For Immediate
Release October 12, 2009
Dollar
Reaches Breaking Point as Banks Shift Reserves
(Update2)
By Ye
Xie and Anchalee Worrachate
Central
banks flush with record reserves are increasingly
snubbing dollars in favor of euros and yen, further
pressuring the greenback after its biggest two-
quarter rout
in almost two decades.
Policy makers boosted foreign currency holdings
by $413 billion last quarter, the most since at
least 2003, to $7.3 trillion, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. Nations reporting currency
breakdowns put 63 percent of the new cash into
euros and yen in April, May and June, the latest
Barclays Capital data show. That's the highest
percentage in any quarter with more than an $80
billion increase.
World leaders are acting on threats to dump the
dollar while the Obama administration shows a
willingness to tolerate a weaker currency in an
effort to boost exports
and the economy as long as it doesn't drive away
the nation's creditors. The diversification
signals that the currency won't rebound anytime
soon after losing 10.3 percent on a trade-weighted
basis the past six months, the biggest drop
since 1991.
"Global central banks are getting more serious
about diversification, whereas in the past they
used to just talk about it," said Steven
Englander, a former Federal Reserve researcher
who is now the chief U.S. currency strategist
at Barclays in New York. "It looks like they
are really backing away from the dollar."
Sliding Share
The dollar's 37 percent share of new reserves
fell from about a 63 percent average since 1999.
Englander concluded in a report that the trend
"accelerated"
in the third quarter. He said in an interview
that "for the next couple of months, the
forces are still in place" for continued
diversification.
America's currency has been under siege as
the Treasury sells a record amount of debt to
finance a budget deficit that totaled $1.4 trillion
in fiscal 2009 ended Sept. 30.
Intercontinental Exchange Inc.'s Dollar
Index, which tracks the currency's performance
against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar,
Swiss franc and Swedish krona, fell to 75.77 last
week, the lowest level since August 2008 and down
from the high this year of 89.624 on March 4.
The index, at 76.431 today, is within six points
of its record low reached in March 2008.
Foreign companies and officials are starting
to say their economies are getting hurt because
of the dollar's weakness.
Toyota's "Pain"
Yukitoshi
Funo, executive vice president of Toyota City,
Japan-based Toyota
Motor Corp., the nation's biggest automaker,
called the yen's strength "painful."
Fabrice
Bregier, chief operating officer of Toulouse,
France-based Airbus
SAS, the world's largest commercial planemaker,
said on Oct. 8 the euro's 11 percent rise since
April was "challenging."
The economies of both Japan and Europe depend
on exports that get more expensive whenever the
greenback slumps. European Central Bank President
Jean-Claude
Trichet said in Venice on Oct. 8 that U.S.
policy makers' preference for a strong dollar
is "extremely important in the present circumstances."
"Major reserve-currency issuing countries
should take into account and balance the implications
of their monetary policies for both their own
economies and the world economy with a view to
upholding stability of international financial
markets," China President Hu
Jintao told the Group of 20 leaders in Pittsburgh
on Sept. 25, according to an English translation
of his prepared remarks. China is America's largest
creditor.
Dollar's Weighting
Developing countries have likely sold about $30
billion for euros, yen and other currencies each
month since March, according to strategists at
Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.
That helped reduce the dollar's weight
at central banks that report currency holdings
to 62.8 percent as of June 30, the lowest on record,
the latest International Monetary Fund data show.
The quarter's 2.2 percentage point decline was
the biggest since falling 2.5 percentage points
to 69.1 percent in the period ended June 30, 2002.
"The diversification out of the dollar will
accelerate," said Fabrizio
Fiorini, a money manager who helps oversee
$12 billion at Aletti Gestielle SGR SpA in Milan.
"People are buying the euro not because they
want that currency, but because they want to get
rid of the dollar. In the long run, the U.S. will
not be the same powerful country that it once
was."
Central banks' moves away from the dollar are
a temporary trend that will reverse once the Fed
starts raising interest rates from near zero,
according to Christoph
Kind, who helps manage $20 billion as head
of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust in Germany.
"Flush" With Dollars
"The world is currently flush with the U.S.
dollar, which is available at no cost," Kind
said. "If there's a turnaround in U.S. monetary
policy, there will be a change of perception about
the dollar as a reserve currency. The diversification
has more to do with reduction of concentration
risks rather than a dim view of the U.S. or its
currency."
The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of
54 economists is for the Fed to lift its target
rate for overnight loans between banks to 1.25
percent by the end of 2010. The European Central
Bank will boost its benchmark a half percentage
point to 1.5 percent, a separate poll shows.
America's economy will grow 2.4 percent in
2010, compared with 0.95 percent in the euro-zone,
and 1 percent in Japan, median predictions show.
Japan is seen keeping its rate at 0.1 percent
through 2010.
Central bank diversification is helping push
the relative worth of the euro and the yen above
what differences in interest rates, cost of living
and other data indicate they should be. The euro
is 16 percent more expensive than its fair value
of $1.22, according to economic models used by
Credit Suisse Group AG. Morgan Stanley says the
yen is 10 percent overvalued.
Reminders of 1995
Sentiment toward the dollar reminds John
Taylor, chairman of New York-based FX Concepts
Inc., the world's largest currency hedge fund,
of the mid-1990s. That's when the greenback tumbled
to a post-World War II low of 79.75 against the
yen on April 19, 1995, on concern that the Fed
wasn't raising rates fast enough to contain inflation.
Like now, speculation about central bank diversification
and the demise of the dollar's primacy rose.
The currency then gained 26 percent versus the
yen and 25 percent against the deutsche mark in
the following two years as technology innovation
increased U.S.
productivity and attracted foreign capital.
"People didn't like the dollar in 1995,"
said Taylor, whose firm has $9 billion under management.
"That was very stupid and turned out to be wrong.
Now, we are getting to the point that people's
attitude toward the dollar becomes ridiculously
negative."
Dollar Forecasts
The median estimate of more than 40 economists
and strategists is for the dollar to end the year
little changed at $1.47 per euro, and appreciate
to 92 yen, from 90.38 today.
Englander at London-based Barclays, the world's
third- largest foreign-exchange trader, predicts
the U.S. currency will weaken 3.3 percent against
the euro to $1.52 in three months. He advised
in March, when the dollar peaked this year, to
sell the currency. Standard Chartered, the most
accurate dollar-euro forecaster in Bloomberg surveys
for the six quarters that ended June 30, sees
the greenback declining to $1.55 by year-end.
The dollar's reduced share of new reserves
is also a reflection of U.S. assets' lagging
performance as the country struggles to recover
from the worst recession since World War II.
Lagging Behind
Since Jan. 1, 61 of 82 country equity indexes
tracked by Bloomberg have outperformed the Standard
& Poor's 500 Index of U.S. stocks, which has
gained 18.6 percent. That compares with 70.6 percent
for Brazil's
Bovespa Stock Index and 49.4 percent for Hong
Kong's Hang
Seng Index.
Treasuries have lost 2.4 percent, after reinvested
interest, versus a return of 27.4 percent in emerging
economies' dollar- denominated bonds, Merrill
Lynch & Co. indexes show.
The growth of global reserves is accelerating,
with Taiwan's and South
Korea's, the fifth- and sixth-largest in the
world, rising 2.1 percent to $332.2 billion and
3.6 percent to $254.3 billion in September, the
fastest since May. The four biggest pools of reserves
are held by China, Japan, Russia and India.
China, which controlled $2.1 trillion in foreign
reserves as of June 30 and owns $800
billion of U.S. debt, is among the countries
that don't report allocations.
"Unless you think China does things significantly
differently from others," the anti-dollar trend
is unmistakable, Englander said.
Follow the Money
Englander's conclusions are based on IMF data
from central banks that report their currency
allocations, which account for 63 percent of total
global reserves. Barclays adjusted the IMF data
for changes in exchange rates after the reserves
were amassed to get an accurate snapshot of allocations
at the time they were acquired.
Investors can make money by following central
banks' moves, according to Barclays, which created
a trading model that flashes signals to buy or
sell the dollar based on global reserve shifts
and other variables. Each trade triggered by the
system has average returns of more than 1 percent.
Bill
Gross, who runs the $186 billion Pimco Total
Return Fund,
the world's largest bond fund, said in June that
dollar investors should diversify before central
banks do the same on concern that the U.S.'s budget
deficit will deepen.
"The world is changing, and the dollar is losing
its status," said Aletti Gestielle's Fiorini.
"If you have a 5- year or 10-year view about
the dollar, it should be for a weaker currency."
To contact the reporters on this story: Ye
Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net;
Anchalee
Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 12, 2009 05:55 EDT
More
Articles in Opinion ¸ A version
of this article appeared in print on October 17,
2008, on page A33 of the New York edition.

|