Friday, January 30, 2009

Factors for the euro exchange rates decline

Foreign Exchange - US Dollar, Euro and Pounds Sterling Outlook,

The US dollar exchange rate rose yesterday across the board - but only fractionally against the yen - on a flood of bad economic data just about everywhere and US stock indices falling back. Oil fell, too. It might be fairer to say the euro exchange rate was the center of attention rather than the dollar exchange rate, since the euro fell against the pound, yen and Swiss franc as well as the US dollar.

Factors for the euro exchange rates decline included its failure to reach beyond the early high around 9 am yesterday at 1.3179 to the previous day's high at 1.3328. Around noon the euro made a big jump down from 1.3079 to 1.2930, breaking the previous day's low, and then it was all over for technical traders - they had confirmation, however simple, of the next direction.
We don’t have the timestamp but evidently George Soros told an Austrian newspaper (Der Standard) that the euro may not survive unless the EU pushes for a global plan to deal with toxic debt. Bloomberg picked up the story and it apparently scared a sizeable amount of risk aversion back into market sentiment. Actually, Soros is not saying anything more drastic than the British, who are also appealing for a global solution (at G20), but such is the magic of the Soros name that traders didn’t want to be bothered with the facts. He didn’t say the EU needs a solution to its own toxic paper problem, although that is what the market heard.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

haraka haraka haina baraka - hurry, hurry has no good fortune

Foreign Exchange : Today the US House is supposed to vote on the stimulus bill, now up to $816 billion. Then it goes to the Senate. Everybody and his brother is urging fast action.

There is an adage in Swahili, "haraka haraka haina baraka," meaning "hurry, hurry has no good fortune." Yes, the word "baraka" is the same root as Barack Obama’s name. It's a splendid adage and perfectly true. The stimulus package is likely to be a dog’s breakfast and it may not work. Even if it were carefully designed, it still might work and nobody can accuse the plan of being carefully designed. Experts don’t really know whether Roosevelt’s stimulus plans would have worked if the war had not come along. (Two recent books feature the uncomfortable fact that many of Roosevelt’s plans were really hatched by Hoover, by the way.)

But set aside doubts about the stimulus plan and even the upcoming Fed announements or the "bad bank" rumored for next week. The three big initiatives may be badly designed and may not work, but the market is starving for good news and optimism. Unfortuantely for trend-followers, optimism and a renewed appetite for risk are US dollar-negatives. The trend could be breaking.

Gee, that means we need more bad news if we want to be buy US Dollars - how bizarre is that?

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller

Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

today the Fed starts the policy meeting

Foreign Exchange : In addition to data like Case Shiller home prices and the conference Board consumer confidence index, today the Fed starts the policy meeting. We can perhaps expect two outcomes.

One is a revision of the Fed's forecasting time horizon. Retired member Mishkin said "Interest rates are no longer what monetary policy is about. A much more important part of policy now is managing expectations, and, in an environment like the one we are in now, having more clarity on inflation objectives becomes critical." In other words, we could get an inflation target but it would apply for a longish timeframe, like 3-5 years.

The other big subject is managing the balance sheet, already ballooned out of all recognition. We are pretty sure the Fed is going to buy Treasuries, in part to manage the long-term rate, but how is it going to get out of the market-manipulation business? In other words, what’s the exit strategy? We’d like to know that at the beginning, before the entry.

We say it's much too early to consider fear and more fear to be losing its grip. If bad debt really is $2-3 trillion and only $1 trillion has been disclosed and addressed, more shocks are to come. The US dollar exchange rate remains a good bet even if it’s not straight-lining anymore.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Monday, January 26, 2009

US dollar exchange rate is softer at the start of the week

Foreign Exchange : The US dollar exchange rate is softer at the start of the week, led by the Canadian dollar for once, as the prospect of a US stimulus plan and perhaps formation of a "bad bank" encourages less risk aversion. Both oil and hold rose strongly on Friday, too. But this week we get an overwhelming amount of new data and information, nearly all of it bad, including a flood of US company earnings reports. The market has recently retreated from panic mode - and panic favors the safe-haven dollar - but panic could or should be building again this week.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

US Congress discussing and passing the Obama $800 billion stimulus plan

Foreign Exchange Outlook : This is a week of an overwhelming amount of information. Nobody can absorb this much information, let alone analyze it and put it into perspective. Aside from the US Congress discussing and passing the Obama $800 billion stimulus plan, nearly all the news is going to be bad. As we have seen recently, bad news is US dollar favorable because risk aversion rises.

Tomorrow is the start of a 2-day Fed meeting.

With the target rate range already zero to 0.25%, what can the Fed say to impress anyone? The FOMC needs to make a powerful statement lest anyone notice that it has run out of ammunition, presumably more talk about quantitiative easing. This will probably take the form of expanding the TALF (Treasury Asset-Backed Liquidity Program) to include not only Treasuries but also CMBS (commercial-mortgage-backed securities) or private-label RMBS (residential mortgage-backed securities), according to Market News. So far the government has not actually bought any Treasuries, let alone private paper, but we probably should expect it this week.

Also tomorrow Congress starts debating the Obama stimulus plan, which Obama wants done by the President’s Day national holiday on Feb 16, or two weeks from today. The Feb 16 holiday is a compromise date between Lincoln’s birthday on Feb 12 (also Darwin’s birthday, take note) and Washington’s birthday on Feb 22 (also USAF Col. Gary Rockefeller). We guess the stimulus debate will not be bi-partisan, judging from the Sunday TV talk shows where Republicans have one solution to everything, including athlete’s foot and the flu - tax cuts.

Also tomorrow is the start of the Davos World Economic Forum, for which the high and mighty pay a gaint fee to attend (Chf 42,500). The WSJ says 40 heads of state will attend this year, up from 27 last year, and some 1400 CEO's. Everyone will be talking about how bad conditions are and how much worse they can get, especially since the IMF is expected the next day to lower its global growth forecast to a mere 1%. The WSJ says that among the scheduled speakers is Richard Olivier, son of the late British actor Sir Laurence Olivier, who runs a motivational seminar company. Olivier says "The capitalist myth is lovely and youthful. It kicked off the industrial revolution, but maybe we need a new one." He will compare MacBeth to Lehman Bros.

Oh, good grief.

Anyone who thinks capitalism is a myth shouldn't take the stage in the first place.

Also tomorrow is US existing home sales and the Case Shiller home price index for November. Thursday brings Dec durable goods orders, taken as a leading indicator of everything from industrial production to employment. From an economics point of view, the biggie is Friday’s US GDP estimate… and the Friday after that, the Dec payrolls number.

There probably is some good news in all this somewhere - some data last week was not bad, like the University of Michigan consumer confidence index (61.9% from 60.1 in Dec and the highest reading since Sept). But the ain’t over yet. We await other dire news, like German bank failures or the Chinese declining to buy US paper (they could buy Greece instead), and so on.

Bad news is US dollar-favorable. We do not have strong evidence of the trend failing, and the trend is our friend.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Why are we not as afriad of potentially $1 trillion in toxic paper at German banks as we were on Tuesday?

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The US dollar exchange rate is not through rising, and we make that assertion on the grounds that the world is not through throwing unpleasant surprises at us. Why are we not as afriad of potentially $1 trillion in toxic paper at German banks as we were on Tuesday? Besides, various coutnries could actually intervene, if not this week, with the intent of driving their currencies down and "creating" inflation. We don't expect this outcome, at least not soon, but surely what they would be buying US dollars. And on the economics front, we concur with the Confederation of British Industry ,which said today it is stunned by the sheer speed with which things have fallen apart. The economic onsequences are deep and long-lasting. The analyst who said he expects recovery in Q1 is dreaming. In short, we haven’t hit bottom yet.

More Shocks are in store, and as we have seen, shocks favor the dollar.

At a guess, though, confirmation of Geithner and upcoming announcements of bailout/recovery plans, if accepted as worthy by the market, are ironically US dollar exchange rate negative. Still, the overall trend is in place and we do not see a reason to expect it to come to a halt.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Pound to US Dollar fell in a straight line from 1.4900 on Sunday night to 1.3915

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The US dollar exchange rate resumed a strong rise across the board as bank and political crises erupted in the UK and Europe. The euro exchange rate fell yesterday from the high after the open Sunday night at 1.3386 to 1.3055 by the end of the day yesterday in the US, which saw hardly any trading since the banks were closed for the Martin Luther King holiday.

Overnight the euro exchange rate plunged right out of the gate in early Asian trading to 1.2986 and thence to a new low of 1.2919 after Europe came in around 3 am ET. That’s 467 points in about 30 hours. The euro rate is bouncing to 1.2954 at 7 am today but it’s not hard to read the chart—a new phase of the downtrend has started. The euro exchange rate has already retraced more than 62% of the recent upmove and talk will soon begin again of a 100% retracement of the move up from the Oct low at 1.2329.

Pound to US Dollar fell in a straight line from 1.4900 on Sunday night to 1.3915 - almost 1000 points.

Holy cow!

It’s the lowest level since 2001, on renewed disarray in the UK financial sector, with Royal Bank of Scotland needing government rescue on Monday and stocks, especially Lloyd’s, down over 30% today. The government is injecting capital into RBS but an analyst told the FT "The further losses from the combination of deflation and deleveraging will consume these additional funds, leaving equity shareholders at risk of further dilution."

The only currency holding steady is the dollar to Japanese yen, which has been hovering in the low 90's since Sunday night. Euro to Japanese yen and pound to Jpanese yen are both weaker, however. See the charts.

It seems strange to see the pound soft against the yen when the UK still has a yield advantage and a more activist central bank and treasury than Japan during its own lost decade.

Buy For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

foreign exchange traders sold the euro to 1.3099 today on more bad news

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The US dollar exchange rate rose again yesterday from 1.3282 at 8 am in New York to 1.3138 by mid-afternoon, but was already giving some of it back into the close at 1.3180. The euro exchange rate suffered yesterday from bad economic data and a dollop of worry over fiscal conditions that clearly will violate the Stability Pact and triggered ratings agency downgrades (Spain on top of Ireland and Greece), but then as the euro exchange rates fell under a critical level around 1.3250, foreign exchange traders got worried the euro exchange rate was getting oversold and the market was running out of sellers. The 1.3250 level is the 62% Fib retracement of the euro's upmove from the Oct low at 1.2329 to the Dec high at 1.4719.

Sure enough, the euro rate rose overnight to 1.3338, but when Europe took the trading baton from Asia, foreign exchange traders sold the euro anew to 1.3188 again, not quite matching yesterday's lows but having the virtue of creating a new hand-drawn resistance line on the hourly chart (at 1.3310). Reasons for the euro to dip again include a false rumor that Ireland was already going to the IMF (it's only threatening) and German GDP, which came in at 1.3% for 2008 when 1.4% was forecast and in contrast to 2.5% in 2007. Adjusted for working days, German 2008 growth was a mere 1%.

Sterling, dollar to japanese yen and euro to Japanese yen made a similar small corrective bounce. The correction may not be over, alas, and could turn into a bigger upmove - depending on what the ECB does and says tomorrow. Right now we think it’s a minor event but foreign exchange traders have their chaps and spurs on, and are ready to ride a bucking horse.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

UBS, which repeated yesterday that the euro exchange rate will fall to 1.2000 by year-end.

Foreign Exchange Outlook : As we wrote yesterday, a decline was the euros manifest destiny even as it was rising last week because it was inevitable that the ECB would not stand apart from the rest of the world, clinging to an outdated anti-inflationary stance in a disinflationary world. This was and remains the persepctive of major Foreign Exchange market players like UBS, which repeated yesterday that the euro exchange rate will fall to 1.2000 by year-end. The forecast itself from such an important name becomes a factor in its own right. Even if the ECB stays on hold or cuts by only 25 bp, the bank says, expectations of cuts next time will get built in. "Thus the euro rate is likely to remain a sell on rallies against both the dollar and the yen."



We say this is exactly right.

We expect an ECB surprise on Thursday. ECB chief Trichet said "this is no time for complacency." The current challenges are pressing and new challenges will arise. He was (evidently) talking about a "firm and credible implementation of the EU stability pact," i.e., fiscal restraint, but Trichet is a really smart guy and he must know that to complain about overspending (Germany will break the pact in 2010) is spitting into the wind. We expect Trichet to make some critical comments accompanying the rate decision.

In the background is some chatter, mostly from the lunatic fringe, about some countries being forced to leave the EMU (Italy, Greece, Spain, Ireland are the most-cited names). We say it's much too early to be thinking along these lines, let alone making trading decisions based on such speculation.

For one thing, there is literally no mechanism for a member to leave the EMU.

Nobody knows how that could be accomplished. Having said that, there is an explicit deal that the EMU will not rescue a failed member, either. This is not so odd - New York State doesn't have to step up and rescue Massachusetts, either. Still, stress on certain names is generally euro exchange rate negative, although Bank of New York economist Woolfolk says that a weak country leaving the EMU would be a euro exchange rate positive. Well, no. While pan-European integration has hardly been a full-scale success, leakage from a failed economy could be substantial, from loss of export sales to immigration. We think the EMU would indeed come up with a rescue plan… but for whom? Spain yes but Greece no?

Back in the broader market, there's almost too much data this week to keep it all straight, but we must pay attention to Bernanke's speech at the London School of Economics today. But again, it almost doesn’t matter what he says because "it's worse elsewhere." See all the grim data above in the UK, Germany, Spain (ratings). We have the secret weapon of Obama, of whom far too much is being expected… but he is our secret weapon all the same.

Nobody else has an Obama.

Nobody else has a federal structure, either.

And finally, nobody else is willing to experiment as wildly as the US, badly managed as it seems to be. Keep the faith - the US dollar exchange rate is on a roll.

Note to Readers: Next Monday, Jan 19, is Martin Luther King Day and a national holiday in the US. The market is closed and we will not publish any reports. The next day is the Obama inauguration, yippee.

Bye For Now



Barbara Rockefeller

Foreign Exchange Trading

Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial



Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!

Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!

Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!



Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Monday, January 12, 2009

The Big Event, however, is the ECB rate decision on Thursday.

Foreign Exchange Outlook : We get a ton of data this week, as usual for the second week of the month. The Big Event, however, is the ECB rate decision on Thursday. So far the ECB has been reluctant to acknowledge the extent of the likely downturn, let alone the vastly deflationary forces at work. It has also put forward a face of "we know better" that is starting to look less convincing with every data release. Logically, there is no way Europe can avoid contamination from the US and UK, as Ireland just found out with the withdrawal of Dell and its several thousand jobs, or German manufactuers of industrial equipment suddenly seeing Chinese orders fall off the cliff due to demand destruction in the US.

We normally get an odd pattern of currency market responses to upcoming rate changes, as we just saw with the UK pound and the BoE decision. Often a currency rises ahead of the decision, which is counter-intuitive, and doesn't fall until afterwards. This time it looks like the euro exchange rate is going to fall, perhaps overly so, ahead of the decision (suggesting it might rise on the Event itself). The ECB has nobody to blame but itself. As BoT-Mitsubishi analyst Halpenny says in the FT today, "We maintain that the financial markets remain much too optimistic over the ability of the eurozone authorities to manage the current downturn. Lack of coordination on fiscal policy and evidence of strains within the EMU will undermine the euro exchange rates."

Merrill Lynch says the forex traders would buy euros if the ECB decision not to cut rates but it would be short-lived. We say "short-lived" is a euphemism - it would last all of ten seconds. In other words, the euro rate is going to fall no matter what the ECB does. It is in a no-win situation, unless you consider that a falling currency is desirable (which of course it is, today).

As for the economic claendar, it’s enormous--the Nov trade deficit tomorrow and the TICS report on Friday. We also get retail sales, the Beige Book, the Empire State and Philadelphia Fed indices, Dec CPI and industrial production, and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment for Jan. We also get the Federal budget deficit and the World Economic Forum's Global Risk report for 2009. Stock market guru Sandi Lynn adds that the U.K. ban on short selling financials ends this week, too.

Sometimes of more importance than the data is the rhetoric. This week we get Feds Lockhart, Bernanke and Lacker along with Congressional hearings on Obama’s cabinet nominees. We say the public and markets are still in a state of shock over the developments since last March when Bear Stearns lost its way and September when Lehman was allowed to go under. Goldman Sachs chief economist O’Neill says the Goldman financial distress index is actually a bit better, mostly on activist policy proposals, but with fresh bad news sure to be coming, this is probably the calm before the storm. Such a perspective is also a dollar - favorable perspective ( buy us dollars), since severe distress is dollar-favorable on the safe-haven thesis.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller

Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Thursday, January 8, 2009

But overnight the price of oil rose 85¢ to $43.48 on the Lebanese attack on Israel

The Feb NYMEX oil contract closed at $42.63, down substantially from $48.58 the day before and under the 10-day and 20-day moving averages. The WSJ says the 12% drop is the biggest single-day drop in percentage terms since September 2001. One factor was the US dEpt of Energy report showing crude inventories rose 6.7 million barrels last week, many multiples of the forecast. The amount of oil stored at the Cushing,

OK delivery terminal rose to a record high, too, showing weak demand.

But overnight the price of oil rose 85¢ to $43.48 on the Lebanese attack on Israel, the fear starting to grow that a pan-Arab alliance could grow against Israel and ultimately get reflected in a 1983-style embargo for Israeli allies. We say the probability of such an outcome is low. The miscreants are fringe groups, even if they hold power or high influence in Gaza and Lebanon, neither of which is an oil producer and both of which are failed states The question is whether real states want to make trouble and join up with these losers.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

We wouldn’t touch a new Foreign Exchange position with a bargepole

Foreign Exchange Outlook : Politics is playing a big but unmeasurable part in the FIFO recovery scenario that underlies the US Dollar recovery story. The NKS writes today that "Expectations for the measures had prompted massive US dollar buying in recent trading on hopes for a U.S. economic upswing." Really? Outside of Japan, we have not seen many foreign exchange trader interviews focusing on the Obama Effect.

We still think it's the US secret weapon and the world has not yet acknowledged it. One reason for this is the "empty suit" argument. Let's say we get new infrastructure spending and get it faster than now expected. Two points remain in question. Will the roads and bridges be well-built and without cost overruns? History is not sanguine on this one. And how is the newly unemployed 55-year old office worker going to benefit from shovel-wielding jobs that he himself can't get or take? Obama's big plans, which we will hear about today, are already being questioned. It’s one thing for insiders to say he is a pragmatic guy. It’s another to fight a tsunami with a pickaxe. It’s simply not clear that all the tools at the disposal of the US government are sufficient to get the job done. This is a confidence issue and it requires a continuous diet of rhetoric. If the stock market responds favorably today to the Obama speech, we have a prayer.

All the same, the new data from Germany - industrial orders down over 25% y/y - makes the point that "it's worse elsewhere." Yes, Germany is taking new initiatives, but is it fair to assume Germany can pull all of Europe up by itself? Employment is slower to drop in Europe than in the US, but the manufacturing sector is clearly going to contract, raising unemployment again. This has a domino effect throughout Europe. We have to ask whether the "conditions worse elsewhere" factor is going to take the heat off the US dollar exchange rate response to the payrolls report tomorrow. Now that we have had a shockingly high number from ADP, does a better actual number produce a relief rally-or what? Foreign Exchange Analysts say there are serious methodological problems and differences between the ADP and BLS statistics. This is really, really annoying, not least because payrolls is such an important number in evaluating the depth of the downturn and also because of the currency market effect.

We’d like to see the euro exchange rate dip back under 1.3500 today going into the report tomorrow. We have to be prepared for a jump to 1.3800, though. Conditions are wild. We can hardly remember the last time conditions were this uncertain and vulnerable to a new black swan. We wouldn't touch a new Foreign Exchange position with a bargepole. We issue buy/sell signals because you pay us to have an opinion, but realistically, the odds are only 50-50 these days of getting anything right. The wise course is to stand aside and wait, even at the risk of an opportunity loss. If you are not convinced that the market is wildly irrational today, take another look at sterling.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial
Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Europe just starting to feel the pain already much in evidence in the UK and US

Foreign Exchange Outlook : The market is flirting with a return to risk appetite that is most visible in price rises in some commodities (copper, oil) as well as equities. At the same time, traders are girding their loins against really bad economic data, of which Friday’s payrolls is the most important. Market News reports the median number in its survey is a drop of 490,000, with a forecast range of 450,00 to 567,000. This comes after 533,000 job losses in November and 320,000 in October.

Offsetting the economic gloom is a rising sense that a can-do Obama administration really can create growth in some areas and that the reduction in fear is itself a pro-growth factor. Market News reminds us that when Reagan came into office in 1981, the US Dollar Exchange Rate was just coming up off a crisis level of 1.7250 against the DM. The previous Oct (1980), Fed funds had reached 20%--remember Mr. Volcker? While the US Dollar was already rising off the lows of the 1980 year when Reagan took office, he gets credit for the can-do attitude, even if Reaganomics had very little valid underpinning. Persisting today is a near-worship of Reagan by some but even those who thought the supply-side ideas were dumb have to admit that sheer attitude and the force of Reagan’s personality and charm were effective in restoring confidence. (He could also construct a whole sentence, too.)

Foreign Exchange Analysts point out that it’s impossible to untangle the psychological factors and the "real" economic and market forces at work. We say three things are critical. First is Obama convincing foot-draggers in Congress to shut up and go along with his plans. He will make a major speech tomorrow on recovery initiatives.

The second is greater confidence in the institutional infrastructure. The Fed's US mortgages market actions are already seen as a huge success two days into the initiative, if not grabbing headlines in the financial press just yet. Now we need success like this on every front, including the SEC. Numerous articles are appearing reviewing what happened, who or what is at fault, and how to prevent it next time. A lingering worry is that the guys who got us into the mess (Geithner, for example) are still the guys in charge of getting us out. We need to see a change in mind-set and not just personnel.

The third thing is perception of "how much is enough." This is one of the lessons every junior banker learns in credit school - is the borrower asking for the optimum amount of money to make the new business plan workable?

Right now it looks like the Obama plans will encompass $1-2 trillion, with $775 in stimulus spending and $300 billion in tax cuts (so far), on top of the $700 billion in TARP money plus whatever the Fed is doing.

Is that enough?

If the markets perceive that it is, they will open their wallets. A ton of money is sitting on the sidelines. In particular, corporations are stuffed with cash and refusing to invest in capital spending. So we not only need to see corporate bonds become acceptable paper again, we need to see corporations spend some of their own money.

Nothing spells confidence like capital spending.

We say that tax and other incentives to boost capital spending (as opposed to consumer spending) are the key to the success of the Obama plans. If tomorrow we start getting confidence in this aspect of the recovery initiatives, the payrolls number the next day will lose its sting. Yes, this means we think the psychological factor (returning confidence and hope) can outweigh bad data. The psychological factors are forward looking while the data is, by definition, backward-looking. Markets like to anticipate, and none so more than the Foreign Exchange market. With Europe just starting to feel the pain already much in evidence in the UK and US, hope is more likely to arise on this side of the Atlantic. So far Asians seem to be willing to believe in the Fed, and let’s face it, Asians are the ones with the money these days. Meanwhile, Middle East sovereign wealth funds and other official and semi-official asset managers are licking their wounds and watching the oil price fall—but they will be back someday, if only because of the dearth of safe investment opportunities in their own region.

Now let’s look at the calendar. Jan 19 is a national holiday in the US and the inauguration is the next day (not a holiday). Analysts say mid-Feb is the earliest we can expect Obama initiatives to hit the streets, but we guess the can-do effect will hit before then. This could be wildly US Dollar - favorable.

We just need this dratted correction to end first.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

falling oil prices that set the stage for the us dollar currency recovery

The Feb NYMEX oil contract closed at $48.81 from $46.34, breaking the 20-day moving average to the upside as well as the linreg channel top. This is quite frightening since it was falling oil prices that set the stage for the us dollar currency recovery. Overnight it went to $50.04, not seen since Dec 15, on reduced Russian supply of natural gas to not only the Ukraine, but Southern Europe, too. The FT names Turkey, Bulgaria and Romania. Oil is the alternative. Separately, Bloomberg reports that Kuwait and Qatar plan to cut oil shipments to Asia starting in January, fulfilling the cuts promised at the OPEC meeting on Dec 17.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial
Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Buy US Dollars - Even the strongest rally doesn’t move in a straight line

Foreign Exchange Outlook : We get some US data today, including the ISM service sector index for Dec (probably a decline to 36.5), existing home contracts, factory orders, and the minutes of the Fed Dec 16 meeting. The Fed minutes will be interesting because they will disclose the reasoning behind taking rates to a range of zero to 25%. Today is also probably the day that Friday’s payrolls come onto the radar screen.

Still, the overriding factor is the ECB rate cut now universally expected next week and the associated rhetoric as well as the amount (25 bp or 50 bp) and the pace of future cuts. Bloomberg reports that ECB policy member Constancio said yesterday (before today’s inflation numbers) that the bank is prepared to cut interest rates if necessary to keep inflation on target. If price growth slows below the goal of "just below 2%," the bank will respond with rate cuts. This is nothing more than confirmation of what we already know, but central banks have their own intricate dance with the market and it's necessary for the bank to disclose its intentions out loud. We can’t wait to hear from the BBK's Weber. As for the extent of cuts, Bloomberg says its survey shows ECB rates down from 2.5% to 1.5% by end-June, or a total of 100 bp in cuts. We think the market may reward the euro exchange rate with a bump up if the first move is a biggie, at least 50 bp.

Also, we need to look at two intermarket factors, the rise in US 10-year note yields and the price of oil. We are seeing a rise in yields and steepening of the yield curve in part on hope that the Obama team can drive recovery. As a general rule, this is US dollar rate - favorable. But not to the mind of former Bank of England policy committee member Buiter, who says Americans must prepare themselves for a "massive collapse" in the dollar as investors around the world dump US assets, according to a piece in the Telegraph newspaper. This is a tabloid newspaper that loves shocking headlines, although Buiter is a reputable source. Buiter says there will be increasing disenchantment with the US economy and thus an exodus of foreigners.

Well, probably not. Recently both the Japanese and Chinese have affirmed that they will continue to buy US government paper for reserves, even though China has already said Q4 reserves will show a drop because of the dollar's decline late last year. Some forex analysts say this is no big deal - these reserve managers have a distinct lack of other good assets to choose from. Even European bonds are not a real alternative to US paper since the European bond market is made up of individual country paper and some of it is getting the benefit of the doubt from the existence of the euro exchange rates and not because of good underlying fundamentals (like Italy). We are inclined to accept the no-good-alternative argument. If Buiter were right and the dollar exchange rate gets dumped as the Treasury holds auctions and nobody comes, the global financial system would face a bigger Shock than anything we have seen so far. We may not like it, but as goes the US economy and the US government bond market, so goes the rest of the world.

Oil is a more immediate and pressing problem. We complained all last year that the inverse correlation of the dollar and oil was silly (beset by circular reasoning whereby oil traders said they were buying oil as a speculative asset because the dollar was falling and currency traders said the dollar was falling because oil was rising). This correlation is not a necessary one—we have had periods when the dollar and oil moved the same way and not inversely. But the speculative psychology could easily come back and give us wildly higher oil prices, and perhaps a wildly lower dollar, on very little evidence. We still want to see greater regulation of the oil market in some way - when oil is treated as a financial asset and not a commodity, it becomes less linked to valid supply and demand determinants and takes on the irrationality of financial markets. Oil is too important to be controlled by greedy, nasty yuppies at Goldman Sachs. But critics are right that regulating this market may cause more trouble than it cures. Who exactly would be qualified to do it, and how? Net-net, we see oil as the biggest threat to the dollar rally, not US economic fundamentals (and we are not certain that the Obama rescue plans will work in the first place).

Finally, today is Tuesday and we often get a pullback on Tuesdays, or so market lore has it. Even the strongest rally doesn’t move in a straight line. But keep the faith - it’s a true new trend and unless something comes along to derail it, we have more time to enjoy it.

Bye For Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates!

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790