"Doubling down on QE3, the Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Bernanke tells China and Brazil: allow your currencies to appreciate. One does not need to be a rocket scientist to conclude that Bernanke wants the U.S. dollar to fall."
Currency
Wars: U.S. Attack
BY
AXEL G MERK
17
OIctober, 2012
Doubling
down on QE3, the Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Bernanke tells China
and Brazil: allow your currencies to appreciate. One does not need to
be a rocket scientist to conclude that Bernanke wants the U.S. dollar
to fall. Is it merely a war of words, or an actual war? Who is
winning the war?
The
cheapest Fed policy is one where a Fed official utters a few words
and the markets move. Rate cuts are more expensive; even more so are
emergency rate cuts and the printing of billions, then trillions of
dollars. As such, the Fed’s communication strategy may be
considered part of a war of words. Indeed, the commitment to keep
interest rates low through mid 2015 may be part of that category. But
quantitative easing goes beyond words: QE3, as it was announced last
month, is the Fed’s third round of quantitative easing, a program
in which the Fed is engaging in an open-ended program to purchase
Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). To pay for such purchases, money is
created through the strokes of a keyboard: the Fed credits banks with
“cash” in payment for MBS, replacing MBS on bank balance sheets
with Fed checking accounts. Through the rules of fractional reserve
banking, this cash can be multiplied on to create new loans and
expand the broader money supply. The money used for the QE purchases
is created out of thin air, not literally printed, although even
Bernanke has referred to this process as printing money to illustrate
the mechanics.
Why
call it a war? It was Brazil’s finance minister Guido Mantega that
first coined the term, accusing Bernanke of starting a currency war.
Here’s the issue: like any other asset, currencies are valued based
on supply and demand. When money is printed, all else equal, supply
increases, causing a currency to decline in value. In real life, the
only constant is change, allowing policy makers to come up with
complex explanations as to why printing money does not equate to
debasing a currency. But even if intentions may have a different
primary focus, our assessment is that a central bank that engages in
quantitative easing wants to weaken its currency. It becomes a war
because someone’s weak currency is someone else’s strong
currency, with the “winner” being the country with the weaker
currency. The logic being a weaker currency promotes net exports and
GDP growth. If the dollar is debased through expansionary monetary
policy, there is upward pressure on other currencies. Those other
countries like to export to the U.S. and feel squeezed by U.S.
monetary policy. Given that politicians the world over never like to
blame themselves for any shortcomings, the focus of international
policy makers quickly becomes the Fed’s monetary largesse.
Bernanke
speaking at an IMF sponsored seminar in
Tokyo pointed to the other side of the coin: if China, Brazil and
others don’t like his policies because they create inflation back
home, they should allow their currencies to appreciate. But these
countries are reluctant as stronger currencies lead to a tougher
export environment.
Now
keep in mind that it is always easier to debase a currency than to
strengthen it. Switzerland, the previously perceived safe haven by
many investors, has taken the lead. Using a central bank’s balance
sheet as a proxy for the amount of money that has been printed, the
Swiss National Bank’s printing press has surpassed that of the
Federal Reserve considering relative growth since August 2008. Again
note that no real money has been directly printed in these programs;
also note that some activities, such as the sterilization of bond
purchases by the European Central Bank, cause a central bank balance
sheet to grow, even if sterilization reflects a “mopping up” of
liquidity:
Japan
has warned about intervening in the markets on multiple occasions,
but the size of the Japanese economy as well as the lack of political
will make an intentional debasement more difficult. Indeed, the
Japanese did their money printing in the 1990s, but forgot we had a
financial crisis in recent years.
Bernanke
does acknowledge the concerns of emerging markets, but argues they
are blown out of proportion. He elaborates that undervaluation and
unwanted capital inflows are linked: allow your currencies to
appreciate (versus the dollar) and you won’t have to be afraid of
excessive capital inflows, inflation and asset bubbles. Ultimately,
and importantly, Bernanke says the Fed will continue its course,
suggesting that it will strengthen the U.S. economic recovery; and by
extension, strengthen the global economy.
Let’s
look at the issue from the viewpoint of emerging markets: policy
makers like to promote economic growth, among other methods, through
a cheap exchange rate, up to a certain point. They don’t want too
much inflation or too many side effects. Historically, they manage
these side effects with administrative tools. However, taking China
as an example, taming price pressure through, say, price controls,
has not been very effective. We believe that’s a good thing, as
China would otherwise experience product shortages akin to what the
Soviet Union experienced. Conversely, however, China must employ a
broader policy brush to contain inflationary pressures. We believe –
and Bernanke appears to agree – currency appreciation is one of the
more effective tools.
So
how will this currency war unfold? The ultimate winner may well be
gold. But as the chart above shows, it’s not simply a race to the
bottom. If one considers what type of economy can stomach a stronger
currency, our analysis shows an economy competing on value rather
than price has more pricing power and therefore the greater ability
to handle it. Vietnam mostly competes on price; as such, the country
has, more than once, engaged in competitive devaluation. At the other
end of the spectrum in emerging markets may be China: having allowed
its low-end industries to move to lower cost countries, China
increasingly competes on value. Within Asia, we believe the more
advanced economies have the best potential to allow their currencies
to appreciate. It’s not surprising to us that China’s Renminbi
just recently reached a 19-year high versus the dollar.
What
we have little sympathy for is an advanced economy, e.g. the U.S.,
competing on price. We very much doubt the day will come when we
export sneakers to Vietnam. As such, a weak dollar only provides the
illusion of strength with exports temporarily boosted. Yet the
potential side effects, from inflation to the sale of assets to
foreign investors with strong currencies, may not be worth the risk.


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