U.S. Dollar is Gaining Like It’s the 1980s – For
Better or Worse
The dollar is in the midst of
its strongest rally since 1984 and – unlike then – there may be little anyone
can do to stop it.
Thirty years ago this month,
the U.S. was powerful enough to muscle its way out of a damaging trade
imbalance when it took financial markets by surprise with the Plaza Accord. In
that agreement, it persuaded Japan, Germany, France and the U.K. to join in
coordinated action to help weaken the dollar.
Now, the Federal Reserve’s
willingness to raise its interest-rate benchmark, along with currency-weakening
stimulus from other central banks, has strengthened the dollar enough to risk
crimping U.S. inflation and casting a cloud over corporate earnings. The
greenback is already within 8 percent of a record
high, according to the Fed’s Trade-Weighted Broad Dollar Index, and the danger
is tighter monetary policy may supercharge its rally.
“The Fed is in a position to
raise rates but it is extremely cautious, and the impact of the one-way dollar
strength on U.S. exporters and repatriated income must be taken into account,”
said Makoto Utsumi, 81, who was a minister at the
Japanese embassy in Washington D.C. at the time of the Plaza Accord and is now
chairman of the global advisory board for Tokai Tokyo Financial Holdings Inc.
“The common understanding for the need for policy cooperation shared at the
Plaza Accord is lost and it’s not clear where the true leadership is in each
country or in the world.”
The dollar has surged 20 percent against the yen in the past two years and 17 percent versus the euro as the prospect of higher U.S.
interest rates contrasts with monetary easing in Japan and Europe. The Fed’s
dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus 26 currencies of U.S. trading
partners, has climbed more than 18 percent since the
end of 2013, approaching the record high set in February 2002. It’s heading for
its steepest two-year advance since 1984, which saw it surge 32 percent.
At the same time, the
International Monetary Fund flagged in its annual report in July that global
imbalances were a hindrance to global growth and the dollar was trading
“modestly above” a level consistent with its fundamentals.
Yet a Group of 20 gathering in
Turkey this month ended without any concrete policy on how to respond to a
slowing Chinese economy, even after an unexpected yuan devaluation fueled concern a
currency war will derail global growth.
That’s a contrast with the
September 1985 gathering of international finance ministers at the Plaza Hotel
in New York. From 1979, the dollar had strengthened for six straight years,
making U.S. companies uncompetitive. On the 22nd, they signed an agreement to
weaken the greenback, which subsequently tumbled about 50 percent
against the yen in two years and 30 percent against
the deutsche mark.
Human Relationships
The G-20 outcome highlights
the loss of coordination since the 1980s that can only be built up through
human relationships developed over years of regular contact, according to
Japan’s former top currency official Toyoo Gyohten, who was involved in negotiations leading up to the
Plaza Accord.