Suppose we have a savings account at a bank that is paying 2%. Just down the road are banks offering 4% and 6% for identical accounts. What are we likely to do? All things being equal, we'll pull money from our bank and seek the higher returns of competitor institutions.

So it is in the world money markets. Take a look at government interest rates around the world as of Friday:

Three month (two year) rates:

U.S.: 1.84% (1.62%)

U.K.: 5.2% (4.07%)

Japan: 0.57% (0.56%)

Germany: 3.96% (3.16%)

Brazil: 11.8% (12.46%)

Australia: (6.72%)

So we have six banks, called U.S., U.K., Japan, Germany, Brazil, and Australia. In a relatively short period of time, the U.S. bank has cut its interest rates to dollar holders to become more like Japan than Europe or Brazil. From that perspective, it's not surprising that dollar holders have fled the currency in favor of the alternatives. After all, why not sell low-yielding dollars in favor of higher yielding currencies and invest in resource-rich areas such as Brazil and Australia--particularly when the management of the U.S. bank is signaling even lower rates ahead?

Brett Steenbarger

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This article has 1 comment:

  •  
    Mar 03 07:33 AM
    It's true. The USD is now with the yen and CHF in the bottom 3 yielding currencies of the G10 and DBV will reset to show this on Mar 17 when they roll the futures. Now whether you or i have the huevos to carry trade currently is another issue altogether! I want to see volatility hit an intermediate extreme and then i am there.

    Cheers from osaka,
    john
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