- Wealth Forum
Currency
markets have been on a roller coaster ride in recent months, with volatility
that can sometimes put small cap stocks to shame. From a situation of
co-ordinated monetary easing by Central Banks around the world to get the
world out of the 2008 financial crisis, we now have a situation where each
country is pursuing policies to address its own challenges, leading to
competitive devaluation - which is creating a situation of currency wars. How
did this happen and what happens next?
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Currency
wars - the beginning
For the
last several months, international currency markets have experienced
tremendous volatility. Several currencies have gained in value, led by the US
dollar and the Swiss franc, while many currencies have depreciated, the most
important being the Japanese Yen; while the Venezuelan bolivar has fallen
spectacularly. The Swiss franc appreciated by nearly 40% in a day earlier in
the year, while the Venezuelan currency slumped 55% in the last month. Such
pronounced volatility is surprising given the quiet years following the
Financial Crisis of 2008.What has caused this sudden rollercoaster ride?
The
Back Story
The
story actually begins years ago, in the aftermath of the 2008 Financial
Crisis. International banking was in a mess and even sound institutions were
in trouble. At that time the received wisdom was that credit and more credit
was necessary to keep the wheels of commerce churning. In this scenario, the
US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank opened the credit tap. This
was the first Quantitative Easing or QE. In simple terms it meant that the
two banks along with the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan would buy
bonds of dubious value, at their full prices, to prevent banks from
collapsing. Earlier these banks had invested heavily in bonds and new
investment products like derivatives. There is nothing wrong in innovation
even in the financial space. The point was that quality of these new assets
was vague and completely opaque in most cases. Amongst other assets, what lay
behind such assets were the housing loans doled out to the American poor.
When
defaults of these loans, referred to as 'sub-prime assets' started to creep
up, the value of these assets also became suspect. This meant that the value
of these investments became junk overnight and more importantly banks found
that they were unable to sell these assets even at discounted prices to raise
cash for their regular business needs. Fearing that the entire banking system
would jam up, leading to a collapse of the real economy, the central banks
began to buy these assets at their notional or full value, without enquiring
about the real value of these assets. This gave banks, both good and bad, a
much needed lifeline. Slowly the banks began to recover, but not before several
big names failed and some others nearly went under.
The
Method
The
money for this huge purchase was and continues to be raised by a simple
mechanism; printing money. Other avenues were issuing bonds and tax revenues
but these have limits. As the central banks competitively print more money to
keep their economies afloat, the intrinsic value of these currencies tend to
sag, since there is now that much more money supply.
At
last, after some years, as the US economy began to recover, the Federal
Reserve announced in the summer of 2013, that it would stop QE by that year's
end. This immediately set the markets in a tizzy. Since there would be fewer
dollars in the market in the future while there would be substantial numbers
of euros and yens and other currencies sloshing around the world, the USD
started to rise in value. In this environment, countries which maintained a
benchmark to other currencies (Swiss franc was pegged to the euro) were
forced to buy the bonds denominated in that currency to keep the value of
their own currency at the right level. Once this became impossible currency
values either tumbled or surged overnight.
The
Impact
In
India, the rupee value fell dramatically and the RBI under the new Governor
Raghuram Rajan took several emergency measures to stop the free fall of the
rupee and institute a sense of confidence in the currency. Since then this
sword of Damocles of the US stopping the QE has been hanging over the world.
The dollar has gained in strength while most other currencies have weakened.
As a
currency weakens, that country's exports become cheaper in dollar terms. Thus
countries with weak currencies get an export advantage. This has meant that
countries are now competitively making monetary policies that would weaken
their currencies so that they can protect their export markets.
"The
government and the Bank of Japan are employing expansionary fiscal and
monetary policies respectively, which traditionally tend to be currency
negative." (Financial Times 25th March 2015). This month, the Japanese
yen's exchange rate against the US dollar fell below ¥125, a 13-year low,
before rebounding to nearly ¥122 following a statement by Bank of Japan
Governor Haruhiko Kuroda that he did not expect further depreciation.(Gulf
Times 25th June 2015).
The
Japanese Yen has fallen almost 20% against the dollar since 2012. Similarly
the Indonesian Rupiah has plunged 25%. However in the case of the rupee we
see a strange variance. Despite high inflation and unprecedented fiscal
deficits, the rupee is holding its own against the dollar while a host of
other currencies are depreciating. Now, to stimulate exports and to protect
our export markets India will have to do something to allow the rupee to fall
so as to be in line with the values of other currencies.
The set
of policies to be followed to achieve this, which are being competitively
practised by governments and central banks, is called currency war.
The Way
Forward
"The
key to ensuring a satisfactory exchange-rate balance is for countries to
pursue policies aimed at ensuring a desirable combination of domestic
inflation and employment. If, for example, meeting domestic inflation and employment
targets requires greater monetary expansion - which will place downward
pressure on the local currency, bolstering the economy's international
competitiveness - other countries may have to pursue their own monetary
expansion to maintain optimal domestic inflation and employment rates,"
writes Koichi Hamada in the Gulf Times (25th June, 2015).
Yet
there is some scepticism about whether countries and central banks will
follow a path of reconciliation and moderation in their policies, as they
rush to protect their markets, their industries and employment levels. What
is needed is policy clarity and firm action on a global scale, or at least by
the major economies. Countries must learn to allow their currencies to
reflect international market values.
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