Arab Times

Rising US Treasury yields pose ‘risks’ to greenback

Drain on the currency

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NEW YORK, Oct 21, (RTRS): Higher US Treasury yields have been cited as a factor supporting the greenback in recent months. In the longer term, however, some analysts see rising interest rates and mounting debt weighing on the dollar.

Federal Reserve interest rate increases and increasing supply last week helped send benchmark 10year bond yields to seven-year highs.

Day to day, higher yields are cited as boosting the US dollar as capital flows into the country to seek out the higher rates. But that correlatio­n does not hold up in the longer term, with higher yields instead being a drain on the currency.

“History shows that if we are still in this upward-moving yield environmen­t, that could continue to have a negative feedback loop into the dollar,” said Tom Fitzpatric­k, chief technical strategist at Citigroup in New York.

The dollar index is down around 8 percent from a 14-year high in January 2017, and has climbed off threeyear lows set in February.

With the Fed expected to continue raising rates and the United States projected to almost double its debt load held by the public to $29 trillion in the coming decade from $16 trillion today, further weakness in bonds and the greenback is likely.

In the past 30 years or so, the dollar has almost always weakened when there have been major selloffs in fixed income. This includes in 1987, in 1994 and from 2004 to 2006, when in each case the bond market weakened as the Fed raised rates.

Reduce

The “taper tantrum” of 2013, when the Fed said it would reduce bond purchases, also sent yields higher and hurt the dollar, while yield increases on Fed rate hikes since late 2016 have weighed on the greenback.

An exception was from 19982000, when the United States had a fiscal surplus, leading to expectatio­ns of debt paydowns, and immediatel­y after the introducti­on of the euro.

Convention­al wisdom says that US monetary tightening automatica­lly produces a stronger dollar, but in fact Fed rate hikes are usually associated with dollar weakness, said Anatole Kaletsky, chief economist and founding partner at Gavekal in London.

“Periods when the US interest rate is going up, when the Fed is tightening, are almost by definition periods when the expected rate of return on capital in the US is going down relative to the rest of the world – and that means long-term capital will flow out of the dollar,” Kaletsky said.

Indeed, US flow of funds data show that foreign purchases of Treasuries often decline as yields increase.

The greenback was bolstered at the outset of quantitati­ve easing as the United States took the first steps toward repairing its economy after the financial crisis. As other regions such as the Eurozone get closer to rate increases, the relative opportunit­ies may shift in Europe’s favor.

Still, not all analysts view Fed rate rises as negative for the greenback, and see dollar strength as having further room to run.

Soften

“To me the game changer is when the US economy starts to soften and the Fed has to think about cutting rates,” said Win Thin, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.

A Reuters poll of currency strategist­s earlier this month found that it could be another six months before the dominant dollar strength trade is swept aside.

Worsening deficits and higher debt needs also make investment in the United States less attractive even as economic growth is solid, adding to pressure for higher yields.

The US current account deficit reached 2.5 percent of gross domestic product in the first quarter, a level at which typically “the dollar starts to respond negatively,” said Bilal Hafeez, global head of G10 foreign exchange strategy at Nomura in London.

Further dollar weakness would fit with the longer-term trend that has been in place since the end of the Bretton Woods system in 1971.

It is also in line with some beliefs that the United States is at the end of a 30-year bull run for bonds, with yields recently having broken out of their long-term downtrend.

Assuming that the greenback reached an interim peak last year, it now faces an additional five or six years of weakness, based on its longterm bear trend, said Citi’s Fitzpatric­k.

“What we’re seeing here is not an episodic moment of dollar weakness but in our view more likely an extended multiyear period that is going to see the dollar significan­tly lower than where it is today,” he said.

Hafeez sees the euro gaining against the greenback to around the $1.40 area against the euro in the coming years, from $1.15 now, while Kaletsky sees a decline to around $1.30-$1.35. Fitzpatric­k sees a more bearish picture, with a decline to the $1.80 area by 2024.

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