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New Post 26.6.2008 11:43
  15069710
176 posts
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Euro Breaks Higher as Market Shifts Focus to ECB  (Belgium)

The currency pair that had the most significant reaction to the FOMC announcement was the EUR/USD. With the Fed meeting behind us, the ECB is the only central bank expected to make any changes in interest rates over the next 2 months. ECB President Trichet said this morning that there is an acute risk of wage price spiral and reminded the market that they could raise interest rate 25bp at the next meeting. The ECB’s intentions should be quite clear and with a little more than one week to the ECB meeting, the market may continue to bid up Euros against US dollars simply because one central bank will be raising interest rates while another remains stationary. This would widen the gap between Eurozone and US interest rates from 200 to 225bp in the Euro’s favor. In the meantime, good news is still being reported from the Eurozone. Industrial new orders jumped 2.5 percent in the month of April, well above the market’s -0.5 percent forecast. German import prices are due for release tomorrow and given the rise in oil prices last month, we expect import prices to continue to edge higher. The ECB also has no problems with further Euro strength. According to ECB member Wellink, the equilibrium rate for the Euro is around 1.60. The central bank wants the Euro to rise because they know it will help to ease inflationary pressures.

From : Daily FX

 
New Post 30.6.2008 22:07
  15069710
176 posts
3rd Level Poster


Can The Dollar Recover?  (Belgium)
Modified By 15069710  on 30.6.2008 20:08:13)

Last week we noted that dollar’s fate was in Fed’s hands stating that, “as the FOMC rate announcement takes place on Wednesday currency traders will get a much better idea if Chairman Bernanke is serious about raising rates or is merely bluffing.” After the Fed’s ambiguous statement the markets decided that the FOMC is not truly serious enough about fighting inflation and the greenback fell across the board.

We wrote on Friday, that the Fed missed a golden opportunity to surprise the market with a rate hike this week, which no doubt would have hurt stocks but may have also broken the back of oil speculators by strengthening the dollar while making credit more expensive. Instead FOMC’s dilly-dallying produced the worst of all worlds. Oil prices skyrocketed breaking the $140/bbl handle, stocks fell sharply as a result and the dollar continued to weaken not only against the euro, but the yen as well.

With the greenback clearly on the defensive, next week shapes up to be even more interesting than the last. Because of the July 4th holiday the NFP report will be released on Thursday rather than Friday right at the same time as the post rate announcement news conference by the ECB. The volatility in the pair could therefore be massive, especially if there are surprises on both side of the equation.

If US employment situation deteriorates more that the market expects (and given the recent trend in jobless claims there are good reasons to think that it will) the prospect of Fed rate hikes will dim even more. Therefore the combination of progressively worse US economic data along with relentlessly restrictive ECB monetary policy may create even more weakness for the dollar in the days ahead and lay the foundation for another runs at all time highs

From : DailyFX

 
New Post 30.6.2008 22:10
  15069710
176 posts
3rd Level Poster


Euro One and Done or More to Come?  (Belgium)

One and done or more to come? That’s going to be the key question for the currency markets next week as attention turns to the ECB rate announcement meeting on Thursday. At this point given the persistently hawkish rhetoric coming from the monetary authorities in Frankfurt, the market is near universally convinced that the ECB will hike rates by another 25bp on Thursday. European monetary officials are deeply concerned about the steep rise in headline inflation gauges (the latest reading showed a year over year rise of 3.7% - well above the central banks target of 2%) and are attempting to anchor intermediate term inflation expectations even at the risk of slowing down the region’s economy.

However, in the prior post conference question and answer session President Trichet was careful to stress that the ECB does not intend to enact a series of rate hikes. The question therefore going forward is whether the ECB chief will signal that central bank considers next week’s move to be sufficient or whether the monetary policymakers will be open to yet more tightening before the year end.

As we noted above the combination of ECB rate announcement and NFPs on the same day creates the possibility of massive volatility as traders react to the news on both sides of the Atlantic. As for the front of the week, Monday CPI and Tuesday German Retail Sales should contribute to the hoopla. If, as expected, the inflation data remains hot and the Retail Sales rebound, ECB’s hawkish posture will only stiffen providing further support to the euro

From : DailyFX

 
New Post 2.7.2008 17:13
  15069710
176 posts
3rd Level Poster


Weak Dollar Rising: 10 More Reasons Not to Bet Against the Greenback  (Belgium)

Weak Dollar Rising: 10 More Reasons Not to Bet Against the Greenback
by Louis Basenese, Advisory Panelist
Associate Investment Director, The Oxford Club

With the weak dollar rising against foreign currencies and the Fed's new willingness to hike interest rates, investors now have a reason to look at the greenback again. But is it really time to go long the almighty dollar?

Well, imagine my surprise when I surfed over to MarketWatch.com last night and found a special report entitled "Dollar Comeback." Only a few days earlier, during a lunch-hour errand, I heard the unthinkable on CNBC radio - a segment on a dollar rebound.

Two months ago, such "reporting" would have landed the editors and anchors in the corner, donning a dunce cap. And I know. When I issued my warning against shorting the dollar, our inbox overflowed with passionate reader comments about my "intelligence…"

Dollar Bears Becoming Dollar Bulls?

Are the dollar bears finally turning into dollar bulls? Could the tide finally be turning?

If so, we may have called a dollar bottom within 12 days of it happening. The U.S. Dollar Index hit a low on March 14. I recommended a long dollar trade to my subscribers on March 26… and then echoed those sentiments here  in Investment U Issue #780, The End of the Weak Dollar.

Time will be the great arbiter. But based on the following developments, I'm convinced we'll come out on the winning side…

Top 10 Reasons That The Weak Dollar Is Rising

Here are my top 10 reasons why the weak dollar will rise:

Bernanke & Paulson Rediscover "Verbal Intervention."
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke finally got off their duffs to defend the dollar. Paulson got things started in Qatar on Sunday. Speaking to the leaders of the Gulf oil states, he urged the countries to think twice about abandoning their dollar peg, as "ending the peg is not the solution to the inflation problem." And Bernanke stepped up today. Speaking, via satellite, to an international monetary conference in Spain he insisted Fed policy will be a key factor, "ensuring that the dollar remains a strong, stable currency." After such a long silence, this week's tag team approach is nothing but a positive development.

The "Smart Money" is Cashing In.
The smart money - Wall Street institutions - tends to be a great leading indicator. If you can figure out what they're doing in time. Right now they're sending a clear signal - take profits on your bearish dollar bets. Case in point, as the dollar met heavy selling on May 21, the smart money took almost $100 million in profits out of Currency Shares Euro Trust (NYSE: FXE). Enough to top the Wall Street Journal's "Selling on Strength" screen. And this isn't the first time the ETF recently made the list. All told, the increased selling activity indicates the smart money fears we may never see such high prices again.

George Soros Changed His Mind.
Even the smartest investors are entitled to a mulligan. After bouncing roughly 3% off the March lows, in recent weeks, George Soros told the Wall Street Journal he is now "neutral" on the dollar. And expects it to strengthen over the next 12 to 18 months. Accordingly, he "greatly reduced his bets against the greenback." Bottom line - we should pay attention when this hedge-fund phenom changes his mind. Here's why, copied and pasted from my first article in defense of the dollar:

"A trader named Jean-Manuel Rozan once spent an entire afternoon arguing about the stock market with George Soros. Soros was vehemently bearish, and he had an elaborate theory to explain why, which turned out to be entirely wrong. The stock market boomed."

"Two years later, Rozan ran into Soros at a tennis tournament. 'Do you remember our conversation?' Rozan asked. 'I recall it very well,' Soros replied. 'I changed my mind, and made an absolute fortune.'"

My guess is he will make a fortune on this change of heart, too.

The Fed is Done.
Okay. Maybe one more cut looms on the horizon. But after that, it's time to get back to fighting inflation and hiking rates. Futures traders awoke to this same reality once revised GDP numbers were released May 29. They ratcheted up their bets that the Fed would raise rates in late October, putting the odds at 88%. Before the release, odds of an October hike stood at 70%. As I said last time, the Fed will hike again. Soon. And such moves will immediately strengthen the dollar.

Busted Rhymes and Tattered Clothing.
The crickets are chirping among the rappers and super models. It's been a long time since we've heard (even rumors) about the world's fashionistas and rhyme-slingers extolling the virtues of the euro over the dollar. In other words, when pop-culture embraced the dollar hating, it signaled the inflection point. And it's time for them to get caught on the wrong side of the trade for such foolish speculation.

The Retail Investor is (Blindly) Headed for the Slaughter.
Sad as it may be, the retail investor tends to always show up late to the profit party. Right now they're headed to the slaughter. The proof - the number and popularity of currency ETFs literally exploded in recent years. As one long-time advisor told an IndexUniverse.com reporter, "I've never seen this much interest in currency ETFs before…There's just a pile of money coming into these funds now." And that pile, according to my research, sits around $4 billion, despite most of the ETFs being less than two years old. This reminds me of my days back at Morgan Stanley. Whenever management decided to launch our own Small Cap Growth Fund for example, because the asset class was so "hot," the asset class was too hot. It was time to recommend our clients take profits. And now that betting against the dollar is fashionable on Main Street, it's time we head the other direction or risk getting burned like the rest of the performance chasers.

New President = Clean Slate.
Whether Barrack "Haven't-Been-to-Iraq-In-A-While" Obama or John "I-Have-Anger-Issues" McCain gets the nod, a new president will get a clean slate to establish their very own dollar policy. At least temporarily. And thanks to record crude prices, expect the new Commander-in-chief to move from the current administration's weak lip service to more meaningful actions in support of the dollar.

We're Still Not Decoupled.
At least not from Europe. Doubts about euro-zone growth continue to pop up. The latest - a weaker than expected composite purchasing managers index reading, compiled by the Royal Bank of Scotland and NTC Economics. The measure from across the 15-nation euro-zone slumped to 51.1 in May, the worst in nearly five years. Bottom line - the European Central Bank is in a pinch. It can't hike rates in the face of a slowdown. And it can't cut rates with inflation running around 3.5%. In the end, the stalemate buys the dollar time to narrow the interest rate gap.

Institutions are Secretly Hedging their Bets.
It's not news that international stock funds significantly outperformed U.S.-focused funds over the last seven years. Or that the dollar decline aided their outperformance. However, few realize these very same funds are now protecting their portfolios against a dollar rally. Three of the top money managers in the business (Harris Associates, Dodge & Cox and Henderson Global Investors) are now hedging up to 55% of their currency exposure. A big jump, considering the international funds from Henderson and Dodge & Cox never hedged their exposure since opening in 2001.

The Dollar Decline is Getting Too Long in the Tooth.
As I said before, "the cyclicality of the markets instructs us that the pendulum will eventually swing back the other way." Combine that with Einstein's theory of relativity and one thing is clear: Although the "real" value of our flat currency may never recover, its relative value certainly will. And with the worst of the financial crisis probably behind us, I stand by my conviction. The worst of the dollar weakness is behind us, too.

Consider this my second warning that the weak dollar will rise. And soon. That makes now perhaps the last opportunity to position your portfolios for maximum gain.

From : InvestrmentU

 
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