U.S. Dollar Rallies as Data Shows Economy Is Resilient

 | Jul 31, 2023 02:06AM ET

Prices pressures are abating, albeit gradually, while economic momentum is faltering. The data in the coming weeks will help shape expectations for rate decisions for September. As the market pushed back against the Federal Reserve's forward guidance that anticipated two hikes in the second half, the US dollar fell against the G10 currencies, but found support beginning around the middle of the July as the market was reluctant to return to pricing in a cut this year and doubts rose about the extent that the European Central Bank and the Bank of England would raise rates.

The dollar's recovery is likely to extend into August, perhaps, encouraged by the risk of the first increase in the US year-over-year headline CPI since June 2022, when it peaked slightly over 9%. The US economy is looking more resilient than Europe and its 2.4% annualized growth in Q2 appears to put it at the top of the G7. We suspect the risk of a September Fed rate hike is greater than the market, which has less than a 20% chance discounted. 

Although there remain worrisome economic signs, including rising debt-stress levels, the inverted yield curve, and the pace of decline among the leading economic indicators, several cyclical indicators are improving, such as several housing indicators and auto sales. Job growth is slowing, and peak tightness looks to be behind us, but it remains robust. At 3.6% in June, and expected to be unchanged in July, the unemployment rate remains well below the median Federal Reserve forecast of 4.1%. Still, the consensus view is a dramatic slowdown in H2, driven to a large extent by a pullback in the consumer, and if this does not materialize quickly, the risk of a September hike will likely rise. Such a scenario is also consistent with a stronger dollar.

The tightening of lending criteria in the US began prior to the March bank stress. Commercial and industrial loan growth has softened marginally, but the reliance on the capital markets, arguably reduces the blow. In Europe, dependency on bank lending makes the tightening of credit standards and the decline in loan demand more potent. Business and consumer confidence in Europe is also weaker than in the US. Moreover, the eurozone data has mostly been disappointing while US data has been more mixed. 

For the first time in nearly eight years, Japan's headline CPI in June was above the US (3.3% vs. 3.0%). Of course, the weightings of the respective baskets are quite different. Japan's CPI gives housing less weighting (21.5% vs. 33.3%), and transportation (9.1% vs. 16.9%), but food and beverages get a higher weight (26.0% vs. 15.1%) and recreation (9.1% vs. 6.7%). Japanese subsidies electricity and gas are set to expire at the end of September. Still, Japanese inflation appears to be peaking and demand factors do not appear robust.

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China has become more opaque. Access to data has become more limited. While there have long been questions about the veracity of Chinese data, other data points allowed a triangulation of government estimates. This has become more difficult. Still, there is a sense that although the 5% growth target this year is achievable, there is widespread perceptions of dissatisfaction. Chinese officials want to boost consumer spending, and although details are sparse, household goods and electric vehicles are the focus. Also in vague terms, the Politburo endorsed efforts to boost the private sector.

The base effect points to a negative July CPI print (August 8), but prices are likely to stabilize as Q3 proceeds. Housing is the largest drag on GDP and the official 18% decline in new house sales in June likely understates the case. Exports are also falling and the 13% year-over-year decline in June was the worst since the early days of the pandemic. Beijing still appears reluctant to enact the kind of structural reforms that would boost confidence among international investors that a corner has been turned. Nevertheless, many global fund managers appear underweight China and there is scope for some catch-up gains.

The combination of Russia's withdrawal from the agreement to allow the shipping of Ukraine grain, and its subsequent bombing of food depots, the historically hot summer in various parts of the world (El Nino), and some protectionism to help insulate domestic producers (India export ban non-basmati white rice) drove up grain prices in July. In June, the United Nation's World Food Price Index had fallen to its lowest level in more than two years. Meanwhile, as the OPEC+ cuts in output began biting, the price of crude oil rose 11-12% in July. The rally in foodstuffs and energy helped drive the CRB commodity index almost 8% higher in July, the most since May 2022. If sustained, inflation worries may resurface. 

The BRICS meeting begins August 22, a week after the 52nd anniversary of the US decision to end the remaining formal links between the dollar and gold (Bretton Woods), ushering in the current era of floating exchange rates. The meeting has captured the imaginations of many with some suggestion that a gold-backed currency could be launched that would ostensibly rival the dollar. There have been other suggestions that a new trade settlement token, also backed by gold, could be considered. We doubt that anything along these lines will be adopted. It seems quite clear that China and India, for example, prefer to work toward further internationalizing their national currencies.

Moreover, as more countries apply to join the BRICS and its New Development Bank, we suspect that framing it as a rival bloc to the G7 will less helpful. When China first launched the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank in 2016, many, including US officials, saw it as rivaling the World Bank. However, many US allies have joined, including the UK, Canada, Germany, France, and Australia. Rather than supplant the World Bank, it appears as a parallel institution, and whose subscriptions and loans are in US dollars. 

Still, technological advancements and national ambitions have given rise to new payment systems that can settle bilateral trade in local currencies. These developments may reduce the dollar's use a means of exchange (One of the three functions of money identified by economists. The other two being store of value and unit of account). However, the dollar's function as a store of value for international savers (central bank reserves, pensions, etc.) remains intact. Here the depth, breadth, and transparency of the US Treasury market is unrivaled. And despite the references to the dollar's "exorbitant privilege," US interest rates are well above European and Japanese rates. The Federal Reserve offers custodial services to foreign official accounts. Since the end of Q1, the foreign holdings of Treasury and Agency bonds in the Fed's custody rose by almost $140 bln.

The MSCI Emerging Markets equity index rose by about 4.6% in July, its best performance since January. July was also the first month it outperformed the MSCI World Index of developed equity market (~2.4%) since January. Emerging market bonds also did well and the premium over US Treasuries (EMBI) fell to its lowest in 15 months. Emerging market currencies were mixed. The JP Morgan Emerging Market Currency Index was practically flat in July after falling each month in Q2. It is off about 1.4% year-to-date.

The MSCI Emerging Market Currency Index, which is slightly less inclusive than the JP Morgan iteration (22 vs. 25 constituents), is weighted by market-capitalization (vs. free-float and trade-weighted), rose by about 1.7% in July to bring the year-to-date gain to 2.6%. Yet these broad metrics miss some nuances. Year-to-date, Latam currencies are the top three performers among emerging markets (Colombia, Mexico, and Brazil), but in July, the only Latam currency to make it into the top four was the Colombian peso. On hand, the Argentine peso and Turkish lira were the weakest performers in July and remain on the bottomed of the rankings year-to-date.