InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 84
Posts 32128
Boards Moderated 85
Alias Born 03/22/2005

Re: None

Saturday, 08/31/2019 10:26:05 AM

Saturday, August 31, 2019 10:26:05 AM

Post# of 245
>>> King Dollar Is Left, Right and Center of Emerging-Market Malaise


By Constantine Courcoulas

August 31, 2019


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-08-31/king-dollar-is-left-right-and-center-of-emerging-market-malaise?srnd=premium


Trade-weighted dollar index hit an all-time high in August

Dollar strength makes search for local-currency carry futile


The prospect of ever looser U.S. monetary policy is little consolation for emerging-market investors grappling with a resurgent dollar.

Rather than weaken, the world’s reserve currency has strengthened against all but one major emerging-market peers since the Federal Reserve cut interest rates in July. Earlier this month, the trade-weighted dollar index touched an all-time high, pushing past a peak seen in 2002.

Meanwhile, speculation that China may be using the yuan as a tool in the trade spat with the U.S. is bolstering havens, a sign that the worst for emerging-markets probably isn’t over.

Never before has the dollar been as strong vs major trading peers

The dollar’s ascent undermines the modus operandi for investors in the developing world. Borrowing where rates are low to invest in higher-yielding emerging-market assets is futile if the dollar’s strength wipes out gains. And it creates headwinds for large swaths of debtors in the developing world, where companies and governments rely on foreign funding for growth.

“My big concern is about the dollar. At the moment, when people want certainty, when they want a safe haven they tend to go to the dollar,” said Paul McNamara, a London-based fund manager who helps oversee $9.4 billion in assets at GAM UK, in Bloomberg TV interview on Tuesday. “That tends to be a tough environment for emerging markets.”

Traders who went long local-currency government debt in the developing world after the Federal Reserve’s decision at the end of last month will have have suffered a more than 2% loss, according to a Bloomberg Barclays index, even as global bond markets rallied.

READ MORE:

Falling EM Currencies Herald End of Renaissance for Carry Trade

Investors Slam on Brakes in Emerging Markets as Risks Escalate

Dollar Rising Into a Possible U.S. Recession Could Be a Bad Omen

Dr. Copper Has Ominous Prognosis for Emerging-Market Currencies
Dollar Demand

The market has now fully priced another 25 basis-point cut by the Fed in September, yet the dollar’s unwavering strength reflects the special status America enjoys at times of heightened global unease: it issues U.S. Treasuries, the biggest and most liquid market for safe government debt.

“It’s hard to argue against the dollar in the short term,” said Chris Turner, the head of foreign-exchange strategy at ING in London. “With so many event risks, such as trade escalation and European politics, we suspect investors will increasingly focus on capital preservation rather than the search for yield.”

<<<








Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.