US dollar continues to weaken as infections soar

The greenback shed 10% of its value against major currencies since March as the number of coronoavirus cases surged

FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: A bank employee counts US dollar notes in this file photo from May 16, 2016. REUTERS/Kham/File Photo
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The dollar is flashing a warning sign to US policy makers — get a grip on the virus.

After hitting an all-time high in March, a gauge of the greenback has lost 10 per cent of its value, with declines accelerating in recent weeks as infections spread seemingly unchecked across the nation.

Much of the sell-off has come during New York trading hours, suggesting domestic investors are closing out bets on US strength and spurring renewed questions about the supremacy of the dollar. Meanwhile, a popular model that’s guided dollar traders for the past two decades has warped.

It’s a rapid reversal in fortune. Early on in the pandemic, the dollar soared after investors sought safety in US assets like Treasuries while the virus stormed through Europe. But with cases now exploding at home, the ineffectual American response to the disease has become a millstone for the currency, spurring concern about lasting damage to the US economy that could keep interest rates and growth low for years.

“What people are most desperately waiting for is good news on virus control, that I think is number one,” said Stephen Jen, chief executive at Eurizon SLJ Capital. “The currency bet is mainly a bet on relative control of the virus, not reflecting the fundamental strength of the economies in question.”

The US government’s handling of the pandemic — which contrasts with the euro area’s progress in containing infections — is now the key driver of the greenback, dictating more conventional spurs of the currency, such as relative growth or monetary policy.

The dollar’s losses have often deepened during the US trading day, suggesting investors were selling after the latest virus figures were released. Speculators are now the most short since May 2018, after betting on strength for almost all of last year.

Still, prior to the dollar’s slump to a two-year low in July, Mr Jen was bullish. A pioneer of the so-called dollar smile theory — which posits that the dollar will gain as a result of either US growth exceeding that of other nations or during risk aversion — Mr Jen predicted in June that the currency would bounce back as the US economy rebounded.

Instead, the dollar has languished as rising infections simultaneously put the kibosh on a boost for growth and sapped appetite for the currency as a haven. California, Texas and Florida posted a record number of daily coronavirus deaths last week, while New Jersey slowed its reopening.

“The key assumption I was making, which turned out not to be correct, was that the US would sort itself out after a difficult period,” Mr Jen said.

The euro area has only outperformed the US in eight years since 1992, according to IMF data, but 2020 is on that track.

American gross domestic product suffered its deepest quarterly contraction since at least the 1940s in the three months through June, a release showed Thursday. While Europe’s economy was also eviscerated, with output shrinking to levels not seen since 2005, recent data show signs of a rebound as lockdowns ease across the region, and governments — so far — keep a lid on new infections.

That hasn’t been lost on the Federal Reserve, with chairman Jerome Powell saying after the central bank’s latest meeting that the path forward for the US economy will largely depend on America’s success in “keeping the virus in check.”

While policy makers have not explicitly linked rates to controlling Covid-19, the broader effort to curb the pandemic is influencing the outlook for both monetary policy and economic growth.

“I’m much more confident about the ‘left’ side of the smile: that is, the dollar performing in a risk-off environment, than I am on the other side, which is classically driven by a US economic outperformance,” said Ross Hutchison, investment director for Standard Life Investments.

But others aren’t convinced that even this side of the framework holds up. The dollar smile has flattened and turned into a painful “grin,” according to Calvin Tse, a foreign-exchange strategist at Citigroup, with the flood of liquidity unleashed by the Fed diminishing the likelihood of a sudden rush to the dollar in a risk-off scenario.

While Mr Tse doesn’t rule out gains for the dollar, any haven rally is likely to be shallower than in previous years thanks to these measures, while the possible extent of depreciation remains the same.

Meanwhile, in the event that US growth returns, aggressive rate cuts have enhanced foreign investors’ appetite for hedging dollar exposure when buying Treasuries, further hurting the case for the dollar to strengthen, he wrote in a report July 29.

For some, then, it’s time to better reflect the influence of the virus in their strategies. Paresh Upadhyaya, money manager at Amundi Pioneer Asset Management, which has $78 billion (Dh286bn) under management, says accounting for the virus has taken on a bigger role in shaping his view of the dollar and the economy.

To keep tabs on the virus’s ongoing impact Mr Upadhyaya has created a spreadsheet of data points, including activity at airport security checkpoints, restaurant reservations, small business openings, small business revenue and employment. He also tracks traditional data on manufacturing and services, and uses mobility data produced by Apple and Google parent Alphabet to gauge state reopenings.

“As cases in the US have picked up, that’s a flag for the dollar,” Upadhyaya said. “Because currency is the perfect reflection of relative value, we use that to gauge which region is having a better handle over the virus.”