US Dollar Looks Likely To Rebound

 | Jan 29, 2018 12:10

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Investment markets and key developments over the past week/h2

  • Share markets were mixed over the last week with US shares gaining 2.2% to a record high helped by good earnings news, Chinese shares up 2.2% and Australian shares up 0.7%, but European shares down 0.2% and Japanese shares down 0.7% on a further rise in the euro and yen. Bond yields were flat in the US and Japan but up in Europe. However, the big development was a further plunge and gyrations in the US dollar. The fall was accelerated by comments by US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin which intimated that the US Government had abandoned its “strong dollar” policy, but then partly reversed after President Trump indicated he ultimately wants to see a “strong dollar”. Regardless of all the political talk around it, the US dollar fell around 1.7% over the past week and contributed to gains in commodity prices, with oil also boosted by falling US oil stockpiles, and a rise in the Australian dollar back above $US0.81.
  • Lower US dollar creating consternation, but it may be at or close to a reversal. The plunge in the dollar (down 14% since the start of 2017) is basically a monetary easing for the US and will further boost US growth, profits and shares. However, it’s working against Fed tightening, increasing the likelihood that it will get more hawkish and US tariff hikes risk driving a stronger, not weaker, US dollar. For Europe, Japan and Australia the lower US dollar is a defacto monetary tightening which could further delay eventual rate hikes, with both the ECB and Bank of Japan over the last week indicating no early exit to their monetary stimulus. With the Fed at risk of getting more hawkish, other central banks remaining relatively dovish and Trump actually advocating a strong dollar, we may be close to seeing an upturn in the US dollar or at the very least further downside in the dollar is likely to be limited.
  • Global growth forecasts still being revised up. In its latest global economic review, the IMF revised up its growth forecasts yet again, with broad based increases. The pattern of IMF revisions is basically the same as for private sector forecasters and as the next chart highlights years of growth downgrades have given way to upgrades as the post GFC hangover has given finally given way to more self-sustaining growth. Just as the growth downgrades were associated with falling inflation, ongoing monetary easing and falling bond yields the upgrades are likely to eventually give way to rising inflation, gradual monetary tightening and further increases in bond yields.