After falling against all
the major currencies in June, the US dollar rebounded in July. The Dollar Index finished the month at new
two-year highs with the Fed’s suggestion it was engaged in a mid-course
correction rather than a sustained easing cycle. The dollar also appeared buoyed by the extent
of the dovishness by the ECB and the heightened risks that the UK leaves the EU
at the end of October without an agreement.
Short-term interest rate differentials that had been seeing a reduced US
premium since last November stabilized in July.
The resumption of US-Chinese trade talks also spurred optimism in some
quarters even though the multifaceted competition continued on several
fronts.
Keynes famously compared
the markets to a beauty contest, with the goal of picking, not who one thinks
is the most beautiful but picking who everyone else thinks is the more
beautiful. However, now with many of the
major central banks poised to ease policy and a US administration intent on
trying to verbally intervene to force a lower dollar and bully the Federal Reserve
into easing policy, the foreign exchange market may be more accurately
conceived of as an ugly contest.
The US happens to be the
least ugly, though it has considerably more to ease policy than other major
central banks. While the dollar
finished July well bid and the momentum can carry it higher, we continue to
believe that the third significant dollar rally since the end of Bretton Woods
is over or nearly so as the convergence of monetary policies replaces divergence,
the US policy mix is less supportive, and the US dollar is over-valued by
various valuation models.
President Trump has
threatened to take unspecific action to offset the dollar’s strength, but we
think any review of his options will conclude that the risks associated with
unilateral intervention are too high for the benefits that could be elusive if
not counter-productive. We are struck
that the US verbal intervention has been all but seemingly ignored by
international policymakers and market participants. The bigger risk, we think, to the dollar’s
role in the world economy than intervention, is the continued use of access to
the dollar market as a weapon. This
gives a sense of urgency to develop alternatives.
ECB President Draghi said
at the late July meeting, roughly the on the seventh anniversary of his pledge
to “do whatever it takes” to ensure the future of monetary union, that the
economic outlook was getting “worse and worse.”
But delivering on the policy response to this situation will wait until
September 12, when the economic forecasts will be updated as well. France’s determination to go forward with its
“digital tax” and a series of diverging of interests (e.g., Nord Stream II
pipeline, defense spending, trade imbalance, Iran, China and Huawei, and
exchange rates). Tensions within the
Northern Atlantic alliance are set to increase as China and Russia stage what
appears to be a joint exercise that crossed into South Korean airspace
recently.
Boris Johnson won the
Tory leadership contest to replace May to become the UK’s Prime Minister with less than 100 days before the October 31 deadline.
Johnson demands that the backstop, which protects the Good Friday
Agreement that ended the violence at the border be scrapped altogether. The EC
and Ireland cannot make that concession.
Johnson does not appear to have a majority of Parliament willing to
support a no-deal exit, and it will seek to frustrate such a course, making an
election still a likely scenario.
China’s economy is
slowing independently of the trade tensions with the US. At the same time, the financial system is
being stressed as the large banks appear to be growing more reluctant to lend
to smaller banks, which in turn of often buyers of wealth management
products. A cut in required reserves
appears a likely measure in the coming weeks.
The yuan has been remarkably stable in recent weeks, with the dollar
mostly confined to a CNY6.85-CNY6.90 range.
Dollar: The Dollar Index rose 2.5% in July, the biggest
monthly increase in nearly three years
The advance accelerated late in the month and Fed chief Powell’s
characterization of the first cut in over a decade as a mid-course adjustment spurred
gains through levels the previously capped it.
The market has consistently been more dovish than the Federal Reserve. Still, the mid-course adjustment language
harkens back to the 1990s, where Greenspan engineered two such adjustments and
each was for three 25 bp moves. Although
we are more sympathetic with the dissenting Fed Presidents (George and
Rosengren, who wanted to stand pat) and the seven regional Federal Reserve regional
banks that did not request the usual discount rate cut in the face of a reduction in
the fed funds target rate, we expect another cut in Q4 and one more in Q1 20. The dollar’s appreciation in the face of the
cut and the two-month early end to the balance sheet roll-off is likely to frustrate
the White House, which seems to see the strength as a significant
headwind. The Dollar Index finished July near 98.50. The next important target is near 100.00. The cyclical high was recorded in January
2017 near 103.80.
Euro: The
ECB has left little doubt that it will ease policy in September. A 10 bp reduction in the deposit rate (to minus
50 bp) is expected to be coupled with a resumption of asset purchases, and
easier terms of the targeted long-term refinance operation (TLTRO) that will be
launched in October. Lagarde, Draghi’s
successor, is seen continuing the current path.
Tensions with the US are rising, and this coupled with heightened
antagonism with the UK over Brexit, and the slowdown in China are significant
sources of uncertainty. Within the EMU,
Italian politics appears to have replaced bad loans as a source of risk, while
Spain continues to struggle to form a government.
(previous in parenthesis, end of July indicative levels)
Spot: $1.1076
($1.1373) Median Bloomberg Forecast $1.1228 ($1.1348)
One-month forward $1.1106 ($1.1402) One-month
implied vol 4.9% (5.6%)
Yen: The dollar consolidated
the decline that took it from JPY112.40 in April to JPY106.80 in late
June. It spent July between JPY107.20
and JPY109.00. Although the dollar
strengthened against all the major currencies in July, the yen (~-0.8%) fared
better than all except the Canadian dollar.
The government and the BOJ revised down growth forecasts for this, and
the BOJ has all but given up achieving its two percent core (excludes fresh
food) until after FY21, which ends March 2022.
Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund reportedly will raise the
hedge ratios of their US and European bonds.
Currently, the roughly $1.5 trillion fund is believed to have hedged
only 5% of such exposure. With the sales
tax set to increase to 10% (from 8%) in October, both the BOJ and the Ministry
of Finance could provide additional support to the economy. In the meantime, the rate cuts in the US,
Europe, and several emerging market economies, also lend support to the yen
Spot: JPY108.78
(JPY107.85) Median Bloomberg Forecast JPY108.06 (JPY107.90)
One-month forward JPY108.49 (JPY107.59) One-month
implied vol 5.1% (6.6%)
Sterling: The prospects of a no-deal Brexit has
undermined sterling, but practically since the deadline was extended from March
to the end of October, it has underperformed. The losses accelerated as Johnson
replaced May threatens to leave without an agreement. Over the past month, PredictIt.Org
positioning has seen the odds that the UK does leave by at the end of October
have risen from about one-in-three to about one-in-two. He demands that the backstop, which is to
ensure no hard border separates Northern Ireland from the Republic of Ireland,
be scrapped, even though it a practical consequence of the Good Friday
Agreement. Since the middle of April,
sterling has only risen four weeks against the dollar, while it has fallen for
a record 13 consecutive weeks against
the euro. The brinkmanship game has
nearly quite some time to run, and that means the downside potential has not
been exhausted. The uncertainty has
forced the Bank of England to give up its tightening bias and return to
neutrality. A disruptive Brexit could
see a rate cut and a resumption of asset purchases.
Spot: $1.2159
($1.2696) Median Bloomberg Forecast $1.2402 ($1.2697)
One-month forward $1.2180 ($1.2717) One-month
implied vol 7.0% (5.9%)
Canadian Dollar: The US dollar gained about 0.5% against the
Canadian dollar in July after depreciating a little more than 3% in June. However, the greenback first fell to new lows
for the year (a little above CAD1.30 before consolidating in the second half of
the month. The Bank of Canada is one of
the few major central banks that is not considering easier policy. This leaves the Canadian dollar vulnerable to
disappointing economic news. Of the three drivers we often cite (two-year rate
differential with the US, the oil price, and the S&P 500 as a proxy for
risk), the rate differentials seem to be dominant. Over the course of July, Prime Minister
Trudeau has moved back ahead of his Conservative challenger Scheer, according
to the positioning at PredictIt.Org.
Spot: CAD1.3191
(CAD1.3095) Median Bloomberg Forecast CAD1.3140 (CAD1.3199)
One-month
forward CAD1.3180 (CAD1.3085) One-month implied
vol 4.8% (5.6%)
Australian
Dollar: The Australian dollar closed June well, near $0.7025, and
tried extending the gains in early July.
This fizzled near $0.7050 and the Aussie retreating to almost $0.6900. It got another running start and extended its
gains to around $0.7080. This was all in
the first part of July. It spent the
second half of the month trending lower, reaching almost $0.6830 at the end of
the end. As
the Australian dollar has declined the Australian discount to the US has
widened more than 20 bp to over 100 bp.
Except for a brief period in 1997, Australia always offered a premium
over the US, until late 2017/early 2018.
The Reserve Bank of Australia cut rates in June and July, and
expectations for the next move had been pulled forward but after the “hawkish”
cut by the Fed, it was pushed back to October.
Spot: $0.6845
($0.7020) Median Bloomberg Forecast $0.6931 ($0.6979) One-month
forward $0.6855 ($0.7028) One-month implied vol 6.5% (6.9%)
Mexican
Peso: The US dollar spent most of July consolidating in the range set on July
9 when Mexico’s finance minister and ally of AMLO resigned in protest. That range is roughly MXN18.88-MXN19.35. Investors are wary after the airport
construction was scuttled and AMLO is discouraging private investment in the
energy sector. On the other hand, a broadly stable peso continues to reward foreign
debt holders and some carry-trade strategies.
Mexico’s economy contracted in Q1 and barely
escaped a contraction in Q2. The year-over-year
rate fell to -0.7%, the weakest since 2009, but
the central bank is reluctant to cut rates.
Inflation is just back into its 2-4% target range, and risks continue to
emanate from the PEMEX. Few, if anyone,
expect Banxico to cut rates at the August 15 meeting. However, the market is perceiving a greater
chance (~30%) of a cut at the September 26 meeting (vs. less than 20% at the
end of June).
Spot: MXN19.15
(MXN19.22) Median Bloomberg Forecast MXN19.26 (MXN19.28) One-month forward MXN19.25 (MXN19.32) One-month implied vol 8.9% (9.4%)
Chinese
Yuan: The Chinese yuan appeared to
flatline in July. It was almost as if
Chinese officials had re-pegged it, which they didn’t. The dollar traded the entire month between
roughly CNY6.8355 and CNY6.8960. The
actual volatility in July was 2.35%. In
June it was half again as high (~4.5%) and the historic volatility in April was
nearly 4.6%. If this was of official
doing, it might show up as a decline in reserves, though given the dollar’s
broad gains, valuation shifts will also likely play a significant role. Consider that if a modest $500 bln of China’s
$3.12 trillion of reserves were in German Bunds, which were nearly flat on the
month, the euro’s depreciation would be reflected in a $10 bln (unrealized)
loss. The Chinese economy has slowed
independent of the trade conflict with the US, and this coupled with greater
caution on the part of the large banks to lend to smaller banks, makes a policy
response, such a reduction in reserve requirements and/or an interest rate cut
more likely.
Spot: CNY6.8850
(CNY6.87) Median Bloomberg Forecast
CNY6.8915 (CNY6.88)
One-month
forward CNY6.9050 (CNY6.86) One-month implied vol 3.1% (4.9%)
Disclaimer
August Monthly
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
August 01, 2019
Rating: