**Next Publication on Nov
24th
·
Carry Trade Liquidation Hits the
US
Dollar
·
Euro Eyes 1.30, Looks Ahead to
IFO
·
Japanese Yen Soars Despite Cabinets
Downgrade of Economic
Assessment
US Dollar –
Traders banked their four day rolls
at the close of business yesterday and began a massive liquidation out of carry
trades that sent the US
dollar sliding to its lowest level against the Euro in 14 months. Just as everyone has settled into the
notion that it would be a quiet trading week, volatility spiked and currencies
began to move. Given that many
US and Japanese traders have left
early for the holidays, which is quite common this time of the year, the lack of
significant liquidity is sure to have played a major role in today’s exaggerated
price action. The dollar’s biggest
drop was against the Swiss Franc and the Japanese Yen, both of which are very popular
carry trades. Looking ahead, we
want to warn that the combination of a depreciating dollar and a bleaker
US economic outlook could resurrect
talk of reserve diversification by central banks. This was the same case in 2004 when talk
of reserve diversification was at its peak as the Euro surged from 1.22 to
1.3660 in a matter of 3.5 months.
With the market so dollar bearish, any talk of reserve diversification
could take the EUR/USD above 1.30.
According to an interesting price study that we published as a special
report today on DailyFX.com, over the past 20 years, the US
dollar depreciated against the Euro 15 out of those 20 years during the month of
December. The seasonality is even
more apparent if we zoom into the past 12 years, where there were only two
instances that the US dollar
managed to rally in the last month of year. Meanwhile only minor economic data was
released today. Weekly mortgage
applications dropped last week by 3.7 percent, erasing most of the prior week’s
gains. Jobless claims ticked
higher, bringing the 4 week average to 317k, which signals that payrolls could
be a bit softer in November. The
final University
of Michigan consumer confidence
index was also revised down from 92.3 to 92.1 as consumers were slightly less
optimistic about the current economy.
Euro and Swiss Franc
– The Euro screamed higher today and came
within an arm’s length of the psychologically important 1.30 level. Economic data released this morning was
mixed with French consumer spending falling short of expectations while Eurozone
industrial
orders dropped less than expected.
France’s economy has really been the
laggard lately and we suspect that the latest bout of Euro strength will only do
further damage to the fragile economy. For an export dependent region, the
higher the EUR/USD rallies, the bigger the damage that the currency could do to
the local economies. If you recall,
the major reversal that we saw in the EUR/USD in late 2004 was triggered by a
round of disappointing economic data.
Although we may still have some more room to go in the EUR/USD on the
upside before seeing a meaningful reversal, the odds of deteriorating economic
activity are very high at this point.
If the EUR/USD stays at its present level when the European Central Bank holds their monetary policy meeting,
there is an extremely big possibility that ECB President Trichet will signal
that the December rate hike is most likely their last. Even though the ECB is concerned about
inflation, the strong currency also reduces inflationary pressures. The most important piece of economic
data due for release tomorrow is the German IFO report on business
sentiment. The prospects of an
interest rate hike and the strength in the currency should lead to a drop in
business confidence after a large jump last month.
Meanwhile the market has had a strong demand for Swiss Francs over the
past few days thanks to firmer economic data. Switzerland’s labor market has been
very tight and tomorrow’s third quarter employment level is expected to confirm
that.
British Pound –
The
British pound scored big gains today despite a surprise voting record for the
central bank’s latest interest rate hike.
The hike was originally expected to be supported by 8 of the 9 monetary
policy members but only 7 actually voted in favor of it. Rachel Lomax joined David Blanchflower
in voting to hold interest rates steady at 4.75 percent. They were both afraid that the previous
rise in inflation was only temporary.
The British pound sold off on the release, but quickly recovered its
gains as the details of the minutes revealed a tinge of hawkishness that was not
expected after the round of disappointing inflation reports. The monetary policy committee remained
optimistic about growth, which we expected after the Quarterly Inflation report,
but on the inflation front, they talked mostly about the upside risks and how
the tight labor market, high money supply and strong housing market could push
inflation even higher. The fact
that the British pound is quickly closing its yield differential with the US
dollar has helped the pair stage today’s impressive
rally.
Japanese
Yen – Carry trade liquidation was the
main driver of today’s rally in the Japanese Yen. No meaningful economic data was released
last night and the market completely shrugged off the Japanese Cabinet’s first
downgrade of their economic assessment since December 2004. The government is worried about consumer
spending which has long been one of Japan’s major economic problems. The prior weakness in the Yen should
help to keep demand domestic while also boosting the export sector. We still believe that Japan
is on the road to recovery and expect incoming economic data to reflect that.
Japanese markets are closed tonight
for the country’s Labor Thanksgiving Day.
Commodity Currencies (CAD, AUD, NZD)
– The commodity currencies continued
to strengthen today thanks to the broad based weakness in the US
dollar. Canada
was the commodity dependent country that had economic data released today, which
was slightly worse than expected.
Consumer prices fell for the second month in a row with the annualized pace of
growth increasing from 0.7 percent to a less than expected 0.9 percent. The core rate hit a 3.5 year high
however, offsetting a bit of the bearishness by indicating that inflationary pressures are
still prevalent. There was no
economic data released from Australia or New
Zealand.
Firmer gold prices and bids for Qantas Airways are helping to extend
gains in the Australian dollar.

