Far from debasement, dollar hits overdrive By Reuters



© Reuters. A packet of U.S. five-dollar bills is inspected at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington March 26, 2015. REUTERS/Gary Cameron/File Photo

By Mike Dolan

LONDON (Reuters) – Wasn’t surging inflation supposed to undermine the U.S. dollar?

Be that as it may, the opposite happened this week as news of a surprise spike in U.S. inflation and inflation expectations to their highest in decades sent the U.S. dollar soaring against currencies around the world.

The dollar’s main index zoomed to its highest for the year as the euro and sterling, which make up 58% and 12% of that index respectively, slumped to 2021 lows.

For some, this made little sense.

There’s a long-standing narrative out there that over-easy Fed money and seemingly endless creation of new dollars via Fed bond buying will eventually fuel inflation and undermine the greenback as the kingpin of the world financial system.

All things equal, higher consumer inflation should be bad for a currency as it means people can buy fewer goods and services for their coin. Allowed to fester, spiralling prices and resulting hyperinflation have in the past rendered national currencies effectively worthless.

Fear of so-called ‘dollar debasement’ has been the stuff of gold bulls for decades, and many have been demanding a return to the gold standard ever since it was abandoned 50 years ago. Lately, cryptocurrency evangelists have taken up the cudgel.

Yet, the failure of bitcoin or ethereum to get excited by Wednesday’s U.S. inflation shock underscored just how patchy the argument for buying crypto as an inflation hedge remains.

And even though gold rose this week, it remains in the red for the year. Long-standing gold bugs and Fed critics, such as Euro Pacific Capital’s Peter Schiff, were left scratching their heads as to why the dollar was rising.

“Today’s dollar rally makes no sense,” Schiff tweeted on Wednesday. “The fact that the dollar is losing purchasing power much faster than expected doesn’t make the dollar more valuable.”

So what gives?

Prosaicly, it’s all just relative. Even if faith in the Fed is in question, foreign exchanges dictate that any loss of the bank’s credibility only matters if it’s more or less than any other central bank out there.

And more posaically still, that all comes down to the basics of where you expect U.S. interest rates and inflation to be relative to those of their major peers a year from now.

DOLLAR IN YOUR POCKET?

This week’s slide in the world’s pivotal euro/dollar pair to its lowest since July 2020 came as the one-year interest rate gap in favour of dollars surged after the inflation data. It’s now added almost 20 basis points to 0.9% in just three weeks.

The Fed is now priced to hike policy rates at least twice by the end of next year, starting as soon as July. The European Central Bank barely has one smaller hike priced, but ECB officials loudly insist a rate rise next year is very unlikely.

Whether these rate premiums cover…



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