Equity Volatility Encourages FX Liquidation – Not Consolidation

 | Feb 08, 2018 08:45

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

After getting a taste of the dangerously wild swings this week, investors continued to take profits and unwind their high-beta trades, driving the U.S. dollar and Japanese yen higher in the process. Part of that had to do with the wild intraday swings in the Dow, which was up more than 400 points in early NY trade but ended the day up only 80 points. The simultaneous consolidation in USD/JPY and slide in the euro and Canadian dollar confirm that traders were still liquidating into Wednesday’s rally. Many major currencies enjoyed strong moves over the past month and the recent volatility was a much needed wake up call. As we mentioned in Tuesday’s note, investors won’t return with the same enthusiasm and so far, in the FX market, they haven’t returned at all because U.S. yields continued to rise. There were no U.S. economic reports released Wednesday but we heard from a few Federal Reserve officials. FOMC voter Dudley dismissed the latest decline in stocks, describing it as not “that big of a bump.” He said it has no consequence to the economic outlook and would not impact his view unless it was sustained. This same sentiment was shared by Kaplan and while Evans did not touch on policy, he said the U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders and he’d support further tightening if inflation picks up. Neither is a voting member this year but Bostic who is, sees slow and gradual rate rises if growth remains robust. The dollar also received a boost from the 2-year Senate budget deal. It still has to pass the House but it will achieve the goal of avoiding a government shutdown. With no major U.S. economic reports scheduled for release on Thursday, the dollar will take its cue from risk appetite.

The Bank of England’s monetary policy announcement and Quarterly Inflation Report are the most important events this week.
The BoE raised interest rates toward the end of last year and investors want to know when it will tighten again. At its last meeting, there was no mention about timing, but the Monetary Policy Committee likes to provide guidance with the Quarterly Report. Unfortunately there’s very little reason for the central bank to rush to tighten. Since the last meeting in December, manufacturing-, service- and construction-sector activity slowed. Although inflation ticked up, retail sales fell sharply. More importantly, GBP is up 5% against the dollar and 10-year Gilt yields are up 25bp since the last meeting, making financial conditions more difficult. Sterling's recent strength should also drive price pressures lower. While we believe that the general tone of the Quarterly report should be upbeat, the central bank will stress that inflation has peaked. How sterling reacts will depend on any forecast change and Carney’s comments. If the tone of the Quarterly Report is generally upbeat with upgraded forecasts for growth and little emphasis on downside risk (suggesting that another hike is on its way), GBP/USD will find its way back to 1.4150. However if the Quarterly Report falls short and BoE Governor Carney is not as hawkish as investors are hoping, GBP/USD could sink down to 1.3775.

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now