Dollar Towers Above Rivals, Posing Fresh Threats to Financial Markets

Article: Strong/misaligned dollar hurts corporate earnings and commodity prices. 

Me: Exchange rate mgmt to achieve and maintain current account balancing dollar price needed for realignment and economic/jobs growth in real economy.

[Ira Iosebashvili | August 18, 2019 | WSJ]

The ICE Dollar Index, which tracks the dollar against a basket of six major currencies, stands near its highest level in more than two years and is up nearly 11% from its 2018 lows.

One key driver of the dollar’s gains has been the relative strength of the U.S. economy, which since 2015 until recently has allowed the Fed to raise rates far above the levels of borrowing costs in other developed countries.

As recently as last year, investors were betting that growth would accelerate abroad, boosting foreign currencies as central banks outside the U.S. raised rates. That pickup never materialized and investors now believe the gap in yields is likely to remain in place as central banks ease monetary policy to counter the effects of a global slowdown.

Even with last week’s decline in Treasury yields, investors can still expect to collect a far larger payout from U.S. government bonds than from those in any other developed country, including Europe and Japan, where negative yields have proliferated in recent years.

“There is nothing exceptional about U.S. growth, but it still looks pretty exceptional compared to other parts of the world,” said Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at Deutsche Bank.

The dollar’s strength has been a double-edged sword, both inside and outside the U.S.

A stronger dollar is a negative for U.S. exporters because it makes their products less competitive abroad. It also is hurting U.S. multinationals by making it more expensive for them to convert foreign revenues into U.S. currency—a worrisome trend for investors betting on an earnings rebound in the second half of the year.

The earnings of S&P 500 companies with more international exposure fell an average of around 12% in the second quarter compared with a year earlier, while those with more domestic revenue posted growth of more than 4%, a FactSet analysis of a selected group of recent earnings reports found.

Companies that have cited the dollar as a negative factor this year run the gamut from Levi Strauss & Co. and International Business Machines Corp.to medical-technology company Hologic Inc.

At the same time, the dollar’s strength has made investors more cautious on emerging markets, which in recent months have been hit by fears of slowing global growth stemming from the trade battle between China and the U.S.

A rising dollar makes it more expensive for developing countries to service their dollar-denominated debt, pressuring those that have borrowed heavily in the U.S. currency. The outstanding dollar-denominated debt of emerging-market companies and governments stood at $6.4 trillion at the end of the first quarter, compared with $2.7 trillion a decade ago, according to the Institute of International Finance.

Prices of commodities, which have been buffeted by growth fears and the trade-war escalation, also have been hurt by the strengthening dollar. Oil, copper and most other raw materials are denominated in dollars and become more expensive to foreign buyers when the U.S. currency appreciates.

The strong dollar does benefit U.S. companies that import goods from abroad by increasing their buying power. It also, in theory, helps U.S. consumers buying foreign goods. American tourists also will see their money go further abroad.

The dollar’s strength also has been a boon to countries trying to boost growth because it makes their own currencies cheaper. That has drawn the ire of President Trump and heightened speculation that the Treasury Department may try to weaken the dollar through intervention in currency markets, a tactic that hasn’t been attempted by the U.S. since 2000.

Mr. Trump and his economic advisers discussed a proposal to intervene in foreign-currency markets to weaken the dollar but ultimately decided against such an action, officials said last month.

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