Dollar Generally Higher Despite Lower U.S. Rates

 | Mar 30, 2015 04:25AM ET

The dollar was opening higher in Europe against almost all the G10 currencies and the EM currencies that we track even though Fed funds rate expectations ended the day lower Friday and bond yields declined somewhat. Fed Chair Janet Yellen Friday said “conditions may warrant an increase in the federal funds rate target sometime this year” but that rates would rise “only gradually” and that tightening could even reverse if conditions warranted it. These comments were quite in line with what Fed officials have been saying up to now. Judging from the market response though, the statements increased the market’s conviction that a rate hike is coming (hence the stronger dollar) while lowering the market’s assumed path of rate increases (hence lower interest rates).

The Commitment of Traders (COT) report showed that while investors generally became less bullish on USD, reducing long DXY positions and closing out some short currency positions, they increased their net short EUR positions by a substantial 14% to a record short position. This suggests that in addition to USD strength, we are likely to see EUR underperformance in the coming week. Quantitative easing plus Greece’s troubles are probably behind that.