Monday, February 22, 2010

Euro Exchange Rates to hit 1.3000 vs US Dollar Exchange Rate

Foreign Exchange - Pounds Sterling and Euro Exchange Rate Outlook

The bandwagon is gathering speed, as we expected. Bloomberg reports Barclay’s Wu and UBS’ Yu have each cut their 12-month euro exchange rate forecasts (to 1.40 and 1.30, respectively). Gary Shilling predicts parity, which the euro exchange rates has not seen since 2002. At the core of these forecasts is the idea that the ECB will hang on to its current low rate for longer because so many countries will be falling back into recession due to budget austerity, including Spain and the other PIGS. The US, meanwhile, will be raising rates, even if last Thursday’s discount rate hike was not the bell-ringing.

We agree the euro rate is going to remain weak for a very long time to come, but we disagree with the idea that the ECB will be looking at recession data in some countries. The ECB looks at inflation data, period. There is nothing in the ECB’s past behavior that suggests it would refuse to hike rates if it saw inflation (and inflation expectations) rising to a dangerous level, recession in some members be damned. One size fits all, remember? Of course, recession by its very nature is non-inflationary, so the issue may not arise.

Not to be flippant, but Greece not being able to get data to Eurostat on deadline because its finance ministry is on strike to protest EMU-imposed austerity sums up the situation with stunning simplicity - worse than a SNAFU if something less than a full-blown Crisis.

Back on this side of the Atlantic, the Fed’s discount rate hike had a number of purposes, only one of which was to signal a readiness to raise "real" rates (Fed funds). One purpose was to take the punchbowl away from banks after many not only recorded big profits but also paid themselves 2007-level bonuses. A second purpose was to acknowledge that discount window borrowing had fallen back to minor levels, so the hike is a message to all and sundry that the crisis is over. A third reason, which may be wishful thinking although we hope it is not, is that the Fed wants to dampen commodity speculation. We have no way of knowing whether anyone borrowed 28-day discount window money to speculate in pork bellies and gold - it seems improbable, doesn’t it? - but an overall rise in the cost of borrowing does make managers re-consider risk/reward.

As one analyst put it, the discount rate hike didn’t bring forward a rise in Fed funds by one minute, and this is almost certainly true. The Fed is managing expectations, not engaging in monetary policy. The Fed has always played mind games with the market, and this is just another one. We get a number of Fed officials speaking this week, including Chairman Bernanke on Wednesday and Thursday. The expectation is that he will talk about normalization and decline to say much about monetary policy except that the discount rate move wasn’t it. The one to watch is San Francisco Fed Pres Yellen late today speaking on the economic outlook. She is the most straight-shooting of the bunch and often tells us the right perspective.

As noted above, a big move is almost always followed by a corrective move in the other direction as foreign exchange traders take profit, reconsider the reasons for the original move, and sometimes vote with their feet the other way if they perceive the currency is still oversold and more will be leaving the herd. This is called “fading the trend” and is very risky. We have had two such minor consolidations in recent weeks and they were exceptionally lame.

Bye for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates! Get a quote for Buying Euros now!Buying Dollars?
Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Dollars Now!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Australian Dollars Now!
Need to Buy Holiday Money? Buy Travel money at the best exchange rates visit http://www.travelfx.co.uk/ and save on your travel and holiday money needs

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Pounds Sterling and Euro Exchange Rate Outlook

Foreign Exchange - Pounds Sterling and Euro Exchange Rate Outlook

The euro exchange rate rose from a spike low at 1.3721 early in New York to 1.3747 at the close, not really a convincing move. Overnight the euro high was only 1.3801 and since then, the euro rate slid to a low of 1.3679.

This would seem to suggest that the market is not impressed by whatever the upcoming announcement may have to offer. We are surprised - normally the forex market likes announcement effects and the ensuing tussle over whether it’s a credible announcement.

Japan is having a holiday today. Pounds Sterling dipped as low as 1.5555 overnight but is staging a recovery this morning on Middle East and Asian sovereign demand, according to Market News. All our long-term models switched back to a selling pounds position yesterday.

Bye for Now

Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates! Get a quote for Buying Euros now!Buying Dollars?
Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Dollars Now!
Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Australian Dollars Now!
Need to Buy Holiday Money? Buy Travel money at the best exchange rates visit http://www.travelfx.co.uk/ and save on your travel and holiday money needs

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Foreign Exchange Traders sell euros

CFTC Commitment of Traders Report: Speculators increased euro short positions to a record high since the founding of the euro,

Monday, February 8, 2010

European sovereign debt problem

Foreign Exchange - Pounds Sterling and Euro Exchange Rate Outlook

The euro to US dollar exchange rates is trading in a narrow range of about 1.3620 to 1.3720 since late Friday, having dropped during the US session on Friday from 1.3742 to 1.3582, an 8-month low. The euro exchange rate came back later in the day in the usual end-of-week position paring, albeit a modest one this time.

The WSJ reports that "The cost of insuring Greek and Spanish debt against default fell amid a lack of fresh bad news Monday. However, the debt problems of Greece, as well as those of Spain and Portugal, are expected to remain a dominant feature in currency markets. Last Friday's vote by Portugal to extend the spending powers of its regional councils aren't going to help either as this will make it more difficult for Lisbon to curb the country's budget deficit."

During Asian hours, the failure of G7 to say anything interesting or worthwhile did not escape the notice of traders. G7 is so far down the news list that you have to search hard to find out what they did say. The group did not talk about the European sovereign debt problem, although EU officials made some comments on the sidelines, and although Japan wanted to talk about China, the rest of G7 chickened out. G7 gutlessness pushed Asian stock markets mostly lower, although the dollar/yen is flat as pancake in a tiny range of 89.10 to 89.56.

The US dollar index made a giant leap last week, from 78.68 on Feb 3 to 80.68 on Friday. See the chart. It probably went too far and too fast last week. We know prices don’t move in a straight line so we must expect a pullback at some point, but after that, the index has the potential to reach the 50% retracement level at 81.86 in Feb or March.


Bye for Now
Barbara Rockefeller
Foreign Exchange Trading
Forex Trading Reports - Click for a free trial

Buying Euros? Buy Euros at the best euro Rates! Get a quote for Buying Euros now!
Buying Dollars? Buy US Dollars at the Best Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Dollars Now!Buying Australian Dollars? Buy Australian Dollars at the Best Australian Dollar Rates! Get a quote for Buying Australian Dollars Now!

Need to Buy Holiday Money? Buy Travel money at the best exchange rates visit http://www.travelfx.co.uk/ and save on your travel and holiday money needs

Contact IMS Foreign Exchange + 44 207 183 2790