Buckled by the buck
Until Monday, the stock market liked the lower greenback. That it's now considered bad is worrisome.
May 20, 2003: 8:45 AM EDT
By Justin Lahart, CNN/Money Senior Writer
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - For six weeks the stock market looked blithely on as the dollar weakened, rallying even as the greenback tumbled to ever lower levels against the world's other major currencies.
Over the weekend, everything changed -- Treasury Secretary John Snow's substantially retooled what the United States' "strong dollar" doctrine means, and suddenly Wall Street decided that the buckling buck was a problem. The notion that the dollar no longer has a safety net rekindled old fears that overseas investors will start pulling money out of U.S. assets -- causing more dollar weakness and snowballing into a general run for the exits.
That these fears have surfaced threatens to derail what Snow was trying to achieve. A weaker dollar appears to be part and parcel of a no-holds-barred effort by the Federal Reserve and Treasury to get the economy back onto its feet again. For the Fed, this means a pledge to keep interest rates low even if the economy begins to show signs of life, openly courting higher inflation as a means to fighting back the possibility of deflation.