4 Reasons Why A Strong Dollar Will Not Slow The Commodity Rally

 | Dec 10, 2021 23:29

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • New highs in the dollar index
  • The prospects for rising US interest rates are bullish for the US currency
  • Commodities have been rallying since the 2020 lows
  • The first two reasons for higher prices: Inflation and logistics
  • The second two reasons: Decarbonization and pricing power

The last secular bull market in the commodities asset class began when prices fell to lows in 2008 as the global financial crisis gripped markets across all asset classes. Central banks and governments dug deep into monetary and fiscal toolboxes to stabilize local and worldwide economic conditions. Slashing short-term interest rates, purchasing longer-term debt via quantitative easing programs, and stimulus packages provided the stability that got the economy through the US housing and mortgage-backed securities debacle and the European sovereign debt crisis.

One of the side effects of the treatments was a bull market in commodities that lifted prices to multi-year and, in some cases, all-time highs by 2011 and 2012.

In 2020, the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic was an entirely different crisis, but the central banks and government employed the same monetary and fiscal tools. The only difference was the levels required were far higher in 2020 than a dozen years before. The policies ignited a bullish fuse in commodities in 2020 and 2021. The legacy of unprecedented levels of liquidity and stimulus could mean the virus’s legacy will continue to push prices higher for years to come.

Even though the US Federal Reserve has begun to address rising inflationary pressures, the damage is already done. The central bank is behind the curve, with the latest CPI data at the highest level in three decades.

Bull markets rarely move in straight lines; commodity volatility makes periodic corrections downright nasty. However, we should expect higher lows and higher highs in the raw material market over the coming years as the price tag for the pandemic is massive.

h2 New highs in the dollar index/h2

The US dollar remains the world’s reserve currency. Even though China’s economy is nipping at the US’s heels to overtake the leadership position, a reserve currency must be freely convertible. Restrictions on the Chinese yuan have made the foreign exchange instrument exempt from reserve status. The second-leading reserve currency is the euro. The Japanese yen, British pound, and other currencies also have reserve status, but the US dollar is the top dog in the world of fiat foreign exchange instruments.

Over the past weeks and months, and throughout 2021, the dollar index, which measures the US currency against other world reserve foreign exchange instruments, has been moving higher.

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