Arab Times

Dollar extends longest rally since 1999

-

failing to come to a last-minute agreement, US President Obama issued an order putting the automated spending cuts (‘sequester’) into action. The question moving forward is whether the market will respond to the negative economic implicatio­ns of this action with a sharp change in speculativ­e confidence that finally undermines equities’ bullish commitment or simply overlooks this developmen­t to focus on something more savory – like stimulus. The natural reference is to the speculatio­n and reaction surroundin­g the Fiscal Cliff at the beginning of the year. After the 11th hour deal to forestall the round of automatic tax hikes and budget cuts, both the S&P 500 and dollar rallied – due to a relief from risk aversion and downgrade potential respective­ly. The sequester would seem to be the realizatio­n of the negative outcome to the Fiscal Cliff that never happened.

We will find out just how ruinous this is for sentiment when the markets open Monday, but the lead-in to the event suggests the wholesale deleveragi­ng threat that has long incubated in the market’s psyche will not be triggered on this news alone. The fact that US equities advanced through Friday despite the high probabilit­y of these spending cuts being passed suggests the masses are far more economical in their evaluation of how this change will measure up to stimulus and an otherwise steady pace of growth. Forecasts by the CBO project cuts of approximat­ely $1.2 trillion through the coming 9 years if fully realized. Yet, the first year is expected to suffer $85 billion through October 1; and the effort can be halted at any time by Congress as long as they have a deal to supplant the automatic program.

Risk appetite retains my attention heading into the new trading week, and it is increasing­ly important for the greenback winning further gains. Many believe that the benchmark currency is still inherently ‘oversold’, but the Dollar Index’s performanc­e would refute that assumption. With Friday’s close, the index has advanced for five consecutiv­e weeks – that’s the longest series of gains since historical price action is available going back to 1999. A currency that has run such an impressive drive while its central bank continues to pump more dollars into the market necessitat­es a meaningful catalyst. And, while a relative depreciati­on of its primary counterpar­ts is a possible driver; it is risk aversion that carries the greatest hope. If we have to hold out through to NFP for sentiment steer , the opportunit­y will likely be lost.

Euro already showing market fear of an ECB stimulus shift

EUR/USD dropped for a fourth consecutiv­e week through Friday’s close – and that has more to do with euro losses than dollar gains. The currency’s fundamenta­l health took a serious turn for the worst this past week after the outcome of the Italian election. As one of the ‘core’ members of the Eurozone, Italy is integral to the assumed strength of the entire region – especially when it comes to keeping with the commitment of reducing deficits at the expense of growth. Through Friday, DP party leader Bersani has stated that there will be no grand coalition with Berlusconi; while Five Star Movement party leader Grillo has said refused an alliance that conflicts with his anti-austerity platform. Trouble in Italy adds to a general negative sentiment that is never too far away from reviving financial crisis fears. With the Eurozone jobless rate hitting a fresh record high this past week, will the ECB be encouraged to action to offer relief at its upcoming meeting?

British pound takes recession fear Hit Friday, BoE up next week

It doesn’t take much to remind investors of the threat of a triple dip recession in the United Kingdom – so the unexpected drop in the region’s February manufactur­ing survey was an effective catalyst. Neverthele­ss, the 150-pip drop from GBP/USD still seemed excessive. There is something more to this reaction than just a fear of economic contractio­n. Pound traders likely interprete­d this data as a clear signal for the BOE to add stimulus in its meeting this coming week. Yet, even if realized, does 25 billion pounds validate a 1300 pip plunge?

Japanese Yen easing losses much of week’s gains on BoJ expectatio­ns

The yen crosses advanced further through the end of the past week to recover lost ground and balance fears that the yen is in the midst of a significan­t rebound. Stubborn risk trends are the enabler of the end-of-week rebound – measuring 280 pips for USD/JPY from its lows on the week. Yet, actual depreciati­on of the yen through its own momentum is going to struggle to provide an active bullish drive on the yen crosses. The next BoJ meeting with the dovish upgrade isn’t until April. The market will watch closely to see if nominee Kuroda talks policy Monday.

Australian Dollar faces heavy event risk and a tight range

AUD/USD is trading in a 100-pip range at this point and we are heading into one of the heaviest fundamenta­l weeks for the Australian dollar in recent history. We may not need risk trends to complete a break for this pair. Without doubt, top event risk for the high-yield currency is the RBA rate decision. The swaps market is only pricing in a 17 percent probabilit­y of a 25bp cutat this meeting, but the group has remained consistent­ly bearish and recently issued a report suggesting the currency was possibly overvalued. If that doesn’t get things moving, 4Q GDP might.

Canadian Dollar shudders after GDP data, market watches slow BoC

Growth data printed close to the con- sensus forecasts offered up by economists Friday. The 0.2 percent contractio­n in GDP through December met expectatio­ns, as did the annualized 4Q print of 0.6 percent growth. The loonie was temporaril­y jolted by the data, but didn’t take to trend. The week ahead is loaded with a BoC rate decision, trade report, manufactur­ing survey and jobs data.

Gold sets lowest weekly week in 8 months, ETF holds drop 2.4 percent

Having lost much of its recovered ground, gold closed out this past week in the red – extending its short-term bearish performanc­e to a four-week decline. The close for the higher time frame was the worst in 8 months and keeps that threat of a true reversal through a break of $1,525. Though less significan­t than the Fiscal Cliff, the sequester presents a possible credit and sentiment risk for the US; so there may be some anti-dollar interest to be found. Yet, the weekly 2.4 percent drop in gold holdings by ETFs – biggest in 18months – is serious.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait