Thursday, October 15, 2009

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

US Dollar Falling: Is this the Beginning of Downtrend?

US Dollar : A short term Forecast


The US Dollar is experiencing tremendous pressure due to higher interest rates expected in next year in Europe & US.

The rate of savings in US is going to be high due to the effect of recession. Although the world economies are experiencing recovery the spending habits are influenced by the aftereffect of the recession & due to people expecting the interest rates to rise in future.

Recently the Royal Bank of Australia took a decision to increase the interest rates. This decision will have an effect on world economy as the high interest rates would result in inflation- higher prices.

In US although Housing sector is growing commercial real estate industry is falling at full speed. Personal credit is declining at a rate of 4 % year to year basis due to stringent credit standards.

On the contrary the US firms are growing & new orders are increasing. The employment is not growing at the same rate but is expected to grow over a short period as Companies would again start recruiting.

The recent decline of US Dollar against major currencies (especially Canadian & Australian Dollar) could be a beginning of downfall which could last till the end of December.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Dollar Reaches Breaking Point as Banks Shift Reserves


 
Central banks flush with record reserves are increasingly snubbing dollars in favor of euros and
yen, further pressuring the greenback after its biggest two-quarter rout in almost two decades.Policy makers boosted foreign currency holdings by $413 billion last quarter, the most since at least 2003, to $7.3 trillion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.Nations reporting currency breakdowns put 63 percent of the new cash into euros and yen in April, May and June, the latest Barclays Capital data show. That’s the highest percentage in any quarter with more than an $80 billion increase.

World leaders are acting on threats to dump the dollar while the Obama administration shows a willingness to
tolerate a weaker currency in an effort to boost exports and the economy as long as it doesn’t drive away the
nation’s creditors. The diversification signals that the currency won’t rebound anytime soon after losing 10.3
percent on a trade-weighted basis the past six months, the biggest drop since 1991.

“Global central banks are getting more serious about diversification, whereas in the past they used to just talk
about it,” said Steven Englander, a former Federal Reserve researcher who is now the chief U.S. currency strategist at Barclays in New York. “It looks like they are really backing away from the dollar.”

                         Sliding Share

The dollar’s 37 percent share of new reserves fell from about a 63 percent average since 1999. Englander concluded in a report that the trend “accelerated” in the third quarter. He said in an interview that “for the next couple of  months, the forces are still in place” for continued diversification.America’s currency has been under siege as the Treasury sells a record amount of debt to finance a budget deficit that totaled $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2009 ended Sept. 30.

Intercontinental Exchange Inc.’s Dollar Index, which tracks the currency’s performance against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, fell to 75.77 last week, the lowest level since August 2008 and down  from the high this year of 89.624 on March 4. The index, at 76.104 today,is within six points of its record low reached in March 2008. Foreign companies and officials are starting to say their economies are getting hurt because of the dollar’s weakness.

                        Toyota’s ‘Pain’

Yukitoshi Funo, executive vice president of Toyota City, Japan-based Toyota Motor Corp., the nation’s biggest automaker, called the yen’s strength “painful.” Fabrice Bregier, chief operating officer of Toulouse, France-based Airbus SAS, the world’s largest commercial planemaker, said on Oct. 8 the euro’s 11 percent rise since April was “challenging.”

The economies of both Japan and Europe depend on exports that get more expensive whenever the greenback slumps.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said in Venice on Oct. 8 that U.S. policy makers’ preference for a strong dollar is “extremely important in the present circumstances.”

“Major reserve-currency issuing countries should take into account and balance the implications of their monetary policies for both their own economies and the world economy with a view to upholding stability of international financial markets,” China President Hu Jintao told the Group of 20 leaders in Pittsburgh on Sept. 25, according to an English translation of his prepared remarks. China is America’s largest creditor.

                       Dollar’s Weighting

Developing countries have likely sold about $30 billion for euros, yen and other currencies each month since March,according to strategists at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.That helped reduce the dollar’s weight at central banks that report currency holdings to 62.8 percent as of June 30, the lowest on record, the latest International Monetary Fund data show. The quarter’s 2.2 percentage point decline was the biggest since falling 2.5 percentage points to 69.1 percent in the period ended June 30, 2002.

“The diversification out of the dollar will accelerate,” said Fabrizio Fiorini, a money manager who helps oversee $12 billion at Aletti Gestielle SGR SpA in Milan. “People are buying the euro not because they want that currency, but because they want to get rid of the dollar. In the long run, the U.S. will not be the same powerful country that it once was.”

Central banks’ moves away from the dollar are a temporary trend that will reverse once the Fed starts raising
interest rates from near zero, according to Christoph Kind, who helps manage $20 billion as head of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust in Germany.

                     ‘Flush’ With Dollars

"The world is currently flush with the U.S. dollar, which is available at no cost,” Kind said. “If there’s a
turnaround in U.S. monetary policy, there will be a change of perception about the dollar as a reserve currency. The diversification has more to do with reduction of concentration risks rather than a dim view of the U.S. or its currency.”

The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 54 economists is for the Fed to lift its target rate for overnight
loans between banks to 1.25 percent by the end of 2010. The European Central Bank will boost its benchmark a half percentage point to 1.5 percent, a separate poll shows.

America’s economy will grow 2.4 percent in 2010, compared with 0.95 percent in the euro-zone, and 1 percent in Japan, median predictions show. Japan is seen keeping its rate at 0.1 percent through 2010.Central bank diversification is helping push the relative worth of the euro and the yen above what differences in interest rates, cost of living and other data indicate they should be.The euro is 16 percent more expensive than its fair value of $1.22, according to economic models used by Credit Suisse Group AG. Morgan Stanley says the yen is 10 percent overvalued.

                       Reminders of 1995

Sentiment toward the dollar reminds John Taylor, chairman of New York-based FX Concepts Inc., the world’s largest  currency hedge fund, of the mid-1990s. That’s when the greenback tumbled to a post-World War II low of 79.75 against the yen on April 19, 1995, on concern that the Fed wasn’t raising rates fast enough to contain inflation. Like now, speculation about central bank diversification and the demise of the dollar’s primacy rose.The currency then gained 26 percent versus the yen and 25 percent against the deutsche mark in the following two years as technology innovation increased U.S. productivity and attracted foreign capital.“People didn’t like the dollar in 1995,” said Taylor, whose firm has $9 billion under management. “That was very stupid and turned out to be wrong. Now, we are getting to the point that people’s attitude toward the dollar becomes ridiculously negative.” 


                     Dollar Forecasts

The median estimate of more than 40 economists and strategists is for the dollar to end the year little changed at $1.47 per euro, and appreciate to 92 yen, from 89.97 today. Englander at London-based Barclays, the world’s third- largest foreign-exchange trader, predicts the U.S. currency will weaken 3.3 percent against the euro to $1.52 in three months. He advised in March, when the dollar peaked this year, to sell the currency. Standard Chartered, the most accurate dollar-euro forecaster in Bloomberg surveys for the six quarters that ended June 30, sees the greenback declining to $1.55 by year-end.

The dollar’s reduced share of new reserves is also a reflection of U.S. assets’ lagging performance as the country struggles to recover from the worst recession since World War II.

                         Lagging Behind

Since Jan. 1, 61 of 82 country equity indexes tracked by Bloomberg have outperformed the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of U.S. stocks, which has gained 18.6 percent. That compares with 70.6 percent for Brazil’s Bovespa Stock Index and 49.4 percent for Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index.

Treasuries have lost 2.4 percent, after reinvested interest, versus a return of 27.4 percent in emerging economies’ dollar- denominated bonds, Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes show.The growth of global reserves is accelerating, with Taiwan’s and South Korea’s, the fifth- and sixth-largest in the world, rising 2.1 percent to $332.2 billion and 3.6 percent to $254.3 billion in September, the fastest since May. The four biggest pools of reserves are held by China, Japan, Russia and India.

China, which controlled $2.1 trillion in foreign reserves as of June 30 and owns $800 billion of U.S. debt, is among the countries that don’t report allocations.“Unless you think China does things significantly differently from others,” the anti-dollar trend is unmistakable, Englander said.

                       Follow the Money

Englander’s conclusions are based on IMF data from central banks that report their currency allocations, which account for 63 percent of total global reserves. Barclays adjusted the IMF data for changes in exchange rates after the reserves were amassed to get an accurate snapshot of allocations at the time
they were acquired.

Investors can make money by following central banks’ moves, according to Barclays, which created a trading model that flashes signals to buy or sell the dollar based on global reserve shifts and other variables. Each trade triggered by the system has average returns of more than 1 percent.

Bill Gross, who runs the $186 billion Pimco Total Return Fund, the world’s largest bond fund, said in June that dollar investors should diversify before central banks do the same on concern that the U.S.’s budget deficit will deepen.

 “The world is changing, and the dollar is losing its status,” said Aletti Gestielle’s Fiorini. “If you have a 5-
year or 10-year view about the dollar, it should be for a weaker currency.”



(Forex News by Bloomberg)

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

US Dollar Falls as Stocks Gain on U.S. Banks, Spurring Risk Demand

The dollar declined against the euro as stocks rose after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. raised its view on large banks, encouraging investors to buy higher-yielding assets at the expense of the U.S. currency.

The greenback earlier weakened after the Group of Seven finance officials refrained over the weekend from calling for measures to bolster the world’s main reserve currency. The yen pared gains against the dollar after Japanese Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said the government will intervene if the yen moves in a “biased” direction.

The dollar slid 0.3 percent to $1.4614 per euro at 10:12 a.m. in New York, from $1.4576 on Oct. 2. It fell to a one-year low of $1.4844 on Sept. 23. The yen depreciated 0.1 percent to 131.05 per euro, from 130.90, and gained 0.2 percent to 89.67 per dollar, compared with 89.81 at the end of last week, after earlier advancing as much as 0.6 percent.

U.K. Pound (GBP) Drops Amid Speculation Economic Recovery May Stall


The pound fell for a second day against the euro as U.K. banking stocks declined earlier amid concern that the economic recovery may stall.The British currency was little changed against the dollar as the FTSE 350 Banks Index fell as much as 0.4 percent, before erasing its declines. A report this week may show U.K. house price growth slowed last month, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. Futures traders increased bets that the pound will decline against the U.S. currency, the latest figures from the ashington-based Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.“There seems to be a growing belief that stocks have rallied too far given the outlook for earnings, and sterling does correlate well with stock markets,” said Neil Jones, head of European hedge-fund sales in London at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. “The economic recovery is still fragile.”

Sterling weakened by 0.3 percent to 91.67 pence per euro as of 3:13 p.m. in London. It traded at $1.5939, from $1.5946. The pound bought 142.93  Japanese yen, from 143.21.
 

Government bonds gained, with the yield on the 10-year gilt dropping 3 basis points to 3.41 percent. The 4.5 percent security due March 2019 rose 0.26, or 2.6 pounds per 1,000- pound ($1,594) face amount, to 108.74. The two-year note yield declined less than 1 basis point to 0.75 percent. The U.K. banks’ index dropped 0.3 percent, pushing its loss since Sept. 29 to 5.6 percent. It has more than doubled in value since reaching its lowest level this year on March 9.

                      ‘Too Soon, too Fast’

Markets “have gone up too much, too soon, too fast,” New York University Professor Nouriel Roubini, who predicted the financial crisis, said in an interview in Istanbul on Oct. 3.
 

“I see the risk of a correction, especially when the markets now realize that the recovery is not rapid and V-shaped, but more like U- shaped.” The difference in the number of wagers by hedge funds and other large speculators on a decline in the pound compared with those on a gain, so-called net shorts, was 47,826 on Sep. 29, compared with net shorts of 31,595 a week earlier, CFTC data showed.

Losses by the pound may be limited as reports signal the economy is emerging from the recession after the Bank of England cut the benchmark interest rate to a record low and started buying government bonds to further depress borrowing costs.

                       Services Resilience

An index of services industries, based on a survey of 700 companies, increased to a two-year high in September of 55.3, from 54.1 a month before, Markit Economics said today. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 28 economists was for a gain to 54.5. Financial firms see signs of recovery and banks report feeling “more confident” for the first time since the economic crisis began, according to a survey by the Confederation of British Industry and consulting firm Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP.

In the U.S., the Institute for Supply Management’s index of non-manufacturing businesses, which make up almost 90 percent of the economy, rose to 50.9 in September, higher than forecast,the first expansion in a year, according to the Tempe, Arizona- based group. Fifty is the dividing line between expansion and contraction.

“The resilience of the services sector is buoying up sentiment and helping the pound,” said Jeremy Stretch, a senior currency strategist at Rabobank International in London. “There is some cautious optimism.”

(source: Bloomberg news)

Monday, October 5, 2009

Swiss Franc May Rise to 1.0015, Soc Gen Says: Forex Technical Analysis

Oct. 5 2009  -- The Swiss franc may climb 3 percent against the dollar should it close at less than 1.0325 today,
according to Societe Generale SA, citing technical indicators.

The currency may strengthen “medium term” to the July 2008 high of 1.0015 per dollar should it first appreciate
through so-called resistance levels of 1.0280 and then 1.0185, the September 2009 high, strategists including Hugues Naka and
Fabien Manac’h wrote today in a report, citing Fibonacci charts.Resistance is a level where sell orders may be clustered.

“This is a short-term bearish signal” for the dollar, the analysts said. The dollar-franc rate “should then extend its
medium-term downtrend” to the July 2008 low of 1.0015.The franc was little changed at 1.0341 per dollar, from
1.0350 francs at the end of last week.

The currency gained 3.3 percent against the dollar this year even after the Swiss National Bank began selling the franc
on March 12 to keep it from strengthening, primarily against the euro. It fell 1.1 percent versus the common European currency in
the period.

SNB Governing Board member Thomas Jordan said on Sept. 25 that policy makers will act “with full force” to avoid an
appreciation of the franc against the euro.

In technical analysis, investors and analysts study charts of trading patterns and prices to forecast changes in a
security, commodity, currency or index. Fibonacci charts are based on the theory that securities tend to rise or fall by
specific percentages after reaching a new high or low.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Asian Currencies Gain This Quarter, Led by Won, on Recovery

Sept. 30,2009  -- Asian currencies strengthened this quarter, led by South Korea’s won, as signs economies are recovering from a slump spurred demand for regional assets.The Bloomberg JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index, which tracks the region’s 10 most-traded currencies excluding the yen, today capped its best month since March, after Japan reported a sixth straight increase in industrial output. The won rose after a central bank survey showed manufacturers’ confidence reached a two-year high and the Taiwan dollar advanced on a report the island’s trade surplus will double this year.

“The fundamentals look pretty positive for Korea,” said Gerrard Katz, head of currency trading at Standard Chartered Plc in Hong Kong. “The economy is rebounding quite strongly, so the central bank’s a little more relaxed about won strength.”
The won gained 0.7 percent to 1,178.05 per dollar as of the 3 p.m. close in Seoul, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It’s strengthened 6 percent this month, the best performance among Asia’s 10 most-traded currencies. Taiwan’s dollar advanced 0.5 percent to NT$32.20 after central bank Governor Perng Fai- nan told lawmakers in Taipei today that foreign inflows are putting “appreciation pressure” on the local currency. Shares in South Korea and Taiwan each attracted more than $4 billion from overseas this month alone, taking net purchases for the year to $19.4 billion and $11.4 billion as of yesterday. The Kospi stock index climbed 5.1 percent this month and the Taiex index jumped 10 percent.

Yield Gap

Relatively high yields also helped draw funds to the region. Bank Indonesia on Sept. 3 refrained from cutting its benchmark interest rate for the first time in 10 months, keeping it at 6.5 percent. The Philippine central bank will tomorrow keep its key rate at 4 percent, according to all 15 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Borrowing costs in the U.S. and Japan are no higher than 0.25 percent. The Asia Dollar Index rose 1.8 percent this month, taking its quarterly gain to 2.1 percent. The yen strengthened to 89.48 per dollar from 90.09 late yesterday in New York, headed for a 4 percent monthly advance.

Japan’s factory output rose 1.8 percent last month after climbing 2.1 percent in July, the Trade Ministry said today in Tokyo. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast a 1.8 percent increase. Chinese production expanded for a sixth month in September, a purchasing managers’ index released by HSBC Holdings Plc today showed.

‘Slow Rise’

 Taiwan’s dollar advanced 2.2 percent from the end of August, its biggest monthly gain since March. The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) today reiterated that the exchange rate should reflect economic conditions and it will act to curb excessive volatility. Policy makers can try to influence exchange rates by buying or selling foreign currency.

“The central bank report points to a slow rise of the Taiwan dollar,” said Henry Lin, a currency trader at Shin Kong Commercial Bank in Taipei. Malaysia’s ringgit strengthened, completing a second
quarterly gain, after the central bank predicted the economy will return to growth by year-end as stimulus programs revive domestic demand. Gross domestic product slid 3.9 percent from a year earlier in the second quarter, following a 6.2 percent drop in the first three months of this year.

“The market is focusing on the better economic outlook,” said Azmi Shukri Rahman, a currency trader at CIMB Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. “If merger and acquisition deals here are well received, we can expect to see more inflows supporting the ringgit.”

 The currency rose 0.7 percent to 3.4605 per dollar today, extending its quarterly advance to 1.5 percent.

Growth, Politics

Indonesia’s rupiah appreciated for a second quarter as the fastest economic growth in Southeast Asia and the re-election of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono helped draw funds from abroad.
The currency had its best month since April as the highest interest rates among Asia’s 10 largest economies lured investors. The central bank this week maintained its forecast for the economy to expand 4 percent this year, while the Asian Development Bank last week raised its growth projection to 4.3 percent from a March estimate of 3.6 percent.

“We’ve been very positive on the Indonesian rupiah due to the positive political and macroeconomic developments which led to quite a bit of re-rating on the currency,” said Mirza Baig, a currency strategist at Deutsche Bank AG in Singapore. “Carry trades were also popular and the rupiah’s high yield relative to the region makes it attractive.”

 The rupiah rose 0.7 percent to 9,660 in Jakarta, taking this quarter’s advance to 5.7 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The currency has risen 4.7 percent this month and its 13 percent gain for the year is Asia’s best performance.

Elsewhere, the Philippine peso climbed 1.6 percent this quarter to 47.365, while the Singapore dollar advanced 2.8 percent to S$1.4076. Thailand’s baht rose 1.9 percent to 33.43. China’s yuan was at 6.8263 versus 6.8307 at the end of June. 

(Source: Bloomberg)