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It has taken $50 billion and two years but the Bank of Israel may have finally accepted it is time to pare interventions and let the shekel juggernaut roll on.
What might be changing the equation โ alongside the healthy 7 per cent GDP expansion expected this year โ is inflation which is gradually inching towards the top of the official target.
So without entirely abandoning interventions, the central bank is expected by economists to sharply cut back on forex purchases, a strategy adopted years ago to curb the relentless shekel appreciation.
The shekel on Monday hit 3.08 per dollar, the highest since 1996.
It is the top performing emerging currency since the pandemic started roiling financial markets in early 2020, up 10 per cent, while gaining 12 per cent against its main trading partners. The shekel has gained nearly 4 per cent in the year-to-date, making it one of the top three 2021 emerging currencies.
All this despite Israel โ unlike many other developing countries โ having yet to raise its 0.1 per cent interest rate.
The shekelโs strength has been attributed to a number of factors as well as the overall weakness of the dollar: a rapid economic recovery from the COVID-19 crisis amid a widespread vaccination programme; a large current account surplus that is expected to reach 5.5 per cent of GDP in 2021, thanks in part to Israelโs tech firms; and huge foreign direct investment in the sector that may hit $30 billion this year.
Gains in overseas stock markets also often lift the shekel because Israeli pension funds and other institutions are required to cap their foreign currency exposure. That has forced them to sell $20 billion into the market this year.
INFLATION EQUATION
โYou have all these factors and to expect the Bank of Israel to try and prevent a sharp shekel appreciation is not realistic,โ Jonathan Katz, chief economist at Tel Aviv brokerage Leader Capital Markets said, adding it was possible to infer from comments by BoI governor Amir Yaron that he prefers to not intervene.
Yaron took office in late-2018 and stayed on the sidelines in 2019, ignoring an 8 per cent shekel surge and an outcry from exporters. But he intervened last year as the pandemic necessitated support.
Now the picture is different, with the central bank expecting growth of 7 per cent this year.
โHis world view is when the economy is recovering and weโre in good shape โฆ thereโs less need to intervene. But there will be pain for exporters,โ said Katz, predicting dollar-shekel likely at 3 by year-end.
Katz likens Israelโs booming high-tech sector to the countryโs natural gas sector in 2013, when the BoI also bought dollars of try to offset the sectorโs impact on the surging shekel. Without sufficient offset for that one sector, other exporters suffer, he said.
Earlier this year, Yaron seemed to be following the route set by his predecessors whose intervention campaigns have pushed BoI reserves to a record 47 per cent of GDP. After buying $21 billion last year, the BoI announced up to $30 billion of forex purchases for 2021.
But last week, Yaron called the $30 billion programme, which ended on Oct. 27 when it hit that level, an โexceptional plan for exceptional timesโ. BoI said it would not extend the programme, instead reverting back to unannounced interventions when deemed economically necessary.
EXPORTER CONCERN
Modi Shafrir, chief strategist at Mizrahi Tefahot Bankโs finance division, expects interventions to decline in 2022, given Israelโs 2.5 per cent inflation print in September โ towards the upper end of its annual 1 per cent-3 per cent target.
โAt the beginning of 2021, we had deflation and โฆ now, we are in a different, very different area,โ Shafrir said. โThe shekel appreciation slightly reduces the inflation coming from the supply side.โ
The central bank has created a process that allowed the economy to gradually adapt and move to a services focus, away from production, Yaron told reporters last week, adding:
โThe monetary policy committee looks at exporters but also at importers and consumers. The macroeconomic picture of the economy emerging from the crisis a good one.โ
Unannounced interventions โ and there have been a few recently according to traders โ prevent episodes of excessive strength while allowing gradual gains, Goldman Sachs wrote, predicting โcontinued, gradual shekel appreciationโ. They forecast a 3.05 rate in six months.
Israelโs high-value tech exports, comprising 14 per cent of GDP, are relatively insulated from exchange rate swings, but Yaronโs comments and actions have not sat well with other exporters.
Israel Chemicals (ICL.TA), for instance said the currency strength hurt operating profit by $17 million in the third quarter over a year earlier.
Ron Tomer, head of Israelโs Manufacturersโ Association, said a third of manufacturers had shifted some production overseas โand it keeps on growingโ.
โUntil the latest shekel move, a lot of companies were selling at cost or even at small losses,โ Tomer told Reuters. โNow with the shekel at 3.10 โฆ we reached a point in which people can no longer dip into pocket money.โ
He urged policymakers to continue interventions and the government to step in, because โwhen you have the shekel strengthening 3 per cent in a week, you canโt sustain any planโ.
REUTERS