The recent themes in the
foreign exchange market continued last week. On the one hand, the dollar-bloc
currencies and Norwegian krona trended higher, while the euro, and especially
the yen, traded heavier. On the other hand, although some critics argued that the Fed's 25
bp rate hike earlier this month was too timid, the Fed is signaling it could
accelerate the pace. The interest rate adjustment continued in dramatic fashion.
The Fed funds futures imply
almost a 77% chance of a 50 bp move at the next meeting (May 4). The general resilience of the US
economy, the tight labor market (with weekly initial jobless claims falling to
new lows since the late 1960s) and upticks in the flash PMI may embolden the
Federal Reserve. The two-year note yield has risen by 50 bp since Russia invaded Ukraine, and it is not done. The consensus that
appears to be developing at the Fed favors a march toward neutrality, seen in 2.25%-2.50% by the vast majority of Fed officials. The two-year
note yield is near 2.2%, up from a little less than 0.75% at the end of last
year. More than half of the Fed officials and economists think the
target rate will have to rise above neutral to counter the inflationary
pressures.
A few trends in
the foreign exchange market are worth noting. First the yen's weakness. The dollar has risen in 13 of the past 15 sessions against the yen. The rise in US yields and the lack of official resistance appear
to have spurred and sustained the move. BOJ's Kuroda was still finding good things to say about the yen's slide ahead of the weekend. Second, the dollar bloc is on fire. The Canadian dollar has strengthened for nine
consecutive sessions and 13 of the past 14. Rising commodity prices, the reduction of the US premium at the short-end, and the policy mix, following the
Liberal-NDP pace, lend support to the Canadian dollar. The S&P 500
has advanced in seven of the past nine sessions, and this proxy for risk
appetites underpinned the Loonie. The Australian dollar has rallied in 10
of the past 13 sessions. Its 3.5% appreciation this month leads the
majors. The New Zealand dollar's advance may not be as impressive, but
its 2.8% gain against the greenback puts it in second place this
month.
Third, Latam currencies
continue to shine among the emerging market currencies. High yields, commodity exposure, and
the ebbing public health crisis appear to be the main drivers. Contrary
to conventional wisdom that seems to believe "everyone" wants weaker
exchange rates, currency appreciation is desired throughout the region with price pressures and tighter monetary policy.
Let's drill down.
Dollar Index: Ahead of the weekend, the Dollar Index
successfully tested the 20-day moving average. (~98.40). It has not
closed by this moving average since February 22. Still, the high for the
move was recorded on March 7 (~99.42), and despite the widening market moving to
fully discount 200 bp more of Fed tightening this year, the upside momentum has
stalled. The near-term barrier is the downtrend line of this month's
highs at the start of the new week, around 99.00. The
consolidation pattern is seen to signal the continuation of the trend, which is
higher. The MACD and Slow Stochastic have drifted lower but are in the middle
of the range. The Slow Stochastic may be trying to turn higher. The
Dollar Index peaked in March 2020 near 103.00. However, a break of the
97.70 area would weaken the technical tone.
Euro: The euro spent the past four
sessions in a $1.0960-$1.1040 range. The MACD and Slow Stochastic are trending
higher, but the latter has flattened out and could turn lower in the coming
days. The flash March PMI showed economic activity more resilient
than economists expected. Still, sentiment surveys have weakened
materially. The US-German two-year interest rate spread has widened sharply in
the US favor (from about 137 bp at the end of last year to above 240 bp at the
end of last week. However, it is not just the US side of the equation
that is moving. Since the end of last month, Germany's 2-year yield has
risen from almost -80 bp on March 7 to around -15 ahead of the weekend, a new
seven-year high. If there was a genuine ceasefire, the euro would likely
to recover. The swaps markets anticipate about 45 bp of tightening before
the end of this year.
Japanese Yen: The three-week dollar rally against
the yen has stretched momentum indicators and frayed the upper Bollinger Band,
which begins next week near JPY122.60. Correlations of the change in the
exchange rate and change in US yields are stronger with 10-year rates than the
two-year. In the past, US industry (and officials) has often protested
against yen weakness, but this time, radio silence. The OECD's measure of
Purchasing Power Parity put fair value near JPY96, which makes the yen more
than 26% under-valued, second only to the euro's 32% undershoot. With BOJ
Governor Kuroda still embracing the benefits of the weak yen, and US rates
still trending higher, there is little compelling reason to pick a top in the
dollar. The JPY123.75 area may offer resistance, but the next important target
is the JPY125.00-JPY125.85 area, where it peaked in 2015. Then Kuroda
suggested he did not want to see a move above JPY125.00.
British Pound: Sterling is frustrating. On March 18, it tested a neckline (~$1.32) of a bottoming pattern projected toward
$1.34. However, after reaching nearly $1.33 in the middle of the last
week, it slipped back to almost $1.3150. The market seemed to judge the
Spring budget as milquetoast, and the unexpected drop in February retail sales
reported before the weekend was disappointing. That said, the momentum
indicators are pointing higher, and the five-day moving average crossed above
the 20-day moving average for the first time since late February. The
$1.3150 area corresponds to the (50%) retracement of sterling's bounce from the
test on $1.3000 on March 14 to the recent high by $1.3300. The next
retracement (61.8%) is near $1.3115. The market-perceived odds of a 50 bp
hike at the next meeting in May rose to almost 40% by the end of last week from
about 26% the prior week.
Canadian Dollar: The Bank of Canada meets next on April
13. The swaps market now prices roughly an 85% chance of a 50 bp move, up
from a 55% chance the previous week. Stronger than expected January retail
sales (3.2% instead of 2.4% as the median forecast in Bloomberg's survey had
it) may have played a role. Still, the Liberal-NDP tie-up means more fiscal
support was also important. The central bank has suggested that the
economy will be operating near full capacity around midyear. The nine-day slide
in the greenback saw it fall through the six-month trendline drawn off lows
from last October, January, and earlier in March (~CAD1.2565) to test CAD1.25
before the weekend. As one would expect after such a sustained move, the
momentum indicators are stretched, and the Slow Stochastic could turn higher. The lower Bollinger Band begins the new week near CAD1.2475. This year's low,
set in January, was around CAD1.2450.
Australian Dollar: The Australian dollar fell by about
5.6% last year, and here in Q1, it has rallied 4% to lead the major
currencies. The Aussie's strength has materialized even as the two-year
rate differential moved sharply against it. Its discount to the US more than
doubled here in March to almost 70 bp. The futures market has
pulled the first hike into June from July. The Aussie set a new
five-month high ahead of the weekend near $0.7535, which meets the (61.8%)
retracement objective of the slide since the $0.8000 was tested last May. The high from last October was closer to $0.7555, where the upper Bollinger Band
is found. The momentum indicators are stretched. Initial support is
seen around $0.7450.
Mexican Peso: AMLO's policies have not been to
the liking of investors. Fiscal policy has not been engaged though
around 45% of the population lives below poverty. Still, the peso has
appreciated for the past 11 sessions and is at its best level in six
months. It is the longest streak in half a century. The greenback
took out the MXN20.00 level before the weekend and after the central bank delivered
the third consecutive 50 bp hike. The next important technical area
is MXN19.50-MXN19.60. By revising higher its inflation forecast,
Banxico seemed to signal it intends to hike again. The swaps market has
about 120 bp of tightening discounted over the next six months. The move
has stretched the momentum indicators, and the lower Bollinger Band is found
near MXN19.9060. The MXN20.00-MXN20.05 area that had been support may now
serve as resistance. The Brazilian real surge continued. It rose by around 5.6% last week to bring this month's advance to a stunning 8.3%. The central bank signaled its intention to hike by another 100 bp in May when it meets again to finish the aggressive cycle. The market seems less convinced and has another 50 bp hike.
Chinese Yuan: The dollar rose against the yuan for the fourth consecutive week, its longest streak since last July. Over the four weeks, the greenback has risen slightly less than 0.8%. Even though the PBOC's daily dollar fix is not always stronger than the market projections, it still seems clear that Beijing would prefer a somewhat weaker yuan given the divergence of monetary policy and the recognized need for more stimulus. China's 10-year premium over the US continues to shrink. It halved last week to about 32 bp. It has been a dozen years since the US offered a premium over China, but that is where it appears to be headed. Next week's PMI readings will likely reflect an economy that is struggling. Higher commodity prices, the Covid-related lockdowns, and the loss of the property market as an engine are taking a toll. The dollar's high this month was set on March 15 next CNY6.3860. It is also the year's high. The next important chart point is CNY6.40. Dollar support is seen in the CNY6.3500-CNY6.3550 area.
Disclaimer