It has been a tough week for the US dollar.
On Wednesday the greenback fell to a record low against the Swiss franc and now it ends the week not far from its 2.5 year low against the Japanese Yen. Negative retail sales, signs of a recession in the US manufacturing and housing sectors as well as bearish comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke all provide strong reasons for the dollar’s weakness. Although we do not believe that the greenback has hit a bottom, we would not be surprised to see a bounce in the dollar this coming week. The US economic calendar is light with the only potentially market moving report being Thursday’s existing home sales data. Don’t forget that Monday is President’s Day which means that US markets are closed. This gives traders the opportunity to seriously think about whether the Federal Reserve will really deliver a 75bp rate cut. Fed fund futures are now pricing in a 72 percent chance that the move will happen. The possibility of an inter-meeting rate cut is also being floated around, contributing to the dollar’s weakness. If the Federal Reserve fails to deliver, those who have short the dollar on this expectation will have to adjust their positions accordingly. We continue to stress that a 75bp rate cut is a severe move. The last time the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by three quarters of a point was during Volcker’s term when he raised interest to as high as 20 percent to curb double digit inflation growth. Over the last 30 years, there has been 4 recessions in the US economy. An interesting question to ask is if the Federal Reserve has cut interest rates by more than 75bp to fight a recession? Yes. In the past 3 decades, there have been times when the Fed cut rates by 200bp in a single meeting, but interest rates at the time was 18 percent. Since US interest rates are now at 4.25 percent, a 75bp rate cut on a percentage basis would be far more significant than a 200bp cut when rates were at 18 percent.