ETF Investment News & Articles
Dollar
to Rally – Or Retreat
Market Watchers Say Big Move Is Due but Can't Agree on
Direction
July 29, 2004; WSJ, Page C14
PARIS -- For a market that
promised to be full of pizzazz when the year began, the
$1.2 trillion-a-day global foreign-exchange
market has been stoic as a mule. Instead of falling steeply
further, as most analysts predicted, the dollar is higher
against most other major currencies and down less than
2% against the pound.
Moreover, its major rival -- the euro -- for much of 2004
has floundered in a range of $1.1780 to $1.2460.
Even so, that hasn't stopped economists, strategists and
other prognosticators from predicting that a big breakout
for the dollar is imminent -- and that a big rally or a
big retreat is in store. Needless to say, they disagree
on which. But it is a key question as the U.S. currency
yesterday climbed to six-week highs against the euro and
yen, its highest level in two months against the Swiss
franc and was near a one-month peak against the pound and
the Australian dollar. Its recent rise was helped by unexpectedly
upbeat comments last week by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan about the U.S. economy and inflation.
Few average
investors spend their time trying to play the foreign-exchange
markets, and rightly so. But they should
care about the dollar's direction.
Even the relatively small
shifts in currencies so far this year have had an impact
on other investments. Take the
German stock market. This year through Tuesday, it is down
4.8% in euro terms, according to Morgan Stanley Capital
International. But to an American who tallies wins and
losses in dollars, that deficit widens to 8.9% because
the dollar has strengthened since the start of the year.
Similarly, the Tokyo market's 5.3% rise expands to 6.4%
for a resident of one of the 12 euro-zone countries, but
shrinks to 1.8% in dollar terms.
First, the case for the dollar doomsayers, who see a big
slide ahead. In six months, Steve Barrow, the chief currency
strategist for Bear, Stearns & Co. in London, expects
the dollar to be trading at $1.30 to the euro, ¥100
and $2 to the pound. His 12-month forecast is even more
dollar-negative -- at $1.36 to the euro, ¥90 and $2.03
to the pound.
Late yesterday in New York, the euro was at
$1.2046, down slightly from $1.2049 late Tuesday, and the
pound had risen
to $1.8252 from $1.8212. The dollar strengthened to ¥111.69
from ¥110.96.
The core of the bears' case rests on what
economists like to call the U.S.'s "structural imbalances." In
particular, they point to the huge deficit in the U.S.
current account, a broad measure of trade in goods and
services plus certain financial transfers. Running at an
estimated $550 billion to $580 billion, it equals roughly
5.1% of U.S. gross domestic product. And because Americans
don't save enough, the U.S. must rely on foreigners to
fund the shortfall, mostly through direct investments,
the purchase of U.S. assets and bank loans. Thus, bears
argue, U.S. investments must yield enough to persuade foreigners
to keep buying them, or the dollar must sink lower.
"
There appeared to be reluctance among private-sector investors
to buy U.S. assets in the period preceding U.S. rate hikes," says
Mark McFarland, a currency strategist at UBS in London. "This
bodes ill for the dollar." Adds Barbara Rockefeller,
president of Rockefeller Treasury Services in Southbury,
Conn.: "The doom-and-gloom crowd says it's a crisis
in the making."
But at ABN Amro Bank, strategists are
looking for the euro to fall to $1.15 in three months and
$1.10 in a year, while
the pound trades down to $1.78 in three months and $1.64
in 12 months. Strategists at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi predict
the dollar will climb to ¥115 in six months and ¥118
in 12 months.
Their case rests largely on cyclical factors,
such as changing estimates of economic growth and interest
rates.
Who wins in the end? In the short run, usually the cyclical
argument prevails, says Ms. Rockefeller. Her advice: "Accumulate
dollars when they are still cheap, but get ready to jump
back on the trash-the-dollar bandwagon."
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