differently, high interest rates should imply a less valuable currency. Since US rates are among the highest in the world, the USD should decline in the long term in order to compensate US investors in foreign securities for the lower risk-free returns they are implicitly accepting.
The reasoning is simple enough: since the advent of
currency futures, traders have been able to speculate on future
exchange rates. In order for futures to be priced fairly (such that
arbitrage is impossible) the difference between a currency’s current
value and its implied future value should perfectly equal the difference
between domestic interest rate levels and international interest rate
levels. In the case of the US, bets on the USD made during the recent
period that US interest rates have exceeded European and British
interest rates, must have been predicated on a declining USD in the
future, which is now the present.
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