*Denial or 
acceptance<http://www.economist.com/businessfinance/PrinterFriendly.cfm?story_id=14700644>
* Oct 22nd 2009
>From The Economist print edition


*The dollar’s slide is complicating life for countries with floating
exchange rates*

IN ONE sense, a weak dollar is good news for the world. Behind the global
economy’s current revival is a returning appetite for risky investments,
such as equities and corporate bonds. At their most panicky investors
shunned all but the safest and most liquid assets: American Treasuries were
a favoured comfort blanket. That demand for safe assets prompted a rally in
the dollar in the months after the collapse of Lehman Brothers last
September.

Now that stockmarkets and economies have bounced back, dollar weakness has
returned, causing a headache for countries with floating exchange rates (see
chart). That has prompted three responses: direct measures to stop
currencies rising; attempts to talk them down; or acceptance of a weak
dollar as a fact of life.

**

Brazil has gone for the direct approach. Foreign capital has flooded in,
attracted by the healthy prospects for economic growth and high short-term
interest rates. That has pushed up local stock prices, as well as the real,
Brazil’s currency. To stem the tide, the government this week reintroduced a
tax on foreign purchases of equities and bonds. Though many doubt the
long-term efficacy of such measures, it had an immediate effect. The real,
which had risen by more than one-third since March, fell by 2% (before
regaining some ground). Brazil’s main stockmarket dropped by almost 3%.

Others have resorted to talking their currencies down. In a statement
released after its monetary-policy meeting on October 20th, Canada’s central
bank said the strength of the Canadian dollar would more than offset all the
good news on the economy in the past three months. The currency’s strength
would weigh on exports, said the bank’s rate-setters, and mean that
inflation would return to its 2% target a bit later than previously
forecast. Foreign-exchange markets took the hint: the Canadian dollar fell
by 2% against the American one after the bank’s statement.

Europe’s efforts to contain the dollar’s weakness have had rather less
impact. This week the dollar slid to $1.50 to the euro, just as Henri
Guaino, an adviser to Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, described such
a rate as a “disaster” for Europe’s economy. Mr Sarkozy has often moaned
about the harm done to exporters by a muscular euro.

Other euro-zone countries are less rattled. “A strong euro reflects the
strength of the European economy,” shrugged Walter Bos, the Dutch finance
minister. Germany, Europe’s export powerhouse, feels that its firms can just
about live with a euro worth $1.50. Its exporters still flourished when the
euro last surged to that level, because demand from Asia and the Middle East
for its specialist capital goods proved insensitive to price. France,
however, struggled. A report earlier this year by the European Commission
showed that French exporters lost market share in the euro’s first decade.
Other euro-area countries such as Greece, Ireland, Italy and Spain have at
least benefited from the recent revival of risk appetite through lower
premiums on their debt.

Even so, there is palpable concern that the dollar’s decline might get out
of hand. Jean-Claude Trichet, head of the European Central Bank (ECB), has
repeated his line that policymakers across the Atlantic say a strong dollar
is in America’s interests. That is meant to signal a shared interest in
avoiding a dollar rout. In fact America needs a weak dollar to help revive
its economy and reorient it towards exports and away from consumer spending.
Since China and some other Asian countries track the dollar, the burden of
exchange-rate adjustment falls on the euro. Mr Trichet, Joaquín Almunia, the
European Union’s economics commissioner, and Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs
the Eurogroup of finance ministers, will visit China later this year to
press for a stronger yuan.

Some think part of the solution is in the gift of the ECB: if it lowered its
interest rates it would weaken the euro against the dollar. Yet the
monetary-policy setting in the euro area has scarcely been different from
that in America. The ECB’s main policy rate, at 1%, is higher than the
Federal Reserve’s, but it has been so liberal with its provision of
long-term cash loans to banks that excess money has pushed market interest
rates close to those of other rich economies. A strong euro may even help by
allowing the ECB to maintain a loose monetary stance for longer, says
Stephen Jen of BlueGold Capital, a hedge fund.

The ECB will eventually face a problem that some central banks are already
encountering. As long as America keeps its interest rates low, attempts by
others to tighten policy (even stealthy ones that leave benchmark rates
unchanged) are likely to mean a stronger currency. That is a price that
Australia’s central bank seems prepared to pay. The minutes of its policy
meeting on October 6th, at which it raised its main interest rate, revealed
the exchange rate was not a consideration. The bank’s rate-setters ascribed
the Australian dollar’s rise to the economy’s resilience and strong
commodity prices. In New Zealand, similarly, the central-bank governor, Alan
Bollard, told politicians that the kiwi dollar’s strength would not stand in
the way of higher rates.

When the global economy was in free fall, all countries looked to stimulate
their economies at the same time. “What looked like co-ordination was really
coincidence,” says David Woo of Barclays Capital. Recovery is more uneven.
Countries with greater exposure to buoyant emerging Asia, such as Australia,
are sanguine about a weak greenback. Even Japan seems relatively unfazed.
But elsewhere, an ailing dollar feels much more threatening.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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