Some profit-taking in the middle of last week pushed the dollar lower and gave rise in some quarters that the
run was over. However, the greenback has come back the bid. It is gaining against all the major
currencies today and most of the emerging market currencies.
Much of the coverage attributes the gains to comments by the Philadelphia
Fed President Harker. He joined the chorus of officials who have
refused to rule out a March hike. Yet the
market is not biting. The Fed funds have been averaging 66 bp. The
March contract implies 69.5 bp, and the
April contract implies 71.5 bp. Our
work suggests this is consistent with about a one-in-four chance of a
hike. Bloomberg puts the odds at 36% compared with 34% a week ago.
The implied yield of the March and April contracts
have risen by half of a basis point over the past week.
Leaving aside the New Zealand dollar, which is being dragged lower
apparently by the continued weakness in milk prices (off five consecutive
sessions through yesterday) ahead of today's auction, the euro is the weakest
of the majors. We suspect the euro is an important driver of the
broad dollar gains. The latest polls have support for Le Pen ticking up,
while the Left continues to hampered by sectarianism, and the two main
candidates Fillon and Macron appear to have lost some momentum.
The 10-year French premium over Germany has widened to 80 bp, the
most since August 2012. It has risen nearly 14 bp since the middle of
last week. The two-year spread is also widening. It is at 44 bp
today, the widest since May 2012. It is up about 16 bp over the last four
sessions. The five-year credit-default swap was at 68 bp yesterday, up
from 38 bp at the end of last year and 42 bp at the of January. The
sell-off in French debt instruments has reportedly come on high
volume.
The demand for German paper, not only emanating from flows out of France but the periphery more general, has seen
the German two-year note fell to a new record low (~-88 bp). This in turn has widened the spread between the
US and Germany. The US two-year premium took
out the end of last year's high (~205 bp) today to make a new post-2000
high. The US 10-year premium is near 330 bp today, which is the widest so
far this year, but still a little below peak from the end of last year near 339
bp, which is the widest since at least 1990.
The euro has been sold back toward last week['s low near $1.0520.
The sell-off has come in two legs. The first in Asia took the euro
through $1.0580. Then Europe took it down another half cent. The
sell-off came despite a robust flash PMI. The eurozone composite jumped to 56.0 from 54.4. The median
guesstimate in the Bloomberg survey was for a little slippage to 54.3.
The details were also favorable. The manufacturing PMI rose to 55.5 from
55.2. The median looked for a softer number. Economists expected an
unchanged the service PMI. Instead, it jumped to 55.6 from
53.7. New orders reached a six-year high and prices charged rose to the
highest level since July 2011.
Of note, the French composite rose above the German composite (56.2 vs. 56.1). Some observers try to draw
a political implication from the recovery in the French economy. This may be mistaken. The two high income
countries where the populist-nationalist agenda had electoral success, the UK
and US, enjoyed among the strongest recoveries from the Great Financial Crisis,
including levels of unemployment that were
broadly regarded near full employment.
In addition to the eurozone PMI,
the flash manufacturing PMI for Japan was
reported. It rose to 53.5 from 52.7. Markit
reports its preliminary manufacturing, service, and composite PMI for the US
today. Modest upticks are expected.
The backdrop is that the US, Europe, and Japan are off to a firm start to the
year. Equity markets seem to appreciate this. The MSCI Asia Pacific
eked out a small gain, its fourth in the past five sessions. Of note,
Korea's Kospi rose 0.95 to its best level since mid-2015. In Europe, the
Dow Jones Stoxx 600 is up nearly 0.3%. It is the third consecutive gain
and the tenth advance in 11 sessions. Financials are the weakest
sector in Europe, off about 0.7%, dragged in part by the disappointing earnings
at HSBC. On the other hand, BHP Billiton and Anglo-American beat
expectations. Iron ore future extended this year's rally, adding 3.2% to bring the year-to-date advance to
34%. Copper, zinc and lead prices also rallied.
Support for the euro is near $1.0520, which corresponds to the low from last
week and the 61.8% retracement objective of last month's euro rally.
Below there is potential toward $1.0450. The intraday technicals are stretched. A little short squeeze
toward $1.0560 may give North American dealers a better selling
opportunity. The dollar faces immediate resistance near JPY113.80, but a
move above JPY114.10 is needed to suggest another run at JPY115.00.
Sterling is flirting with the $1.2400 level. It has probed this shelf several times this month and
has been unable to close below it.
The Australian dollar found initial
support near $0.7650, a five-day low, but the $0.7670 area may cap corrective
upticks. After the attempt on CAD1.30 failed in the middle of last week,
the US dollar has recovered to CAD1.3160 in the European morning but has run
out of steam. Recall that in the futures market, speculators are net long
the dollar-bloc currencies and but net short the euro, sterling, yen and Swiss
franc.
Disclaimer
Dollar Bounces Back
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
February 21, 2017
Rating: