The Dollar is currently teetering on the edge of a precipice. Many
analysts are predicting that, having recently retreated from a record
low against the Euro, the Dollar’s best days are still in front of it.
On the other hand, the economic data and interest rate pictures remain
nuanced, and still favor the Euro on paper. In this article, we aim to
sort through this morass, and produce a clear summation of the factors
which bear on the Dollar in the short term.
Let’s begin with the bullish side of the equation, which is supported
by the Dollar’s recent upside swing. First of all, while interest rate
differentials are currently hurting the Dollar, the Fed is probably near
the end of its loosening cycle, while the ECB has yet to begin. The
best-case scenario would be a tightening of US monetary policy
simultaneous with a loosening of EU policy. Next, there is the economic
picture. The most recent GDP data indicates an economy that is still
growing, albeit slowly. In addition, the unemployment rate declined in
the most recent month for which data is available. The US stock market
has regained half the value it lost in the first three months of 2008,
and the overall P/E ratio is close to its long-term average, which
suggests the markets could appreciate further. Finally, the economic
stimulus package that was approved by Congress in March will go into
effect this month, as tax rebates worth $150 Billion are distributed to
consumers and businesses.
On the bearish side, let’s return to the interest rate story. While
the future certainly bodes well for the US, the present still favors the
EU. US interest rates are currently negative in real terms, and
investors have already turned the Dollar into a funding currency for
carry trades. Moreover, negative real interest rates implies high
inflation. US CPI is hovering around 4.0%, and could continue to climb
in proportion with surging food and energy prices. In fact, inflation is
now viewed by economists as more problematic than the economy, itself.
While US exporters have benefited from the resulting cheap Dollar, US
consumers- which account for 75% of the US economy- have not. The
economic downturn still has not officially been labeled a recession by
the Bureau of Economic Research, but the situation remains tenuous, and
the scales could easily be tipped by a few pieces of negative economic
data.
The wild card in this mess is housing. In certain regional markets,
real estate prices have tumbled by 30%. In other markets, they have
hardly budged. While an estimated $350 Billion in subprime debt has
already been written down, analysts disagree over the eventual total.
Estimates vary from $1 Trillion to less than $350 Billion, which would
imply "write-ups" on debt that was erroneously declared worthless. The
difference represented here amounts to 6% of GDP, which could mean the
difference between growth and contraction, a strong Dollar and a weak
Dollar, respectively.
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