Does A Meltdown In Stocks Change Course For Currencies?

 | Oct 16, 2018 01:10

In two trading days, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than 1,300 points and the S&P 500 fell over 5%.

The last time there was a decline of this magnitude was in February and on the day when the UK voted to leave the European Union. Both times the declines were short-lived and with stocks rebounding on Friday, many investors are wondering if buyers will return just as quickly this time around. We’ll discuss this in further detail in the US dollar portion of our note but the sell-off in stocks last week drove the greenback lower against most of the major currencies. The biggest beneficiary was the Japanese yen, which isn’t a surprise because the yen is a safe-haven currency. However the gains in the New Zealand and Australian dollars are unusual because risk aversion tends to be negative for these currencies. There are a number of reasons why they outperformed but the main one is that investors saw the recent decline in stocks as a US dollar story and the greenback’s weakness was compounded by softer data. Looking ahead, the big question is whether the meltdown in stocks changes the course for currencies because the US dollar had a great run this year and is vulnerable to a correction.