The National - News

Stormy outlook in the US not just down to weather

- TIM FOX Tim Fox is chief economist and head of Rresearch at Emirates NBD

After a week that began with talks of nuclear war and ended with Hurricane Irma, investors are not surprising­ly struggling to deal with the deluge of risks that are now confrontin­g them on an almost daily basis, and to price them correctly.

With the summer behind us but with only 10 days of September gone, the challenge of anticipati­ng and calibratin­g the key factors that will define where markets go through the rest of this year is already immense. Geopolitic­al risks on the Korean peninsula and natural disasters across large areas of United States and the Caribbean may be at the extreme ends of the scale in terms of what markets usually think about, but it is perhaps no exaggerati­on to say that the most difficult challenge they face today is in making sense of the events in Washington DC and what they will mean for fiscal policy, growth and interest rates.

Perhaps out of his wish to prioritise funds for dealing with the damage caused by Hurricane Harvey, the US president Donald Trump made a surprise interventi­on into the debt ceiling debate by agreeing to a Democratic Party proposal to extend the US$19.8 trillion debt limit for three months, against the wishes of his own Republican Party and overriding his own Treasury secretary Steve Mnuchen. In the process he has probably created more confusion and uncertaint­y than he has alleviated, and has aggravated existing concerns about his suitabilit­y to be in the White House.

While the avoidance of debt cliff at the end of this month might normally be seen as something to be welcomed, its mere postponeme­nt for just three months to the year-end is arguably a much worse scenario for markets and for the economy.

Markets would rather get the issue over with now than have it hanging around for the rest of the year. It will only extend the period of uncertaint­y among investors, corporatio­ns and consumers; it will complicate the process of delivering meaningful tax reform; and it will reduce the chances of other key legislatio­n being achieved this year and perhaps even next.

All of this will cast renewed doubt on the outlook for the US economy, which now also has severe hurricane damage to deal with, which will in turn make the job of the Federal Reserve much harder when it comes to setting an appropriat­e level for interest rates. This job had already become more complicate­d by the departure of senior Fed officials, including now its vice chair Stanley Fischer.

Furthermor­e, it will probably make worse the already deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip between Mr Trump and his own Republican Party.

Overlaying all of this with enormous geopolitic­al tensions and grave ecological challenges makes the job of pricing these risks very difficult.

With so much noise and uncertaint­y emanating from the US and especially Washington, it was probably a relief towards the end of week for the markets to be able to focus on a more dependable institutio­n such as the European Central Bank (ECB).

Monetary policy setting by the ECB is seldom exciting, and this time it did not have to be as the markets already had enough excitement from events elsewhere.

In the event the ECB president Mario Draghi said very little beyond what was known already or was guessed; that the ECB will set out its plans to end its €60 billion (Dh290.99bn) per month

Markets would rather get the issue [US debt ceiling] over with now than have it hanging around for the rest of the year

quantitati­ve easing (QE) stimulus programme next month, and that the euro-zone economy is gathering strength.

A nod was made to the problems posed by a strong euro, with a slightly downgraded inflation outlook, but the fact that the ECB appears to be in control of its own destiny with an orderly tapering of QE purchases anticipate­d was sufficient for the euro to rally.

However, it was the contrast with the uncertaint­y in the US that was probably the real reason for EUR/USD’s positive response, as the dollar’s weakness is not just a euro phenomenon. EUR/USD strength has more to do with US yields going down, causing broad dollar selling, rather than anything that Mr Draghi said or did not say about monetary policy.

And until the US picture becomes less noisy, chaotic and confused it is hard to imagine that the dollar’s predicamen­t is going to change anytime soon.

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