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3 Reasons Why U.S. Dollar Could Fall Further Next Week

Published 07/24/2020, 05:50 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

It has been a rough week for the U.S. dollar. The greenback traded lower against all of the major currencies, falling to multi-month and, in some cases, multi-year lows in the process. USD/JPY, which has been consolidating in a tight range for more than a week, finally broke down on Friday, dropping below 106 to its weakest level in four months. The U.S. dollar’s weakness was the most pronounced against the euro and Australian dollar – EUR/USD rose to its highest level since September 2018, while AUD/USD hit a one-year high. Chances are, investors will continue to sell U.S. dollars in the coming week for the following reasons:

#1 – Extra Jobless Benefits Disappear

Come Monday, more than 20 million Americans will lose the $600-a-week extra unemployment benefits that kept them afloat for the past few months. The official deadline is July 31, but based on the way states calculate and pay these benefits, the last payment for most people would be July 25 or July 26. Not only will these households see an immediate drop in income, but many businesses, such as grocery stores and retailers, will feel the effects as well. Unless these benefits are extended quickly, we’ll see more foreclosures, bankruptcies and, in turn, more retail job losses. The fear of the recovery unraveling could send the U.S. dollar to fresh lows. Congress is struggling to come up with another relief package, but the supplement it ends up providing won’t be as generous. At most we expect it to pay 70% of prior income but the average extra payment to unemployed Americans could fall to as low as $200 a week. With the funeral and remembrance ceremonies for former U.S. Representative John Lewis scheduled for the coming week, the real negotiations won’t begin until the first week of August.

#2 – Double-Digit Contraction Coming for Second Quarter U.S. GDP

Second quarter U.S. GDP numbers are also scheduled for release, and as so well put by Tim Smart, executive editor of US News (yes, I know), it might turn into a third-quarter hangover for the markets. Lockdown measures were first implemented at the end of the first quarter and the shutdown in activity caused a 5% contraction in GDP. Nearly all U.S. states were in full lockdown for the better part of Q2 and economists expect a 35% contraction in growth. Unfortunately, the data could be much worse as the Atlanta Fed predicts a 52.8% decline. Anything in excess of 40% will be a shock that could send equities and currencies plunging lower. USD/JPY in particular will fall quickly and aggressively. Even if the data is better, the U.S. dollar could decline versus high-beta currencies such as the euro, as the market compares the contraction in the U.S. with the expected 12% drop in GDP projected for the Eurozone in the same quarter.

#3 – Federal Reserve Meeting

The two greatest threats to the U.S. economy are two things the Federal Reserve has no control over – the rapid spread of coronavirus in the U.S. and the government’s fiscal response. A few weeks ago, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell warned lawmakers not to become complacent as the U.S. economy remains extraordinarily uncertain. Since then, the outlook worsened, extra unemployment benefits expired and the packages that Congress is discussing could fail to impress. For all of the reasons, we expect nothing but ongoing dovishness from the Fed along with a pledge to keep monetary policy accommodative for the foreseeable future. Last month, they said rates will remain at zero through 2022. How the U.S. dollar trades will depend on Powell’s tone. Back in June, he said a second-half recovery is likely, but with virus cases rising rapidly, his outlook may have dimmed. The big question is negative rates – any mention of that being an option will be bruising for the dollar. Regardless, we expect the greenback to extend its slide before and after FOMC.

Latest comments

USD is still too expensive right now, it needs to go cheaper or else it's difficult to keep buying equipment and durable goods priced in dollars
Thank you Kathy❤
Thank you for the excellent article. Your viewpoint has been proven as totally right. ✅✔ ✅✔
when the dept gonna be dangerously high ?
While I think the dollar has a lot of room to fall, point #1 by the author is clearly bullish. Fewer dollars chasing the same number of goods would cause the greenback to appreciate.
The more dollars you print just devalues all existing dollars. Even Trump knows that
US dollar will strengthen next week. It has no other choice.
can you explain on what basis is it going to strengthen
money makers gonna take in their minds this article and doing the madness again, if u know what I mean, the upcoming plunge abt GDP is already priced in, something fishy gonna happen
Short squeeze high chance
No, GDP plunge is not in price. If data will be bad dollar will crash.
Fantastic analysis, gloomy for the greenback. But there is always a wild card locked-in in waiting.
Wild card?
might be fall but trump will bring it up..election is coming he wants every americans happy and vote for him
Trump wants a cheap dollar
The US economy cant be fixed with Trump's antics anymore. Whether he wants to make Americans happy  but this current state of the economy is now beyond his control
Good realistic analysis, of course the wild card is Trump
what you think that Trump just signed huge discount of B medicines ?
Only gold can protects people’s savings during this times
Negative rates aren’t going to happen, you junkies. The FED has said this so many times.
you junkie kathie
They also said so many times last year that the economy was in good shape
Nice article Kathy, good piece of research on the very recent US economy there. Decreasing the interest rate generally weaken the currency and we have see that just after the announcment from the Fed that prompted the big rally from 23rd March onwards. However, Powell also mentioned the fact that he is unwilling to set negative interest rate. This should protect a bit the dollar to follow further due to a lower interest rate. In point 2 you say "Anything in excess of 40% will be a shock that could send equities and currencies plunging lower." However, Feb - Mar we have seen that during a sell-off investors tends to move back to "safe heven currencies", and, in fact, the USD strenghten further during that time. So, do you really think that if we will see another sell-off in equities (technical huge double top - W-shaped recovery), we should see "equities" and "USD" traveling together at this time? Thanks!
Feb- Mar event was a global panic and the demand for USD mainly came from swap lines from foreign banks hence why the FED opened up the faucet to avoid a currency crisis. I believe what Kathy is talking about here is a more localized event with less global variables affecting it. As investors weigh the economic effect of a -40% qtr vs how other nations are faring, I believe the USD will continue to show weakness. Hope this helps.
Hello
This article is written as if the author has insider information in regards to unemployment benefits. Such a negative one sided article built on the perpetuation of misinformation presented as fact. This person must not have done well in writing class as she provides no counterpoints, but a blatantly biased garbage article. I guess she is trying to lower the bar for terrible articles which was already quite low. Shame on you!
The GOP has had since May to extend unemployment benefits but has been holding 30 million Americans hostage while they try to earmark tax cuts for the wealthy. This isn’t insider information - it’s facts.
Exactly, theyre facts and nothing surprising. Fact is, things really are as dire for the dollar as she says. I dont see any counterpoints.
 You couldn’t be more wrong. Please buy equities (esp tech) and not gold/silver so we can all make money off you.
when everyone has reached a common opinion, it will then go the other way.
gold fall or rise?
Long-term it’ll rise.
But we sisnt have Covid or a global economic crisis where the dollar was called into question as the worlds currency.
Can dolllar will go more low in next week?
Yes
thanks, ? is, this has been known many days, weeks, partly build into the dollar, safe haven demand can kick in, dollar short has risk of correction now
DXY falling 0.3% every day is not sustainable. I agree a correction is coming.
some argument for reference: the Us election is coming, the current administration is unlikely let unemployment benefit eased, they think of long-term allocation of fiscal stimulus to boost recovery; There are two new Fed members appointed by the President, so the balance of force in term of monetary policy stance will be so different; EU faces with many issues such as debt pile, rule of governance, protectionism... usd swaplines usage in last several months will impact on currencies that.central banks used it with total 459 bil. Tks for your article.
that depends the size of the stimulus, I doubt they can go for 3 trillion, a 1 trillion support is more likely becoz this is a marathon and next year new stimulus will have to continue
 Unfortunately, there will be no next year for many small businesses without more than #1T stimulus now, because consumers will not have the money to spend to keep them alive.
Well done! Thank you.
I'm not so sure. It seems everyone has the thesis that the dollar can only go down at the same time we wedge down to a decade long support line. I wouldn't be surprised if it bounces next week. I have longs and shorts on UUP and I'm long silver and short oil so either way I'm covered.
  If you take a look at the EUR/USD monthly chart, there's a symmetrical triangle that started building from the lows in 1984 (I know the euro didn't exist yet, its a synthetic based on the individual currencies of the time) and the highs in 2009 that about a year from closing off. Since these usually don't make it past about 80% of the wedge before they break, this one is on borrowed time. A 36 year compression should break big. No matter which way that goes, its going to ***for everyone. Anyway, the chart shows the Euro is about to hit that 2009 resistance line. I tend to think its going to bounce off it and break to the downside but that's just my guess.
but we are in much deeper ****than 2011, I doubt the supports will hope.
I agree. None of this seems like its going to end well. Maybe I'm just projecting my hope that we get a few more years before I get to regret not digging a bunker
how can I block this news from this lady?
haha come on, you're a big fan admit it
I Salute You!Kathy.. I Can't Understand their Articles. Ma'am your CLEAR!! Biggest Fan have a great weekend.because of your input.. Im WINNING$
People is going to get out and find a job i see a lot of people making more in unemployment than working so they got to find a way to survive i havent stop working this whole time and im making half of what i use to make people are going to make it just they lazy right now cuz of the 600$
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