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The US dollar gets a respite following a sharp sell-off late last week as
traders neutralize excessive selling in a relatively data scarce trading session. Tuesday's
speech by Fed Chairman Bernanke on the US economic outlook may provide further
stability to the US currency as the Fed Chairman is unlikely to depart from
his obligatory hawkishness and risk triggering a renewed attack on the currency.
The dollar's stabilization is reflected in gold prices as the metal
retreats from its 3 ½ month high $641.62 per ounce to $637.00 per ounce.
We reiterate that last week's thin trading activity did play a major role in
amplifying the dollar sell-off, but should not overshadow the fundamentals
and market flows acting against the US currency.
Now that the dollar sell-off has finally drawn the attention of those beyond
currency traders and analysts, it's worth summing the major factors triggering
the latest sell-off in the currency. Escalating optimism in the Eurozone underlined
by Thursday's unexpectedly strong German IFO business survey hitting a 15-year
high in November, coupled with inflation vigilance by the European Central
Bank officials, have strengthened the case for ECB rate hikes extending to
3.75% by end of Q1 from their current 3.25%. Speedy unwinding of yen carry
trade positions against the higher yielding currencies of the USD and AUD have
also been key drivers to the USDJPY declines, especially after Comments from
People's Bank of China officials warning about the risk to Asian currency reserves
from further dollar slide, suggesting the much talked about shift in USD reserves
is either already underway or is a matter of time.
One of the key drivers to the sustained run-up in EURUSD and GBPUSD is
the unprecedented contrast in monetary policy outlooks between the European
Central Bank and the Bank of England , and the Federal Reserve. Never
since the birth of the euro in 1999 have we seen an environment where the
ECB and the BoE in the midst of an interest rate tightening cycle, while
the Federal Reserve was approaching an interest rate easing cycle. It is
this unprecedented contrast in monetary policies that is behind the accelerating
flows emerging against the US dollar, even if the UK and Eurozone rates are
currently below their US counterpart. This unfolding yield landscape is also
leading to a sharp narrowing in the 10-year spreads between the US and the
Eurozone.
This point is further validated by the lack of continuity in the USDJPY
rallies. With Japanese short-term interest rates at 0.25%, 500-bps below
their US counterpart, the yield differential remains one of the obstacles
to an uninterrupted decline in USDJPY. Also, the Bank of Japan's cautious
stance towards its planned tightening pales in contrast to the unequivocal
hawkishness of the ECB and the BoE in the face of increasing levels of money
supply growth, inflation growth as well as business and consumer demand.
The chart below shows the US dollar index (trade weighted index against
the euro, yen, sterling, Swiss franc, Canadian dollar and Swedish Krona) is
down 10% from the 92.63 highs reached a year ago (November, 14, 2005). The
MACD measure of trend momentum has entered negative territory, suggesting 82.70
could be reached before year end. Recall we noted in our long-term piece of
October 20 th that: "Given the dollar's existing high yield advantage and
the continued upside risks to inflation, we expect the dollar index to fall
by no more than 5.0% from its 87.30 peak of October 13th, making 83.80-84.0
our year-end target."

The United Arab Emirates' central bank announced a 19% increase in its FX
reserves to $25.1 bln at end of Q2, while clarifying it had not yet gone along
with diversifying its reserves. Less than a month ago, the central bank said
it would shift 10% of its reserves from US dollars to euros and gold to alter
its 98% USD/2.0% EUR proportion.
This week's busy data/event schedule kicks off tomorrow (Tuesday) with the
October M3 money supply from the Eurozone, and the US figures on October durable
orders, October existing home sales, November consumer confidence and speeches
from Fed Chairman Greenspan and Chicago Fed's Moscow.
Euro readies for temporary retreat
Losing half a cent from its 1.3165 highs, EURUSD is expected to extend its
retreat in a relatively data-free session for the technical signals to stabilize
from their extreme levels. Traders may accelerate the euro's declines towards
the 1.3030s amid cautiousness with Bernanke's speech reiterating the Fed's
inflation vigilance. Bernanke may well maintain a relatively hawkish rhetoric
in order to slow the pace of dollar decline rather than solely reflect the
inflation picture. Thursday's release of the US October core PCE price index
will carry significant weight in shaping the market's latest inflation assessment.
A figure below 2.3% could well renew dollar selling as it weakens the case
for the Fed's long standing inflation vigilance and further make way for the
path to easing policy.
German finance Minister Steinbrueck was unequivocal in his optimism, indicating
the economy is firing on all cylinders and that next year's VAT tax will not
be a shock. Even one member of the economic "Wise Men" said 2006 growth could
surpass his 2.4% forecast.
But remarks from France's finance Minister Thierry Breton indicating "of course" he
would discuss the euro with fellow European ministers today do not carry the
same weight as did the more direct ECB criticism by his nation's president
and Prime Minister of two weeks ago.
EURUSD sees interim support at 1.3060, followed by 1.3025-30. The relative
strength index currently shows overbought levels at their highest since October
26. Interim resistance stands at 1.3140, followed by 1.3180.
USDJPY seen in corrective bounce
There was no major currency reaction to remarks from Bank of Japan Governor
Fukui reiterating the central bank would "adjust interest rates gradually" in
order to "avoid impeding the expansion of Japan 's economy". Fukui referred
to the recent developments in FX as having "moved slightly", expressing no
signs of worry or dissatisfaction with the yen's sharp run-up. Non-central
bank officials may add their own version of the FX arena and sound off more
aggressive remarks regarding the danger of rapid yen gains, in which case the
dollar could get a brief fillip. Concerns ahead of Tuesday's Bernanke speech
on the US economic outlook may also be dollar positive as the Fed Chairman
is unlikely to depart from his obligatory hawkishness and risk a renewed attack
on the dollar.
But these dollar gains are seen largely corrective in nature, with temporary
upside capped at 116.55, followed by 116.85-90. Support seen holding at the
116 figure, backed by increased buying at 115.70.
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