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The USD Upends Markets

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By Callum Newman, Tuesday, 26 January 2021

Happy Australia Day!

I hope you’re celebrating today with a bit of sun, or style, or both.

Personally, I’m planning a swim down the beach with my two daughters.

There hasn’t been too many days like that this summer down here in Victoria.

Regardless, the markets stand still for no man or woman. Every day we wake up and reckon our way forward.

Yesterday I brought to your attention to a tail risk of 2021: a further collapse in the value of the US dollar.

However, the opposite is also true. A spike could be just as destructive.

The overarching dynamic is that any fiat currency untethered from gold becomes unstable, unpredictable and devalued over time. The implications filter out from there.

We’re going to continue the theme with one of the best currency teams in the business: Jim Rickards and his Australian analyst, Nick Hubble.

This is not an academic debate.

Every business with international currency exposure is affected by this market.

The RBA wants a lower Aussie dollar to boost exports and national income.

Today we share with you some recent analysis from one of our paid advisories, Strategic Intelligence Australia.

Consider it a gift from us to you to celebrate our national holiday.

We are grateful to have you as a reader.

Read on for the insight from Nick…

Best wishes,

Callum Newman Signature

Callum Newman,
Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia

The USD Upends Markets

Nick Hubble

Nick
Hubble

Dear Reader,

What if the number of millimetres in a centimetre kept changing?

It’d make life very confusing wouldn’t it? And life is plenty confusing as it is.

Especially because the financial market equivalent of a millimetre does keep changing its value. The value of our money.

I don’t just mean inflation here. Although that is an important point.

The fact that the value of our money changes each year is problematic for anyone trying to make long-term plans.

We don’t know what sort of burden our mortgage might be in a few years’ time, nor the value of our savings.

Is a 2% return good, or 7%? It depends on unpredictable inflation.

And yet, that’s what central banks try to do. Reduce the value of money at a few percent a year. And they’re not very good at hitting their targets.

But my point today is about the unit of measurement which the world uses in every financial transaction. Even though we are very rarely aware of it.

That unit of measurement is the US dollar.

They’re your dollars too

I know you probably don’t use the US dollar in your everyday transactions. But most large businesses whose goods you are buying probably do.

You see, most international trade is conducted in US dollars, even between countries using other currencies.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) estimates that over 80% of global trade involves US dollars.

How does this work in practice? Well, an example is rather instructive.

In 2012 The Copenhagen Post reported that US authorities had confiscated and kept US$20,000 of a Danish policeman’s money because he tried to buy Cuban cigars from Germany.

You might think this transaction has nothing to do with the US, let alone its currency, so how did they even get the money, let alone find out about it or keep the funds?

Well, the transaction flowed via the US dollar and the US payment systems.

As do most international transactions, especially between businesses. And that allowed the US to freeze the funds. Despite the transaction being legal in Denmark and Germany.

A more common example is that all commodities are priced in US dollars.

And then converted to local currencies at prevailing exchange rates.

Even the London Bullion Market Association sets its gold price in dollars, not pounds.

Obviously, this makes the US dollar especially important to Australia’s exports.

Find out how to Survive Australia’s Biggest Recession in 90 Years. Download your free report and learn more.

The growing and shrinking yardstick

But the US dollar’s value isn’t fixed. It changes, every day. Every split second even.

This means that the price of everything is in effect moving at all times because the unit of measurement is changing.

People presume that the price of gold, Cuban cigars and lunch is what’s fluctuating. But what happens when the US dollar is what’s on the move instead?

IMF research suggests that a rising US dollar drags down international trade.

More specifically, a 1% rise in the US Dollar’s Trade-Weighted Index reduced global trade by 0.6 to 0.8%.

That’s because when US dollars become more expensive for people conducting trade, it means everything they want to buy in global markets has become more expensive too.

That’s all commodities. And all contracts written in US dollar prices.

Not to mention debt denominated in US dollars, which many corporations issue, despite being based outside the US.
Here’s a chart of the Dixie — the US Dollar Index.

It compares the US dollar’s exchange rate with a number of different currencies to try and get at the US dollar’s changing value instead of the changing value of the other currencies.

Think of it as the value of the US dollar relative to a basket of international currencies.


Port Phillip Publishing

Source: Market Watch

[Click to open in a new window]

As you can see, it has been going sideways in a range since 2015.

In March 2020, the US dollar spiked as the COVID panic hit. And it has recently ticked up from near its lows going right back to 2015.

That last uptick is why I’m writing this today. It got our attention.

And it roiled markets over the last few days.

Could the Dixie surge again? Back to the top of the range?

That’s the big risk I want you to become aware of today.

A bit of trouble in financial markets and trade because of a rising US dollar — something most people won’t even be aware of when it happens.

Let alone expect the implications…

When there’s a crisis, the world rushes to the safety of the US dollar. It’s become a bit of knee-jerk reaction.

But this makes crises worse by interfering with the price of everything.

As mentioned, a second ago, a higher US dollar tightens trade and makes things more expensive for the world.

This means it pays to keep one eye on the Dixie at all times. Plenty of traders I know check it first thing in the morning. It is after all, in a way, the price of everything.

Perhaps all the other moves in financial markets can be explained by that single indicator — the change in the unit of measurement, the US dollar.

Why did the US dollar suddenly surge?

That’s easy. US interest rates hit 1%. Which seems to have been a psychological barrier for the US dollar to attract some interest again, pun intended.

We’re not talking about central bank interest rates here. We’re talking about US government bonds.

The 10-year bond doubled its yield from 0.5% to over 1% since August. It now costs the US government twice as much to borrow money.

And investors get twice as much return. That makes US dollars a lot more attractive. And the added demand spiked the US dollar’s value on foreign exchange markets.

The point is that we need to keep an eye on this trend.

Until next time,

Nick Hubble Signature

Nickolai Hubble,
Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia

All advice is general advice and has not taken into account your personal circumstances.

Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

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Callum Newman

Callum Newman is a real student of the markets. He’s been studying, writing about, and investing for more than 15 years. Between 2014 and 2016, he was mentored by the preeminent economist and author Phillip J Anderson. In 2015, he created The Newman Show Podcast, tapping into his network of contacts, including investing legend Jim Rogers, plus best-selling authors Jim Rickards, George Friedman, and Richard Maybury. He also launched Money Morning Trader, the popular service profiling the hottest stocks on the ASX each trading day.

Today, he helms the ultra-fast-paced stock trading service Small-Cap Systems and small-cap advisory Australian Small-Cap Investigator.

Callum’s Premium Subscriptions

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All advice is general in nature and has not taken into account your personal circumstances. Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

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