US Dollar Breathes a Sigh of Relief, Trend Remains Towards Losses |
By David Rodriguez |
Published
08/27/2007
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Currency
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Unrated
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US Dollar Breathes a Sigh of Relief, Trend Remains Towards Losses
The US Dollar saw a modest bounce on the day of trade, as relatively illiquid markets allowed a sigh of relief through the Monday New York open. A UK Summer Bank Holiday meant that much of London remained offline through the earlier trading session. Later US economic data was unable to elicit much of a reaction from forex markets, signaling that the coming week may be similarly uneventful ahead of later critical US event risk.
The Euro remained almost exactly flat off of Friday’s close, dropping 15 points to $1.3649. British pound price action was slightly more eventful, as cable initially rallied to $2.0194 before coming back down to $2.0139 through the afternoon. The Japanese Yen remained the strongest performer through the afternoon, as the firmer dollar dropped ¥.25 to ¥116.13 through time of writing.
Disappointing US housing data was unable to move major currency pairs, with Existing Home Sales showing the largest inventory of unsold homes in 16 years. A 0.2 percent drop in transactions through July was better than median forecasts of a 0.9 percent decline, but it was nonetheless clear that the trend remains towards a larger inventory overhang in the domestic housing market. Many claim that the negative impact of the housing slowdown will spread to the broader economy, forcing unemployment rates to rise and hurting consumer demand.
Given fast-rising mortgage rates, it seems increasingly plausible that the housing recession will spread to other sectors of the economy. Combined with recent market turmoil, the US Federal may have little decision but to cut its central Fed Funds rate through its upcoming meeting. Fed Funds futures show a 96% chance of such a rate cut through the bank’s September meeting and a cumulative 50 basis points in cuts through December. All else remaining equal, this will leave trends towards dollar selling through the medium term.
Domestic equity markets proved similarly indifferent to the morning’s disappointing housing data, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average remaining largely unchanged in the moments to follow. The closely-monitored index fluctuated through the day’s trade, moving 23 points lower to 13,355 an hour ahead of the close. The S&P 500 was not quite as fortunate, however, shedding 0.6 percent to 1,470. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite lost 0.3 percent at 2,568.
Treasury markets were unsurprisingly higher on the Dow Jones slide, with the benchmark 10-Year Treasury Note 3/16 points improved to 101 and Ã,¼. Yields fell a relatively minor 2 basis points to 4.59 percent.
David Rodriguez is a Currency Analyst at FXCM.
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