Mnuchin Mania Adds To Dollar Negativity

 | Jan 24, 2017 12:36AM ET

The lack of any key U.S. economic data overnight had dealers focused exclusively on the Trump Administration’s trade policy and the signing of the executive order to pull out of the TPP. U.S. fixed income is feeling the stress, with ten year UST leading the charge as the yield toppled from 2.47% to 2.38%. The move on Treasuries has dragged the dollar lower throughout the New York session.

Adding to the negative dollar headline hysteria were comments, late in the New York session, from Treasury Secretary-designate, Steven Mnuchin who reiterated his previous view that “EXCESSIVELY STRONG USD MAY BE NEGATIVE IN SHORT TERM”. The comments all but stuck a dagger into an already reeling greenback and the dollar gapped lower.

Yet at the heart of the debate is the fact that this market is tough to figure out, as key storylines intersect with one another in a baffling way. The fear factor is dominating sentiment as traders are desperately trying to find out if this is merely a glitch in opinion or a broader evaluation of US asset markets. Nonetheless, we are entering some perilous times in capital markets.

h3 Australian Dollar/h3

The Australian Dollar shot higher on Mnuchin’s comments, and the U.S. dollar market remains very nervous, not only driven by Trump uncertainties, but very unsure of what additional daunting headlines may lie ahead.

The market views U.S. protectionism as negative for the dollar, but given Australia’s strong position in the global supply chain, along with negative implications of possible regional trade disruptions, the AUD underperformed its G10 peers overnight. The Aussie bulls are also holding back, probably due to the slide in Iron ore prices. I think the slowdown in overall trading activity as China nears the lunar new year is a factor, but chatter coming from the Commodity pits suggest that new high–grade supply may also be a trigger for the long Iron ore position unwind.

While external developments dominate price action, local traders are keenly anticipating tomorrow’s CPI release. I do not expect a positive print to have any immediate policy implications, as it would continue to support the bias that the RBA’s next move will be a rate hike and because investors will likely bring forward expectations for interest rate tightening and buy AUD on the print.