The Dollar Should Double-Dip Against The Yen
-
Font Size:
For the first time in over a decade, one US dollar bought less than 100 Japanese Yen. USD/JPY dropped to a low of 99.77 in the early European trading session as news of Carlyle Group’s potential failure broke. The hedge fund has had trouble meeting its margin calls last week and now, it faces outright liquidation. This sent shock waves across the markets, triggering a sharp drop in stocks, bond yields and the US dollar. The biggest fear right now is the possibility that the Federal Reserve is losing control. Each new step that they take has been nothing more than a band-aid for a growing problem.
If Carlyle Group defaulted, lenders will want to recover their funds immediately, forcing a liquidation of any open positions in the market. This would lead to another wave of volatility in the bond, stock and currency markets.
At this point, the Federal Reserve has no choice but to cut interest rates by 75bp. Fed fund futures are back to pricing in a 94 percent chance of a 75bp rate cut, up from a 64 percent on Thursday.
However, if they really want to do the right thing and put an end to the pessimism and risk aversion across the financial markets, they need to give the markets a surprise by cutting interest rates 100bp in one shot. Retail sales last month was very weak. The rise in food and gasoline prices have been too much for most consumers to handle and as a result, they have cut spending to the point where the decrease in demand has offset higher prices, making overall gasoline sales negative in the month of February. Interestingly enough, the US dollar did not fall on the retail sales report.
There were a bunch of rumors floating in the markets about why the US dollar and stock market recovered intraday, but I do not believe that any of these reasons are compelling enough to prevent a double dip in the US dollar. The Associated Press reported that the Senate has extended some of President Bush’s tax cuts, but this is limited. Standard and Poors indicated that the worst may be over for large write downs, but their main focus was on the severity of the subprime problems while rumors circulated about a number of different parties including the Fed, providing capital to Washington Mutual, the struggling mortgage lender.
The US government is getting desperate too. The House Financial Services Committee announced a Mortgage and Housing Rescue plan that would “permit FHA to provide up to $300 billion in new guarantees to help refinance at-risk borrowers into viable mortgages.”
There are many reasons to remain bearish US dollars.
Even though tomorrow’s consumer price report could be hot, that will not prevent the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates by at least another 150 to 200bp. Therefore even if the dollar is rebounding off its lows today, we expect it to double dip back below 100 against the Japanese Yen.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- A Long Housing Boom Won't Yield to a Brief Recovery
- Why Congress Blames Index Speculators
- What Are the Prospects for Stagflation?
- State Street Launches 10 Ex-U.S. Sector ETFs
- Eisai Victorious Over Teva and Dr. Reddy’s in Aciphex Compound Patent Case
- Financials Future Still Uncertain
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- As WaMu, Wachovia Ready Earnings, Comparisons to Wells, USB Are Telling »
- Apple F3Q08 (Qtr End 6/28/08) Earnings Call Transcript »
- Three Stocks To Be Held To Infinity and Beyond »
- Crazy Dividends »
- Apple Investors Nervous as Earnings Call Approaches »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Historic Financial Collapse Underway? »
- Mother of All Short Squeezes? »
- China Poised to Pounce on U.S. Coal Suppliers »
- Is Natural Gas Down for the Count? »
- Barron's Goes Bullish on Banks, Again »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Dollar Back? - Fast Money Recap (7/23/08)
- Terex: Overlooked Bargain
- EBay is a Not Com – Cramer’s Lightning Round (7/23/08)
- Buy Costco, Get Sirius -- Cramer’s Stop Trading! (7/23/08)
- Intuitive Surgical's Q2: A Lesson in Errors of Perception
- Chevron: Good Choice for Conservative Growth Investor
- Pfizer Beats: Recommended at or Below $18
- Illumini, Intuitive: This Healthcare Outperformance Brought to You by the Letter 'I'
- Cynosure: Growth Expected as Sales Go Global
- More Bad News for the Anti-Ethanol Crowd
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Get True Religion - Cramer's Lightning Round (7/22/08)
- Principal Financial Group Vulnerable to Commercial Real Estate Softening?
- Increases in Shorting, Only for Some
- Is a Ban on Short Financial ETFs on the Horizon?
- Is There a More Efficient Shorting Tactic?
- Short Oil as a Long Investment
- Ford's Financial Services Business About to Enter the Red
- Educational and Training Services Are An Excellent Short Opportunity
- Short Selling: Others Want Protection Too
- The SEC's Campaign Against Naked Shorting: Misguided or Right On?
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- EBay is a Not Com – Cramer’s Lightning Round (7/23/08)
- Buy Costco, Get Sirius -- Cramer’s Stop Trading! (7/23/08)
- Soup Target; Cramer's Mad Money (7/22/08)
- Get True Religion - Cramer's Lightning Round (7/22/08)
- Copper Down Low - Cramer's Stop Trading! (7/22/08)
- Banks Hit Bottom – Cramer’s Mad Money (7/21/08)
- Ends In X - Cramer's Stop Trading! (7/21/08)
- Great American Companies – Cramer’s Lightning Round (7/21/08)
- Market Rotation Bolsters Financials - Fast Money Recap (7/18/08)
- For Everything, Wind - Stop Trading! (7/17/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Most Popular Feeds
-
ETFs
-
US Market
-
Long Ideas
-
Alt. Energy
- Full list of feeds »
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers:
- Search jobs by category
- Get job alerts by email or live feed
- Apply online
Employers
- See all recruitment options
- Get applications online or by email




This article has 4 comments:
Tiedeman
I have to disagree with you. This is not a liquidity driven crisis. This crisis is all about solvency, precipitated by a housing and credit bubble that fueled excess consumption for 4 years. You could lower the funds rate down to 0% and it still won't do anything to prevent housing prices from declining unless the Fed wants to open the discount window directly to home buyers. (Even that won't help since we have a huge overhang in new homes inventory that is substantially in excess of the true need). Notice that mortgage rates (30 year fixed) are higher today than they were when the Fed started cutting. Not to mention the stricter underwriting standards. I'm afraid that it's too late to worry about the size of the hangover when the vodka bottle is empty.