USD Rises Against G10 Currencies Except NOK, CAD, And GBP

 | Jun 10, 2015 05:28AM ET

Dollar drifts higher on encouraging US data The pendulum swung back again yesterday as better-than-expected US data improved the relative attractiveness of USD, while the continued stalemate in Greece is weighing on the EUR. The National Federation of Small Businesses (NFIB) optimism index rose more than expected, and the percentage of managers saying they will increase pay held steady. There was also some improvement in key components such as “plans to hire” and “positions not able to fill.” At the same time, the Job Opening and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) job openings rose more than expected in April, and job openings exceeded the number of people hired for the first time ever, indicating a tightening labor market. Signs that the Fed is on the way to achieving its employment mandate pushed Fed funds rate expectations for end-2017 up 4 bps and 10-Year yields up 5.5 bps.

10-year Bund yields were up 7 bps though, so the spread at the long end moved further in Germany’s favour. Still, USD gained against EUR as talks between Greece and its creditors go nowhere, while the clock ticks down to the end-June deadline. Watch what happens later today, when the ECB makes its weekly decision on whether to increase the Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) funds to Greek banks. I expect that they will want to up the pressure on the Greek authorities, and therefore won’t increase the ELA funds, even though outflows from the Greek banks are reportedly accelerating. That should put further downward pressure on EUR/USD.

USD rose against most other G10 currencies too, except NOK, CAD and GBP. A sharp rise in oil prices (WTI up 4.2%!) was the reason why NOK and CAD outperformed. Oil rose on expectations of falling US supply, as indicated by the weekly American Petrolelum Institute (API) data, plus comments by the Saudi oil minister that their increase in output was due to a rise in demand, not an attempt to regain market share. We’ll have to see if the official Energy Information Administration (EIA) data out tonight verifies the privately issued API data. That could push oil up even further and support these currencies. Still, I expect US production to rise in June because of changes to the taxation system that kick in this month, making it more attractive to pump oil, plus limits on how long wells can remain drilled but not pumping. There’s a saying in the oil market that “high prices cure high prices,” and that’s what we’re likely to see happen as the recovery in oil prices off the lows prevents the kind of wholesale shut-down in US shale oil production that some people were looking for.

Kuroda kicks USD/JPY Bank of Japan Gov. Kuroda said in the Diet that Japan’s real effective exchange rate is already very weak, and it’s hard to see it falling more. He noted that the yen has returned to levels it was at before the collaps of Lehman Bros. He’s absolutely right; indeed, on a REER basis, the yen is the weakest it’s been at least since 1994 (the beginning of the BIS data series). That doesn’t mean it can’t weaken further, however. Remember that Japan has the world’s biggest QE program going and is likely to maintain it indefinitely, which over time should weaken the yen further, in my view.

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