What’s driven the fall in the Australian Dollar?
Unfortunately, currency forecasting is a bit of a mugs game to which John Kenneth Galbraith’s observation in relation to economic forecasters that there are “those who don’t know and those who don’t know that they don’t know” may apply.
So, it should not be surprising the value of the Australian Dollar continues to surprise. Six months ago, when the Australian Dollar rose to $US0.67, we thought it would go higher for various reasons including that it was slightly undervalued and interest rate differentials looked likely to shift in favour of Australia. As it turns out it did go higher, rising above $0.69 in September. But then it fell sharply, recently reaching a low of $US0.615.
Why has the Australian Dollar fallen since September?
- The return of Trump – support for the Democrats peaked around late September/early October and so markets moved to price in the rising probability and then reality of his return to the presidency. Since his policies – tax cuts and deregulation which could boost US productivity, tax cuts which could add to the US budget deficit and result in tighter Fed policy, and tariffs – all imply a stronger US dollar this is what we have seen with the $US rising around 9% against a basket of major currencies from its September low.
- A hawkish pivot by the Fed versus the RBA – whereas the Fed cut rates in December to 4.25 to 4.5% it signalled less cuts than previously expected through 2025 whereas confidence has grown that the RBA will start to cut rates. As a result, the interest rate gap between the Australia and the US is expected to deteriorate in contrast to previous expectations for an improvement. Historically the $A goes up when the Australian interest rates rise versus US rates and vice versa.
- Finally, concerns about the outlook for the iron ore price, Australia’s biggest export, rose after disappointing stimulus announcements in China and fears that US tariffs on China could reduce demand for Australian commodities – that said iron ore prices and wider commodity price indexes are above their September lows suggesting commodities have not really been a major driver of the fall in the Australian Dollar.
So, the fall since September is mainly a strong US dollar story rather than a weak Australian Dollar story as since September the Australian Dollar fell around 10% but the US Dollar rose around 9% as other major currencies also fell against the US Dollar.
Will the fall add to inflation and hamper RBA rate cuts?
- Firstly, while the Australian Dollar has had roughly a 10% fall from September against the US Dollar, other countries’ currencies have also had sharp falls against the US Dollar so the value of the Australian Dollar on a trade weighted basis is only down by around 5% over the same period which is neither here nor there in terms of the impact on in inflation.
- Secondly, on a trade weighted basis the Australian Dollar is in basically the same range it’s been in for the last four year now. And with President Trump holding off from Day One tariffs and opting instead for a US government review of them and a “more negotiating approach” with China (according to a Bloomberg report) the range appears to be holding with the Australian Dollar bouncing slightly from oversold levels.
- Thirdly, with consumer spending depressed it’s hard to see businesses being able to pass on higher import prices anyway – beyond higher petrol prices and international travel – without depressing demand. So, it’s hard to see a significant boost to the inflation outlook from the fall in the Australian Dollar so far and so the RBA shouldn’t be too concerned - albeit I have no doubt it will mention it in upcoming communications.
Despite the slide, there are several positives for the Australian Dollar
Consistent with this, the Australian Dollar tends to move in line with relative price differentials over the long-term. Right now, it’s cheap at around $US0.63 compared to fair value around $US0.72 on a purchasing power parity basis.
Where to from here?
Over the next 12 months, it’s likely to be buffeted between changing views as to how much the Fed will cut relative to the RBA and how far Trump goes on tariffs (so far so good – but there is a way to go yet as Trump is still saying tariffs are coming) versus potential positives of undervaluation, negative sentiment and maybe more decisive stimulus in China. This could leave it stuck between $US0.60 and $US0.70, but with the risk skewed to the downside if Trump acts more aggressively on tariffs.
Implications for investors
This highlights the benefits of having a well-diversified investment portfolio across both assets and also across currencies.