Dollar Slides as Pressure Increases on China to Revalue - Will it Matter?
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Dollar
Slides as Pressure Increases on China
to Revalue– Will it Matter?
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More
Central Banks Talk of Diversifying to Euro
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G7
Meeting Could Pave
Way for US to Brand China
as Currency Manipulator
US
Dollar - The US
dollar succumbed to selling pressure today as the G7 harshened its stance on
China, calling for exchange rate
flexibility specifically from the Asian giant. This is eerily reminiscent of the 2003
G7 meeting in Dubai.
If you recall, back in 2003, the G7 finance ministers called for “more
flexibility in exchange rates.” At
that time, the change to the statement was the first significant move by the
committee in 3 years. It resulted
in a 150 pip knee-jerk rally in the EUR/USD, but over the next four months, the dollar fell another 11 percent against the
Euro (which amounted to 1100 pips), 9 percent against the British pound and 7
percent against the Japanese Yen. The long term impact was far more
substantial than the market’s knee jerk reaction, which is the risk that the
market faces today. Over the
weekend, we had another major shift to the G7 statement. For the very first time ever, China
has been mentioned directly by the G7, reflecting their increased concern over
the past few months. This also raises the
question of whether the US Treasury’s FX report due in two weeks would also
brand China as a currency manipulator. The G7 report could have paved the way
for the Treasury to also take a harsher stance which given the G7 statement,
would probably have less of an impact on the market. More importantly, the G7 statement is
basically advocating appreciation in the Asian currencies and as a byproduct,
depreciation in the US dollar. This is a key point since it comes at a
pretty important juncture. The
Federal Reserve is nearing the end of its tightening cycle while reserve
diversification has picked up steam. Oil prices, though lower today are still at
extremely lofty levels and in the words of President Bush, “it will be a tough
summer for US consumers.” Consumer confidence, due for release
tomorrow, is expected to be heavily impacted by the recent climb in oil. Most of the US data
due for release this week is expected to be weaker except for first quarter
GDP. Therefore, the tone has been
set by the G7 meeting and if history is a reliable indicator, then we could
expect a bit of consolidation and then another fresh wave of selling.
Euro -
The Euro is benefiting from broad dollar bearishness as well as more
talk of reserve diversification.
The latest central bank to talk of their demand for Euros was the
governor of Qatar’s central bank, who said that
they have recently been buying Euros for reserve purposes and although their
current reserve makeup is confidential, up to 40 percent of its currency
reserves could be moved to Euros.
The UAE is also considering shifting another 10 percent of their reserves
to Euros next month, which follow’s Sweden’s announcement on Friday that
they have increased the Euro share of their reserves from 37 percent to 50
percent. On top of that, after
talking down the dollar’s status as the absolute reserve currency on Friday,
Russia announced today that they
would allow their $61 billion oil fund to invest in bonds issued not only by the
US and Britain, but also by Eurozone countries. With the breakdown of the EU Constitution well behind
us, the market has feels that reserve diversification is a theme that is here to
stay. Meanwhile French figures came
in much stronger than expected today with business confidence rising from 106 to
108. German industrial production for the month of February was up 1.0 percent
with an upward revision from -0.1 percent to up 0.4 percent the previous
month. This is in line with
continued improvement in the Eurozone economy and the need for more rate hikes
by the ECB. It remains questionable
though how hawkish the central bank will be. ECB President Trichet is speaking at 5pm
EST, so it will be interesting to see if he talks down the Euro once again
following a 300 pip rise over the past week.
British Pound -
The British pound is soaring today thanks not only to dollar
bearishness, but also firmer UK data. Retail sales increased a more than
expected 0.7 percent last month even though
there was a milder downward revision the previous month. This is quite encouraging in the context
of generally mixed economic data.
Consumer spending has remained relatively stable, which should help to
offset some of the bearish sentiment brought on by the weak inflation growth
figures reported last week.
Nonetheless it doesn’t change the landscape much for the Bank of
England. The central bank is still
expected to leave interest rates unchanged. Mortgage lending and public finances
both increased more than expected indicating
that for the time being, the UK economy is holding on.
Japanese Yen -
The Japanese Yen was undoubtedly the day’s biggest mover. After having range traded for 2.5
months, the
currency has finally broken out and is dictating overall market activity. As the proxy for Asia, the yen is most
sensitive to any developments in China and at the moment, the big question is how
China will respond. In the worst case scenario that
China is also branded a currency
manipulator as we mentioned in the dollar section, will that be enough to force
them to change their currency regime?
China has proven to not be one to
succumb to international pressure and each move that they have made in the past
has been very politically astute.
Just take the Chinese President’s visit to the US. Even though there was widespread
speculation that the Chinese President could make a major foreign exchange
related announcement – he didn’t.
Yet ahead of the
US Treasury’s report,
China may very well make a minor but
symbolically important shift that if branded as a currency manipulator, they
could use as rebuttal. A major
shift however will be unlikely since China has already downplayed the G7’s
criticism. In addition, as
indicated by Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley,
China does not want to be the scapegoat for the US’
self created problem. He argues
that “America’s unprecedented savings
deficiency” is what got the current account balances to where it is now. More interestingly though, he adds that
back in the 1980s, when the US had its first major current account deficit,
it screamed unfair value and pressured Japan, the country that it had the biggest gap
with back then the same way it is pressuring China
now to let the yen rise so that the gap would be closed. Japan agreed and let USD/JPY slide
but sadly the strong yen was what fueled the major asset bubble that eventually
led to the Asian Financial crisis.
Roach says that China
is far weaker economically now than Japan was then and in such a sensitive time, they
probably have no interest in making the same mistakes that Japan
did. These are fascinating comments
by Roach that are well worth noting.


