USD Stutters And Sputters Into Weeks End As The Fed Telegraphs Hesitancy

 | Nov 17, 2018 11:21PM ET

The week ahead

UK political drama rocked the market while the emergence of a distinctly dovish tone from the Fed knocked the USD off its pedestal going into weeks end. The week ahead will be cut short by the Thanksgiving holiday in the US. And while this adds up to less trading days, those fewer hours will be chock-full of political drama. For no other reason than year-end self-preservation, the markets risk profile will continue to drop as political risk continues to permeate virtually every pocket of the globe. As such, traders will be in risk reduction mode suggesting a high level of indifference will creep into the playing field as year-end musings leak into the equation.

While a Fed pause could offer up a temporary relief for equity investors, however, I get more concerned that these early warning signals are a very useful canary in a coal mine suggesting we’re quickly approaching an economic slow down which could trigger steeper declines in US equity markets.Fed watchers will take a keener interest in upcoming financial reports to flesh out any indications of a US economic reversal.

Without question, the week will be dominated by Brexit, and with lingering uncertainty over May’s ability to put a viable deal into motion, traders cannot rule out a vote of no confidence.

Market banter around US President Trump & Chinese Premier Xi’s G20 meeting will ratchet up several decibels this week, but frankly, my sceptical radar is flashing red, as we’re unlikely to see concrete progress from the one-on-one talk. Presidents Trumps pep talk on Friday “I think will have a great relationship with China.” Furthermore, China would like to make a deal and have sent a list of things its willing to do on trade. While the list is “pretty complete,” but four or five things have been left off. Still, the US “may not have to impose further tariffs on China ” which firmed the G-10 commodity block of currencies and the EM gamut.

On the US domestic front, USMCA deal or Mueller investigation will likely add a bit of spice to the mix. Trump is not agitated about the Special Counsel. He says he’s finished writing his answers to Mueller but hasn’t submitted them yet. And look for White House revolving door to starting spinning again as the President is happy with ” almost all” of the White House cabinet.

Currency markets

The USD failed miserably this week, and it’s unlikely the market will be soft-hearted on the dollar bulls heading into year-end.

The de-escalation of trade war rhetoric on the back of China offering up trade concessions saw a swift reversal on USD haven hedges in EM Asia, particularly against the Yuan. But the DXY hit the skids falling from 96.90 towards 96.40 on a speech from Vice Chair Clarida, who in a coordinated fashion and following in the footsteps of Chair Powell’s cautious tone from Wednesday, also emphasised global growth concerns. Which, in the market’s opinion, effectively walked back one of the more hawkish elements of Fed policy. If the This is far too coordinated as the Fed is telegraphing hesitancy with Powell, Clarida, Evans and Kaplan raising concerns about 2019. If the Fed does raise interest rates in December, it could be a one and done for a while.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

Fanning the dollar demise, both China and Japan, the two biggest foreign U.S. creditors, cut their U.S. Treasury holdings further in September. If US-China trade war continues to go sideways, its possible could more also reduce US Bond holdings. While I’m keeping a close eye on future developments, at this stage of the game, I suspect this is just prudent policy to effectively acquire USD as part of an intervention smoothing procedure to prevent the Yaun from weakening too quickly as the economy slows which will trigger capital outflow. Given that China foreign-exchange reserves have been declining, this makes sense to ensure reserves stay above the US 3 trillion mark

(Bloomberg)