Thursday, March 19, 2009

that it has the deepest and most sophisticated bond markets in the world (so there is somewhere to park capital reserves)

From the FT:

"
The US dollar, the Norwegian krone and the ‘ugly contest’

All eyes have been on the Fed in the past 24 hours - and all currency gyrations, particularly the dollar’s sharp depreciation - have been attributed to the Fed’s move to spend $300bn on buying long-term Treasuries, among other measures. As some currency analysts observed on Thursday, however, the dollar’s steep decline suggests there may have been some over-reaction to the Fed’s move.

But there are other factors at work behind the dollar’s downward trajectory - not least, growing disenchantment in some parts of the world with US economic policies (or lack thereof), and rumbles about dumping the dollar as the world’s reserve currency and adopting a shared basket of currencies.

In an article about a gathering of top Asian think tanks on Thursday in Tokyo, Reuters reported:
The role of the US dollar as the key global currency will decline after the financial crisis, and its value may also weaken due to America’s current account deficit, officials at some of Asia’s top think tanks said. But Asia, which is heavily invested in US assets, hopes any decline in the dollar will be gradual to avoid further shocks to financial systems, the officials said on Thursday.

The bottom line was summed up by Chalongphob Sussangkarn, a former Thai finance minister and now president of Thailand Development Research Institute, who said:The US deficit is so huge. This is why all countries, particularly East Asia, are concerned because we hold a lot of these assets. What happens if the US dollar falls 40 percent? Many central bankers will be losing huge amounts of money.”

Such fears, now spreading among governments about their relatively large holdings of dollar reserves, have been fuelling moves at the United Nations and there is now growing speculation among analysts and forex markets that the UN is preparing a recommendation to member countries to move away from using the dollar as the world’s reserve currency and instead, adopt a shared basket of currencies. No matter that the UN often appears bureaucratic and ineffectual - it sometimes does make an impact - and almost certainly will if it goes ahead with such a push.

Growing speculation about such an announcement was “as large a reason for the overnight sell-off in the dollar, as was the Fed’s announcement to buy US Treasuries as part of their quantitative easing policy”, noted Richard Grace, CBA’s chief currency strategist in a Thursday note.

While Grace suggests it’s “worth waiting until next week” to see the full intention of the UN’s recommendation to diversify out of dollar, he voices three key reservations about such a move:(1) The UN does not carry as much weight as the G7. If it were a G7 announcement (or even an IMF announcement) then the announcement effect (and the full ramifications) on the USD would be extremely significant (and USD negative). We do not expect such an announcement from the G7 anytime soon.

(2) Most major currency reserve managers already diversify (out of USD) anyway. There is nothing new here. Currency reserve managers will diversify according to liquidity, expected return, and to cover a mix of underlying assets (be it imports or underlying securities). Central bank data from the IMF illustrates that, while there is plenty of room for diversification, a significant amount of reserves are already diversified in non-USD currencies (chart 4).

(3) Most trade contracts and commodity prices are priced in USD. If the UN statement is designed to re-price commodities and trade contracts in an alternative to the USD, and toward a basket of currencies such as Special Drawing Rights (SDR’s), then it is a significant announcement by the UN, and clearly USD negative. But it is worth waiting until next week to see if this is the intention of the UN, and if it has endorsement from the US Treasury. The logistics of such a move are huge and will take some time to implement, but an immediate depreciation of the USD under the above circumstances would certainly occur.

Afterall, notes Grace, the two major foundations which keep the dollar stable as the world’s major reserve currency are first, that the US is the largest economy in the world; and second, that it has the deepest and most sophisticated bond markets in the world (so there is somewhere to park capital reserves). “It takes time for alternative markets to grow and adjust to additional demand”, he noted.

Even so, it’s clear, as the FT reported recently, that countries such as China, which hold massive dollar reserves, are concerned, and that there is some interest in at least radically reducing dollar holdings if not shift out of the dollar as the reserve currency. And as we saw last week, moves by Switzerland to intervene in its currency - and fresh speculation that Japan may go the same route (see Related Links, below) has triggered much discussion within governments about forex holdings and safe-haven currencies.

On top of that is the point made by Morgan Stanley’s Stephen Jen this week, that plans to massively boost the IMF’s funds in order to channel aid to Eastern Europe could ultimately see the euro gaining substantial ground. Still, as Hong Kong-based research and investment house Gavekal remarks in a note on Thursday:

There are numerous reasons to dislike the euro … some valid concerns about sterling and the yen, and, with the Fed clearly indicating its “no holds barred” approach to printing money to spur economic activity, dollar-aversion is no surprise either…

Still, we continue to believe that, warm and fuzzy IMF statements aside, the issues Europe is confronting are very serious and will necessitate a political will and flexibility which we have yet to see on the Old Continent. Thus, of all the three-legged blind mules out there, the euro remains, in our view, the most structurally challenged.

Perhaps, as the FT’s currency correspondent Peter Garnham suggests on Thursday, Norway’s krone may emerge as the big, new safe-haven currency.

The bottom line, as Gavekal concludes, remains that picking a currency has truly become an “ugly contest”. Meanwhile, it says, “away from the spotlight, some currencies either offer tremendous value because they have been oversold concerns about debt exposure (SEK, KRW, IDR…), or because they have sound-enough fundamentals which, in these panicked times, the markets are ignoring (CA$, BRL, MYR…).”

Related links:
Norwegian krone: the new safe haven currency? - FT
Game-changer for the euro, and a coming CHF bloc - FT Alphaville
Getting the IMF to take the heat - FT Alphaville
Ministers agree on need to boost IMF funds - FT
The Swiss franc factor
- FT Alphaville
Swiss franc intervention - Short View
Swiss stoke fears of currency wars - FT
On your marks, get set, devalue
- FT Alphaville
China’s dollar dilemma - FT

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat Mar 19 14:10
"The US deficit is so huge. This is why all countries, particularly East Asia, are concerned because we hold a lot of these assets. What happens if the US dollar falls 40 percent? Many central bankers will be losing huge amounts of money.”

Isn't the fact that the Flight to Safety necessitated losses when the economy reversed course understood? Surely they knew that it was a hedge against deflation, but that deflation was the one thing that everyone feared and the fight against it would be substantial. I guess what I'm saying is that they don't want to lose money on treasuries, but they want to US economy to strengthen as well, which seem contradictory goals, unless, again, you see the Flight to Safety as a hedge.

Frankly, the fact that there is a focal point for the Flight to Safety might end up being good, as it acted as a kind of LOLR for the world. I'm not sure yet that countries won't want to keep that burden, if you will, on the US, but time will tell.

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