In the past two months the US Dollar has declined 5% against major currencies (the US Dollar index currently stands at a 13 month low) suggesting that increase in the value of the dollar in the years after the Covid-19 Pandemic has come to end. Analysts suggest that this is not too surprising because the rhetoric coming out of the Federal Reserve has recently softened regarding interest rates. Indeed, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, made it plain at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium (20th – 22nd August 2024) that inflation was, in fact, receding. Chairman Powell went on to say “Inflation is on what increasingly appears to be a sustainable path to our 2% objective”.
The big question at the moment is not if, but by how much the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates at their next meeting on September 18th, 2024, and will sustained cuts in interest rates erode the dollar haven that the United States has enjoyed for the last three years? Analysts suggest that according to bond market pricing* financial markets can expect a 0.25% reduction in interest rates at the September Federal Reserve meeting. However, there are those in the market who suggest that the Federal Reserve could indeed cut rates by a full half percentage point.
*Correlation Between Interest Rates and Bond Prices – The relationship between interest rates and bond prices are such that when interest rates fall bond prices rise and when interest rates rise bond prices fall. Thus when existing bonds have a lower interest rate than current interest rates they are less desirable, so as the interest rate on the US Dollar falls, so bonds become more attractive and their price rises.
What effect will the declining value of the US Dollar have on emerging markets, exporters of commodities, and the rest of the world? As the dollar declines due to interest rate cuts some analysts are questioning whether the status as global reserve currency will be affected. Experts agree that the reserve currency status will not be threatened by a declining US Dollar as the United States is still the safest place to invest with buoyant stock markets and decent yields. However funds that are domiciled in the United States may look outside its borders as investment opportunities open up in other parts of the world.
Elsewhere, countries whose economies rely on the exports of commodities will usually reap the benefit of a falling US Dollar, as the commodity price correlation usually moves inversely to that of the US Dollar. Emerging markets that have not had the best of times in recent years should broadly benefit, especially those resource-poor markets (Inc India and China) who rely on the importation of commodities denominated in US Dollars. The US Dollar has lost ground against the G-10 currencies, the largest of which is within the European Union and specifically the Federal Republic of Germany, where a stronger Euro will only increase the pain of weakening capital expenditure and consumer confidence.
The odds are very good for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates at their September meeting. However, Chairman Powell always hedges his bets by reminding the financial community that their decisions are always data driven. He reminded us at Jackson Hole, with the upside of beating inflation against the downside of labour market concerns (which had cooled substantially with unemployment rising to 4.3%), future actions would depend on incoming data and the balance of risks.
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