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Little Aussie’s no battler

- ANTHONY KEANE

THE Australian dollar has shrugged off its history and strengthen­ed against the US greenback and other key currencies during the greatest global geopolitic­al crisis in a generation.

The local currency has climbed 5.5 per cent against the US dollar, 7 per cent against the British pound and 8.4 per cent against the euro since early February. It reached US74.4c this week, up from US69.8c in late January.

Some economists expect it to climb to US80c by late 2022 as the war in Ukraine causes supply disruption­s and sanctions against Russia, a major exporting nation.

The dollar’s surge is a change of tradition, as it usually sinks in turbulent economic and political times, as it did during the pandemic’s early days, the global financial crisis and 9-11 terror attacks.

CommSec senior economist Ryan Felsman said the Aussie dollar was benefiting from a “perfect storm” for commodity exports.

“Being one of the biggest commodity producers and exporters on the planet means our incomes lift, and we could be considered a safe haven given our isolation with no direct threat of conflict,” he said.

KPMG chief economist Brendan Rynne said the US dollar usually strengthen­ed during crises because it was seen as a safe haven.

“The difference here is we are now getting price spikes in commoditie­s that Australia produces and supplies overseas,” Dr Rynne said.

Australia’s key commodity exports to benefit include wheat, gas, iron ore and coal.

AMP chief economist Shane Oliver said “it does all come back to commoditie­s”.

“Normally the Australian dollar goes down when there’s some sort of global crisis because it’s seen as threatenin­g demand for commoditie­s … this crisis has increased demand for commoditie­s, which will in turn boost national income, and has pushed up the outlook for Australian interest rates,” he said. “We are seeing massive rises for prices of oil, gas and coal, most metals have gone through the roof and even the iron ore price has gone up. Most soft commoditie­s – foodstuffs – have gone up. These are all our big exports. We will pay more at the bowser but in terms of national income we will get a boost.”

Dr Oliver expects the dollar to approach “US80c or thereabout­s”.

Mr Felsman said the currency surge was “perverse, because the Australian dollar is normally a proxy for risk”.

When Covid first struck in early 2020, the Aussie dollar dropped 17 per cent.

During the global financial crisis in 2008 it plunged 36 per cent. Mr Felsman said the dollar could dip within the next month to about US70c but Commonweal­th Bank strategist­s expected it to lift to US80c by the end of 2022 “on the back of a stronger global economy”.

He said the Russian invasion had meant people had forgotten about rising Chinese demand lifting the iron ore price to a seven-month high.

“There’s a strong correlatio­n between iron ore and the Australian dollar,” he said.

China had also increased demand for our coal and gas, Mr Felsman said.

The Aussie dollar could weaken against the US next week when the US Federal Reserve was forecast to raise its official interest rate 0.25 percentage points.

“The Reserve Bank of Australia, in our view, is expected to lift interest rates from June,” Mr Felsman said.

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