HomeNewsBusinessMarketsShort Call: US dollar on a bumpy road, but not every currency will cash in the rough ride; BHEL, Skipper, Aadhar Housing Finance in focus

Short Call: US dollar on a bumpy road, but not every currency will cash in the rough ride; BHEL, Skipper, Aadhar Housing Finance in focus

"The four most dangerous words in investing are, it’s different this time." —Sir John Marks Templeton 

September 24, 2024 / 09:33 IST
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While a weaker dollar usually gives other currencies a chance to rise, the story this time around isn’t quite that simple.
While a weaker dollar usually gives other currencies a chance to rise, the story this time around isn’t quite that simple.

After climbing uphill for most of 2024, the US dollar has swiftly declined in recent months, falling 5 percent from its peak earlier this year. The culprit? The Fed’s “jumbo-sized” rate cut, which took some shine off the greenback.

The relative strength of the US dollar has real-world effects as it can shift trade balances, impact foreign sales for multinational companies, and amplify or diminish returns for US dollar-dominated investors in other equity markets. While a weaker dollar usually gives other currencies a chance to rise, the story this time around isn’t quite that simple.

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The key piece of the puzzle here is the interest rate differential, which is the gap between global central bank policy rates. This gap determines how appealing a country’s debt looks to investors, which can boost or sink its currency. The Bank of Canada, European Central Bank, People's Bank of China, and Bank of England began their rate-cutting cycle with varying intensity while the Bank of Japan chose to hike interest rates and the Reserve Bank of India stood pat on its current policy rates.

Given that the cycle of central bank policy normalisations across the world has been unequal and uncertain, this differential will continue to vary across currencies, eating away chances of equal appreciation of all currencies against the dollar.