May 31, 1999  Europe's new currency unit, the euro, has fallen 10 % since it began trading in January.  At the beginning of the year, the euro was worth $1.17.  Now it's worth less than $1.05.  Some speculate that it could fall further behind the dollar over the rest of this year.  "Ninety-nine in '99 remains a possibility," a top official at Deutsche Bank quipped to a New York Times reporter last week (meaning that the euro could fall to $0.99 by the end of this year).

Like most economic events, this is both bad and good news for the people who reside in the E-11 countries.  [The eleven countries which belong to the European Monetary Union are:  Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Austria, Belgium, Luxembourg, Finland, Portugal, and Ireland.  Their national currencies are pegged to the euro].  The bad news is that those people who own euros and euro denominated assets are relatively poorer.  Because their currency unit has depreciated, the prices of merchandise and services from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan are (in effect) higher.  They now have to exchange more euros (and marks or francs or lira) to get a US dollar, a British pound, or a Japanese yen.  Their terms of trade are deteriorating.

However, the good news is that European products have become cheaper to foreigners.  This will stimulate export sales, tourism, and jobs in Western Europe as well as help keep the wheels of the European economy turning.  While other economies have picked up speed, the European economies have slowed down recently. A currency depreciation may help them get the boost they need..

Currency exchange markets are essential for international trade and finance.  The ability to exchange one currency for another is the monetary link between nations.  These markets allow trade merchants to circumvent bartering that would otherwise be too cumbersome.  So what determines the exchange rate between two currencies?  The short answer is:  "Supply and demand."

People demand foreign currencies to buy goods and services, travel, and make foreign investments.  They supply their own currency to demand other currencies.  When the supply of a currency increases, its price falls.  When the demand for a currency goes up, so does its exchange value.  The euro will fall (and the dollar will rise) when the demand for dollars is greater than the demand for euros in the foreign exchange market.

Business cycles and expectations play major roles in foreign exchange markets.  Most analysts think that the dollar is going up in value relative to the euro because people believe the US economy is strong, and they are moving their investments to the United States.  A strong US economy and stock market, combined with higher interest rates in the US than in Europe, and expectations that Europe's new monetary union may stumble in its early stages, all point to a strong demand for dollars and a weak demand for euros.

Flexible exchange rate systems that permit market forces to operate have a built-in stabilizing mechanism.  As the dollar gets more and more expensive, US exports become less and less competitive and investments in the US become less attractive.  Meanwhile, as the euro gets cheaper, European exports become more competitive and foreign investment in Europe becomes more attractive.  At some point, the exchange value of the dollar will peak, stabilize, or may even begin to decline.  The turning point is what currency speculators would like to know.

Ever since the world's largest trading nations abandoned the gold-exchange system in the 1970s, exchange rates have been primarily determined by free market forces.  Some countries still officially fix or peg their national currency to a key currency such as the US dollar, but most nations have adopted an independently floating system.  Central banks do intervene occasionally to persuade a currency up or down by leaning against the wind, but market forces tend to prevail in today's foreign exchange climate.

When analyzing foreign exchange markets, time is an important element.  Although exchange rates fluctuate minute by minute, most analysis is confined to daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, annually, or longer periods of time.  It makes a difference where you begin and end your analysis, because a currency could fall in one month but rise over the course of a year.  The strongest currency in the world over the past 12 months has been the Japanese yen.  There is still a strong demand for the Japanese yen to buy Japan's automobiles, consumer electronics, and other products.  Japan runs a trade surplus with virtually all of its trading partners, and Japan's recession has weakened its demand for other countries' goods and services.

The picture below likens exchange rates to a race.  The currency that goes up in value the most gets ahead, and those currencies that are depreciating fall behind.  The US dollar is used as the base currency.  The Japanese yen has appreciated by 8 per cent relative to the US dollar over the past 12 month period.  The German mark, on the other hand, has fallen vis-a-vis the US dollar by almost 4 per cent.  [Because they are linked, most of the other E-11 currencies depreciated at nearly same rate as the German mark].  The Brazilian real has depreciated dramatically, especially since January of this year; and the Russian ruble has virtually run out of gas.  Last year, 6 rubles exchanged for 1 dollar.  Now it takes 25 rubles to get a dollar (assuming you could get someone to make the exchange).

The Bank of England compiles and maintains an interesting trade-weighted exchange rate index, using 1990 as the base year.  The index is weighted by the proportion of trade that each nation engages in with its trading partners.  For example, the United States' biggest trading partner is Canada.  If the US dollar were to appreciate (or depreciate) relative to the Canadian dollar that would affect the index more than if the US dollar were to appreciate (or depreciate) relative to a smaller trading partner's currency like the Italian lira or the Brazilian real.  According to this index, the Japanese yen has been the strongest currency over the decade of the 1990s.  Its exchange value is 25 per cent higher now than it was at the beginning of the decade.  The Spanish peseta and the Italian lira have depreciated by approximately 25 per cent over the same period. [See Table below].  The US dollar ranks second to the yen, having appreciated by nearly 10 per cent.  The Australian dollar, which has shown strength over the past 12 months, is still down by about 13 per cent since 1990.
 
 

Exchange Rates:  Trade-Weighted Index
May 1999 (1990=100)
Country
Currency
Index
Japan
Yen
125.6
United States
Dollar
109.5
Switzerland
Franc
106.6
Denmark
Krone
105.0
France
Franc
105.0
United Kingdom
Pound
104.5
Germany
Mark
102.8
Austria
Schilling
102.5
Belgium
Franc
101.8
Netherlands
Guilder
101.1
Australia
Dollar
86.5
Sweden
Krona
80.9
Canada
Dollar
80.5
Spain
Peseta
76.2
Italy
Lira
74.9
Source:  Bank of England in The Economist (May 22 -28, 1999)

So what do you think will happen to the value of the Japanese yen, the US dollar, the European euro, and other currencies over the next 12 months?  the next 10 years?  Forecasting exchange rates is one of the most difficult assignments that economists undertake.  They are not really very good at it.  But they are better than everybody else!  That's why they get paid to do it.  The foreign exchange market is just one more fascinating aspect of The World Game of Economics.
 

Recommended Links for up-to-date exchange rates and currency converters:

                [OANDA.COM]  



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