Have Currency Wars Made A Comeback In 2018?

 | Feb 15, 2018 21:50

by Noreen Burke

As nations look to scale back monetary stimulus without pushing the value of their currency higher, at a time when inflation remains stubbornly low, it appears the stakes have been rising in the long-simmering currency wars. According to the UK's Express , based on recent rhetoric from the Trump administration, "the ECB (European Central Bank) is concerned the US is attempting to exert political influence on exchange rates."

The nature of the forces behind the revival of the currency wars also suggest that they are here to say, says Simon Derrick, chief currency strategist at BNY Mellon. The modern era of ‘currency wars’ arose from the need for central banks and finance ministries, all facing the same challenges of low growth and inflation, to facilitate emergence from the 2008 crisis, he explains.

Derrick notes that markets have focused on recent comments from European Central Bank Council member Ewald Nowotny, who raised concerns that the US is attempting to weaken the value of the US dollar versus other major currencies. "We in the ECB are certainly concerned about attempts by the United States to politically influence the exchange rate," Nowotny said. "That was a theme of economic discussions in Davos, where the ECB addressed this, and it will certainly be a theme at the upcoming G20 summit." The next G20 summit will be held in Argentina in March.

Nowotny's comments, made during an interview this past weekend, echoed those he made earlier this month when he accused the US of deliberately putting downward pressure on the dollar. He also suggested that the European Union should band together to serve as a ‘counterweight’ to the Trump administration.

Nowotny’s comments were widely seen as a response to US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin’s remarks about the dollar on January 24. Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Mnuchin said a weaker dollar is good for the US as it relates to trade. A weaker dollar tends to benefit US exporters by making their goods more competitive overseas. It also helps keep a lid on inflation, which in turn helps keep interest rates low.