History has shifted, and we're leaving the era of central bank
convergence and entering the era of central bank divergence, i.e. open
conflict. In the good old days circa 2009-2014, central banks acted
in concert to flood the global banking system with easy low-cost credit
and push the U.S. dollar down, effectively boosting China (whose
currency the RMB/yuan is pegged to the USD), commodities, emerging
markets and global risk appetite.
That convergence trade blew up in mid-2014, and the global central banks have been unable to reverse history. In
a mere seven months, the U.S. dollar soared from 80 to 100 on the USD
Index (DXY), a gain of 25%--an enormous move in foreign exchange markets
in which gains and losses are typically registered in 100ths of a
percent.
This reversal blew up all the positive trades engineered by central banks: suddenly
the yuan soared along with the dollar, crushing China's competitiveness
and capital flows; commodities tanked destroying the exports,
currencies and economies of commodity-dependent nations; carry trades in
which financiers borrowed cheap USD to invest in high-yielding emerging
markets blew up as currency losses negated the higher returns, and
global risk appetite vanished like mist in the Sahara.
The net result of this reversal is global markets have struggled
since mid-2015, when the headwinds of the stronger dollar finally hit
the global economy with full force.
In one last gasp of unified policy convergence, G20 nations agreed to crush the USD again in early March 2016, to
save China from the consequences of a stronger yuan and the commodity
markets (and lenders who over-extended loans to commodity producers).
That Shanghai Accord lasted all of two months. The engineered
collapse has already reversed, and the USD is gaining ground, reversing
the gains in risk assets, commodities and China's export-dependent,
debt-based stability.
The problem is there is no win-win solution to this foreign exchange battle. Japan and the Eurozone benefit from a stronger USD as the euro and yen weaken, but China loses as the USD soars.
Commodities lose when the USD gains, but the domestic U.S. consumer's purchasing power increases as the USD strengthens.
It's Triffin's Paradox writ large: As the primary global reserve
currency, The USD plays both a domestic and an international role, and
each set of users has a different set of priorities.
No matter what policy the Federal Reserve pursues, there will be powerful winners and losers.
This sets up a war between central banks everywhere in which winning may be as disastrous as losing. The conventional central bank policy is to lower interest rates to weaken their currency, as a means of boosting exports.
But the unintended consequence of lowering rates is capital flight,
as capital flees devaluation and negative returns and seeks higher
returns elsewhere. This is a self-reinforcing process, as capital
flight causes the currency to lose value, reducing the purchasing power
and wealth of all who hold the currency. This motivates everyone who
anticipates this devaluation to get their money out of the depreciating
currency, which further weakens the currency which then triggers even
more capital flight, and so on.
The only way to avoid the devaluation is to pull your cash out of that
currency and put it into a currency that's strengthening. For many, that
currency will be the USD, due to its ubiquity and the liquidity of its
capital markets.
Nations such as China are boxed into a lose-lose choice. If they
lower rates to weaken their currency (to maintain a competitive export
sector), they trigger capital flight, which weakens the domestic economy
and creates a self-reinforcing feedback loop.
If they do nothing and their currency rises as other nations
aggressively devalue their currencies, their export sectors whither as
competing exporters take market share.
Any central bank that dares to raise rates will make their nation a magnet for capital seeking a higher return--both in yield and in currency appreciation.
The Fed is boxed in, too: if the Fed can't raise rates after
seven years of "growth," then its credibility suffers. If it raises
rates, that accelerates the capital flow into USD and the U.S., pushing
the dollar higher, which then triggers mayhem in China, emerging
markets, commodity markets and U.S. corporate profits earned overseas.
Welcome to a currency war in which victory depends on your perspective. If
the USD continues strengthening, the winners will be those holding USD,
as their currency will increase its purchasing power as other
currencies devalue.