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Before exploring the latest boost to the Aussie, let's first go over today's
surprisingly smaller than expected 25-bp rate cut from the European Central
Bank. The ECB is likely to use the next 4 weeks in elucidating its intention
to keep the door open for further conventional easing (rate cuts) and starting
non conventional easing (asset purchases and extending term lending) as early
as the next meeting. Currency markets are no longer subscribing to the
much punditized notion that slower/ further ECB rate cuts keep it behind the
curve at the expense of the euro. The realities of the market remain shaped
by the positive impact of rising risk appetite on EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, NZD at
the expense of JPY and USD.
The latest burst in risk appetite boosted the Norwegian krone and the
Aussie at the top of the list of major currencies. Ive long discussed in previous
notes highlighting the long term fundamentals of these two currencies on
the basis of positive fiscal balances, favourable external imbalances and relatively
generous yield foundation. The Norwegian currency has practically become a
household name as of late after outperforming all major currencies since the
beginning of the year. It is also the only currency to have appreciated against
the price of gold. Chapter 8 of my book Currency
Trading & Intermarket Analysis made the case for the Norwegian Krone
for being more than just an energy-dependent currency. (The book was completed
in last summer).

Aussie traders will find long term positives in the latest USDA report
showing US farmers to reduce total acres with corn, soybeans and wheat this
year. The USDA announced that planned wheat plantings were to drop 7.1% from
last year when seedings were the highest in 10 years. Australias position as
a leading top producer and exporter of wheat, allows it to gain from the rise
in crop, as was the case in 2007 to H1 2008.
Forex traders seeking more concrete trading ideas can find the track record
of my trading calls favouring AUD, and NOK by
clicking here .
With US jobless claims at fresh 27-year high of 669K and continuing
claims at a record 5.73 million, it is a reminder that macroeconomic deterioration
in the US is far from having reached its trough. Even ifFriday's March jobs
report from the USshows further stabilizationon the payrolls front (as
did the last 3 reports), the US unemployment rate is likely to exceed 8.1%,
thereby, surpassing that of the Eurozone and Germany, a development that
could notbe imagined just a few months ago bythe classic critics of the Eurozone
model. And with US consumer credit delinquencies in Q4 surging to an all time
high, the deleveraging process within US households relative to that of the
Eurozone is another dynamic supporting medium term stabilization in the single
currency.
Funding the Fund with Gold. TheG20 announcement of tripling IMF resources
to $750 billion offered an extra boost for equity markets and higher yielding
currencies at the expense of further damage in the dollar and the yen. The
G20 confirmed our predictions that central banks will incorporate gold sales
to finance assistance for lower income nations. Central banks gold selling
would also help stabilize any renewed selling in the greenback and prevent
any unwanted appreciation in other currencies.
China's aspiring role for becoming the IMF of the Eastern Hemisphere
fits with increased assistance for the multilateral institution ahead of the
WB/IMF meeting later this month in Washington. China's various currency swap
arrangements totaling CNY650 billion with its trading partners (South Korea,
Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Belarus and Argentina) comprise a major step
towards turning the yuan into an invoicing currencya natural course for bolstering
its role as a reserve currency. Chinas membership in the Inter-American Development
Bank and its US$350 million contribution to the agency's lending, should also
enhance its role in assisting Latin American and the Caribbean nations.
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