04 May 2005

Fisher Predicts Comeback for the Dollar

The US dollar is set to rebound against other major currencies, according to Fisher Investments, a discretionary investment manager, ending its recent three-year slide.  Loose monetary policy at the US Federal Reserve has hurt the dollar, but this is expected to change, heralding an increase in short-term interest rates and a reduction in excess liquidity.

Andrew Teufel, Director of Research at Fisher Investments supports this upbeat forecast for the US dollar, debunking five currency myths cited as cause for the greenback’s continued decline:

1) The US dollar has just begun to fall
The US dollar has been falling for three consecutive years: history if nothing else suggests the greenback should recover in 2005.  Major currencies tend not to experience longer than three-year cycles, strengthening or weakening against each other.  Relative monetary policy determines exchange rates, and while the Fed is tightening, others - the Bank of England, ECB, and Bank of Japan – are holding steady.  Real interest rate differentials can serve as a proxy for relative monetary policy, and within the last several months this has swung in favour of the US dollar.

2. Trade balances, foreign policy and international popularity drive currencies
This is a common misconception: it is supply and demand that give currencies their relative value with other considerations being little more than background noise.  Supply is determined by the issuing central bank; demand is principally determined by the amount of economic activity conducted in that currency.  Exchange rates, on the other hand, reflect the value of one currency, quoted in another’s terms.  It is an entirely relative measure and has no absolute meaning.  Increases in demand or decreases in supply drive one currency’s exchange rate up versus another.

3) The US dollar must fall because it has been falling – a crisis is on the way
Crises are rarely predicted accurately and when sentiment reaches an extreme a turning point is often near.  Relative to sterling and the euro, the US dollar has already fallen more than 30% from highs in 2001.  Fisher Investments believe that the US dollar ‘crisis’ is now past and emphasises, as with any financial asset, that past performance is not indicative of future returns.

4) The huge US budget deficit will cause the US dollar to fall further
Exchange rates are not dictated by budget deficits.  They are monetary phenomena, while budget deficits are fiscal.  Linking budget deficit to weak currency proves unfounded historically.  For instance, the US dollar rose in the 1990s when the US ran similarly large budget deficits as a percentage of GDP.

5) The US current account deficit will cause the US dollar to fall further
Current accounts have no significant predictive power when it comes to exchange rates.  Over the last 25 years the US dollar has experienced periods of strength and weakness despite ever increasing current account deficits.  Similarly, in the last few years, the currencies of the UK, Australia and New Zealand have appreciated despite significant current account deficits.

Fisher Investments Director of Research, Andrew Teufel said, “Speculation over the direction of the US dollar has been rife, with many respected market commentators teetering on the edge of hysterical.  Investors need to be more circumspect before making rash hedges against the US dollar and put the current situation into its historical context.  Looking at hard facts rather than popular myths, we are confident that 2005 will see a significant reversal of the greenback’s recent performance.”

 

 

NOTES TO EDITORS


FISHER INVESTMENTS EUROPE LTD and FISHER INVESTMENTS


For a copy of Fisher Wealth Management’s comprehensive Markets Commentary report, visit www.fisherwm.co.uk or call 0845 458 1194.

Fisher Wealth Management is the operating name of Fisher Investments Europe Limited which is registered in England and is authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. (Company number 3850593. Registered office: 16 Curzon Street, London W1J 5HP). Investment management services offered by the Company in the United Kingdom are provided by Fisher Investments.

San Francisco-based Fisher Investments is a discretionary, fee-based investment manager and adviser, established in the USA and regulated by the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The protections of the UK regulatory system, including the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, do not apply in relation to its services. The Company provides a variety of wealth management strategies and services to high net worth individuals and institutions, throughout North America and the United Kingdom.

With its founder’s industry history going back over 30 years, Fisher Investments has built a reputation of experience and innovation. From engineering the Price-to-Sales Ratio, to pioneering the identification of the Small Cap Value asset class, to recent developments in behavioural finance, Fisher Investments has continued to develop capital markets investment technologies for the purpose of providing excess return relative to benchmarks.

Ken Fisher's ‘Portfolio Strategy’ column in Forbes magazine, which he has been writing for the last 20+ years, is at www.fi.com/forbes.

The past is not necessarily a guide to future performance. The value of investments and the income from them will fluctuate with world stock markets and international currency exchange rates.


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