|
Below is an extract from a commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com on
10th August, 2008.
Currency Market Update
Up until the past week or so there has been almost incessant talk in the press
and many newsletters about the weak US dollar, but the US currency hasn't been
universally weak since last November. Last November was when the Canadian Dollar
and the British Pound commenced intermediate-term declines against the US$.
Then, in March, the Swiss Franc and the Japanese Yen embarked on intermediate-term
declines against the US$, leaving the euro and the A$ as the remaining holdouts.
These holdouts finally buckled over the past fortnight, meaning that all six
major non-US currencies are now in intermediate-term declines against the US$.
The intermediate-term advance in the Dollar Index is probably still in its
infancy, but just as the US$ bottomed against one currency and then another
over an 8-month period it will probably top against different currencies at
different times. Also, we suspect that the dollar's topping sequence will be
similar to its bottoming sequence. For instance, we think there's a good chance
that the Canadian Dollar will be the first of the dollar's fiat currency competitors
to complete its intermediate-term decline, while the euro and the Australian
Dollar are likely to be the last to bottom. In fact, the C$, which the following
daily chart reveals to be nearing its lows of the past year, could already
be close to its ultimate correction low.

Last week's up-move in the Dollar Index stopped just shy of the top of the
channel drawn on the following weekly chart, which will undoubtedly give the
dollar bears some encouragement. However, we think the odds are strongly in
favour of the Dollar Index breaking out of its downward-sloping channel and
making significant additional gains over the coming months. There's a reasonable
chance that the close proximity of the channel top will prompt some profit
taking and short selling, leading to a 1-3 week US$ pullback or period of consolidation,
but last week's action was a very clear signal that the dollar's intermediate-term
trend has reversed. The one thing that almost always occurs in the early stages
of intermediate-term US$ rallies, but had not occurred prior to last week,
is a weekly gain by the Dollar Index of at least two points. This formerly-missing
piece of the puzzle is now in place.

Many people will be asking the question: why is the US$ rallying when its
fundamentals are so terrible? From our perspective, however, a more reasonable
question is: why has it taken so long for the US$ to rally against the euro
given that the US$ is extremely under-valued relative to the euro and the euro's
fundamentals are just as bad?
The answer, we think, is that the currency market has believed that the US
Federal Reserve would be as 'easy' as it needed to be to help the banking system
through its crisis, while the ECB would continue to focus on minimising currency
depreciation. We think the market was/is right to believe that the Fed will
do whatever it takes to maintain the solvency of the major banks, but traders
now appear to be coming around to the view that the ECB will also be loosening
the monetary reins. Take away the interest-rate 'prop' and the euro suddenly
becomes free to fall under the weight of its own over-valuation.
It is also worth mentioning that the recent sharp downturn in the world of
commodities has probably had an important effect on perceptions, and hence
on relative valuations, within the currency market. The reason is that with
the prices of most commodities now in intermediate-term downward trends the
decision-makers at the ECB should feel free to pay more attention to the serious
economic slowdown currently underway, and less to the inflation problem.
Gold stocks and the US dollar
The Dollar Index will probably trend higher over the next few months. If so,
will this prevent gold and gold stocks from rallying?
We don't think so. Why should strength in the US dollar driven by the realisation
that other fiat currencies are just as bad as the dollar prevent gold and gold
stocks from rallying?
When the US$ strengthens against the euro it creates a psychological headwind
for gold-related investments and this psychological effect will usually dominate
for a while, but the US dollar's trend relative to other fiat currencies is
only one of several drivers of the gold price. Other important considerations
are credit spreads (measures of financial market confidence), the yield spread
(a measure of financial market liquidity), real interest rates, and money-supply
growth trends.
The following chart provides a good example of how the gold sector will sometimes
react to an intermediate-term US$ rally. The chart, which compares the performances
of the HUI and the Dollar Index during 2005, shows that the HUI tanked during
the first part of the Dollar Index's intermediate-term advance and then began
to trend upward despite the dollar's continuing strength. Moreover, it shows
that in 2005 the bottom of the HUI's correction occurred two days after the
Dollar Index broke upward from a basing pattern. This means that we are potentially
in exactly the same position today as we were at the May-2005 bottom (the Dollar
Index broke upward from its basing pattern on Thursday 7th August 2008).

It is also worth noting that the best part of the 1973 rally in gold stocks
occurred while the US$ was strengthening relative to other fiat currencies.
We aren't offering a free trial subscription at this time, but
free samples of our work (excerpts from our regular commentaries) can be viewed
at: http://www.speculative-investor.com/new/freesamples.html.
|