FX5: Dollar’s Worst Month In 5 Years

 | Mar 30, 2016 07:03AM ET

Wednesday March 30: Five things the markets are talking about

Prior to Ms. Yellen’s Economic club speech in New York yesterday, the markets were experiencing low volatility, a new market norm since Central Bank guidance came back on line in early March and little to no transactional volume being executed.

Within in a matter of moments the Fed Chair happened to ‘mix it up’ by blindsiding capital markets with her cautious negativity. Many expected Yellen to stick to her “usual” dovish script, but that was not to be the case. The Fed chair has virtually closed the Fed’s door to rate normalization for the foreseeable future.

A quite boring start to a holiday-shortened week has now been turned on its head with renewed apprehension. Investors have yet to be served this week’s main course – Friday’s non-farm payroll (NFP) report.

1. Yellen to remain cautious in rate normalization

Day two of the fallout has European and Asian stocks surging, crude oil rallying as the U.S dollar heads for its worst month in more than five-years.

The market is interpreting Yellen’s remarks from yesterday as overtly dovish, suppressing the more hawkish comments of other recent Fed speakers over the past week. This is penalizing the ‘mighty’ U.S dollar as investors unwind the currency’s rate differential premium, while flattening the U.S yield curve.

While concluding that cautiousness in policy adjustment is the most appropriate course of action by reiterating that the FOMC is not on a preset course for normalizing policy is naturally supporting the global stock rally. But, not all sectors profit – investors should expect the banking sector to lag behind, while other rate-sensitive groups like utilities, homebuilders, and emerging markets to benefit.