The US dollar slid after US President Trump complained about its
strength. The sell-off extended into early Asian activity, before
stabilizing. It is mixed in late morning European turnover, which is
already lightening up due to the extended Easter holiday.
The dollar bloc is stronger, led by the
Australian dollar's 0.8% advance that was encouraged by an employment report
that was considerably stronger than expected. Australia added
nearly 61k jobs, three times more than the median forecast in the Bloomberg
survey and the February series was revised from a loss of 6.4k jobs to gain of
2.8k. These jobs are full-time. In fact, full-time positions rose
74.5k, while part-time positions fell 13.6k. Even the unchanged
unemployment rate of 5.9% was impressive given that the participation rate rose
to 64.8% from 64.6%.
The Australian dollar may also be attracting flows over the holiday
period. Also, strong trade figures from China may have also
helped. China reported a March trade surplus of nearly $24 bln,
which nearly twice as large as expected. Exports jumped 16.4%
year-over-year, after a 4% rise in the January-February period (viewed together
due to the Lunar New Year distortions). Imports rose 20.3%, moderating
fro 26.4% increase in January-February.
Of note, China imported a record amount of oil in March, pushing it ahead
of the US as the largest buyer in the first three months of 2017.
Stocking piling and strong demand by booming refiners coupled with a decline in
domestic output appear to be the driver.
China's oil output in January-February fell 8% year-over-year after
output fell last year. In contrast, the US official data yesterday showed
US oil output at the highest in more than a year, though inventories slipped
from a record.
Trump's comments are the main talking point today. His claim
that the dollar is too strong is not new, but it is the first time he has
ventured down that path since the inauguration. His comments follow a three-month
decline in the broad measure of the dollar. If a leader of another
country said what he did, they likely would be accused of manipulating their
currency. That said, in the US Treasury's criteria of currency
manipulation, jawboning does not count. Still, it seems a departure from
the G7 and G20 agreements, and like areas, this is an example of
unilateralism.
Trump made several other revelations that may be important for investors.
He revealed that China will not be cited
as a manipulator, but refused to be drawn into a discussion whether this was
partly in exchange for cooperation from
China on North Korea. A few hours before Trump's interview was released,
China abstained from the UN Security Council resolution condemning the chemical
attack in Syria. Since 2011, China has vetoed US-sponsored Security
Council resolutions on Syria. Russia vetoed it yesterday.
Abstaining sent an important diplomatic signal.
The US President also changed his stance regarding NATO. He
said it is not longer obsolete. However, he still harangued NATO head
Stoltenberg about compensation for the US carrying the NATO. Two
overlooked points should be noted. First, Germany's Vice Chancellor has
argued that in addition to the country's 1.2% defense budget, it spent around
0.7% on dealing with refugees in part from past military efforts, like in
Libya. Second, in a ground war, Germany and Europe will likely pay much
more than 2% of GDP. The US may pay
in advance, Europe later.
Trump also reversed his earlier opposition to the Export-Import Bank.
He also returned to an earlier position that health care reform needs to
proceed tax reform. He also had spoken
well of Yellen and kept the door open to
her reappointment. Volcker, Greenspan and Bernanke, the last three
Fed chairs, were each appointed by the President of one party and reappointed
by the President of the other party. His admission of preferring
low interest rate policy is not surprising, though he was accused Yellen during
the campaign of keeping rates low to help Clinton. Preferences do not
drive exchange or interest rates, and low rates seem
to run against the stronger growth that he is advocating.
The heightened geopolitical worries appear to be easing for the second
consecutive session. The South Korean won is up 1% to lead the
emerging market currencies higher. It is the largest gain in a
month. Korea's Kospi is also the strongest equity market in Asia, posting
a 0.9% gain. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index eked out a fractionally gain, its fourth rise in the past five
sessions.
In Europe, the French 10-year premium over German has narrowed for the
second day as well. To be sure it is elevated near 72 bp, but the momentum has faded. At the
two-year tenor, the French premium has edged higher, though it is holding a
little below the peak from a couple of
days ago. Although the French yield is slightly softer, the German
two-year yield is pushing beyond minus 85 bp for the first time in
nearly a month.
The euro's three-day advance is in jeopardy today. After
approaching $1.0680 in Asia, the euro has come back offered, but finding
support near $1.0640 in ahead of the US open. The dollar fell to its
200-day moving average against the yen (~JPY108.75). The subsequent
stabilization looks fragile, and the JPY107.90 area may be the next target,
which corresponds to a 61.8% retracement of the rally since the US
election. Sterling rose to $1.2575 before slipping back to $1.2435.
Support is seen in the
$1.2500-$1.2520. Its four-day rally coming into today is its longest
streak of the year. The Dollar Index held 100.00, which is the 50%
retracement of the rally since March 27 low near 98.85. It will likely
struggle to resurface above 100.40. That said a move back above 100.60
would help stabilize the tone.
US economic data include PPI, initial jobless claims and the University
of Michigan consumer sentiment. These are not typically market
movers. Tomorrow the US report retail sales and CPI.
Disclaimer
Greenback Stabilizes After Trump Induced Slide
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
April 13, 2017
Rating: