The frequency of my reports on the Chinese Yuan
is admittedly much higher than it used to be. Why? Call it disbelief.
More than two months have passed since China revalued its currency, and
after a rapid 1% appreciation, the RMB has actually fallen back. Today,
it stands only .5% higher against the Dollar compared to June 18. On a
trade-weighted basis, it is actually 2.3% lower. What is going on?!
Emerging Market Currencies Flat in 2010
Sunday, August 29, 2010
The recovery that emerging markets (their economies and financial markets) have staged since the lows of 2008 is impressive. In most corners of the financial markets, all of the losses have been erased, and securities/currencies are trading only slightly below there pre-credit crisis levels. Even compared to twelve months ago, in 2009, the performance of emerging market currencies holds up well. In the year-to-date, however, most of these currencies have appreciated only slightly, thanks to a particularly weak month of August.
Labels:
Emerging Currencies
Pound Rally Runs out of Steam
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
The rally in the Pound, which lifted it 10% from trough to peak,
appears to be fizzling. The Pound is already down 3% in the last two
weeks, and is trending downward. It now stands at a four-week low
against the Dollar.
Labels:
British Pound
Intervention Looms as Yen Closes in on Record High
Friday, August 20, 2010
It was only a few weeks ago that I last wrote
about the possibility of intervention on behalf of the Japanese Yen,
and frankly, not a whole lot has changed since then. On the other hand,
the Japanese Yen has continued to appreciate, the Japanese economy has
continued to deteriorate, and the Bank of Japan has continued to ratchet
up its rhetoric. In short, whereas intervention once loomed as a
distant prospect, it has now become a very real possibility
Labels:
Central Banks
US National Debt and the US Dollar
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Pessimists love to point to the surging US National Debt as an
indication that the Dollar will one day collapse. And yet, not only has
the US Dollar avoided collapse , but is actually holding steady in spite
of record-setting budget deficits. That being the case, one has to
wonder: As far as the forex markets are concerned, does this debt even
matter?
Labels:
Central Banks
Safe Haven Trade Returns
Friday, August 13, 2010
I shouldn’t have been so complacent in declaring the paradigm shift in forex markets, whereby risk aversion had given way to comparative growth and interest rate differentials. While such a shift might have been present – or even dominant – in forex markets over the last couple months, it appears to have once again been superseded by the so-called safe haven trade.
Labels:
Economic Indicators
SNB Leads Downward Pressure on Euro
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Since the beginning of this week, the Euro has retreated 3% against
the US Dollar, including a 2% dip in Wednesday’s trading session, alone.
Is it possible that the Euro rally was too good to be true, or is this
correction only temporary?
Labels:
Central Banks
China Currency Revaluation: More Than Just the Yuan at Stake
Monday, August 9, 2010
I concluded my last post (Euro Recovery: Paradigm Shift Confirmed)
by musing about how interesting it is that nobody has taken credit for
predicting/profiting from the sudden reversal in forex markets, whereby
the Euro has surged and the Dollar has tanked. Two days later, I think I
can offer an explanation: China.
That’s right. The force behind the sudden sea change might not be private investors, which up until the spike entrenched itself as a full-fledged connection, remained firmly behind the declining Euro. Instead, it seems quite reasonable that China – via its sovereign wealth fund, which is charged with investing its foreign exchange reserves – might be the responsible party.
That’s right. The force behind the sudden sea change might not be private investors, which up until the spike entrenched itself as a full-fledged connection, remained firmly behind the declining Euro. Instead, it seems quite reasonable that China – via its sovereign wealth fund, which is charged with investing its foreign exchange reserves – might be the responsible party.
Labels:
Chinese Yuan (RMB)
Japanese Yen: Intervention is Imminent?
Sunday, August 1, 2010
I last mused about the possibility of Japanese Yen intervention in June (Japanese Yen: 90 or 95?):
“It seems that anything between 90 and 95 is acceptable, while a drop
below 90 is cause for intervention.” Since then, the Japanese Yen has
fallen below 86 Yen per Dollar (the USD/JPY pair is now down 7% on the
year), and analysts are beginning to wonder aloud about when the Bank of
Japan (BOJ) will step in.
Labels:
Central Banks
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