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Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review

Written By McCool on Friday, February 11, 2011 | 1:06 AM

Credit Market
Previous
Current
Change
% Change
Outlook *
DJ Credit Default Swaps
82.043
81.985
-0.058
-0.07%
Improving
10 Year Junk-Bond Spread
464.3
436.66
-27.64
-5.95%
Improving
Credit Card Delinquencies
4.15
3.91
-0.24
-0.24%
Improving
Mortgage Delinquencies
9.85
9.13
-0.72
-0.72%
Improving
US 3 Month Libor Rate
0.311
0.312
0.0015
0.48%
Improving
Total Money Market Funds
2798.65
2746.94
-51.71
-1.85%
Improving
Stock Market
Last Week
Current
Change
% Change
Outlook
Dow Jones Industrial Average
12062.26
12229.29
167.03
1.38%
Improving
Dow Jones Real Estate Index
226.56
228.29
1.73
0.76%
Improving
Dow Jones Financial Index
382.02
393.66
11.64
3.05%
Improving
Dow Jones Retail Index
92.99
93.73
0.74
0.80%
Improving
S&P Volatility
16.69
16.09
-0.6
-0.60%
Improving
Put-Call Ratio
1.67
1.66
-0.01
-0.01%
Improving
Market Breadth (Adv - Dec)
0.5049
0.5701
0.0651
6.51%
Improving
Economic Indicators
Previous
Current
Change
% Change
Outlook
GDP (Annualized)
2.8
3.2
3.2
3.20%
Improving
Mortgage Applications
11.3
-5.5
-5.5
-5.50%
Deteriorating
Initial Jobless Claims
411
383
-28
-6.81%
Improving
Consumer Confidence (CB)
53.3
60.6
7.3
13.70%
Improving
ISM Manufacturing
58.5
60.8
2.3
3.93%
Deteriorating
ISM Services
57.1
59.4
2.3
4.03%
Deteriorating
ISM Services - Employment
52.6
54.5
1.9
3.61%
Deteriorating
An Improving outlook means the Federal Reserve coulduse thisindicator
to support a rate hike. The opposite stands for a deteriorating outlook.
The Economy and the Dollar
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_1.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
The US dollar hasn’t taken that critical step to secure a true reversal; but the fundamental drivers that would achieve the necessary shift are starting to line up. From price action alone, this past week has proven to be relatively quiet given the lack of scheduled event risk and off-the-docket developments. However, the benchmark currency finds itself loaded with potential energy that can quickly turn kinetic given the right catalyst. Taking stock of the strained position the dollar finds itself, EURUSD is eyeing the 1.3550 level that has held the pair back from retracing its January rally for three weeks, GBPUSD has settled on the floor of a 1,000-point rising trend channel and AUDUSD has once again dropped back to parity. What can lead the dollar to that next step in a reversal? As it happens, two of the three most critical fundamental drivers behind the currency have already started to line up. Relative growth (and the forecast for that lead to hold up) has already been accounted for. New to the mix but still hesitant in its support of the greenback is early speculation that the second stimulus program could come under review. Early commentary doesn’t necessarily mean the Federal Reserve will immediately abandon the loose policy stance; but the speculative crowd priced in the adoption of QE2 well before the actual November announcement. So, it stands to reason that the forecast for its withdrawal will pique curiosity. And, finally, there is risk appetite. Holes have been punched in sentiment; but the benchmarks for speculative positioning have yet to give up a reasonable portion of their gains.
A Closer Look at Financial and Consumer Conditions
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_7.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
It is easy to see stability in the financial markets when the assets that comprise them are stable and values are high. However there is certainly reason to be concerned about US and global market conditions. Domestically, the Fed has to keep an eye on the distorting effects of stimulus; but a tightening of the monetary reins is inevitable. When that happens, the mortgages that have held out due simply to the record low benchmark lending rate will start falling into default. Expanding our view globally, we noted that Portuguese 10-year government bond yields rose to a record high despite the open-ended promises EU officials made for March. And, in Asia, China clearly is concerned about instability as it hiked the benchmark lending rate for a third time since October.
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_10.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
There were relatively few updates on the health of the US economy over the past week through traditional means; but those developments that did transpire added to the picture of a robust (though perhaps not exactly consistent) recovery ahead. Off the docket, various Fed policy officials voiced confidence in the economic recovery – and a few were optimistic enough to warn that the stimulus may need to be removed before its natural expiration if trends hold. For data, the January NFPs showed a weaker-than-expected addition while the jobless rate dropped primarily because of a record exit of despondent American’s from the labor market. That said, labor conditions are slowly improving. Looking ahead, we have consumer confidence, retail sales, CPI and a range of other important indicators.
The Financial and Capital Markets
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_4.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
There is a notable deviation between the various benchmark asset classes. Where currencies have oscillated in their performance along the lines of carry interest and economic performance; the US benchmark equity indexes have charged forward to fresh two-and-a-half year highs. How are these differences in performance and implicit projections reconciled? Through stimulus and other transient factors. The moral hazard that governments were so fearful to encourage back during the worst of the housing crisis has shown itself to be a critical factor in the capital market’s climb since the market bottomed out. As a natural sequence, the injection of funds directly into the financial system (meant to keep interest rates low) translates into banks holding a greater level of capital. Policy officials would prefer this capital be redirected to lending to jump support the economy; but there is still considerable risk in that venture. Instead, industrious banks put the money to work in investments that have proven to be unnaturally consistent in their returns (and perhaps even flooding emerging markets and inflating commodity prices at the same time). And, to ensure there isn’t a pang of conscience to this, the fact that the original stimulus program was in response to instability amongst financial players; the market inherently expects protection from adverse market conditions going forward.
A Closer Look at Market Conditions
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_16.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
The performance of equities and commodities is remarkable. Looking at the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the CRB Commodities Index (the benchmark for the two asset classes), fresh highs after an unprecedented and steady climb suggests either a global economy that is the prime of its growth phase or a market without significant risk. We know that neither of these is the case; but when the market becomes acclimated to such consistent trends; it can be difficult to break them of the cycle. Yet, when we see unusual developments like these, they almost always end with dramatic revisions to realistic and fundamental means.
Dollar_Eyes_Rebound_as_Event_Risk_Fills_Out_Stimulus_Under_Review_body_Picture_13.png, Dollar Eyes Rebound as Event Risk Fills Out, Stimulus Under Review
The traditional measures of risk are more than disconnected from the reality of the situation; their standings inadvertently pose the perfect contrarian reading. What are we to gather from currency market volatility readings at multi-month lows and the VIX diving plunging levels not seen since well before the financial crisis took off? What about yield differentials between so called junk debt and safe haven Treasuries narrowing to levels consistent with a steady economy? An improvement in these various measures is reasonable as the specter of a crippling global crisis eases. That said, the absence of a crisis state and the onset of a robust period of expansion are two different things. Something will give; and it will likely be traders’ confidence.


1:06 AM | 0 comments | Read More

FOREX: Dollar Rallies Across the Board but the Absence of a Clear Driver Could Drain Momentum

  • Dollar Rallies Across the Board but the Absence of a Clear Driver Could Drain Momentum
  • British Pound Rallies as Quiet BoE Event Considered a Hawkish Response after 4Q GDP
  • Euro Drops against Dollar, Pound as ECB Reportedly Forced to Buy Portuguese Bonds
  • Australian Dollar Breaks Down Well After Employment Data as Yields Ease
  • Japanese Yen Plunges as Threat of Early Election Threatens to Delay Fiscal Resolutions
  • Swiss Franc Tumbles after Inflation Data Further Depresses Rate Expectations
Dollar Rallies Across the Board but the Absence of a Clear Driver Could Drain Momentum
The dollar posted its biggest rally in five weeks through Thursday’s session. This has ushered the currency what many speculators would agree could be the verge of a meaningful reversal against a number of its counterparts. A quick rundown of the list of liquid majors gives us a good sense of what is at stake. EURUSD has dropped back to the floor of the past three weeks’ congestion at 1.3550 and could finally retrace more of that aggressive, January rally. GBPUSD has similarly settled back towards 1.60, leading many to wonder whether its five-week and nearly 1,000-point run will finally crack. USDJPY and USDCHF enjoyed their biggest rally in three weeks in a move that transcends the risk-appetite debate. And, even AUDUSD has stumbled back to the market-friendly and psychologically influential parity level. After a terrible performance for the greenback for January, the currency looks poised to make its recovery. The only concern is where this sudden strength originated.
From a speculative perspective, it is easy to convince ourselves that the dollar is simply oversold and is ready to reverse. However, history has shown us that without a meaningful fundamental catalyst; nascent trends quickly turn into failed trends. Looking forward, there are more than a few notable drivers that could accelerate (or stunt) the dollar’s run; but what was the impetus for the past session’s catalyzing performance? It has been suggested by a large swatch of the financial media that the initial jobless claims figures for the period ending February 5th were responsible for the climb. That said, a closer look at the currency and broader financial markets’ reaction to the release of this data shows that this is not the case. Historically, this indicator has shown very little influence over price action as the indicator is considered an unqualified complement to monthly NFPs and the underlying trend on this weekly reading generally prevents significant surprises. So, while the 36,000-claim drop in jobless benefits is an encouraging sign for the more comprehensive, monthly statistics; it does little to excite volatility on its own. The same is generally true for the 1.0 percent increase in wholesale inventories and the smaller than expected $49.8 billion January deficit.
What then encouraged the dollar Thursday? One prominent feature was notable underperformance by many of its counterparts. For its own part, though, the US saw rates rise in a number of venues: Libor, Treasury yields and swaps. This improvement was tame; but set against the drop in yields seen in European and Asia, such performance is magnified. On the other hand, a modest turn such as this does not possess the necessary influence to keep the greenback rallying. A true fundamental drive is needed. The long-awaited risk aversion move could certainly fit the bill; but there is no evidence that this overdue shift is about to occur. That doesn’t mean, however, that global uncertainty can’t bolster the dollar’s safe haven value without impacting artificially inflated assets like the S&P 500. Should conditions deteriorate in Europe for example, it will drive considerable liquidity the benchmark’s way. Another predicable threat to a calm market is scheduled event risk. Friday brings the December trade balance figures and the first reading of February’s University of Michigan consumer confidence survey. Both are important to the economic backdrop; but the specter of true volatility holds with next week’s global calendar.
British Pound Rallies as Quiet BoE Event Considered a Hawkish Response after 4Q GDP
How would the efficient market theory hypothesis explain the pound’s rally after the Bank of England’s policy meeting passed without a tangible change? The true of the matter is that speculation plays a far larger role in guiding the capital markets than simple economic theorem allows for. And, for the rate decision Thursday morning, the reality that rates were held, the bond purchasing program was unchanged and there would be no clear explanation as to the group’s reasoning tells perceptive fundamental traders something. On the one hand, a very few people would be disappointed that the central bank didn’t move immediately on raised inflation pressures and forecasts. On the other, there is material relief that the unexpected 0.5 percent drop in the UK economy through the fourth quarter didn’t necessitate an increase in the stimulus program. There was volatility Thursday; but real action is seen next week with the quarterly inflation report, labor statistics and confidence figures.
Euro Drops against Dollar, Pound as ECB Reportedly Forced to Buy Portuguese Bonds
European officials have bought themselves time before they have to make the hard decision about what to do to ensure the sovereign debt and banking crisis doesn’t sweep over the region again. Yet, this temporary paint job isn’t holding up too well. Portuguese yields surged to a record reportedly necessitating the ECB’s first government bond purchase in nearly three weeks. Banter and disagreement looms for Europe.
Australian Dollar Breaks Down Well After Employment Data as Yields Ease
The employment data was big-ticket event risk for the Aussie dollar; but the immediate reaction was limited. Given time, the masses would eventually look beyond the headline figures to see the disappointment in the report; the real driver for the day wasn’t on the docket. Looking at CS overnight index swaps, the 12 month yield outlook plunged the most in two weeks while two-year Treasuries yields suffered a similar fate.
Japanese Yen Plunges as Threat of Early Election Threatens to Delay Fiscal Resolutions
There are few options for Japan. Long-standing deflation (over two-decades), debt that is seen ballooning to two-times GDP and a surprisingly buoyant currency have backed the economy into a corner. Yet, the bold reform that many officials believe is necessary to correct the problem is struggling to make it through the necessary channels. This raises the threat of an early election which will only push back the needed change.

Swiss Franc Tumbles after Inflation Data Further Depresses Rate Expectations
The franc is slowly bleeding its fundamental strength. Through 2010, the currency was considered one of the strongest currencies in the market due to its anti-euro appeal and the development of hawkish interest rate speculation. Today, we see the euro stabilizing having bought itself time and inflation has printed a tepid 0.3 percent annual clip through CPI. Without that euro catalyst, the franc will continue to give up gains. 


ECONOMIC DATA
Next 24 Hours
Currency
GMT
Release
Survey
Previous
Comments
NZD
2:00
Non Resident Bond Holdings (JAN)
62.1%
Dec. holdings highest in 3 months.
EUR
7:00
German Consumer Price Index (MoM) (JAN F)
-0.5%
-0.5%
German inflation unexpectedly accelerated in December as hotel prices surged 5.6% and heating oil rose 5.4%.
EUR
7:00
German Consumer Price Index (YoY) (JAN F)
1.9%
1.9%
EUR
7:00
German Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (MoM) (JAN F)
-0.5%
-0.5%
EUR
7:00
German Consumer Price Index - EU Harmonised (YoY) (JAN F)
2.0%
2.0%
EUR
7:00
German Wholesale Price Index (MoM) (JAN)
1.8%
Wholesale prices increased in December for a fourth time in 5 months.
EUR
7:00
German Wholesale Price Index (YoY) (JAN)
9.5%
EUR
7:45
French Non-Farm Payrolls (QoQ) (4Q P)
0.1%
French non-farm payrolls increased in the last three quarters.
EUR
7:45
French Wages (QoQ) (4Q P)
0.3%
0.3%
EUR
7:45
French Current Account (euros) (DEC)
-4.2B
Deficit widened in November.
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (MoM) (JAN)
1.4%
3.4%
U.K. producer prices increased 0.5% in December, higher than 0.4% expected, on higher costs for food and fuel. Prime Minister Cameron said that recent gains in consumer prices was “concerning” and policy makers faced a “difficult task.”
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Input n.s.a. (YoY) (JAN)
12.7%
12.5%
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Output n.s.a. (MoM) (JAN)
0.5%
0.5%
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Output n.s.a. (YoY) (JAN)
4.4%
4.2%
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Output Core n.s.a. (MoM) (JAN)
0.3%
0.2%
GBP
9:30
Producer Price Index Output Core n.s.a. (YoY) (JAN)
3.0%
2.9%
CAD
13:30
International Merchandise Trade (Canadian dollar) (DEC)
-0.3B
-0.1B
Unexpectedly narrowed on energy.
USD
13:30
Trade Balance (DEC)
-$40.5B
-$38.3B
Deficit likely widened to 3-month high.
USD
14:55
U. of Michigan Confidence (FEB P)
75.0
74.2
Probably rose to an 8-month high.
Currency
GMT
Upcoming Events & Speeches
EUR
11:15
ECB's Axel Weber, Christian Noyer Speak on European Economy
EUR
17:30
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet Speaks on European Economy
SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE LEVELS
CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE - 18:00 GMT
Currency
EUR/USD
GBP/USD
USD/JPY
USD/CHF
USD/CAD
AUD/USD
NZD/USD
EUR/JPY
GBP/JPY
Resist 2
1.4025
1.6420
89.00
1.0000
1.0922
1.0600
0.8230
127.60
146.05
Resist 1
1.3875
1.6300
86.00
0.9775
1.0750
1.0200
0.8000
120.00
140.00
Spot
1.3600
1.6093
83.32
0.9700
0.9956
1.0046
0.7638
113.31
134.08
Support 1
1.3425
1.5750
80.00
0.9300
0.9800
0.9600
0.6850
103.80
125.00
Support 2
1.2900
1.5315
75.00
0.9000
0.9700
0.9375
0.6585
100.00
119.00
CLASSIC SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE EMERGING MARKETS 18:00 GMTSCANDIES CURRENCIES 18:00 GMT
Currency
USD/MXN
USD/TRY
USD/ZAR
USD/HKD
USD/SGD
Currency
USD/SEK
USD/DKK
USD/NOK
Resist 2
13.8500
1.6575
7.4025
7.8165
1.4945
Resist 2
7.7500
5.7800
6.2750
Resist 1
12.5000
1.6300
7.2825
7.8075
1.4655
Resist 1
7.5800
5.6625
6.1150
Spot
12.0813
1.5895
7.2612
7.7901
1.2786
Spot
6.4714
5.4825
5.8336
Support 1
11.7200
1.5300
6.9900
7.7490
1.2700
Support 1
6.2850
5.2625
5.7030
Support 2
11.4400
1.4725
6.8000
7.7450
1.2500
Support 2
6.1250
5.1000
5.5200
INTRA-DAY PIVOT POINTS 18:00 GMT
Currency
EUR/USD
GBP/USD
USD/JPY
USD/CHF
USD/CAD
AUD/USD
NZD/USD
EUR/JPY
GBP/JPY
Resist 2
1.3797
1.6207
84.04
0.9787
1.0015
1.0191
0.7761
113.91
135.36
Resist 1
1.3698
1.6150
83.68
0.9744
0.9985
1.0119
0.7700
113.61
134.72
Pivot
1.3638
1.6081
83.01
0.9659
0.9959
1.0064
0.7662
113.11
133.62
Support 1
1.3539
1.6024
82.65
0.9616
0.9929
0.9992
0.7601
112.81
132.98
Support 2
1.3479
1.5955
81.98
0.9531
0.9903
0.9937
0.7563
112.31
131.88
INTRA-DAY PROBABILITY BANDS 18:00 GMT
\Currency
EUR/USD
GBP/USD
USD/JPY
USD/CHF
USD/CAD
AUD/USD
NZD/USD
EUR/JPY
GBP/JPY
Resist. 3
1.3765
1.6259
84.21
0.9813
1.0052
1.0177
0.7740
114.71
135.67
Resist. 2
1.3724
1.6217
83.99
0.9785
1.0028
1.0144
0.7715
114.36
135.27
Resist. 1
1.3683
1.6176
83.77
0.9757
1.0004
1.0112
0.7689
114.01
134.87
Spot
1.3600
1.6093
83.32
0.9700
0.9956
1.0046
0.7638
113.31
134.08
Support 1
1.3517
1.6010
82.87
0.9643
0.9908
0.9980
0.7587
112.61
133.29
Support 2
1.3476
1.5969
82.65
0.9615
0.9884
0.9948
0.7561
112.26
132.89
Support 3
1.3435
1.5927
82.43
0.9587
0.9860
0.9915
0.7536
111.91
132.49
v
 

1:05 AM | 0 comments | Read More