Written by: Ivan Martchev A lot of investors are looking for the U.S. dollar to go down, with the Federal Reserve being more or less on the sidelines, but it just keeps staying very firm and refuses to decline. Most investors look at the U.S. Dollar Index, which frankly is outdated. The U.S. Dollar Index is not trade-weighted and it does not include major emerging markets, where the majority of global growth has happened in the last 20 years. If one were to look at the Broad U.S. Trade-Weighted Dollar Index, one would see that the dollar is near all-time highs of just under 130 (the latest close, as reported by the St. Louis Fed, is 127.48). If one wanted to use the euro as a proxy of the old U.S. Dollar Index, since it’s the heaviest component (with over 57% weighting), one could say that the dollar today, on a trade-weighted basis, is where the euro was back in 2001, when it hit 83 cents. For comparisons, the euro closed last Friday at $1.13.
This resilience in the dollar has happened as the Federal Reserve is not officially done tightening. The runoff of bonds from its balance sheet continues, even though the Fed Chairman himself has stated that for the time being the fed funds rate hikes are on hold.
Keep in mind that the only other major reserve currency – the euro – is under full “QE assault” from the ECB. Short-term policy rates in Europe are negative while the ECB balance sheet has resumed growing. This is bound to put further pressure on the euro, particularly if this belated fits-and-starts ECB brand of QE continues to be ineffective. Euro parity to the dollar under such a scenario is only a matter of time, particularly if the delayed Brexit does not happen smoothly.Related: Cheap ETFs and Mutual Funds Dupe Investors
The Trade Deal’s Impact on the Dollar and Other Currencies
The biggest trade deal is the one with China, which is 90% done as per the Trump Administration's own admission. I have long maintained here that the Chinese had every incentive to make a trade deal with the U.S., as the lack of such a deal would complicate their domestic situation tremendously at a time when the Chinese economy was slowing down under heavy debt loads and government sponsored deleveraging.The Chinese previously had taken advantage of the United States by directing their army of state buyers to buy more from their key trading partners in the region so that they can increase their political influence. There are plenty of things the Chinese could have bought from the U.S. in the last 15 years, but they didn’t. It took an unconventional man like President Trump to arrest their clever trade strategy – worthy of true Sun Tzu disciples. If the U.S. trade deficit begins to shrink notably, courtesy of aggressive Trump trade policies, this is decidedly dollar-bullish, and it would have a long-term impact on currency markets.