Annualized Growth In Federal Spending Appears To Have Bottomed

 | Oct 26, 2016 08:10AM ET

The US policy mix is changing. The trajectory of fiscal policy is toward more stimulus, while the trajectory of monetary policy is toward less. That policy mix, expanding fiscal policy and less accommodative monetary policy is typically associated with an appreciating currency.

There are two big examples of this. The first is the Reagan-Volcker policy mix in the early 1980s that helped fuel the first dollar sustained dollar rally since the end of Bretton Woods. In September 1987, the major central banks agreed to drive it lower, and they did.

The other example of this policy mix is when the Berlin Wall fell. The German government financed the leveraged buyout of East Germany on favorable terms. The Bundesbank responded with tighter policy. This policy mixed fueled an overshoot of the German mark, not just against the dollar, but against the European currencies. This sparked a European currency crisis that led to the widening of the narrow ERM bands, and ultimately the monetary union.