|

US: Cohn’s resignation provides confirmation a weak USD trend is here to stay - ING

The resignation of White House chief economic adviser Gary Cohn may be all the confirmation global markets need that the US administration’s protectionist policy agenda is more than just a political show, suggests Viraj Patel, Research Analyst at ING.

Key Quotes

“While the reasons for Cohn’s departure remain speculative – one can imagine that at this stage it is as much to do with a difference of economic ideology than anything else. Indeed, since the passing of the GOP tax bill, there has been a clear power shift amongst the President’s closest advisers – with the typically touted nationalists (Wilbur Ross, Peter Navarro) seeing greater ‘airtime’ relative to the globalists (like Gary Cohn).”

“One only needs to look at the White House’s muddled economic policy agenda to understand why such ideological divisions have arisen. On the one hand, the administration have just passed a $1.5trn deficit-financed tax cut – which based on simple economic identities (and the assumption that private sector savings remain unchanged), would see a widening of the US current account deficit. But with the policy focus now shifting towards tackling what would partly be a self-inflicted trade deficit – by use of anti-growth tariff measures – it is no wonder that global investors are having difficulties in squaring the economic goals of the Trump administration. As our ‘Trump Trilemma’ framework shows, it is this lack of US economic policy cohesion that is fuelling a loss of confidence in the long-run trajectory of the US economy – which is what a weakening US dollar is moving in lock-step with.”

“Former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers makes a similar point (see here). Even more telling is that when global markets have previously expressed a similar loss of confidence in US policy institutions – it has taken a big policy regime shift (and a big character) to restore such confidence (eg, Volcker’s extreme Fed policy in the 1980s, Rubin’s ‘strong dollar’ policy in the 1990s). We’re still in watch this space mode, but this history lesson should serve as a warning sign for global markets (and those looking to fight the weak US dollar story).”

“As for today, it is worth keeping an eye on the ADP employment data ahead of Friday’s US jobs report. But in the context of the current market narrative, we suspect confirmation that the US trade deficit widened in January may be of greater significance (both data releases due 1330 GMT).”

“Bottom line: Look for the US dollar to continue trading on the back foot, with Cohn's resignation merely providing confirmation that the currency should be trading with a risk premium due to greater US policy and political uncertainty.”

Author

Sandeep Kanihama

Sandeep Kanihama

FXStreet Contributor

Sandeep Kanihama is an FX Editor and Analyst with FXstreet having principally focus area on Asia and European markets with commodity, currency and equities coverage. He is stationed in the Indian capital city of Delhi.

More from Sandeep Kanihama
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD ticks north after ECB, US inflation data

The EUR/USD pair hovered around 1.1750 but is still unable to conquer the price zone. The European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged, as expected, upwardly revising growth figures. The US CPI rose 2.7% YoY in November, down from the 3.1% posted in October.

GBP/USD runs beyond 1.3400 on BoE, US CPI

The GBP/USD pair jumped towards the 1.3440 area on Thursday, following the Bank of England decision to cut rates, and US CPI data, which resulted much softer than anticipated. The pair holds on to substantial gains early in the American session.

Gold nears $4,350 after first-tier events

The bright metal advances in the American session on Thursday, following European central banks announcements and the United States latest inflation update. XAU/USD approaches weekly highs in the $4,350 region.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum hold steady while XRP slides amid mixed ETF flows

Bitcoin eyes short-term breakout above $87,000, underpinned by a significant increase in ETF inflows. Ethereum defends support around $2,800 as mild ETF outflows suppress its recovery. XRP holds above at $1.82 amid bearish technical signals and persistent inflows into ETFs.

Bank of England cuts rates in heavily divided decision

The Bank of England has cut rates to 3.75%, but the decision was more hawkish than expected, leaving market rates higher and sterling slightly stronger. It's a close call whether the Bank cuts again in February or March.

Ripple holds $1.82 support as low retail demand weighs on the token

Ripple (XRP) is trading between a key support at $1.82 and resistance at $2.00 at the time of writing on Thursday, reflecting the lethargic sentiment in the broader cryptocurrency market.