An argument for a lower dollar
The bullish narrative around the US Dollar has been the potential of a Fed rate hike as well as the continued devaluation of other currencies around the world. This article outlining the thoughts of Vasileios Gkionakis, head of global currency strategy at UniCredit Bank. “Central banks are stepping back a bit from their currency obsession.”
Essentially he argues that Draghi’s recent comments that rate cuts are done for the Euro is what we will start to hear from other central banks. These banks will take note of the situation Japan has gotten themselves into and stop with their currency devaluations. This might be a stretch as this would mean central banks admitting what they have done over the past years had not worked.
It is noteworthy that traders are at the lowest aggregate bullish since July 2014.
Click here to visit the posting page over at MarketWatch.
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Wall Street is wagering that the ‘great dollar correction’ is just beginning
Aggregate total of bets that the buck will strengthen has fallen to its lowest level since July 2014
Is the dollar in the midst of a “great correction”? Or is this the new normal?
Increasingly, market strategists and investors seem to be betting on the latter, driven by the notion that the world’s largest central banks have given up on trying to influence exchange rates with monetary policy, for a number of reasons.
Meanwhile, the recent uptick in U.S. inflation is eating into what’s called the real interest-rate differential — the difference between returns on U.S. dollar-denominated assets and those priced in foreign currencies when adjusted for inflation. This lowers the return on dollar-denominated assets relative to those denominated in other currencies, making the buck less attractive to investors. Many other developed economies like the eurozone and Japan have struggled with too-low inflation for years.
And traders have taken notice. Data reported Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission show that the aggregate total of bets that the dollar will strengthen has fallen to its lowest level since July 2014 (See chart below).
“We’re coming out of a massive dollar overvaluation,” said Vasileios Gkionakis, head of global currency strategy at UniCredit Bank. “Central banks are stepping back a bit from their currency obsession.”
A chart shared by Société Générale (included below) currency strategist Kit Juckes shows how a widening inflation gap between the U.S. and Europe—expressed by calculating the difference between 2-year swap rates minus headline consumer-price index—suggests the dollar has further to fall.
In comments made last week, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen explained her outlook for the dollar, emphasizing that the central bank would take a cautious approach to raising interest rates. Yellen, and other Fed officials including Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, have cited the risks of raising interest rates before rising inflation has been firmly established.
Getting out of hand
In the beginning, the dollar rally was fueled by the expectation that rising interest rates would drag U.S. real yields higher as other large central banks experimented with negative interest rates—broadening the differential from both ends, Gkionakis said.
But these expectations quickly got out of hand, Gkionakis said. In the first half of 2015, the euro-dollar EURUSD, +0.0439% pair bottomed out below $1.05—much lower than expectations for policy divergence could possibly justify.
Now, investors are re-evaluating their outlook for the greenback. Gkionakis expects the dollar to drift lower over the next few years, even as U.S. interest rates rise, because the buck has already priced in normalization in monetary policy, more so than what Treasury yields have reflected.
“Even when divergence manifests itself, it does not mean that it will be beneficial for the currency, because the currency has already priced all that in,” Gkionakis said.
The dollar’s weakness is happening against the backdrop of a fundamental shift in how central banks are conducting monetary policy—and that is no coincidence. At the European Central Bank meeting in March, the euro jumped higher after President Mario Draghi said he didn’t anticipate any further interest-rate cuts—a sign that the central bank is no longer directing monetary policy with the primary aim of weakening its currency.
This change of heart was driven largely by the fact that central bankers have realized that maintaining negative interest rates and other ultraloose monetary policies can have diminishing effects, Gkionakis said.
The are also many potential risks.
Legendary bond investor Bill Gross has warned, negative rates put undue pressure on the financial system while not accomplishing important policy goals like pushing investors into riskier assets.
The dollar will rise again
Gkionakis noted that there is one major risk to his outlook. The possibility of a much stronger than expected rebound in U.S. growth. The gains would need to be strong enough to convince investors to price in a faster pace of interest-rate hikes.
To be sure, there are still a number of currency strategists who are standing by their view that the dollar will begin strengthening by the end of the year—though most acknowledge that the potential for short-term weakness is high.
In a note released Monday, a team of global strategists from Bank of America said they continue to see the euro finishing the year at parity with the dollar.
While the recent pickup in inflation and inflation expectations will likely continue to weigh on the dollar in the near term, in Bank of America’s view, the theme of policy divergence will eventually re-emerge, driven by U.S. growth outperformance.
Once that happens, they say, traders will come rushing back to the dollar, sending the euro tumbling to parity with its U.S. rival for the first time since late 2002. The dollar’s run, as measured by the ICE Dollar Index DXY, +0.03% has seen it gain around 17% since July 2014.
So far, however, few strategists and traders have been successful in making bets on the dollar’s reaction to central bank policy.
And versus gold…
And most likely, the euro…
And the Loonie…
So Matthew do you think that this is just a bump up in gold & silver or do you think that the correction is over and they will begin another leg up?
I do, Lewis, but I can sure see why so many disagree.
“No doubt,” sounds a lot like a armchair trader, i.e. novice.
Any real trader always considers that his view is wrong and how to manage his risk, and for damn sure he never uses “no doubt” when it comes to the high risk world of trading.
Now Matthew, could there be a possibility that the Loonie, the Euro, the Yen, and gold are all experiencing what they call “counter-trend” moves, also known as corrective waves?
Chill Jack. It seems to me that the real novice is the guy who gets worked up over an opinion and feels the need to recite arbitrary rules that he picked up somewhere. I bet you’d really go off if I told you that I HOPE gold goes up tomorrow. We all know you can’t utter THAT word and remain credible.
I believe your technicals, Matthew. It does not make fundamental sense to me, however, that the yen should be in a bull market……so I must be missing something.
If you can view a monthly chart, here’s gold priced in yen:
Bears will see that as a large multi year top but I think it’s probably a consolidation that is nearing it’s end. The yen is not in a bull market when priced in gold.
With the fundamental flaws of the yen it is hard to see how it could be set to appreciate against gold, or much of anything real.
Well one thing about it is we would want a lot of the people to disagree.( This is for Matthews response to me up above)
You’re right about that.
Pure gold jumped almost 35% today and did so on great volume/action.
JAG is bullishly digesting its extremely high volume breakout…
Weekly:
Silver found support just above the 30 week MA yesterday…
There is no doubt in my mind that the USD is in a new bear market versus the yen…
http://schrts.co/nvK2l0