Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by DailyFX | Jul 21 08 21:32 GMT | | |
US Dollar: The One Correlation that Hasn't Faded (Yet) The sell-off in the Dow, the rebound in oil prices and weaker economic data drove the US dollar lower against every major currency except for the New Zealand dollar. Leading indicators dropped for the second month in a row, as stock prices plunge and unemployment rises. Even though Bank of America reported better than expected earnings today, the rally in the stock market is running out of gas. US Treasury Secretary Paulson and Fed President Plosser are scheduled to speak about the economy tomorrow and it may difficult for them to avoid acknowledging the deteriorating outlook for the US economy. Whether or not the dollar will continue to slide will be largely dependent upon the moves in equities and oil since the US economic calendar is devoid of any significantly market moving data. Meanwhile, for currency traders, the most interesting article in today's Wall Street Journal is the one about volatility in the financial markets causing trading relationships to be in flux. Why Did EUR/JPY Hit a Record High? The Euro hit a record high against the Japanese Yen in the early US trading session. The primary reason why the currency pair has rallied 11 percent over the past 3.5 months is because of US growth - not many people realize that the price action of EUR/JPY is directly correlated with how the US economy is faring. According to this EUR/JPY chart, there is a strong correlation between manufacturing ISM and EUR/JPY. The arrows on the chart point to the times when manufacturing ISM had a meaningful dip below the 50 boom / bust level. This has happened more than 7 times over the past 20 years and each time the US manufacturing sector contracted, EUR/JPY rallied. On average, from the month that ISM contracted to the month that ISM moved back above 50, EUR/JPY rallied 314 pips. Euro Edges Higher on Hawkish Comments and Dollar Weakness The Euro edged higher today on US dollar weakness and hawkish ECB comments. Draghi is the latest ECB member to warn that surging oil has increased inflation risks. Central bank officials are not giving up on their hawkish monetary policy even though growth is clearly slowing. The German IFO report is the marquee event on the Eurozone calendar this week. With Eurozone industrial production falling by the largest amount in a single month since 1992, it is hard to believe that German business confidence improved. Meanwhile Swiss economic data was slightly better than expected with producer prices beating expectations and the real estate index of family homes edging higher. The Swiss trade balance is due for release tomorrow. The market expects weaker global growth to weigh on export demand. BoE Comments Weigh on the British Pound Even though the British pound strengthened against the US dollar, the rally was modest at best compared to the performance of the other major currencies. Aside from the US dollar, the pound weakened against all of the other G10 currencies as the outlook for the UK economy deteriorates. Bank of England member Blanchflower confirmed what many Britons fear the most, which is that the UK economy is headed for a recession. Although Blanchflower is typically more dovish than his counterparts, he is right in arguing that the economy will get worse before it gets better. He calls for the central bank to cut interest rates rapidly to prevent a downturn that could be more severe than the one in the U.S. The Bank of England minutes are due for release on Wednesday. Canadian Dollar Rallies Ahead of Retail Sales The Canadian dollar has strengthened ahead of its retail sales report tomorrow. The strong rise in wholesale sales suggests that consumer spending should have been strong. The recovery in oil prices is also helping. The New Zealand dollar was the only the currency to lose value against the greenback today. The overriding fear in the markets right now is that the Reserve Bank will make dovish comments following their monetary policy meeting this week. Visitor arrivals and credit card spending was weak in June, pointing to weaker consumer spending last month. The Australian dollar on the other hand edged higher as stronger vehicle sales offset softer producer prices. Disclaimer Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. 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Tuesday, July 22, 2008
US Dollar: The One Correlation that Hasn't Faded (Yet)
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