Posts Tagged ‘dx’

Hoenig the Hawk Hoists the Flag

Friday, January 29th, 2010

The first hint of higher interest rates in the States arrived after this week’s FOMC meeting.  Thomas Hoenig (President of the Kansas City Fed) emerged as the first interest rate hawk on the FOMC and voted against an unchanged monetary policy.  Hoenig “believed that economic and financial conditions had changed sufficiently that the expectation of exceptionally low levels of the Fed funds rate for an extended period was no longer warranted”.  In plain English Hoenig wants the Fed to signal to the markets that it is going to begin hiking interest rates at some stage in the not too distant future.

At the moment Hoenig is the only dissenter on the FOMC.  It will pay to keep a close eye on whether his view gathers support at future FOMC meetings.

The market’s reaction thus far to Wednesday’s announcement has been most evident in the US Dollar.  Its rally, which began after the 4 Dec 2009 Employment Report, has continued and the Dollar Index (DX) has now broken above its 200-dma.  The 50- and 200-week moving averages are the next resistance levels to be surmounted and they lie just above the current 79.59 level of the DX.  Hoenig hankering after US rate hikes will only serve to help the Dollar to extend its recent rally.  Commodities (as measured by the CRB index) have reacted badly, the US stockmarkets have remained under pressure (but they started falling two weeks ago) but the all-important US Treasury bond market has traded sideways despite Hoenig hinting at higher rates sooner rather than later.

However it is difficult to believe that the Fed is going to implement the first rate hike until the US economic recovery has gained significant traction which results in a very visible fall in the unemployment rate from its current 10%.  There is so much spare capacity in the States that the Fed can afford to let growth continue to build momentum without worrying about higher inflation resulting anytime soon.  Any premature rate hikes would be a serious policy error which would impact the economy & stockmarkets severely.

A more likely explanation for Hoenig’s action in voting against the others is that it allows the Fed to test the market’s reaction to a proposed change in the current policy stance of “low rates for yonks”.  If markets react badly over the next few weeks (particularly if the US bond market tanks) then we can expect all the other FOMC members to very publicly bang the drum that interest rates are not going up anytime soon.  The FOMC knows full well that it will eventually have to tell the markets that rates are not going to stay at “exceptionally low levels for an extended period” and this is a low risk way for it to prepare the markets for an eventual change in monetary policy.

I still think that the first US rate rise is out of view and over the horizon (and more likely to take place in 2011 than 2010) but will be paying close attention to future FOMC statements for clues as to when policy is likely to change.

Has the Dollar already begun its 2010 rally?

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Do the last three weeks of US Dollar strength represent the start of a bigger upswing in the fortunes of the Dollar?

We have just seen the Dollar close higher for three consecutive weeks, as measured by the Dollar Index. This hasn’t happened since the Dollar topped out in March 2009 (as global stockmarkets simultaneously bottomed).  We last saw a strong Dollar rally during July – November 2008 as a mad scramble for dollars took place – see “Get me a Printing Press“.

There is also a confluence of fundamental factors coming together at the moment which together provide a more solid basis for a sustainable rally in the Dollar.  The Fed is scheduled to end its current bout of $1.75 trillion QE bond purchases by the end of Q1 2010.  In addition this week’s FOMC statement highlighted that most of the Fed’s special liquidity facilities will expire on 1 Feb 2010 and that the Fed will also be closing its Dollar swap arrangements with other central banks by 1 Feb 2010 too.  The net effect is that the Fed will be shutting down three different ways in which it has been supplying Dollars to the markets.

For its part, the Euro has been impacted by the recent turmoil seen in Greece’s government bond markets and the currency markets have once again taken note that the Euro is not the same thing as a Deutschmark and it can be undermined to a certain extent by the PIIGS membership.  If Greece really got into trouble, there is no way that the other, more stable, members of the Euro would allow Greece to be rescued by the IMF (and thereby show to the whole world that Euro-land couldn’t manage its own internal affairs).

The Japanese Central Bank is also offering 10 trillion Yen in 90-day money into its money market, although the Japanese have historically been quite timid with their Quantitative Easing and this measure runs true to form in being less aggressive than, say, purchasing long-term government bonds.

Finally the US employment report for November 2009 showed both the unemployment rate falling and weekly hours worked rising.  This implies stronger US GDP (70% of which is consumer spending) which has also served to boost the Dollar.

Neither is the Fed itself going to stand in the way of a Dollar rally.  Now that a tentative recovery has been established in the States and GDP is growing again, the Fed does not need to manage the Dollar lower from here but it would surely be happy to see a combination of the Dollar rallying and lower oil prices (which would serve to keep inflation under control and lower gasoline prices would put more money into consumers pockets).

A Dollar rally at this stage is not negative for US stockmarkets because consumers having more money to spend means that companies can grow their top-line sales and generate higher profits.  These higher profits will help to keep the stockmarket rallying into 2010 (the Dow has been in a 10,200-10,500 range for the last 5 weeks, consolidating now that it has recovered half of its Oct 2007 – March 2009 losses).

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Disclaimer
These are my own thoughts and opinions. They are based on considerable experience but in no way constitute investment advice and should not be taken as such, ever. This content is intended solely for the diversion of the reader, and me.