Forex: Dollar Confirms Longest Tumble in 3 Years After Yellen Testimony

Talking Points:

  • Dollar Confirms Longest Tumble in 3 Years After Yellen Testimony

  • British Pound: BoE to Reconcile Traders and Bank’s Divergent Outlook

  • Euro Outlook Mixed between Growth Forecast Growth Upgrades, Fitch Warning

Dollar Confirms Longest Tumble in 3 Years After Yellen Testimony

Janet Yellen delivered her first official testimony on monetary policy before Congress as the Fed Chair this past session and the dollar notably extended its decline while equities climbed more than 1 percent. This would seem an easy read for cause-and-effect, but the impact of the news likely carries less sway over FX and capital markets than many suspect. For all the sound bites and headlines that the new Fed Chair’s statement and Q&A inspired, she stuck remarkably well to the playbook Ben Bernanke had setup before her. This includes support for the current pace of consistent Tapering alongside a forecast for a more distant return to rate hikes that the simple thresholds may imply. So where is the impetus for this 7-day USDollar decline – the longest since December 2010 – coming from? Simple momentum.

Over the past week, we have seen the S&P 500 mount an impressive rebound from its 6 percent correction while the dollar has sunk over 1 percent. While reviving a negative correlation between the two that follows the lines of ‘risk trends,’ the momentum is as yet unconvincing of robust trend development. This seems to have its roots in the market’s acclimation to the reality of a steady Taper and the reality that the downshift in stimulus itself is not the panic-level event that would set off a risk unwind. Yellen promoted both the Taper and calm at the House leg of the Humphrey-Hawkins testimony. Among the highlights, the central banker said she expected the Fed to continue with the measured steps of the Taper. On the other hand, with the FOMC’s 6.5 percent unemployment target (offered last June) in sight, Yellen reiterated the objective was a ‘threshold’ and not a ‘trigger’. To ease the pressure this disparity would have with each economic update, went on to say the Fed will look at a broad range of labor data. The market will eagerly look to establish what those measures are.

So, where do we look for the dollar’s bearings moving forward? Risk trends. US equities (a benchmark for investor sentiment) are approaching record highs as the VIX Volatility Index is quickly returning to a natural floor around 12 percent. Reversing the ‘risk’ premium is one thing. Initiating a new and lasting speculative drive is another. It requires commitment and capital inflow these markets will struggle to produce.