Lots of event risk in the days ahead

Fears about yet another market crash in October proved unfounded but there were severe bouts of nervousness during parts of the month.  This was hard to tie in with the strength of earnings and continued good news on the economic front but perhaps markets had already priced in a lot of good news.   This was evident in the fact that economic surprises were becoming increasingly negative.

Nervousness is good for the dollar and has at least given the currency a semblance of support.   However, not all the economic news is coming in below forecast as demonstrated by the stronger than consensus reading for the US ISM index for October whilst even the eurozone PMI moved back into expansion territory following 17 months of contraction.

The tone over the rest of the week will depend on the outcome of several central bank meetings the main ones being the Fed, ECB and BoE as well as the US non-farm payrolls report.  None of the central banks are likely to hike rates but in an FX market that is becoming increasingly reactive to interest rate differentials whichever bank sounds relatively more hawkish will see their respective currency strengthen the most.

Unless the Fed sounds particularly dovish the dollar is likely to consolidate further over the short term and given the still significant size of dollar short positioning there is still some scope for some further relief for the dollar.   However, don’t expect much movement out of current ranges until after the payrolls report and even then markets may be hesitant ahead of this weekend’s G20 meeting.

Who’s going to follow in Brazil’s footsteps?

Last week saw a sell off in some emerging market currencies and whilst this may simply have been profit taking attributable to some large hedge funds it did coincide with the imposition of a tax on portfolio inflows in Brazil.  The tax dented sentiment as it quickly fuelled speculation that it would be followed elsewhere, especially in countries that had seen rapid FX appreciation.  

The BRL is one of the best performing currencies this year against the USD whilst the stock market has surged on strong capital inflows.  The huge increase in USD liquidity globally and substantial improvement in risk appetite has fuelled strong capital inflows into Brazil especially as the country has proven to be one of the most resilient during the crisis.

Although on the margin the tax will have a negative impact on speculative flows into Brazil it is unlikely to have a lasting impact.  Previous such measures have done little to prevent further appreciation.  The BRL is clearly overvalued by around 25-30 at present, but the tax in itself will not be sufficient to result in a move back to “fair value”. 

At best it may act a temporary break on currency appreciation and could limit the magnitude of further gains in the real but this could be at the cost of distorting resource allocation and market functioning.   The longer term solution is to enhance productivity but this will not help in the interim. The tax may make investors a little more reluctant to pile into Brazilian assets, which is what the authorities will desire but already the BRL is back on its appreciation path suggesting a short lived reaction. 

Other countries that could follow include South Africa, Turkey or South Korea but South Africa has already denied that it has any plans to move in this direction.  In South Korea’s case the central bank has chosen to intervene in currency markets to prevent the further strengthening in the won but that also has implications for sterilizing such flows limiting the extent that intervention can be carried out.    

The bottom line is that the broad based improvement in risk appetite is proving to be a strong driver of capital flows into emerging markets and the reality is that many emerging economies such as Brazil and many in Asia have been much more resilient than feared. 

Although there is clearly a limit on the extent that these countries want to allow their currencies to strengthen versus USD the upward pressure will continue, leading to more FX intervention and potential imposition of taxes or restrictions such as implemented in Brazil.   Despite this the outlook for most emerging currencies remains positive and the authorities will face an uphill struggle. 

Where will interest rates go up next?

Following the decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia to raise interest rates attention has swiftly turned to which central bank will move next. Indeed, there has been a reassessment of global interest rate decisions following Australia’s move. The hike in Australia is unlikely, however, to be quickly followed by the US, Japan, Europe or UK where policy is set to remain highly accommodative for long while.

Attention will however, turn to the Bank of Korea as well as the RBNZ and Norges Bank. In particular, the Norges Bank may be the next to hike when it meets on October 28. Norway has already appears to be priming markets for a rate hike. The RBNZ is likely to be slower to hike given the still slow pace of recovery in New Zealand and comfortable inflation backdrop.

The impact on currencies is not straightforward as the bigger influence on currency markets throughout the crisis has been risk appetite rather than interest rates. However, the influence of risk on currencies is beginning to wane and although interest rates have not been a major driver of currencies over recent months the move by the RBA likely accelerates the process of yield re-emerging as a key currency driver.

This is a big problem for the US dollar given that the Fed is unlikely to be quick to raise interest rates even if quantitative easing is withdrawn sooner. This means that the dollar will suffer from a growing yield disadvantage as interest rate hikes are priced in elsewhere. Taken together with improving risk appetite as reflected in the resilience of global equity markets, the main casualty will be the dollar, hit both from a yield and risk appetite perspective.

Risk currencies and those currencies with the greater prospect of higher rates will do well meaning further upside for the Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar as well as the Norwegian krone. Asian currencies look to continue to strengthen with the Korean won remaining an outperformer despite intervention threats by the Korean central bank. The euro will benefit from dollar weakness but is unlikely to benefit from anything euro specific given the likely slower pace of recovery in the eurozone. Meanwhile sterling is likely to remain under pressure, not helped by yield or risk appetite, and sentiment hit afresh by weak data.

Talking about currencies

It’s always the same story.  Ahead of the G7 (or G8 and now more important G20) meetings speculation of decisive action on currencies intensifies.  Traders and investors become cautious on the off chance that something significant will happen but the majority of times nothing of note emerges.

There was no difference this time around.  The G7 Finance Ministers meeting in Istanbul failed to deliver anything substantive on currencies, repeating the usual mantra about the adverse impact of “excess volatility and disorderly movements”.  Although the group pledged to monitor FX markets there was no indication of imminent action. 

The lack of action is perhaps surprising in one respect as there were plenty of central bankers and finance officials talking about currencies in the run up to the G7 meeting, most of which were attempting to talk the dollar higher against their respective currencies.  Given the increase in rhetoric ahead of the meeting, the relatively weak statement now leaves the door open to further dollar weakness.

The strongest indication of any FX action or intervention came from the country that was supposedly the least concerned about currency strength; Japanese Finance Minister Fujii warned that Japan “will take action” if “currencies show some excessive moves”.  The shift in stance from Japan since the new government took power has been stark (considering that the new government was supposedly in favour of a stronger yen).  Markets will likely continue to test the resolve of the Japanese authorities and buy yen anyway.

Although the G7 statement said little to support the dollar and the overall tone to the dollar likely remains negative over coming months, the softer tone to equity markets and run of weaker economic data in the US – the latest data to disappoint was the September US jobs report – may give some risk aversion related relief to the dollar this week. 

Weaker data and equities alongside the impact of official rhetoric is being reflected in CFTC Commitment of Traders’ data (a good gauge of speculative market positioning) which revealed a sharp drop in short dollar positions, by around a quarter, highlighting for a change, an improvement in dollar sentiment over the last week. 

The biggest losers in terms of speculative positioning were the British pound, where the net short position reached its most extreme since mid September 2008, and Canadian dollar where the net long position was cut by almost half.  Again this may reflect official views on currencies, with Canadian officials expressing concern about the strength of the Canadian dollar in contrast to the perception that UK officials favour a weaker pound.
Central bank meetings (BoE, ECB, RBA) will dominate the calendar this week and more comments on currencies are likely even if interest rates are left unchanged.  Meanwhile FX markets will continue to watch equities, and the start of the US Q3 earnings season will give important signals to determine the sustainability of the recent equity market rally.  Recent weak economic data has already cast doubt about a speedy recovery and if earnings disappoint risk aversion could once again be back on the table.

Contrasting fortunes for GBP and JPY

The main FX movers over recent days have been JPY and GBP. Japan’s non interventionist FX stance and the approach of fiscal half year end on September 30 have given markets plenty of appetite to push the JPY higher.  In particular a change in Japanese tax rules which waives taxes on repatriated profits suggests there will be more repatriation flows than usual ahead of fiscal half year end.  Such repatriation flows have played a role in the appreciation of the JPY.    

Even if such flows do not actually materialise the mere speculation that they exist will be sufficient to keep the JPY supported.  Helping the JPY on its way is the view that Japanese officials are not particularly concerned about a strengthening JPY although it is worth noting that Japan’s new finance minister Fujii did note that he was carefully watching the JPY’s rise.  Nonetheless, it appears that the new government’s policy in Japan is in sharp contrast to the previous government’s FX policy which favoured a weaker JPY.  

The positive shift in JPY sentiment over recent weeks has been particularly evident in speculative positioning data which reveals that net JPY speculative positions have hit their highest since 3 February 2009, a sharp turnaround from negative net positioning just three months ago.  Further JPY gains are likely over the short term as speculative appetite for the currency continues to improve. 

In contrast to Japan, UK officials appear to be more comfortable with a weaker currency. Recent comments by Bank of England (BoE) Governor King that a weaker GBP would help exporters has weighed on GBP.  Consequently, speculative sentiment for GBP deteriorated particularly sharply last week, with CFTC IMM data revealing the biggest short GBP positioning since early April 2009.  Even though the latest UK Monetary Policy Committee minutes revealed no sign that the BoE is contemplating expanding quantitative easing, GBP continues to be a much unloved currency.  

Some likely improvements in economic data this week may provide relief to GBP but it will prove limited against the weight of negative GBP sentiment.  The Hometrack housing survey revealed a further increase in UK house prices in September and data this week will likely reveal an upside revision to Q2 GDP, and an improvement in manufacturing confidence.  Overall, despite the encouraging data GBP/USD looks vulnerable to a further downside push.