Business World

Why FX traders are losing confidence in dollar

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CURRENCY TRADERS are getting no joy from one of the market’s most crowded trades.

Dollar bulls have reason to be gloomy after the greenback ended last week little changed against a basket of peers following a three-week decline. The US currency struggled to lure buyers after a mixed jobs report and a Federal Reserve meeting in which officials signaled no change to their interest-rate policy outlook.

And with centrist Emmanuel Macron leading in the polls heading into the final round of France’s presidenti­al election Sunday, market participan­ts have become more optimistic about the euro’s prospects. In the options market, the likelihood of the dollar rising against the euro this year has tumbled from a month ago.

“The dollar is at a tipping point,” said Ulf Lindahl, chief executive officer of A.G. Bisset Associates, who manages about $1 billion from Norwalk, Connecticu­t. The greenback “is likely poised to drop sharply in the months ahead” as US economic data soften, he said.

Inflation and retail sales will be among the indicators to watch this week, as well as speakers including the New York Fed’s William Dudley. April’s consumer- price report may show inflation cooled from a year earlier, echoing last week’s reading on average hourly earnings. The dollar fell 0.9% last week to $1.0998 per euro, and is down more than 4% in 2017. The likelihood of the greenback posting an annual gain this year has dropped to 17% from 32% a month ago, options imply.

Hedge funds and money managers trimmed net bullish bets on the dollar to the lowest since September, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Net long positions tallied 133,092 contracts in the week to May 2, down from 155,569 a week earlier.

While the Fed has signaled two more rate hikes in 2017, traders aren’t convinced the economy is strong enough.

“The dollar has peaked,” Kit Juckes, a global strategist at Societe Generale, wrote in a note last week. While the Fed is on track for a June rate increase, “that won’t be enough to drive the dollar very far unless the market rethinks the longer-term rate outlook.” —

 ??  ?? DOLLAR AND POUND banknotes are seen in this picture illustrati­on taken April 28.
DOLLAR AND POUND banknotes are seen in this picture illustrati­on taken April 28.

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