Great USD Expectations

 | Sep 15, 2015 08:55AM ET

There’s an old saying, "If you have no expectations, you'll never be disappointed.” Some might even suggest it's universal wisdom – a tenet that neither leads one astray nor fools with randomness. And while the long reflection of the more than six year bull run in equities benevolently nurtured a Zen approach towards risk (i.e. don't think, just buy), the past year has introduced a challenge to that dogma, as the Fed stepped away from quantitative easing and looked to further normalize monetary policy through posture, now perhaps practice. The end result, has lengthened the expectation phase for this policy cycle, commensurate with the extraordinary span of ZIRP. As such, the ambiguity – either intended or not, has muddled the macro waters for participants to gauge conditions of where they are actually swimming.

When it comes to the US dollar, this prolonged and fuzzy chapter in the face of easing across much of the developed and emergent world, cleared the airspace for the buck and real yields to take flight in; which has already tightened financial conditions – in our opinion, with even greater capacity than what the Fed could/will engender with marginally raising the fed funds rate off ZIRP over the next year.


Here's Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) in August characterizing an impact of a stronger dollar:

The role of the USD in financial conditions is also significant. We find that a 1-month 1% increase in the nominal trade-weighted exchange value of the USD versus major currencies would add roughly 0.14 points to the Chicago Fed's adjusted financial conditions index, indicative of substantially tighter financial conditions. To put it in perspective, a 10bp widening of the 2-year/3-month Treasury yield spread would have an equivalent impact on financial conditions.