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The events of the past three weeks in foreign exchange markets continue to
be dominated by prolonged dollar strength and a fierce bout of selling in the
British pound. The charts below show the secular performance of the major currencies,
measuring their performances against gold -- whose price is determined by the
forces of supply and demand rather than by central bank monetary policy or
printing press.

As the left charts shows--since the beginning of the second half of the year--the
US dollar is the best performing currency against gold amid the major 8 currencies.
The dollar's strength remains largely a manifestation of the same dynamics;
deepening weakness outside the US rather than strength inside the US. More
specifically, the confirmation that the Eurozone has seen its first negative
quarterly GDP growth since the inception of the euro as well as the sharp decline
in commodities resulting from slowing global demand have been the key catalysts
to the dollar rebound. Speculative flows have also helped drive the dollar
rally as futures traders unwound their dollar shorts vs the EUR, GBP and JPY.
As the chart in the speculative futures section shows, short
positions in EUR against USD are nearing their highest level in nearly 3 years.
Dollar Rises Above All Majors Despite Negative Trifecta
Although ECB president JC Trichet and his colleagues have not hinted at any
interest rate cuts, their increased acknowledgment of the widely anticipated
technical recession in the Eurozone is prompting bond markets to expect ECB
easing to start in 2009, the same year in which the Fed is widely expected
by fed funds futures to begin raising interest rates. Nonetheless, our view
remains that the Fed will cut interest rates by at least 50 bps this year,
while the ECB will follow suit in Q2 2009. The reason to our US interest rate
forecast is largely driven by the deteriorating trifecta of weakening macroeconomic
fundamentals, worsening conditions in US credit markets and the persistent
uncertainty with US financials. Slumping consumer demand and rising joblessness
comprise the first part of the trifecta. Our
view for the Fed to continue easing rates has been held ever since the
central bank began hinting at a pause of its easing campaign earlier this spring.
Now the Fed funds market is coming to terms with this trifecta, reducing odds
of a 2008 tightening down to 20% from more nearly 60% one month ago. Our anticipated
rate cuts are likely to provide support for EURUSD above $1.43 rather than
subject it to renewed selling below that level.
From FOMC to FDIC
Aside from macroeconomic issues, the credit situation and impact on US banks
will likely have an increasing impact on Forex markets. On Tuesday, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) reported 117 "problem" banks as of June 30; up
from 90 problem banks at the end of Q1. The FDIC says that lenders on the problem
list had assets of $78 billion at the end of Q2, compared with $26.3 billion
at the end of Q1. The main question is how these figures reconcile with
the fact that the FDIC has only $53 billion of funds, and has already used
15% of that to bail IndyMac. Conservative estimates place the number of troubled
US banks at about 700 banks, which is 7 times greater than the number in the
FDIC's "watch list". As I argued in Eurozone
vs US , none of these banking troubles constitute the challenges in the
Eurozone, thus, will serve as the principal drivers for renewed Fed cuts, Treasury
bailouts and falling US equities. The dollar impact remains largely negative
against the Japanese yen. Indeed, owing to the escalating uncertainty with
Fannie Mae and Fredie Mac and the persistent increase in LIBOR rates, the Japanese
currency is the second best performer against gold due to frequent bouts of
reduced risk appetite.
High Yielding Aussie, Kiwi and Sterling Underperfom
The Aussie, kiwi and sterling have fared the worst against gold during the
same period. What do GBP, AUD and NZD have in common? They represent the 3
highest interest rates amid the 8 currencies with NZD at 8.00%, AUD at 7.25%
and GBP at 5.00%. Unlike the Bank of England and Reserve Bank of New Zealand
, the Reserve Bank of Australia has not yet cut interest rates. This renders
the Aussie as the next likely victim of an interest rate cut. But it's more
than that. The sharp tumble in the Aussie has been a result of unwinding carry
trades (from all time highs against the USD) as well as rapid declines in commodities,
especially gold and copper--two principal sources of Australian production
and export revenue.
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Ashraf Laidi
CMC Markets NA
AshrafLaidi.com
Ashraf
Laidi is Chief FX Strategist at CMC Markets NA and author of "Currency Trading
and Intermarket Analysis: How to Profit from the Shifting Currents in Global
Markets" Wiley Trading.
This publication is intended to be used for information
purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. CMC Markets (US) LLC
is registered as a Futures Commission Merchant with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission and is a member of the National Futures Association.
Copyright © 2006-2008 Ashraf Laidi
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