BusinessMirror

Dollar’s extended reign delivers stark wake-up call for markets

- BY RUTH CARSON, NAOMI TAJITSU, CARTER JOHNSON & TANIA CHEN

THE world’s financial markets are encounteri­ng a force they didn’t bet on for 2024: A strong dollar is back and looks set to stay.

Having entered the year predicting the greenback would decline, investors have been forced into a rethink by a red-hot US economy and sticky inflation requiring the Federal Reserve to hold off cutting interest rates.

With the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund predicting output stateside will grow at twice the clip of its Groupof-seven peers, talk of “US exceptiona­lism” is rife and supporting stocks and bond yields, adding to the dollar’s appeal. And in a time of mounting geopolitic­al strife, the currency still stands as the ultimate currency haven.

A Bloomberg dollar index has gained more than 4 percent this year, reflecting advances against all major developed and emergingma­rket counterpar­ts. One popular gauge of trader sentiment pointed bearish at the start of the year, but has since flipped to become the most bullish since 2019, according to data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Among those recalibrat­ing their strategies for the dollar is the world’s second-biggest money manager Vanguard Group Inc., which is now calling for sustained strength. UBS Asset Management says the dollar has probably got further to rise despite being 20 percent more expensive than it’s typically valued. Meantime, Wells Fargo Investment Institute capitulate­d on forecasts for weakness by year-end and now reckons it will extend its climb through 2025.

“If other countries can’t match the growth and inflation of the US, there’s just no other option than to buy the dollar,” said Ales Koutny, head of internatio­nal rates at Vanguard. “What was a very tactical trade for us before has become much more of a long-term structural view regarding sustained dollar and US economic strength.”

The greenback’s resurgence has come on the back of a slew of signs that the US economy swerved the slowdown many anticipate­d. The labor market has stayed tight and manufactur­ing activity continues to expand. The resulting persistenc­e in inflation has led Fed Chair Jerome Powell and fellow policymake­rs to wait longer than expected to cut rates.

New York Fed President John Williams has even suggested the possibilit­y of resuming rate hikes if warranted.

“At the beginning of the year I was more of a dollar bear, but that’s no longer the case,” said Rajeev De Mello, global macro portfolio manager at Gama Asset Management SA. “Powell’s comments definitely changed things.”

Of course, the surge in the world’s reserve currency inflicts a price on its counterpar­ts and their economies, which traders are also scrambling to address. India and Nigeria are among the countries seeing their exchange rates plumb record lows, while threats of interventi­on are being heard from Japan to Poland.

Central banks in developed markets such as Australia, the euroarea and UK may find their room for lowering rates limited if weaker exchange rates fan domestic inflation. Those countries burdened by foreign debt, including the Maldives and Bolivia, as well as those heavily reliant on American imports, may be among the most hurt.

In a sign of growing anxiety caused by the greenback’s rapid ascent, the Group of Seven nations earlier this month reaffirmed their common stance over the potential damage of disorderly currency moves. It came after US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen acknowledg­ed the concerns of Japan and South Korea over sharp declines in their currencies, which may offer Tokyo and Seoul more scope to defend the yen and won.

High yields

AS markets scale back bets on Fed easing, Treasury yields have soared again in recent weeks, sending benchmark yields to near 5 percent. The surge has been a major driver of the dollar’s appeal, which has also benefited from ceaseless inflows into US stocks amid the frenzy for artificial intelligen­ce.

“What’s unique now is that the dollar is such a high yielder,” said Peter Vassallo, portfolio manager at BNP Paribas Asset Management. “If you’re a global allocator and running your portfolio, what a slam dunk to improve your risk-adjusted returns: buy shorter-term US debt, unhedged.”

In contrast to reduced expectatio­ns for Fed easing, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde has indicated policymake­rs may be in a position to lower rates in June. Meantime, Japan is so far behind the US in growth that even a historic decision to end the world’s last negative rates failed to prevent the yen from hitting a 34-year low.

“The interest environmen­t in the US is just so much more attractive,” said Ed Al-hussainy, global rates strategist at Columbia Threadneed­le Investment­s. “The US dollar offers a very high rate of return.”

Haven demand

ANOTHER tailwind for the dollar is its role as an unrivaled sanctuary for investors seeking refuge at times of political or financial turmoil. The currency’s haven status was on full display Friday, surging after Israel launched a retaliator­y strike on Iran less than a week after Tehran’s rocket and drone barrage.

Helping to explain the dollar’s haven status is the widely-followed ‘ dollar smile’ theory coined by Stephen Jen, chief executive of Eurizon SLJ Capital Ltd. Jen’s thesis is that the dollar rises when the US economy is either booming or in a deep slump, with weakness during periods of moderate growth.

Heightened geopolitic­al risks are working together with a booming economy to create “a curlier smile, with steeper tails,” creating more of a U-shape, Jen said in an interview. “For every level of US outperform­ance, the dollar should be stronger, because of that safe haven premium coming from geopolitic­al risk.”

US growth hasn’t decelerate­d so the dollar will stay on the “right side” of the smile for longer, he said.

“The underlying strength of the greenback will linger as long as US exceptiona­lism and stubborn inflation persists,” said Bloomberg strategist Mary Nicola.

“So long as the US economy is stronger than its G7 brethren, the dollar will be strong relative to other G7 currencies,” said University of California at Berkeley economist Barry Eichengree­n. “Not everyone may be happy with this, but there is little that can be done about it.”

The author of “Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar” doesn’t expect strength in the US currency to lead to confrontat­ions, but does see growing debt servicing difficulti­es for developing countries with dollar- denominate­d debts.

But to some observers, including Clocktower Group’s Marko Papic, US currency strength may offer a “silver lining” for Europe, China and Japan. “It would help engender a global recovery given that most of the rest of the world is export oriented,” said the alternativ­e asset manager’s chief strategist.

While the escalating tensions in the Middle East offer a fresh boost to the dollar, its strength will likely last well beyond the conflict.

“I still expect the dollar will prove the ultimate winner as the knee-jerk reactions fade,” said Carol Kong, a strategist at Commonweal­th Bank of Australia, referring to the latest developmen­ts in the Middle East. “US energy independen­ce and high yields are likely to keep the dollar’s appeal to investors.” With assistance from Daisuke Sakai /Bloomberg

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