The second, bigger, part is more pervasive. We are not the only country trying to spur growth by chipping away at our national rate of interest, hoping our rate of exchange will follow.
Our collective problem is that this now does not work. In the past, chopping off bits of your OCR usually did have a negative effect on the FX markets in your favour. Now, guess what? The Wall Street Journal notes: "Rate cuts by global central banks have done little to weaken surging currencies. In theory, loosening monetary policy should lower a currency's value. However, all this year the opposite has been happening."
Bloomberg reports: "The traditional monetary-policy playbook calls for steps to weaken foreign exchange values in order to spur domestic inflation and make a nation's exports more competitive in global markets. Unprecedented stimulus policies from Europe to Asia this year have only sent currencies higher, frustrating efforts to spur economies."
Graham Wheeler states: "No matter what I do, the market will still want more." He is dead right, just look around. Further, from the Wall Street Journal: "It isn't just the smaller economies in Asia: The Bank of Japan has had the same problem. A rate cut that took interest rates negative for some deposits at the start of the year has prompted a surge of yen buying and a 15.9 per cent rally in the currency. And globally, the same phenomenon is occurring. Rate cuts in Indonesia, Russia, Hungary, South Korea and Taiwan in the past year have all done little to weaken surging currencies."
This now looks like a distinct "race to the bottom", which was another phrase doing the rounds this week. It is a competition that we are caught up in whether we like it or not. You might be wondering: how low can we go? Well, look at our Swiss and Japanese counterparts. Already negative on rates, and having monetised government bonds, they're now starting on buying equities. At least we, down here in the sticks, still have 2 per cent to play with.
- Caroline Ritchie is a former AFA, sharebroker and portfolio manager. She runs Investment Stuff, a sharemarket based investment coaching service. Visit her at www.investmentstuff.co.nz. This column is not personalised financial advice.