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The currency has fallen 9% since Donald Trump's inauguration on 20 January 2017
Thursday 03 Dec 2020 Author: Russ Mould

It wasn’t always easy to understand what US president Donald Trump wanted, but at least he was consistent about the dollar. He spent much of his four-year tenure in the White House complaining about how the greenback was too high and ultimately he got his way, even if he may have finally come around to the view in 2020 that a rising currency was a back-handed compliment from markets about the relative strength of the US economy.

The dollar has fallen 9% since his inauguration on 20 January 2017, using the trade-weighted basket of currencies that makes up the DXY (or ‘Dixie’) index as a guide, and now trades at a two-and-a-half-year low.

A loss of value in the globe’s reserve currency, and a major haven asset, has potential implications for a range of markets, and not just foreign exchange.

Gloomy greenback

There are multiple possible reasons for the buck’s case of the blues. First, the president regularly railed against the US Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, arguing that chair Jay Powell and the Federal Open Markets Committee were running it too tight.

Whether they listened to the president, heeded stress in the financial markets in autumn 2019 or took other data on board, Powell and colleagues had begun to push through interest rate cuts even before the global pandemic pulled the rug from under the US economy in 2020.

Second, the president’s trade war with China unsettled markets and seemed to bring no great economic benefit. The US trade deficit has surged back toward its all-time high, with the result that dollars are flowing out of America to pay for the overseas-produced goods that consumers are sucking into the country.

In some ways this can be seen as a good sign. In 1960, economist Robert Triffin argued that America would always have to run a trade deficit, and hand out more than dollars than it received, to ensure the world had enough of the reserve currency to go around.

The alternative would be a painful liquidity squeeze on the globe’s economy and financial markets alike as dollars flooded home.

Third, the markets’ latest round of optimism that the pandemic may soon be over and a global economic recovery underway, following the vaccine announcements from Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, and AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, means that perceived havens such as the dollar are less in demand.

Finally, and perhaps most fundamentally, Trump oversaw a huge increase in the Federal deficit. When he took office America’s national debt was $18.9 trillion. It began to surge even before the pandemic and has soared in its wake to $27 trillion. Although Republicans and Democrats have failed to agree upon another round fiscal stimulus, the debate centres on the degree of further borrowing, not whether there should be further debt creation or not.

This argument is not unique to America – something which may be sparing the dollar a few more blushes – but it will surely continue a trend of ever-higher government debt ceilings.

That dates to the early 1970s, when Richard Nixon took America off the gold standard so he could pay for welfare programmes and the Vietnam War, but the trend is clearly accelerating.

Remember that Moody’s downgrade of America’s credit rating, and summer of turmoil in financial markets, came after 2013’s debt ceiling suspension, when the limit was $16.7 trillion. It had taken America 237 years to get there but Uncle Sam has taken just seven years to overspend by a further $9.3 trillion.

Road to ruin

Anyone who takes the view that American debt is not a sustainable path will be wary of the dollar.

Anyone who feels that Covid-19 can be contained, and the world builds a reliable recovery, will also fight shy of the buck. Triffin’s theories imply that a weak dollar is the natural result of a strong US economy and robust global trade flows – both of which would logically benefit emerging markets and commodities, asset classes that traditionally do well when the dollar is weak.

The dollar is likely to hang tough for a while yet, not least as suitable candidates to replace it as the world’s reserve currency are in short supply.

China’s renminbi is not fully convertible, a return to gold will impose disciplines which no politician or central banker will accept (or can afford) and cryptocurrencies do not have universal acceptance.

But any attempt to reset currencies and debts could yet be spearheaded by central bank-backed digital currencies, a trend which must be closely watched.

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