US Dollar 2009 Forecast
How Did the Dollar Trade in 2008?
It has been an exceptionally active year in the foreign exchange market
as currency volatilities hit record highs. In the first half of the
year, everyone was worried about how much further the dollar would fall
but in the second half of the year the concern became how much further
the dollar would rise. After hitting a record low against the Euro in
the second quarter, in the beginning of the fourth quarter, the US
dollar actually surged to a 2 year high. From trough to peak, the
dollar index rose more than 23 percent in 2008.
3 Themes for 2009 The
US economy and the dollar’s fate in the years ahead could be determined
by what happens in 2009. We are focusing on 3 big themes that will
impact the US dollar and each of these themes encompasses a lot.
1. Will there be a U or L Shaped Recovery?
The US is in recession and the slowdown is expected to deepen in 2009.
Before a recovery is even possible, the economy has to work through
more weakness and negative surprises. Non-farm payrolls declined by
533k in November, sending the unemployment rate to a 15 year high of
6.7 percent. With many US corporations forced to tighten their belts,
the unemployment rate could rise as high as 8 percent in 2009. We
expect this to happen because over the past 50 years on average,
recessions have boosted the unemployment rate by 2.8 percent. When the
current recession started in December, the unemployment rate was 5.0
percent. If you tack on 2.8 percent to that level that would put the
unemployment rate at least 7.8 percent.
Non-farm payrolls
could double dip, just as it has in past recessions. In this case, we
would expect a rebound followed by another sharp loss that rivals
November’s job cuts. A rise in unemployment spreads into incomes,
spending and then usually leads to more layoffs. We need to see this
toxic cycle end before we can see a recovery. Consumer spending has
already been very weak and the trade deficit is widening as the dollar
strengthens. As the 2 primary inputs into GDP, we expect fourth
quarter growth to be very weak. The strength of the US dollar in Q3
and for most of Q4 will also take a big bite out of corporate earnings,
leading to disappointments for the stock market. This is why we expect
more weakness in the US dollar and the US economy in the first quarter
of 2009. However towards the middle of the second quarter, we may begin
to see the US economy stabilize as it starts to reap the benefits of
Quantitative Easing and President Barack Obama’s fiscal stimulus plan.
New Administrations usually hit the ground running and as such we fully
expect the rest of the TARP funds to be tapped shortly after his
inauguration. The shape of the US recovery will have a big impact on
the price action of the US dollar but there is no question that the
path to a stronger dollar will be through a weaker one.
The following chart illustrates how non-farm payrolls double-dipped during the 2001 recession.
Although
we expect the US economy to start its slow recovery in the second half
of 2009, GDP growth next year will still be negative. Retail sales and
non-farm payrolls will be particularly ugly in the first quarter, but
we are optimistic that monetary policy and fiscal stimulus will begin
to help the economy. The record decline in mortgage rates should also
help to stabilize the housing market in 2009. Something between a L
and U shaped recovery is likely.
2. What Matters More to the Dollar - Safety or Yield?
The dollar’s rally in the second half of 2008 has been largely driven
by risk aversion, deleveraging and repatriation. In other words,
despite the next to nothing yield offered by dollar denominated
investments, a flight safety into US dollars and government bonds has
kept the greenback from collapsing against other currencies like the
British pound, Canadian and Australian dollars. The concern for safety
was so high that investors were willing to take negative yields just to
park their money with the US government. A bubble is brewing in the
Treasury market and any improvement in risk appetite will take the
market’s focus away from safety and back to return on money at which
time ultra low interest rates could become a detriment for the US
dollar. The dollar’s performance against other currencies would be
contingent upon growth in the rest of the world. For example, if the UK
economy is in the process of recovering, demand for yield and the
prospect of return could send the GBP/USD higher, but if there is a
prolonged recession in the Eurozone, then the Euro may no longer be the
flavor of the month.
3. Compression in Interest Rates and Volatility:
Volatility in the currency market also hit a record high in 2008 but in
2009 we expect the volatility to compress as interest rates around the
world converge. Much of the volatility this past year has been spurred
by speculation about how much various central banks would cut interest
rates. As they run out of room to ease, we may stop seeing monetary
policy surprises which can eventually lead to stabilization for carry
trades. Don’t expect this to happen in the first quarter however as
many central banks are still expected to cut interest rates. The Fed’s
rate cuts have long been a big driver of market volatility and now that
risk is off the table. When the monetary and fiscal stimulus start to
impact the US economy, the market may actually start talking about a
rate hike in the US. Interest rates cannot remain at zero forever,
especially if inflation starts creeping higher in the second half of
the year.
Is there a Risk of Deflation?
Deflation
is much more of a problem for the US economy than inflation. Since oil
prices are more than 75 percent off their highs. As a result, we have
seen either flat or negative consumer price growth every month between
August and November. The December numbers have yet to be release, but
there is no reason to expect CPI to turn positive. Since the beginning
of the year annualized consumer price growth has fallen from 2.1 to 1.1
percent. The US economy has not officially hit deflationary
conditions, but with commodity prices continuing to fall and consumer
demand slumping, deflation will become a greater risk than inflation in
the first half of 2009. However this may change in the second half as
Quantitative Easing, fiscal stimulus and hopefully a weaker currency
boosts inflation.
Time for Quantitative Easing
US
interest rates have fallen 400bp from 4.25 percent to 0.25 percent in
2008. For most people, interest rates at 0.25 percent are as
unattractive as zero interest rates. With US rates pretty much at
zero, the Federal Reserve has informally adopted its own version of
Quantitative Easing. Some people may even argue that the Fed has been
pursuing this strategy for months now. In conjunction with the Treasury
department, the Fed has doubled their balance sheet in the past 3
months to more than $2 trillion. They have done this by purchasing
direct equity investments in banks, easing standards on commercial
paper purchases, made efforts to relieve institutions of their toxic
asset-backed securities and are now considering buying Treasury bonds
and agency debt. By buying these assets, they are adding money into the
financial system. Like the Yen, Quantitative Easing exposes the US
dollar to significant downside risks because the Federal Reserve is
basically printing money and using that money to flood the market with
liquidity, eroding the value of the dollar in the process. However it
is a step that the central bank needs to take to stabilize the US
economy and to prevent a deflationary spiral. The central bank will
not be worried about a weak currency and will in fact welcome one
because they know that a weaker currency is like an interest rate cut
in many ways because it helps to support and stimulate the economy.
Technical Outlook for the Dollar Index
As
indicated in the following chart, the US dollar rallied significantly
in the second half of the year. Between June and November, the dollar
index rose more than 25 percent. However the rally hit a brick wall
in the month of December, when it plunged 12 percent. Since then it has
recovered modestly, but it is hovering below stiff resistance. Not
only is there the 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement above current
levels, but that also coincides with the 100-day Simple Moving
Average. If the dollar index breaks above 81.70, there is scope for a
much sharper gain, but the combination of a head and shoulders pattern
in formation, Fibonacci and Moving Average resistance suggests that the
odds are skewed towards more losses than gains in the beginning of
2009.
http://www.forexpros.com/analysis/technical/2009-currency-market-outlook-15517