Daily Commentary: Gold Finds Support At 1155

 | Mar 11, 2015 07:02AM ET

Dollar continues soaring, euro continues collapsing Nothing new here – the dollar just keeps on soaring and the euro just keeps on collapsing. EUR/USD and the DXY index are back at levels last seen in 2003. The dollar’s strength is particularly remarkable given that the action in the US rates markets hasn’t been USD-supportive. Fed funds futures rate expectations have lost about half the gains made on payroll Friday, while the 10-Year Treasury is back almost to where it was before the payroll data came out. So the effects of the higher payroll figure have faded in the rates market, but not in FX. Nor in US stocks either, which are down 2.7% from where they were at the close last Thursday and have lost all the gains made this year.

ECB policy, currency hedging may be behind the dollar’s rally. The immediate cause of the dollar rally, in my view, is the ECB’s decision to institute quantitative easing (QE). That’s the only thing that can explain the timing of the incredibly rapid decline in EUR/USD. From May 2008 when it hit 1.50 to 1.20 in June 2010 and back to 1.39 in March 2014, the entire range was 30 cents. (In fact, with the exception of a six-month period in 2008, the 1.20-1.50 range largely held for the 10 years from 2004 to 2014.) From March 2014 to now, the range has been 32 cents. So in one year we’ve had a bigger range than in the previous six years. Almost half of that move has been just this year as EUR/USD has fallen 14 cents. Nor has the decline been just against USD; the euro’s real effective exchange rate (REER), as calculated by the Bank for International Settlements, is also back to its 2002 level.