Forex Blog

November 3, 2011

Growth Dollars under pressure

Like a phoenix, the CAD has risen from its lowest level in almost two weeks outright on increased demand for this particular higher-yielding growth currency. The Fed acknowledged that US economic growth “strengthened somewhat” in the third-quarter, giving global equities and commodities a boost. This is always favorable for growth sensitive currencies, especially one that have such a strong trade association with the US. Strong private employment numbers down south suggests that the US may skate a recession. Tomorrow, the market gets the privilege to trade last months NFP and Canadian employment reports. What’s good for the US tends to always be good for its largest trading partner.

The Canadian Finance Minister stated earlier this week that the BoC’s mandate will remain unchanged, allowing Governor Carney to rule the roost the same as before. The CAD, when under duress this week, certainly outperformed other risk sensitive currencies. The BoJ’s intervening actions indirectly dragged the dollar higher and at the same time the loonie was reluctant to fall.

Carney’s comments last week were very transparent. He is concerned about sustainable growth and the market will have to be cautious in trying to push the currency higher at speed. Corporate buyers remain below as dealers focus on the risk reward of owning the loonie at these levels (1.0159)


Loonie

Growth sensitive currencies are not going to hack it through this trading environment. The AUD fell against the yen and pared its outright advance versus the dollar after the referendum pledge from the Greeks and after the Fed refrained from taking additional steps to ease monetary policy. The chances of a disorderly default has raised the stakes that global growth is unsustainable. Earlier in the week the RBA cut rates (-25bp to +4.50%) and has moved to a more neutral policy stance. In Governor Stevens communiqué, the RBA concluded that a more neutral monetary policy stance would be appropriate to maintain growth now that inflation is likely to stay within its 2-3% target over the next two years. The RBA noted that while financial conditions have eased, overall conditions remain tighter than normal and the AUD is still at historically high levels.

The market is now estimating and pricing a neutral policy rate at around +4.0-4.5% and that the RBA is likely to cut by another-25bp in Q1 of next year. Futures dealers have priced in a market easing of about-88bp in total along the curve throughout this cycle. Currently that looks a tad rich, but hindsight is another matter. These cuts are likely to constrain and cap the Aussie. However, on the flip-side, better than expected data out of the US coupled with resilient growth from the Chinese economy will be supporting antipodean currencies. In this current environment, the market remains a better seller of the currency on rallies (1.0277).


Aussie

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September 12, 2011

Greece Default Fears Drag Euro Lower

Renewed fears of Greece defaulting on its debt obligations has investors abandoning the euro for the safety of the less volatile yen. This activity has pushed the euro to the lowest level against the yen since June, 2001.

With the Swiss National Bank invoking a series of actions to stem the Swiss franc’s appeal as a safe haven currency, the yen has come under even more buying pressure. As a result, the euro dropped 0.9 percent to 105.07 yen at 7:57 a.m. in New York, from 105.99 on Sept. 9, after sliding to 103.90. Against the dollar, the euro traded at $1.3636 after decreasing to $1.3495, the weakest since Feb. 15.

Source: Bloomberg

August 31, 2011

Slower Growth Drags Australian, N.Z. Dollars

Signs of slowing economies in both Australia and New Zealand could lead to a further devaluation of each country’s currency. The Australian dollar appears to be set to record its fourth consecutive monthly loss against the yen while losing 3.5 percent against the U.S. dollar during August alone. New Zealand’s dollar has suffered five straight months of losses against the U.S. dollar.

Both countries derive much of their economic growth from the export of commodities but with global demand waning, so too are export sales. Should this trend continue as many expect, it is likely both currencies will continue to weaken in the coming months.

Source: Bloomberg

Canadian Economy Contracts in 2nd Quarter

Statistics Canada announced this morning that the Canadian economy contracted during the 2nd quarter by 0.1 percent. Earlier predictions were for zero growth.

The government agency blamed the decline on a 2.1 percent drop in export sales due most likely to weaker consumer demand in Canada’s largest market, the United States. Despite the declining growth, Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty does not foresee the possibility of Canada’s economy falling back into recession.

April 4, 2011

USD Falls Against JPY After Fed Hints at Keeping Interest Rates Low

Comments from Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart caused the dollar to drop against the yen on speculation the central bank will keep borrowing costs low. It is the first time in eight days that USD fell against JPY.

The dollar dropped 0.2 percent to 83.87 yen at 10:11 a.m. in New York, from 84.06 on April 1.

In a speech today in West Palm Beach, Florida, Lockhart said the U.S. recovery will probably persist, while buffeted by government spending cuts and reductions in consumer debt. “With each quarter, the recovery is increasingly well established,” he said. “However, underlying the recovery there remain serious imbalances that have not been corrected.”

The U.S. central bank may be able to cut about $100 billion from its plan to buy $600 billion in Treasury securities through June, according to the St. Louis Fed president James Bullard. He and other Fed regional presidents indicated optimism on U.S. growth in speeches last week.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said in March that until conditions show significant improvement, the Fed will hold the line on interest rates for an “extended period” and he has given no indication he wants to tighten credit with unemployment still high.

U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose by 216,000 in March, and the unemployment rate fell to 8.8 percent, a two-year low, the Labor Department reported April 1.

Source:  Bloomberg

November 8, 2010

Irish Debt Concerns Plague Euro

Concerns that several Eurozone countries will be hard-pressed to meet their debt obligations has investors backing away from the euro with the euro falling against most of the major currencies. Against the yen, the euro declined 1.1 percent this morning in Europe falling to 112.80 yen.

The pessimism carried over into the equity markets with European stocks declining today after two days of gains. Still, some analysts feel that sovereign debt concerns in Europe will not have a long-term negative impact on stock prices.

“Sovereign debt concerns in Europe may have a short-term effect on market sentiment but any fallout there should be reasonably contained,” said Ng Soo Nam, Singapore-based chief investment officer at Nikko Asset Management Co., which has $123 billion in assets globally.

Source: Bloomberg

Ireland is effectively insolvent

SAD NEWS just in from Our Lady of the Eurozone Hospital: After a sudden worsening in her condition, the Irish Patient, formerly known as the Irish Republic, has been moved into intensive care and put on artificial ventilation. While a hospital spokesman, Jean-Claude Trichet, tried to sound upbeat, there is no prospect that the Patient will recover.

It will be remembered that, after a lengthy period of poverty following her acrimonious divorce from her English partner, in the 1990s Ireland succeeded in turning her life around, educating herself, and holding down a steady job. Although her increasingly riotous lifestyle over the last decade had raised some concerns, the Irish Patient’s fate was sealed by a botched emergency intervention on September 29th, 2008 followed by repeated misdiagnoses of the ensuing complications.

With the Irish Patient now clinically dead, her grieving European relatives face the melancholy task of deciding when to remove her from life support, and how to deal with the extraordinary debts she ran up in the last months of her life . . .

The Irish Times

October 14, 2010

Dollar Falls to 15-Year Low Against the Yen

The US dollar continues to lose ground against the yen despite the best attempts of the Japanese government to devalue the yen. At one point in yesterday’s trading, the dollar fell as low as 81.12 yen before rebounding slightly.

Source: BBC News

November 25, 2009

Yen Strength!

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 12:47 pm

As I’m getting ready to take off for Thanksgiving, was just taking a look through some different charts and noticed this one on dollar/yen (USD/JPY): (click chart to enlarge)

usdjpy1125.JPG

This 10-year chart of USD/JPY shows that the dollar is at its weakest against the yen in over 10 years!  Remember that when this chart makes new “lows”, it actually means strength for Japanese yen.  And you thought I was kidding about dollar weakness in my article below!

To learn more about how to use charts in your analysis, be sure to check out our currency trading courses!

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Happy Thanksgiving to All!

Tags: account, analysis, article, blog, charts, course, currenc, currency, currency trading, demo, demo account, dollar, forex, forextrading, fx, fxedu, Il, Japan, jpy, USD, Yen

US Dollar Limbo: How Low Can it Go?

As I gear up for the holiday invasion and the ensuing gluttony that’s about to transpire, I can’t help but look forward to my next vacation.  I’m thinking somewhere tropical, perhaps the Caribbean, enjoying drinks with little umbrellas in them.  I lull myself into daydream, counting waves and sunsets as island music fills the air.  Yet all is not perfect.  And then it hits me like a ton of bricks—the calypso music I’m hearing is being played by none other than our esteemed Fed Chairman Bernanke!  He’s wearing a Panama Hat and a blousy Hawaiian shirt, playing a version of the Limbo: how low can you go!  Only the participants aren’t drunken tourists, but dancing US dollar bills, each trying to squeeze under a rapidly sinking bar to Bernanke’s amusement!  The pleasant daydream has now become a nightmare, as I realize that I can’t afford another Painkiller with the mountain of cash I place on the bar.  I awake in a cold sweat.  Thankfully it is just a dream.  Or is it?

We are all aware of the trying economic times we are experiencing and the fact that we haven’t gone off the cliff (yet) is something that I am thankful for.  Now that we seemingly have avoided Depression (again yet), we find ourselves mired in a serious recession and there is great debate about how to get out of it.

One of the prevailing themes and the one espoused by those charged with figuring this out is that the path to prosperity is through dollar destruction.   Since the dollar has been tanking thanks to Bernanke’s zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), both the stock market and the commodities markets (particularly gold) have seen tremendous gains (relative to where they were before last fall) as well as other currencies.

This has led to the “tale of two trades”, which I have outlined in previous articles.  The irony of this is that in order for the dollar to advance, we need to see inflation so the Fed will raise rates.  The fact that we are not seeing inflation but rather serious deflation means that the dollar will continue to fall until it reaches its “breaking point” whether we are out of recession or not.

However, there is another way that the dollar can rise without raising interest rates.  It’s called the risk aversion trade and will come back into fashion as investors become more skeptical /less confident in the world and particularly the United States recovery.  I wrote recently about how the Fed massages the numbers and jaw-bones the dollar so at this point it shouldn’t come as a shock to anyone.

So if you want a stronger dollar, you have to be prepared to accept worsening conditions.  Things like GDP revisions and less-bad-but-not-quite-good-employment figures all keep the dollar from crashing.

So where is the breaking point for the dollar?  How low can it go?

Well rather than try to throw out some technical mumbo-jumbo, or attempt to rationalize the irrational, I’m going to leave you with this thought:  the Dollar will continue to decline until things look so bad that the US dollar carry trade starts to unwind as the “flight to safety” takes effect; or if conditions actually do improve enough for the Fed to raise rates. 

The first scenario is likely to happen more rapidly than the second.  The dollar funded carry trade is getting crowded so all its going to take is one timely placed comment or economic number to send everyone running for the door.  This will provide a temporary lift and is intended to buy the Fed time for the second scenario to happen.

The second scenario is a bit more involved and likely to cause the economy to “get worse before it gets better”.  Sacrifices will need to be made and I hope that we have the political fortitude to do so.

But until that happens, I’ll keep hearing those steel drums in my dreams and seeing those dancing dollars making new lows. 

So for this Thanksgiving I’ll be thankful that as of right now, they will still take dollars for my favorite Caribbean drink!  Anything else at this point is just gravy.

Happy Thanksgiving to All and be sure to check out our currency trading courses!

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