With so much to think about these days, I havn’t spent much time
poring over foreign exchange reserve statistics. Apparently, this is to
my detriment, as there have been a number of important developments on
this front, some of which carry far-reaching forex implications.
I’m guessing a lot of you are probably in the same boat as me,
wondering why forex reserves are worth paying any attention to. While
busy looking at complex charts and GDP/inflation statistics, however, we
forget that a currency’s value is fundamentally determined by supply
and demand. In other words, while bullish/bearish indicators and
interest rates are the proximal factors behind forex, the supply/demand dynamic is the ultimate factor. And Central Banks, collectively, comprise one of the largest contingents behind this supply/demand.
As I was saying, this equilibrium is currently undergoing a seismic shift. Specifically, “The dollar’s share
in official foreign exchange reserves in 140 countries has fallen to
its lowest level since euro cash was introduced in 2002, according to
the IMF.” The Euro, Yen, and “other currencies” (i.e. minor currencies
that are collectively important but individually unimportant),
meanwhile, have seen increased interest from Central Banks. This is
consistent with another report I saw recently, enunciating that,”Global reserves
probably gained by about $180 billion in the third quarter with U.S.
dollar-denominated reserves accounting for about $50 billion or less
than 30 percent.”
This came as a shock to many market observers, who assumed that many
economies lacked either the capacity or the impetus to diversify their
reserves, especially since many of them peg their currencies to the
Dollar. These countries are savvier than they used to be, however:
“Emerging market central banks are selling their local currencies and
buying U.S. dollars to prevent appreciation of their currencies. They’re
avoiding having a bigger concentration of U.S. dollars in their
portfolio by turning around and selling dollars against the euro and
other currencies.”
Even industrialized countries, whose forex reserves are dwarfed by
their emerging market counterparts, are jumping into diversification.
After a nearly 10-year hiatus, Canada will jump back into the forex
reserve game, by $1 Billion in foreign currency bonds, denominated in
Euros. According to one analyst,
“This…should be viewed in the context of the entire developed world,
which is in the process of generally ramping up the size of its foreign
reserves, and subtly shifting away from USD.”
The wild card is China. I use the term wild card both because China’s forex reserves are the world’s largest (recently confirmed at $2.4 Trillion)
and hence whatever it decides will have major implications, and because
it does not report the specific composition of its reserves to the IMF,
so it’s unclear how it’s outlook is changing from month to month. Plus,
it offers only vague indications of its intentions, so all we can do is
speculate.
But speculate we will! While China has publicly maintained its
support for the Dollar, quasi-publicly, there is an abundance of
concern. This has most recently manifested itself in the form of
internal calls for China to use its hoard of reserves to buy natural resources
abroad. This wouldn’t necessary involve large-scale selling of its
Dollar-denominated assets – since most oil contracts, for example, are
still settled in Dollars – but would certainly involve shedding some of
them.
As for why Central Banks are dumping Dollars (or simply choosing not
to accumulate more of them), that seems pretty obvious. Even ignoring
the Dollar’s problems, a well-balanced portfolio is an exercise in risk
management. Especially now that many of the Dollar’s rivals are as
liquid and as stable as the Greenback, itself, it makes little sense to
put all one’s eggs in one basket.
Forex Reserves in Transition: Is the Euro Making a Run?
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Labels:
Central Banks
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