Why The Aussie Dollar Is Likely To Fall Further And Shorting It Is Good Protection

 | Aug 21, 2018 13:47

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Key points/h2

  • The downtrend in the Australian dollar from 2011 likely has more to go. The Aussie dollar is near fair value, but the increasing negative interest rate gap to the US and a messy outlook for commodities suggest a fall to $US0.70 by year end.
  • Given the downside risks for the Aussie dollar and that being short the Aussie dollar is a good hedge against threats to the global outlook it makes sense for Australian investors to maintain a decent exposure to foreign currency via unhedged global investments
h2 Introduction/h2

For the past two calendar years the Australian dollar has defied our expectations for weakness. But after hitting $US0.81 in January it’s been trending down as US interest rates fell below the Australian cash rate, the threat of a US-driven trade war increased and it recently broke below a short-term range around $US0.74 and fell as low as $US0.72 on fears of contagion to global growth from a crisis in Turkey. This note looks at outlook for the $A and why it makes sense for Australian-based investors to hold a decent exposure to foreign exchange.

h2 What are the fundamental drivers of the Aussie dollar?/h2

The Australian dollar tends to move in line with relative price differentials over the long term. This is the theory of purchasing power parity (PPP) according to which exchange rates should equilibrate the price of a basket of goods and services across countries – see the next chart.