You heard it here first: the euro would not drop versus the dollar and could even increase. And here we are. During trading yesterday, the euro flirted with USD 1.40, its highest level since October 2011 after gaining in excess of 7% since the start of the year. This is a worrying development, which could erase nearly all of the support that improving global conditions have provided to exports.
Two reasons explain why our forecasts, unlike the market consensus, never strayed from the EUR 1.40/euro exchange rate in the past two years:
• the first is rooted in our skepticism with regard to 1) the consensus that the US economy is presumably in good health and 2) anticipations that the Fed would normalize its monetary policy in response to the expected improvement.
• the second is grounded in the side effects of the competitive deflation policies carried out by the EMU countries. The shrinking inflation gap between the euro area and the rest of the world, resulting from these policies, protects the currency’s purchasing power. Consequently, these policies offer de facto support to the euro, particularly versus the greenback whose value is automatically diluted by the massive scale of pump priming in recent years.
Therefore, it is hardly surprising that the recent disappointments on American growth have pushed the euro higher, especially since the ECB dashed all hopes of additional monetary easing last week.