Daily Commentary: USD/CAD Continues Higher, Gold Tumbles

 | Mar 31, 2015 04:48AM ET

Dollar continues to strengthen

End-month and end-quarter demand pushed the dollar higher Monday. Much of the demand was apparently due to such position-squaring rather than fresh risk-taking. Fed funds rate expectations were largely unchanged and bond yields declined a modest 2 bps, so it was not due to any large change in understanding of the Fed’s view. Today being the last day of the month and quarter, we could see continued demand. The question then is, will it continue on Wednesday when April begins? I expect so. In contrast to what we’ve been seeing over the past several weeks, the recent US economic indicators have generally been good. Yesterday’s February personal income and pending home sales both beat estimates (although personal spending was below forecast), suggesting that perhaps US indicators are perhaps starting to improve (although of course one day does not make a trend). In any case, the market is likely to start looking forward to another strong US payrolls figure this Friday which, coming out on a thin holiday day, may have a greater-than-usual impact on the dollar.

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USD/JPY seasonal pattern in April Following the above discussion of seasonal patterns, I was going to write a sentence or two about how USD/JPY was likely to move higher in April. Although the seasonal repatriation of Japanese funds in March ended years ago with the introduction of consolidated accounting, the outflow of funds in the new fiscal year beginning in April is still a real phenomenon. That’s because people and companies make payments to insurance and pension funds at the beginning of the new fiscal year in April and investment companies put into effect their new investment plans starting in the month. However when I looked at the seasonal pattern, I found that unfortunately, reality did not agree with theory: in fact, USD/JPY has over the last decade tended to move lower in April, not higher (i.e., JPY tended to strengthen). However, the hit ratio is so evenly balanced (6 years down, 4 years up) and the range between the largest decline (-3.7%) and largest rise (+4.5%) is so large as to suggest that there is no dominant seasonal trend. In that case, I think the determining factor for JPY this year will be continued capital outflows as the Bank of Japan buys up all the Japanese Government Bonds, leaving investors to look overseas for investment opportunities.

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