Will The U.S. Dollar Land More Gains Next Year? 2016 Rise May
not be Steep!
It Performed Well against Brazil and Mexico
In the zero-sum game of global currency trading,
the U.S. dollar was the clear winner in 2015. The U.S. dollar chalked up
broad-based gains against world currencies, in many cases posting significant
double-digit gains.
The greenback benefitted on a variety of fronts
including the expectation of bullish U.S. interest rate differentials, on-going
support as the world’s reserve currency, and traditional safe-haven flows. Last
but not least, the U.S. economy continues to outperform on a relative basis,
versus other major industrialized economies.
Broad based gains
A look at a trading screen reveals a sea of green
for the U.S. dollar on a year-to-date basis versus the world currencies. The
U.S. dollar gained strongly versus Latin American currencies, gaining nearly
50% versus the Brazilian real and 16% against the Mexican peso. Heavy declines
in commodities in 2015, especially energies, hurt commodity-heavy economies and
in turn their currencies. The greenback trounced commodity currencies including
the Canadian dollar, the Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar. The dollar
also posted gains against the Asian and Eastern European currencies. In the G-3
arena, the dollar is set to close out the year about 10% higher versus the
euro, with only a modest 1% gain versus the yen.
What lies ahead?
Can dollar bulls continue to power their way
forward in the New Year? Most analysts believe the U.S. dollar uptrend remains
in place, but the pace of the acceleration could slow and or the currency could
be vulnerable to a correction. Others say the dollar run is tired and could be
topping out. Let’s explore.
Bullish interest rate differentials are expected to
be a positive factor for the U.S. dollar in 2016. The divergence in monetary
policies among the world’s central banks will be the largest fundamental driver
of the U.S. dollar next year.
To pointed to the Federal Reserve’s recent interest
rate hike as an example, with expectations for up to four more tightening moves
in 2016. This contrasts sharply to other
major advanced nations.
Experts say, “Both the European Central Bank and
the Bank of Japan will eventually be forced to implement additional
quantitative easing policies, Meanwhile, the Bank of England, slated as the
first central bank to raise rates after the Federal Reserve, is likely only to
hike one time in 2016, as domestic inflation remains very muted. The Bank of
Canada, meanwhile, is likely to stand pat next year given the economy’s
reliance on energy exports.”
The health of emerging market economies, especially
within the Latin region, could also be a potential driver for U.S. dollar gains
in 2016. “S&P downgraded Brazil’s sovereign debt to junk earlier this
September and there is no reason why Moody’s or Fitch won’t follow—perhaps as
soon as the first quarter of 2016,” To says.
The U.S. dollar is a traditional safe-haven and if
an emerging market crisis were to evolve the dollar could benefit. To honed in
on Brazil as a weak link.
In many ways: debt-to-GDP levels, the depth of the
country’s economic recession, and the recent corruption charges, Brazil’s
fundamentals are worse than they were in 1998, when the combination of the
Brazilian, Russian, and LTCM crises fueled a major
surge in the U.S. dollar as domestic investors sold emerging market assets and
repatriate their capital back home. I see this occurring again next year,
especially as many U.S. investors have diversified into emerging market assets
over the last five years.
Honing in on the U.S. dollar index, the greenback
could be topping out. “The U.S. dollar is peaking near 100.00 and that its
uptrend will correct downward in 2016. The 20% rally in U.S. dollar over the
last year or so has priced in a more aggressive campaign of interest rate hikes
that we are likely to actually see and also priced in that other central banks
would remain as dovish as they were in 2015, pessimists says.
Energy sector
Another factor which could impact dollar strength,
especially in relation to commodity currencies is the performance of crude oil.
“The U.S. dollar did particularly well in 2015 against resource currencies like
Canadian dollar, Norwegian Krone, the Australian dollar and the New Zealand
dollar. Going forward, “How the U.S. dollar performs against them this year
depends on what happens with commodity prices. Metals and agriculture could
bounce back, which would help Aussie and Kiwi, but energy gains will be limited
to short term trading bounces, so Canada dollar and Krone could still drag,”
other experts say.
What could dollar action mean for gold in 2016?
Gold is close to a significant bottom and could
rebound through 2016 as the U.S. dollar falters. I had been thinking it could
retest $1,000/oz. but the longer it takes the less likely it may actually
happen. There is inverse relation between gold and dollar. Thus dollar rise
means gold fall and vice versa.