The Daily Edge: The US Dollar Enters A New Bearish Phase Near-Term

 | Jan 10, 2019 01:22AM ET

The Daily Edge is authored by Ivan Delgado, Head of Market Research at Global Prime. The purpose of this content is to provide an assessment of the market conditions. The report takes an in-depth look of market dynamics, factoring in fundamentals, technicals, inter-market, futures and options, in order to determine daily biases and assist one’s decisions on a regular basis.

Quick Take — Why The USD Bearish Outlook?

The US Dollar is set to extend its weakness against the Euro in the following weeks towards its next projected targets at 1.1550 (hit on the breakout) and ultimately complete its bearish cycle as the currency is dealt at levels circa 1.1750 up to 1.18. In this article, I will lay out all the reasons that have cemented and continue to make me bearish the world’s reserve currency.

Drivers — What’s The Current Story?

The debacle of the US Dollar from its peak in Nov-Dec ’18 can be explained, rather than by the merits of the Euro per se (far from it), which accounts for 57% of the DXY basket, as an adjustment of expectations over the Federal Reserve’s inability to raise rates any further. The most fascinating part about the walk back in the Fed hawkish rhetoric in a matter of weeks, however, is the fact that the market has been the ultimate culprit forcing the Fed to re-think its normalization path, even if the unwillingness by the Fed to hear the screaming market signals amid a roaring economy was clear.

The re-calibration in the language by Fed’s Chairman Powell, now publicly admitting that the Central Bank is finally open to hearing the signals the market is sending by considering potential tweaks in its QT (quantitative tightening) down the road, was the ultimate evidence of a market that was setting up to near a resolution of its protracted range.

In the last 24h, multiple Fed speaks have left no stone unturned, providing further backing to the view that the era of tightening has come to an abrupt halt in the foreseeable future. Fed’s Bostic, Evans, Rosengren, Mester, all seem to now be defending the same camp, one where ‘patience’ and ‘flexibility’ has become the norm. This dovish tilt was further confirmed by the Fed minutes, where the statement read that “the committee could afford to be patient about further policy firming” with risks to the outlook highlighted.

By and large, that’s been the story driving the current weakness seen in the US Dollar. A narrative in which the shift in focus from a clearly hawkish stance in early Q4 ’18 to where we’ve come to be today is quite radical, regardless of whether or not the market has been the culprit forcing them to ‘blink’.

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It was precisely the market, via the German vs US bond yield spread, which had been telegraphing for quite some time that the capital flows into the US were set to recede as the yield advantage was rapidly on the retreat. Again, it wasn’t as if the German or the wider Eurozone could carry enough credence to justify higher yields, but it was more to do with a rubber band in the US yields front that had seemingly stretched a bit too far.

From mid-December, it’s when we started to see the real cracks in the German vs the US bond yield spread, which firmed up my bullish conviction to start buying Euros on weakness as the preponderance of evidence mounted.

I must confess that even if my view has been to support the long-side bias all along, I wasn’t that convinced by a breakout of the 1.15 vicinity due to the horrendous set of weakening economic indicators in the Euro area. Even if my endorsement has always orbited around buying at discount vs strength.

Remember, a move in a currency exchange rate, in most cases is predicated by the rates differentials between two countries, with some anomalies possible to affect the pricing of the pair short-term, hence why spotting divergences between the pricing and the spread create genuinely solid opportunities.

The fluctuation in government bond yields is mainly a function of two scenarios. It can be based on interest rate expectations or driven by what’s often referred to as a ‘flight to safety’. In the case of the EUR/USD rise, the rise comes as a combination of a Central Bank that hints its bond won’t be yielding at similarly elevated levels in the foreseeable future, and a recent resurgence in risk appetite orchestrated by the Fed Put and the constructive Sino-US talks on trade, which leads to risk appetite flows to also cap the appeal for USDs.

Economic Data Plays Secondary Role vs Yields

It’s important that we continue to observe the rise in the Euro vs US Dollar exchange rate as a function of US Dollar weakness. One of the reasons that the outlook for the Euro is far from promising, hence, it can’t justify much higher levels on its own right is the appalling economic data coming out of the Eurozone, which calls for a recession in Germany during H2. Judge by yourself in the following heatmap of the Eurozone economic indicators.