Risk Aversion and Asian Growth Compete for the Direction of the Forex Market
Global equities markets took a beating last week. The phenomenon began in the United States (on the back of subprime mortgage concerns) and it spread to the financial markets in other countries. For the forex market, the primary impact of the losses was a return of risk-aversion. The risk appetite of currency traders has waned, and as a result, the yen-based carry trade has begun to unwind. The US dollar has also appreciated significantly as investors run to the safety of US assets. But the search for yield and the changing fundamentals of the market complicate matters, and the current trends may not last.
Regarding the carry trade, it is risk aversion driving the FX market. Japanese fundamentals stink, with Retail Sales disappointing to the negative and deflation sill a concern. But the yen continues to gain as greater market volatility hurts the carry trade. But this is all dependent on the equities market. If the Dow recoups its losses this week, we will see a renewal of the yen carry trade.
The US dollar also saw some improbable gains this past weekend. With investors more conscious of risk, the stability offered by dollar-denominated assets is more appealing. Americans, concerned about losing their gains overseas, repatriate their holdings into US dollars. For international traders, the US dollar becomes a store of value, just like holding gold or silver. Emerging markets in Asia were especially hard hit as overseas investor sunned riskier assets in favor of American ones. This particular phenomenon is controlling the currency market, overpowering economic factors that would pull back the US dollar (like the disastrous Existing Home Sales report).
But the forex market changes very quickly, and if last week’s equities market decline proves temporary, then we could see both a resumption in the carry trade and a plunge in the US dollar. The yen already began giving back some of its gains in European and Asian trading this morning with EURJPY, GBPJPY, AUDJPY and NZDJPY all riding upwards. And the US dollar cannot maintain its status as a store of value forever.
The latter situation is pretty interesting. The dollar benefits from its use as the currency of choice in international trade and as the primary denomination in foreign reserves. We have talked in the past about how other countries are starting to move away from the US dollar both in terms of international trade and in terms of foreign reserves. And there are reports in Bloomberg today of increasing protectionism with regard to foreign ownership of assets in the United States and Europe. This hurts the dollar and the euro because it makes dollar- and euro-denominated assets less attractive. And US fundamentals do not look like they are going to get better anytime soon. A recent Fed report suggests that even the weak US dollar may not help the trade deficit. We may see temporary gains in the greenback and the yen, but a long-term outlook does not bode well for either currency.
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