Non-U.S. Markets to Offer Opportunities as Long as Dollar Keeps Dropping

 | Apr 21, 2023 03:36AM ET

International / Non-US investing has been so out-of-favor for so long, a recent conversation with a long-time friend who has his portfolio allocated based on a traditional bank asset allocation model replied to a comment about international investment opportunities, “It’s gone nowhere for years.”

And therein lies the opportunity.

The recent flurry of social media posts, articles, and blog updates on “dollar hegemony” and the potential loss of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency seem far-fetched at best and alarmist at worst. The rise of the recent articles and attention is a result of China inking deals with countries like Brazil to trade in either the Chinese yuan or the Brazilian real directly, thereby bypassing conversion to the dollar. There was a number of these arrangements that hit the wires several weeks ago, which were then followed by the spate of articles on the buck.

First, in terms of the reserve currency, the world’s share of the US dollar reserves is still between 50% – 60%, not because of any inherent problem with the dollar but because the euro was launched in 1999. Per the blog from the IMF , after the euro was launched, the dollar’s percentage share of the world’s reserves fell from 71% to 59% in the last 25 years. Much of that could be simply the supply of euros versus the supply of dollars.

Second, the amount of sovereign debt denominated in US dollars (liabilities of non-US central banks) is over $15 trillion as of 2021.

Every Treasury Secretary since Bob Rubin (President Clinton) has reiterated the “the Treasury prefers a stronger dollar” mantra. Still, the fact is America’s probably better served, at least in terms of the enormous trade deficit, from a gradually weakening dollar.

In the last 25 years, there have been two periods where the US dollar (as measured by the DXY) has been unusually strong:

  1. The period from 2000 to 2002, the first two years of Bush 43’s Administration, when the SP 500 was in the process of correcting 50%, and the Nasdaq was in the process of correcting 80% (along with a host of other issues like 9/11, and the Worldcom and Enron bankruptcies);
  2. 2022, or last year, when the dollar was very strong, peaking in late October ’22, after the SP 500 had bottomed, but supported by rising interest rates;

Here’s a longer-term weekly chart of the DXY: