Foreign Exchange - Currency Outlook
The big release today is retail sales, probably a drop of 0.8%, according to the Bloomberg survey. We also get the usual weekly applications for unemployment beenfits, probably a horrifying 610,000 for the Feb 8 week after 626,000 the week before. Another Bloomberg survey finds that the consensus of economists is for the US economy to contract at an annual rate of 5% in Q1, with Q2 delivering a lesser contraction of 1.7% and the full-year coming in at –2% y/y. The slide in consumer spending will be the longest-lasting on record, says Bloomberg. One economist says all four quarters would be negative without the Obama stimulus plan. By 2010, we could see growth at 1.9%, with 2.9% in 2011 - but the odds are barely in our favor. "Economists estimated odds that the economy will be out of the recession in the next 12 months at 53 percent, down from 55 percent in January, the survey showed."
The unemployment rate will rise to 8.4% this year and 8.5% next year before recovering to 7.9% in 2011, and "the federal budget deficit as a percentage of GDP will average 10 percent this year, a postwar high." We say 10% is a mere bag of shells. Unless everything goes smoothly, it could be 20% or 30% or some other number.
Recounting the economic catastrophe in the US tells us something about what to expect elsewhere. The US is more flexible/adaptable than most other economies, especially in labor markets. If the US is going to contract a net 2% this year but be coming out of it by year-end, should we assume that the eurozone will decline by more and lag by (say) two quarters, if not more? Yes. This is our "it’s worse elsewhere" argument we imagine it still stands. We also think that Trichet and his cohorts on the ECB policy board are smart guys, and if they are reluctant to cut rates to zero, they must have a really, really good reason beyond stubbornness for the sake of stubbornness. (We might not have said that of Duisenberg but Trichet is a different color of cat).
Ironically, if the market starts believing that a delayed Geithner plan will be a better plan, and if he speaks well at G7 (squeaking to Congress was not awe-inspiring), confidence could come back and this is dollar-negative. Whether we like it or not, the US is taking the global lead on stimulus and on financial sector restructuring. The UK has a somewhat different model (entailing insurance/guarantees, Gilt-buying and probably bank nationalization) while the US is going for a free-market approach that will be messier but solve the problem of pricing toxic assets. We are inclined to believe that mid-year is a real possibility for a turn in the tide—unless another wave of Alt A or other defaults comes along, and maybe by then we will have a mechanism in place to deal with it. Everyone else will still be lagging along…
We like the US dollar again for the near-term, which is now on the order of only about 6-12 hours.
Bye For Now
Barbara Rockefeller
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