USDollar: Get Ready For Its Impact Across Markets

Posted by Drew Zimmerman

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The USD was the talk of the town this week, if you were in Davos that is. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin gave a “weak dollar” statement that the market jumped on, pushing the USD index down to lows we haven’t seen since the end of 2014. Trump has since tried to “walk back” the statement saying they USD is based on the strength of the economy and will therefore get much, much stronger. Trumps headline was enough to push the USD a full point higher before it faded again on Friday.

So what did we learn from the USD action this week? 1) Get ready for a little more volatility this year. I think that means in the amount of “chop” and the willingness for trends to persist. 2) Momentum is like a train, it is a lot easier to jump on than stand in front of. Even with the President out to talk up the USD, it is finishing the weak on a soft note. The USD is now down for its 5th quarter in a row, 3rd month in a row and 6th week in a row. It has been very weak. Given that so many markets are priced in, or looked at relative to the USD we have seen this impact across markets.

The key date on this USD move is the middle of December in which I can look across markets and see that they started to diverge from what I call their typical “drivers” or what moves that particular market. And from that date the one common theme is that many markets have had the majority of their moves from that date because of excessive weakness in the USD. I had originally attributed this divergence to light holiday, however when it became more exacerbated through the start of this year I had to spend more time looking around for a better reason.  David Rosenberg argued that the Fed meeting mid-December was when Yellen gave the “green light” to markets in her final Fed Chair press conference. Since we have had a weak USD (no Fed tightness??), strong commodities and a very strong stock market (up over 8% from mid Dec!). So while this wasn’t as implicit as the Bernanke Put, the market seems to have gotten the message.

So with the momentum surging across markets, do we have a catalyst for a turn? We have a Fed meeting this week on the 30-31st, but as it is Yellen’s last meeting and only a FOMC statement, not much is expected. However, as this is the end of the Yellen era, will we start to see a different tone out of the Fed? What if we start to see Jay Powell offer a different view from what Yellen has been saying?? Especially with speed of the recent market moves.

The trader in me thinks that this USD move is overdone and therefore many other markets that are “far off” their regular drivers are also mispriced. But this is in piano catching territory, so it makes sense to be patient!

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CAD: while much higher than I think it should be, it is has also lagged behind many other currencies during this USD weakness. While NAFTA could be a key component of this, even the Mexican peso has outperformed CAD over the last several weeks. My view is that the Bank of Canada will be hold longer than the market is currently pricing in, especially after watching recent Poloz comments about the incremental interest rate hikes becoming more burdensome for indebted Canadians. The perception of this longer pause in rate hikes is also showing up in the interest rate spreads against the US. Oil prices have jumped higher with a weak USD, but the rise to $66 WTI has been “numbed” for CAD due to an over $28 discount for Western Canada Select, Canada’s oil benchmark. So given that I think the USD is oversold, I wanted to take a position in the weakest currency in the pack, it tends to be slightly less risky to go after the laggard rather than expecting a big move from the currency that is the strongest. I have initiated a small position short CAD this week after Mnuchin’s comments.

Interest Rates: While the USD has grabbed the headlines, US interest rates have continued to move higher with the US 10yr closing the week at 2.65% up over 30bps from the mid-December level. In my view the US 10yr is all about the run to 3%, will it get there?? Will it move through it? I think it will be this move in interest rates that finally pressures stock market prices, whether the rate rise is from the Fed or market driven. I’m continuing to hold my short position in 10yr treasuries. 

Gold: Given the recent rise in interest rates and muted inflation picture, the rise in real rates is telling me that Gold should be trading much lower than it is right now. However, the excessive weakness of the USD has driven the momentum higher in the gold. But I think gold is set up for a scenario is which it is very vulnerable to any USD strength. There are some trade tensions mounting, however the current geopolitical picture does not justify the current excessive bid in gold.

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