USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 25)

Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Wed Nov 23, 2016 10:44 am

Here’s Where the U.S. Dollar is Likely Headed

By Ben Morris

The US government bond yields are higher than those in other developed countries.

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury has yields of 2.3% today. Japan’s 10-year bonds yield 0%. Germany’s and France’s 10-year bonds yield 0.3% and 0.8%, respectively.

Even Italy, which has an unemployment rate of 12% today, has a 2.1% yield on its 10-year bonds.

Those economies are weaker and/or less stable. And the yields are lower. So money flows to the dollar. Over the long term, that trend is likely to continue.


Source: Daily Wealth Trader

http://dailytradealert.com/2016/11/22/h ... ly-headed/
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby behappyalways » Fri Nov 25, 2016 8:18 pm

美滙逼近14年高 
亞幣指數重返09海嘯低位
http://hk.apple.nextmedia.com/financees ... 5/19844915
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Sat Nov 26, 2016 6:22 pm

What Has Worked (And What Hasn’t) With A Stronger Dollar

By Eric Bush

The most tightly correlated basket to the USD over the past decade has clearly been late cyclicals (energy, industrials, and materials). This basket has underperformed the overall GKCI DM equity index by nearly 27% over the past decade. It is noteworthy that this group has basically market-performed since the election while the dollar has gained by roughly 3%.


Early cyclicals (consumer discretionary) have had the highest positive correlation to the USD over the past decade. So as the the dollar strengthens, early cyclicals have outperformed the broader market. Again, similar to late cyclicals, early cyclicals have broadly market-performed while the dollar has picked up steam.


Growth counter-cyclicals (consumer staples and health care) and the USD have been going in opposite directions since this summer. Growth counter-cyclicals have underperformed the broader market by over 11% since 7/7/2016 while the dollar has strengthen by nearly 5%. This is a breakdown from the usual relationship over the past decade as these two series still have a 70% correlation.


Lastly for hyper cyclicals (financials and information technology), there hasn’t been a very robust relationship to the dollar for the past decade. The 10-year correlation is just -20%. We would highlight that while hyper cyclicals have outperformed the broader market by nearly 10% since 7/7/2016, hyper cyclicals have not broken out of the trading range that has been in place since 2009.




Source: Zero Hedge

http://www.thetradingreport.com/2016/11 ... er-dollar/
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Risks Out There 04 (Aug 15 - Dec 16)

Postby behappyalways » Sun Dec 04, 2016 6:39 pm

The mighty dollar

Why a strengthening dollar is bad for the world economy

The rise of the greenback looks like something to welcome. That is to ignore the central role the dollar plays in global finance


THE world’s most important currency is flexing its muscles. In the three weeks following Donald Trump’s victory in America’s presidential elections, the dollar had one of its sharpest rises ever against a basket of rich-country peers. It is now 40% above its lows in 2011.

It has strengthened relative to emerging-market currencies, too. The yuan has fallen to its lowest level against the dollar since 2008; anxious Chinese officials are said to be pondering tighter restrictions on foreign takeove

rs by domestic firms to stem the downward pressure. India, which has troubles of its own making (see article), has seen its currency reach an all-time low against the greenback. Other Asian currencies have plunged to depths not seen since the financial crisis of 1997-98.

The dollar has been gradually gaining strength for years. But the prompt for this latest surge is the prospect of a shift in the economic-policy mix in America. The weight of investors’ money has bet that Mr Trump will cut taxes and spend more public funds on fixing America’s crumbling infrastructure.

A big fiscal boost would lead the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates at a faster rate to check inflation. America’s ten-year bond yield has risen to 2.3%, from almost 1.7% on election night. Higher yields are a magnet for capital flows (see article).

Zippier growth in the world’s largest economy sounds like something to welcome. A widely cited precedent is Ronald Reagan’s first term as president, a time of widening budget deficits and high interest rates, during which the dollar surged. That episode caused trouble abroad and this time could be more complicated still.

Although America’s economy makes up a smaller share of the world economy, global financial and credit markets have exploded in size. The greenback has become more pivotal. That makes a stronger dollar more dangerous for the world and for America.

America’s relative clout as a trading power has been in steady decline: the number of countries for which it is the biggest export market dropped from 44 in 1994 to 32 two decades later. But the dollar’s supremacy as a means of exchange and a store of value remains unchallenged.

Some aspects are clear to see. By one estimate in 2014 a de facto dollar zone, comprising America and countries whose currencies move in line with the greenback, encompassed perhaps 60% of the world’s population and 60% of its GDP.

Other elements are less visible. The amount of dollar financing that takes place beyond America’s shores has surged in recent years. As emerging markets grow richer and hungrier for finance, so does their demand for dollars.

Since the financial crisis, low interest rates in America have led pension funds to look for decent yields elsewhere. They have rushed to buy dollar-denominated bonds issued in unlikely places, such as Mozambique and Zambia, as well as those issued by biggish emerging-market firms. These issuers were all too happy to borrow in dollars at lower rates than prevailed at home.

By last year this kind of dollar debt amounted to almost $10trn, a third of it in emerging markets, according to the Bank for International Settlements, a forum for central bankers.

When the dollar rises, so does the cost of servicing those debts. But the pain caused by a stronger greenback stretches well beyond its direct effect on dollar borrowers. That is because cheap offshore borrowing has in many cases caused an increased supply of local credit.

Capital inflows push up local asset prices, encouraging further borrowing. Not every dollar borrowed by emerging-market firms has been used to invest; some of the money ended up in bank accounts (where it can be lent out again) or financed other firms.

A strengthening dollar sends this cycle into reverse. As the greenback rises, borrowers husband cash to service the increasing cost of their own debts. As capital flows out, asset prices fall.

The upshot is that credit conditions in lots of places outside America are bound ever more tightly to the fortunes of the dollar. It is no coincidence that some of the biggest losers against the dollar recently have been currencies in countries, such as Brazil, Chile and Turkey, with lots of dollar debts.

There are lurking dangers in a stronger dollar for America, too. The trade deficit will widen as a strong currency squeezes exports and sucks in imports. In the Reagan era a soaring deficit stoked protectionism. This time America starts with a big deficit and one that has already been politicised, not least by Mr Trump, who sees it as evidence that the rules of international commerce are rigged in other countries’ favour.

A bigger deficit raises the chances that he act on his threats to impose steep tariffs on imports from China and Mexico in an attempt to bring trade into balance. If Mr Trump succumbs to his protectionist instincts, the consequences would be disastrous for all.

Much naturally depends on where the dollar goes from here. Many investors are sanguine. The greenback is starting to look dear against its peers. The Fed has a record of backing away from rate rises if there is trouble in emerging markets. Yet currencies often move far away from fundamental values for long periods. Nor is it obvious where investors fleeing America’s currency might run to.

The euro and the yuan, the two pretenders to the dollar’s crown, have deep-seated problems of their own. The Fed, whose next rate-setting meeting comes this month, may find it harder than before to avoid tightening in an economy that is heating up.

If the dollar stays strong, might protectionist pressure be defused by co-ordinated international action? Nascent talk of a new pact to rival the Plaza Accord, an agreement in 1985 between America, Japan, Britain, France and West Germany to push the dollar down again, looks misplaced. Japan and Europe are battling low inflation and are none too keen on stronger currencies, let alone on the tighter monetary policies that would be needed to secure them (see article).

Stockmarkets in America have rallied on the prospect of stronger growth. They are being too cavalier. The global economy is weak and the dollar’s muscle will enfeeble it further.

Source: The Economist
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Wed Dec 21, 2016 6:55 am

Two surprisingly easy ways to profit in the raging dollar bull market

Source: Daily Crux

http://thecrux.com/two-surprisingly-eas ... nd-beyond/
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Thu Dec 22, 2016 8:12 am

The US dollar peg has served Hong Kong well for 34 years

The peg protects us from a much worse fate in the whirlpool of volatility

The dollar must by now be so overbought, who is left to buy to push the price up?

Of course, it is possible for the dollar to surprise in 2018 or 2020 by breaking upwards through the line.

A major black swan event could be the catalyst: the break-up of the Euro, the crash of the Chinese economy, a bond market meltdown, or a nuclear warhead going off in the wrong place.


Source: SCMP

http://www.scmp.com/business/article/20 ... l-34-years
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Fri Dec 23, 2016 7:24 am

The #1 Black-Swan event for 2017

Source:

http://thecrux.com/the-1-black-swan-event-for-2017/
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 16)

Postby winston » Wed Jan 11, 2017 2:29 pm

This chart shows the dollar rally could be in trouble

by Annie Pei

While the dollar had been making "higher highs" on the way up, UUP has since made lower lows, which suggests "a change in trend."


Source: CNBC

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/chart-sho ... 20610.html
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 17)

Postby winston » Mon Jan 16, 2017 10:19 am

Dollar: Landed on the 50 day MA's last week as other countries intervened to support their currencies.

They cannot keep that up forever, the US looks stronger and with the Trump growth policies planned it will likely be stronger.

Thus the dollar is well-positioned to bounce.

Source: Investment House
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Re: USD 06 (Nov 15 - Dec 17)

Postby winston » Tue Jan 17, 2017 3:18 pm

A net 22% of fund managers thinks dollar is overvalued, the highest level since November 2006.

Source: Barron's Asia
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