Dollar scare reveals fragile support
Published: February 24 2005 02:00 | Last updated: February 24 2005 02:00
Financial Times
Crisis over? Not really. For sure, the market overreacted to reports that the Bank of Korea wanted to reduce the share of dollars in its portfolio. What the Koreans actually said was that they want to diversify out of low-yielding
That something is the dependence of the dollar on a handful of Asian central banks, which between them control $2,400bn reserves. These reserves are already large relative to the size of the Asian economies, and getting bigger by the day. As they grow so does the incentive to guard against capital loss from further dollar depreciation.
Very obviously, if all the Asian central banks were to start selling their stock of dollars the
But even if Asian central banks do not sell their stock of dollars, the
Diversification might not succeed in its objective of minimising capital loss. It all depends on what currency one diversifies into. The euro is no longer obviously cheap. If and when
In the end the only sure way to limit capital loss is to stop intervening and allow currencies to rise. The yen and Korean won have appreciated significantly since 2002. But while others remain pegged, such appreciation disrupts intra-Asian exchange rates and trade. The optimal solution is a co-ordinated revaluation, led by
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Prudent Investor says,
As editorial says, the recent gains of US dollar stands on tenuous grounds such that unconfirmed reports of Central Banks 'diversifying' away from the US dollar could provoke a dash to the exit doors. Currency volatility and the risk of a dollar run remains entrenched for as long as the structural imbalances exists. It surely does look as if Asian Currencies are the best bet in today's largely dicey environment.
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