Dollar Recovery Begins

 | Feb 27, 2015 07:05AM ET

After several weak days following Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s testimony to Congress, the dollar turned around yesterday and gained against all the other G10 currencies and most of the EM currencies that we track. It started strengthening after St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said the Fed should remove “patient” from its statement in March. The dollar gained even more after the core US CPI rate for January came out higher than expected at the same pace as in December (+0.2% mom, +1.6% yoy) suggesting that indeed low energy prices are the main reason behind the slowdown in inflation, as Yellen argued in her testimony. Moreover, the slight deflation in the headline CPI boosted real average earnings, which rose a solid 1.2% mom, which bolsters the Fed’s case that the labor market is improving. Fed funds rate expectations rose 5 bps in the long end and U.S. 10-Year yields rose about 10 bps from the lows to once again top 2.0%.

The euro moved lower and many euro bears, who had pared risk and were waiting for the signal to jump back in, decided that the time was right to re-establish their short euro positions. Market participants have probably noticed that the recent pattern is that when the euro falls sharply, it does not recover to its previous level, so they probably figure it’s best to get in at the top of the move rather than waiting for the bounce.

Eurozone economic news yesterday was favourable, with the number of unemployed persons in Germany falling more than expected, consistent with the rise in consumer confidence also reported. Also bank lending, which bottomed out in August, continued to grow modestly. But EUR/USD has not been that responsive to European economic news recently, particularly news about growth, probably because there’s no indication that faster growth will translate into higher inflation and thereby influence ECB policy.

Meanwhile, the fact that Bund yields are now negative out to seven years is probably discouraging investment in European bonds. Portuguese yields are below Treasuries out to 10 years! It’s likely that there is some measure of capital flight from Europe as real money bond investors are probably not comfortable at such levels. Equities are another matter, with the Eurostoxx 50 up 13.6% so far this year in local currency terms (5.3% in USD terms) and the S&P 500 up only 2.5%. However I would expect that most of these flows would be currency hedged, for obvious reasons.

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Greece confirms reports of capital flight The monthly data on bank deposits from Greece confirms the rumors of capital flight during the recent debt negotiations. Private sector bank deposits fell EUR 12.3bn or 7.7% during the month, a record either way you look at it. This demonstrates why a “Grexit” would be so difficult for the Eurozone as a whole. If Greece did leave, we’d probably see a similar response by savers in other troubled countries, which could spell disaster for the European banking system.