Dollar Ready for Rebound after its Longest Slump in 18 Months?
  • Dollar Ready for Rebound after its Longest Slump in 18 Months?

  • Japanese Yen Crosses Bounce after Four Day Tumble as Equities Firm

  • Euro Extends its Climb, Can EURUSD Win 6 Months Highs?

  • Canadian Dollar Faces Volatility Surge to End the Week with Jobs Data

  • Australian Dollar Focuses on Chinese Data, Ignores Jobs Figures to Rally

  • New Zealand Dollar: RBNZ Buys Currency, Conflicts with Easing Call

  • Gold Posts Best Day in Two Weeks

Dollar Ready for Rebound after its Longest Slump in 18 Months?

A rebound for the S&P 500 after a three-day slump added a sentiment burden to the already-troubled, safe haven dollar. With Thursday’s close, the Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (ticker = USDollar) has dropped five consecutive trading days. That matches the worst slump for the greenback since late January 2012. The ‘traditional’ academic assessment of a reserve currency falling out of favor as appetite for yield rises doesn’t hold given the meandering performance of global equities and other sensitive asset classes. At the same time, the bearish ride lacks for justification from fears of a delayed Taper from the Fed. Both central banker commentary and data this week have proven largely supportive of an opening move to the wind-down in September. Dallas Fed President Fisher reiterated the hawkish line when he said he expected the Taper to start in September unless conditions deteriorate materially. Yet, even if the moderation of external support is within sight, the actual move is still six weeks away. A lot can change until then. The greatest potential for a committed trend still rests with an appreciable risk move.

Japanese Yen Crosses Bounce after Four Day Tumble as Equities Firm

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) weighed in on monetary policy Thursday morning, and the outcome was what global investors had expected. Given the exceptional scope of the program announced back in April, the central bank saw fit to simply keep a steady hand on the plan to increase the money base by ¥60-70 trillion. For yen traders, this is mildly bullish for the currency (bearish for yen crosses) as the constant escalation of stimulus carried serious weight in its expected devaluation. The fear of a potentially limitless QE program was the impetus to the incredible rally from the crosses between September of last year through mid-year 2013. Though, now with limitations in sight, the concern ebbs. Moving forward, we have carry trade pairs that yield record low carry alongside a central bank that is shifting to a ‘hands off’ approach. This is the basis for driving the yen back to the whiles of risk appetite – with a greater sensitivity to risk aversion due to the spot-value imbalance.