General

#‘The dollar is going to fall very, very sharply,’ warns prominent Yale economist

#‘The dollar is going to fall very, very sharply,’ warns prominent Yale economist

By Mark Decambre, Marketwatch

June 16, 2020 | 3:14pm

Stephen Roach, Yale University senior fellow and former Morgan Stanley Asia chairman, has a warning for US dollar bulls. The prominent economist says that the era of the US buck may be coming to an end and is forecasting a 35% decline soon in the US currency against its major rivals, citing increases in the nation’s deficit and dwindling savings.

The lecturer said during CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Monday that the rise of China and the decoupling of the US from its trade partners is setting the stage for a dramatic weakening of the US currency in the next few years that is likely to end the supremacy of the monetary unit as the world’s reserve currency.

“The dollar is going to fall very, very sharply,” he told the business network.

Roach’s comments follow a similarly themed op-ed that he wrote in Bloomberg last week, in which he specifically declared that the “era of the US dollar’s ‘exorbitant privilege’ as the world’s primary reserve currency is coming to an end.

In that article, the economist said that the US economy is already “stressed” by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and suggested that the recession that has gripped the US in February amid the public health crisis will only amplify the dollar’s woes.

The finance expert said that the rest of the “world is having serious doubts about the once widely accepted presumption of American exceptionalism.”

On Monday, Roach said that the US’s fiscal deficit, as the government expends trillions of dollars, in an effort to mitigate the harm from COVID-19, may only make matters worse for bucks.

Meanwhile, Roach says that China’s currency, the yuan USDCNY, may garner increasing appeal from investors, as Beijing goes through a phase of structural reforms that could shift the country’s manufacturing-heavy economy to one focused more on services and one with greater consumer-led growth.

Roach makes the case that although a weaker dollar, sometimes favored by President Donald Trump, would benefit US exports in the short term, it would prove more problematic over the longer term.

One measure of the buck, the ICE US Dollar Index, has been weakening over the past 30 days, down 3.9% but is up slightly on the year, rising 0.1%, according to FactSet data.

The index measures the buck against a basket of six rival currencies, including the euro, the pound and the yen.

A weaker dollar has implications for assets and the stock market, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 index, with most debts denominated in dollars. In addition, a majority of cross-border financing and international trade are conducted in dollars.

Worries about the global economy have traditionally encouraged buying of dollars along with other havens because of the perception of the US as a stable economy and currency.

Roach, however, says that growing deficits will eventually change that perception and deliver a gut punch to the greenback.

Source

If you want to read more Business News articles, you can visit our General category.

if you want to watch Movies or Tv Shows go to Dizi.BuradaBiliyorum.Com for forums sites go to Forum.BuradaBiliyorum.Com

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
Close

Please allow ads on our site

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker!