About Those 'Eternally Rising' Corporate Profits

 | Jun 06, 2014 10:53AM ET

If corporate profits decline, what will hold up the market's lofty valuations other than the tapering flood of liquidity from the Federal Reserve?

I have often noted that profits of global U.S. corporations have been boosted by the weak US Dollar. In a weak-dollar environment, a company need not sell more goods or services or expand margins to book more profit: all a corporation needs to do is book profits earned in other currencies in dollars.


When the euro and the dollar (EUR/USD) were 1-to-1 back in the early 2000s, 100 euros of profit converted to $100 when stated in dollars. With the euro around $1.36, the same 100 euros of profit earned by the U.S. corporation in Europe converted to a $136 in profit when stated in dollars--a hefty 36% premium gained entirely as a result of the weak dollar.

This explains why the Fed has been so keen to trash the dollar: it magically increases corporate profits and thus drives stocks higher. The mainstream financial media's explanation for the weak-dollar policy is that the Fed is anxious to increase exports, but this is a sideshow; exports make up less than 9% of the U.S. GDP. The real action is in corporate profits, which thanks to the weak dollar are near all-time highs of $2 trillion, about 12% of the nation's entire GDP.