggest
peers. Central banks in Japan and China are still easing policy and the
European Central Bank will struggle with its plans to tighten amid
recession fears from a Ukraine-related energy shock.
Whatever path major central banks follow, the burst of global inflation
and fragmented policy response has put a fire under global market
volatility - U.S. Treasuries implied volatility is the highest since
2009 and global financial conditions are also the tightest in 13 years.
As analysts at Bank of America put it, two years of pandemic-fueled
quantitative easing worth around $11 trillion globally is ending and
markets' 'volatility anchor' has been removed, threatening the
disorderly moves in rates and currency markets that policymakers are
desperate to avoid.
"Market panics (are) often associated with divergent central bank policy
objectives," BofA wrote on Friday.
$1 TRILLION DEBT
The dollar index, a measure of the greenback's value against six major
currencies, is the highest since 2002. Although it has risen rapidly
this year and may be due a profit-taking pause, many analysts reckon it
still has room to appreciate further.
A stronger dollar makes it more expensive to service dollar-denominated
debt for overseas borrowers. According to Institute of International
Finance estimates, well over $1 trillion of dollar debt held in emerging
economies will mature by the end of next year.
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U.S. dollar banknotes are displayed in this illustration taken,
February 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
A rising dollar and U.S. borrowing costs have slammed global financial markets -
the S&P 500 just had its worst January-April performance since the 1930s, while
U.S. bond market volatility and Goldman Sachs's global financial conditions
index are the highest since 2009.
The additional problem policymakers face is essentially the irrationality and
herd-like behavior of financial markets. Once currency traders sense weakness or
fracture, they go for the jugular, and market overshoots can exacerbate
underlying economic problems.
ECB Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel in a March 17 speech nodded to the
danger of allowing policy divergence to widen too much.
"A reaction function that differs materially from that of other central banks
facing a protracted period of above-target inflation risks amplifying the energy
price shock by weighing on the exchange rate, thereby adding to the burden on
real household income," she warned.
Chris Marsh, senior advisor to Exante Data and a former economist at the
International Monetary Fund, says the wide divergence can only continue for so
long before other central banks have to follow the Fed.
"If the ECB and others don't keep up, they end up importing inflation. And
inflation is already very high. So to not keep up with the Fed will be very
difficult for them," Marsh said.
Related columns:
Given what followed, emerging markets fear 1994 Fed redux (Reuters, April 25)
Pumped-up dollar compounding global liquidity squeeze (Reuters, April 22)
Hedge funds' bullish dollar view distorted by yen outlier (Reuters, April 18)
Euro FX reserve demand returns after years of neglect (Reuters, April 13)
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)
(By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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