One of the most popular disaster memes was the collapse of the U.S. dollar. Never mind that you can’t replace something with nothing. The narrative was that the dollar would lose all of its value, and something—the euro, the yuan, the yen (okay, not the yen)—would take its place. The apex of this was the pending decision by the IMF to put the yuan in its currency basket. I got many calls and e-mails on this.
Guess what? It looks likely that this will happen shortly. The IMF will recognize the yuan as a major world currency and include it in its calculations—exactly as predicted by the doomsayers. Unfortunately, for them not us, the effect will be exactly zero.
In fact, if you look at the trend of the dollar’s value, it continues to rise. Traders, both financial and real goods, continue to price goods in dollars. Investors continue to want dollar assets. The U.S. is still considered the global safe haven. None of that has changed.
With the U.S. economy continuing to recover, and even normalize, that trend will only strengthen. With the Fed looking to raise rates at the same time as the European, Chinese, and Japanese central banks all continue to ease policy, investors can get more return, for less risk, in U.S. assets. Who wouldn’t want to own dollars under those circumstances? The fact that the dollar continues to appreciate against most other currencies is the icing on the cake. Expect these trends to continue. The U.S. dollar will continue to be the default and dominant global currency, including for reserve purposes.
Nothing, however, is free, which brings us to the political reasons the dollar’s preeminence is unlikely to fade anytime soon. A strong dollar can damage a country’s economy. For example, you can see:
The U.S., as a relatively self-contained economy, can withstand this kind of export and profit pressure. As the largest capital market on the planet, we can manage the inflows. As an integrated, politically mature, and stable polity (despite the current campaigns), we remain the safe option.
My past discussion of the dollar’s role has focused on network effects, the economic and political strength of the U.S., and the absence of a convincing other option. As economies elsewhere start to slow, though, I can see that I have missed perhaps the most convincing argument of all: Other countries simply will not want the dominant currency role. China, in particular, would have to sacrifice much of its current economic toolbox to take that role, a sacrifice that I would be unwilling to make, if it were up to me.
Something that is becoming clearer to me is that as the cycle turns, we need to reconsider conclusions that seemed quite solid in the past. China has made great efforts to achieve reserve currency status—something it may come to regret. Immigration, long seen as a problem, may end up undergoing the same shift, something I will write about more in the next couple of weeks.
As always, per Mark Twain, it isn’t the things we don’t know that kill us; it’s the things we know for sure that just aren’t so. One of the secrets of investment success over the next several years is likely to be figuring out just what those are.