The dollar had an awful December and things may only get worse.
The currency is set to extend losses as a truce in the U.S.-China trade war and signs that global growth is improving sap demand for haven assets, according to ABN Amro Bank NV. At the same time, the Federal Reserve has taken a dovish tilt, which will help shrink the yield premium offered by U.S. Treasuries, says M&G Investments Ltd.
“You had safe-haven support for the dollar in 2019, but we have a trade truce now,” said Georgette Boele, senior foreign-exchange strategist at ABN Amro Bank in Amsterdam. “The dollar is on a path of long-term weakness.”
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the U.S. currency against 10 global peers, slid 2% in December, the biggest monthly decline in almost two years. The gauge’s failure to sustain gains made earlier in 2019 appears to have drawn a line under a rally that saw it surge about 40% from a low in 2011 to a peak in early 2017.
The U.S. currency started to weaken from October amid signs the U.S. and China were closing in on an initial deal to end their long-running trade dispute. The agreement was finally confirmed by President Donald Trump in December.
Another major pillar behind the dollar’s multi-year advance was also undermined last year as the U.S. central bank halted a series of rate hikes by cutting its benchmark in July, September and October to support slowing growth.
“The Fed does have some room to move lower in 2020, and for this reason I would expect a weaker dollar,” said Jim Leaviss, head of fixed-income at M&G Investments in London. There may also be “more pressure on the Fed if growth remains mediocre going into the U.S. elections,” he said.
The Fed’s dovish pivot has seen the U.S. two-year yield advantage over similar-maturity German debt shrink to 216 basis points from around 350 basis points in late 2018, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“We expect to see better growth in the rest of the world ex-USA,” said Jack McIntyre, a portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management in Philadelphia. “The primary driver of dollar weakness will be a shift in relative economic growth rates between the U.S. and the rest of the world.”
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