Dollar Soars as FOMC Minutes Trigger Liquidation 4 comments
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Despite false rallies in the currency market, I have stressed that there is no reason for the liquidation to be over. I warned that the currency and stock market rallies were a mirage rather than a bottom and now, the pessimistic tone of the FOMC minutes has forced another wave of liquidation.
Tuesday’s rebound in risk appetite was short-lived as the FOMC minutes revealed that the contraction in the US economy could last well into the summer of 2009.
In light of the 400 point drop in the Dow, the US dollar and Japanese Yen regained strength as repatriation and risk aversion continues to drive demand for the low yielders. The greenback’s recent strength can be most clearly seen in USD/CHF, which hit a fresh 14 month high today.
As we predicted, the FOMC minutes was the trigger for a major move in the currency market. However the moves that we have seen today need to be sustained before we can see a more meaningful breakout of the recent consolidation that we have seen across the currency market.
Something more powerful such as a decision on bailing out the automakers, next week’s GDP report or another surprising abysmal loss in the corporate or financial sector may be needed before we see new trends develop.
FOMC Minutes Confirms that More Rate Cuts Needed
The tone in the FOMC minutes, like the tone of Bernanke’s testimony Tuesday was unmistakably dovish. The members of the monetary policy committee lowered their growth and inflation forecasts, talked about the downside risks to growth and how the contraction in the US economy will not temper until the middle 2009, at the earliest. Some members of the committee even openly discussed the need for further rate cuts, which confirms that rates will be lowered again in December. The Fed feels frustrated that interest rates are closing in on zero and acknowledged that it leaves them with little room to maneuver. Fed fund futures are pricing in a 50bp rate cut with a minor chance of a 75bp cut to 0.25 percent. If the Fed cuts interest rates by 50bp and the US economy fails to recover, their credibility will go out the window as the market questions their ability to tap other tools to stimulate the economy.
Automakers, Philly Fed and Leading Indicators
The Big 3 Automakers (General Motors (GM), Ford (F) and Chrysler (DCX)) were on Capitol Hill today pleading for a bailout. Although a bailout of the automobile industry is inevitable in our opinion, it remains to be seen whether lawmakers will act quickly. The longer this drags out, the more pain it will cause for US equities.
As we hold our breath for a decision, the Philadelphia Fed survey of manufacturing conditions and leading indicators are due for release Thursday. The Empire State manufacturing survey held steady, which suggests the same for the Philadelphia Fed index. However we still believe that the manufacturing sector is suffering significantly from the global slowdown which means that the odds are skewed towards weaker numbers. There is no question that leading indicators will be weak with stocks, supplier deliveries and jobless claims all printing poorly in the month of October.
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This article has 4 comments:
Well, except for the rate cut. I wanna say 25bps, I just feel the Fed needs to maintain some maneuvering room into 2009 while the 1% rate affects are still maturing.
And, yes, it might be misguided, but a big 3 bail out is very likely, in my estimation...and yours. Count on it, possibly in January.
If you get the chance, I'd like to hear your estimations on the dollar after we begin to see clear signs of a recovery. I've argued the Fed will react aggressively to curb inflation (some say hyperinflation.)
Furthermore, I would be very surprised if there wasn't a major Fed push to regain control of the money supply. I believe this will mean a tighter supply, one they can actually influence without burning out the presses. Congress has a constitutional dog in this fight, too.
So, I remain cautiously bullish post recovery. I'd really like to hear your take.
The world wants dollars? China is going to give it what it wants. Good luck on sucking dollars back into the system.
Meanwhile, shoes are about to drop on about 6,000 non public banks and 8,000 non public insurance companies who have the same problems but no access to Tarp.
Do you have a warranty on anything? That is an insurance item.
What currency do they want to diversify into? The euro? The pound? The swissy? The Aussie? The ruble? The yen might be a good choice, as is the dollar.
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