Here's
The REAL Reason The Euro Has Been Plunging
25 May, 2012
The
euro has been plunging lately against the dollar, and it's down to
levels not seen in over two years.
This
chart from FRED gives
the gist of what's been going on, but it's a couple days behind, and
now the euro has fallen to about 1.25 against the dollar.
So
naturally, people are screaming about how the Eurozone is in turmoil
and that people are fleeing the currency as some kind market vote on
the likelihood of a collapse.
But
there is an annoying thing that happens in media discussions of the
Euro...
The
Euro (currency) is seen as though it is a proxy for the stability
and future of the Eurozone. And it is assumed that when it's going
down, it means the Eurozone is closer to blowing up, and then when
it's going up, it means the Eurozone is more likely to hold
together.
But
that's not really true, and we'll get to a bit of that later.
In
the mean time, here's another version of the above chart, except
this time in addition to the Euro (red line) we've added the price
of Brent Crude Oil (blue line).
It's
not perfect, but since at least the middle of 2010, the euro and the
price of oil have moved very similarly.
Since
2011, the pair have almost been in lock step, and since the
beginning of 2012, the euro and oil have been perfectly in lockstep.
This
might seem odd that the Euro and oil would move so similarly. After
all, unlike Canada (whose economy is quite tied to oil), Europe
doesn't benefit when oil rises at all, and so at first blush it
doesn't make much sense that the Euro should strengthen when oil
prices go up.
The
primary belief of the ECB -- as
its chief reminded us this week --
is to keep prices stable. The ECB is obsessed with fighting
inflation. Any kind of inflation. The ECB wants to beat back
inflation at all costs, even if doing so may be economically
detrimental.
That's
why in early 2008, and early 2011 (two times when the price of oil
boomed) the
ECB raised rates even as their domestic economies were teetering.
As
everyone knows (or should know) a hike in rates by a central bank
tends to make the currency strengthen.
But
while the ECB freaks out about oil prices, the Fed tends not to, as
Bernanke prefers to look at more 'core' measures that strip out
commodity volatility.
This
was explained in a note by Citi's Jeremy Hale last year:
Oil
prices have been positively correlated with EUR/USD for some time.
One reason is the perceived asymmetric policy response by the ECB
and Fed to higher oil prices, where the ECB typically responds more
hawkishly. Another is that trade flows/ exports to the oil producers
favour Europe over the US.
Another
key reason he cites is that revenues from oil (accrued to Mideast
oil producers) are frequently banked in Euros, creating upward
pressure.
So
when oil is rising, it's seen as more likely that the ECB will
increase (or at least not loosen) monetary policy. And that makes
the Euro strong. And when oil is dropping (as it has been lately)
the odds that the ECB will cut rates goes up. And that makes the
Euro weak.
Really,
the idea that the Euro would be a proxy for the Eurozone is very
dicey. If Greece were to leave, it's easy to imagine the Euro
selling off in knee-jerk fashion, but it's not clear that the
long-term path would be down. Furthermore, the crisis actually
creates upward pressure
on the euro because liquidity-parched banks have to repatriate funds
from overseas and buy Euros to pay off their debts. Think about it,
in a crisis, everybody needs to grab euros to pay the bills. That
can actually be bullish for the currency.
It's
just very murky trying to connect the currency and the zone.
So
rather than seeing EUR/USD as some kind of proxy for the health of
the Eurozone (which has been mess for a very long time) think of it
as having to do more with the price of oil, and how the price of oil
affects monetary policy and currency flows.
Finally,
if you're still not convinced that oil is more important to the euro
than the crisis tensions, check out this same chart going back to
1999, since long before anyone thought there might be a Eurozone
crisis. The similar movement in the euro and oil is uncanny.
UPDATE:
Some
people on Twitter and
in the comments are pushing back, saying that this is just about the
dollar and that it's almost a tautology that the euro and oil would
trade together, since the denominator is the same.
There's
certainly some of that, but here's a chart of the The Euro/the
British Pound (red line) vs. oil (blue line). It's not perfect,
but the correlation is still there.
Due
to some interesting characteristics, the euro and the price of oil
have a unique relationship.
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