Quote from brettman9:
The synthesis position here seems to go something like this:
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And then there's the dollar. When the dollar is strong, we have the flexibility to cut rates and shift models back toward the type of forecasts that really drive a bull market when we face a scenario like this. And in 2000 we had a very strong dollar, which ran lower sharply through the trend in rate cuts for the next couple years.
But now the dollar (index) is testing all-time lows territory right as we face the need to lower rates.
One bit of buffer is that foreign central banks won't want to ruin the dollar because they all hold such large reserves. But the downward pressure will make everyone want to diversify those reserves whenever possible. The fed knows that, so they would seem to be somewhat handcuffed.
The only proactive strategy would seem to be to cut soon and hard. The worst case scenario would be a drawn out period of multiple cuts. But I am not at all convinced that this whole stage can result in a world that works the way this one has over any time period. Can the US become an export economy? Seems like a real evolutionary transition is underway.