Watching the buying power of the dollar shrink in real time is depressing.
Funny enough, the value of the dollar was discussed yesterday at a rally about 2mi from my house, since it just hit a 4 year low.
And from a purely economic perspective, I have no idea if hitting that 4 year low is a net positive, a net negative, or a wash for most Americans.
I am guessing that for most Americans, it will be a net negative and they will be hurt by it. Then for some, it will be a net positive and they will benefit a lot by it. And when combined, it will be largely a wash across all socioeconomic groups.
Again, this is me trying to just understand the ramifications for our country's economy and not political.
-
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the value of the dollar was "great", when asked whether he thought it had declined too much, adding to pressure on the
greenback which hit a four-year low.
- The dollar's recent weakness stems from multiple factors: expectations of continued Federal Reserve rate cuts,
tariff uncertainty, policy volatility including threats to Fed independence and rising fiscal deficits,
all of which have eroded investor confidence in U.S. economic stability.
-
A lower dollar can also benefit U.S. exporters, though Trump said he was not seeking for its value to decline further.
"I would want it to... just seek its own level," he said.
-
"No, I think it's great, the value of the dollar ... dollar's doing great," Trump said when asked by a reporter if he thought the value of the dollar had declined too much.
- While the dollar's fall reflects investor worries about the U.S. economy's strength and
could lead to inflationary pressures due to the rising cost of imports, it can help some businesses. A weaker greenback makes it cheaper for multinational companies to convert foreign profits into dollars,
while also boosting the competitiveness of U.S. exporters' products.
- Steve Sosnick, market strategist at Interactive Brokers, Greenwich, Connecticut, said that
a weaker dollar "was a two-sided coin". "On the one hand, it’s good for multinationals... If you have operations around the world and foreign currency revenue that will have a conversion advantage when you turn it into U.S. dollars, that will be good.
On the other, it makes imported goods more expensive and there might be some inflationary impact from that."