The Mercury

Market is composed about a US Fed move

- Rachel Evans and Lananh Nguyen

CURRENCY traders are giving the Federal Reserve a green light for its first interest rate increase in almost a decade. After a year of surprises that saw exchange rate volatility climb to its highest since 2013, measures of future price swings have fallen back below the 10year average, a sign the market is sanguine about tighter central bank policy.

The euro fluctuated in the narrowest range last week versus the dollar in more than three months. That’s supporting Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen’s numerous pronouncem­ents that it may be appropriat­e to raise rates from near zero in December.

The stability pervading foreign exchange markets in recent weeks contrasts with the turmoil stemming from China’s shock currency devaluatio­n in August, which helped derail a Fed rate move in September.

“The market has done a very good job of anticipati­ng price movements,” said Brendan Murphy, a senior money manager in Boston at Standish Mellon Asset Management, who oversees $19 billion (R273.1bn) of fixed income assets and manages global currency risks. “A lot of the dollar move is baked in the cake.”

The greenback would struggle to break its year-to-date highs versus the euro or yen, Murphy said. The dollar reached $1.0458 a euro in March and ¥125.86 (R14.7317) in June.

Calm returns

Calm has returned to currency markets after the dollar strengthen­ed at the end of October as investors revived trades predicated on higher US borrowing costs.

JPMorgan Chase’s gauge of global currency volatility has added about 0.5 percentage points in the past month, less than after the Swiss National Bank removed its floor for the franc in January, the European Central Bank starting quantitati­ve easing in March and China’s yuan devaluatio­n in August.

The euro moved in a range from $1.0675 to $1.083 last week, its narrowest weekly band since August. Futures show a 66 percent chance the Federal Open Market Committee will announce a rate increase on December 16, at the conclusion of its meeting, up from a 50 percent probabilit­y at the end of October. The calculatio­n is based on the assumption that the effective fed funds rate will average 0.375 percent after the first increase.

Yellen told Congress this month that December remained a “live possibilit­y” for higher rates. “The start has been anticipate­d for a long time,” Ajay Rajadhyaks­ha, the head of macro research at Barclays, said at a press briefing in New York last week. “It’s not terribly relevant. What really matters far more is the messaging around it.”

Emerging markets may also drive currency volatility higher, as central banks respond to a repatriati­on of capital to the US and to slowing growth in China.

Some 36 percent of investors surveyed by Barclays in late October listed an economic cooling in China and other developing nations as their biggest concern for the next 12 months, with only 7 percent identifyin­g US rate increases as the main risk.

Investors were on course to take $540bn out of developing countries this year, the first net capital outflow since 1988, the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance said in October.

‘China cycle’

“The US has never been the be-all and endall of this current cycle; this current cycle is an emerging market cycle, it’s a commodity cycle, it’s a China cycle,” said Andrew Milligan, the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investment­s, which manages about $393bn. “We can see situations where emerging markets just have a really quite difficult 2016.”

For now, markets seem unconcerne­d. The Chicago Board options exchange volatility index measuring stock price swings fell the most in four years last month, even as it has climbed back above its 2015 average. The Bank of America Merrill Lynch Move index, which measures price swings in US government debt based on options, is at its lowest this year.

For HSBC, that means investors betting on moves higher by the dollar are in for a tough 2016. “You missed the rally,” David Bloom, the London-based global head of currency strategy at HSBC, said last week. “It’s priced in.” – Bloomberg

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