The dollar’s downtrend, which has long been anticipated, is driven by expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut interest rates as the economy weakens.
“The dollar has been under pressure and it will remain under pressure over the remainder of this year,” said Guy Miller, chief market strategist, Zurich Insurance Group.
Here’s where the relief is being felt the most.

1/ YEN INTERVENTION WATCH, CANCELLED
But the yen’s dramatic rebound has put an end to such intervention speculation.
One dollar is worth 146 yen, down more than 15 yen or around 10% from its mid-July levels, thanks to a BOJ rate hike, looming Fed cuts and a sharp reversal of popular carry trades.
“We’re not going to get a rebound in U.S. rates like we’ve had in previous corrections in the past two years. This is a fundamental turn and dollar/yen is heading lower,” said Derek Halpenny, MUFG’s head of research global markets EMEA.

2/ NEVER HAPPY?
Earlier this year, China tried to stop its currency from weakening too much against the dollar, partly in fear this would drive capital outflows.
Its rise is largely due to the dollar weakening – China’s domestic economy is fragile – but it could continue, especially if exporters sell the hoard of dollars they have accumulated.
“We generally expect that external developments will continue to outweigh domestic drags, and the yuan should gradually move stronger,” said ING chief economist for Greater China Lynn Song, forecasting the dollar at 7 yuan by year-end with a fall of around 1% from current levels.

3/ BREATHING SPACE
The weaker dollar has lifted emerging market currencies elsewhere too, especially in Asia. The Philippine peso chalked up its best monthly gains in August in some 18-years and the Indonesian rupiah in more than four years.
That momentum did not spread to Latin America, where Mexico’s peso and much of the region suffered hefty losses on domestic woes and wobbly commodity prices.
Nonetheless, a softer dollar coupled with U.S. soft landing hopes provide welcome breathing space for some emerging markets, allowing them more room to cut rates and become more sensitive to domestic growth issues.
“Through the remainder of the year we expect central banks in Philippines, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Taiwan and Turkey to join their early-cutter peers in LatAm and (central and Eastern Europe),” said MUFG’s head of emerging market research Ehsan Khoman.

4/ FROM FOE TO FRIEND

5/ CROWNING MOMENT
Sweden’s rate-setters are also likely cheering a weaker dollar.
The Swedish crown has rallied 4% in August, making it the best performing major currency .
It is difficult for Sweden’s crown to strengthen further from here, analysts say, but the Norwegian crown could hold up better.
Norway will likely be among the last developed market economies to cut rates, boosting its currency and its sensitivity to global growth.
“In an environment where U.S. interest rates are coming down, U.S. growth slows, but global growth remains stable, high beta (growth sensitive) currencies such as the NOK (Norwegian crown) tend to perform well,” NatWest analysts said.

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Reporting by Alun John and Karin Strohecker in London, and the Shanghai newsroom; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Jacqueline Wong
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.