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FX Risk Aversion Deepens: What To Expect Next Week

Published 06/18/2021, 04:46 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Currencies and equities extended their sell-off on Friday as risk aversion in the financial markets deepened. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost over 400 points for the 10th straight day. Today’s decline was the biggest one-day slide since February. The market heard the Federal Reserve loud and clear this week and is preparing for an inevitable reduction in asset purchases. Stocks are selling off because less central bank bond-buying is generally negative for bond prices and positive for yields. A rise in yields leads to a rise in borrowing costs, which can hit the bottom line for U.S. businesses. Interestingly enough, despite the textbook ramifications of taper talk, Treasury yields have not extended higher since Wednesday’s gains. In fact, 10-year yields are actually lower than their pre-FOMC levels. Given how much stocks climbed this year, it is not surprising to see the continued sell-off in equities. But if yields fall further, equities could stabilize as investors feel less threatened by the rise in rates.

This week’s FOMC announcement set off big moves in the financial markets that could lead to more significant continuation. We have often warned that corrections in currencies and equities are generally quicker and deeper than rallies. With the quiet period before the Fed meeting over, we’ll hear from more U.S. policy-makers next week. In an interview with CNBC, Fed President James Bullard said it was “natural” for the Fed to tilt hawkish, and he is “leaning” towards supporting an end to mortgage-backed securities purchases given the “booming housing market.” If other U.S. policy-makers express similar views in the coming week, Treasury yields could resume their rise, extending the sell-off in stocks and the rally in the U.S. dollar.

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The greenback traded higher against all of the major currencies except for the Japanese Yen on Friday. This move cannot be attributed to the Bank of Japan's decision to keep monetary policy unchanged last night, which was widely anticipated. Instead, the sell-off in USD/JPY is consistent with risk aversion. Japanese Yen crosses have been hit particularly hard this week, and further losses are likely. The U.S. economic calendar is light with only home sales, personal income and personal spending numbers scheduled for release. For the U.S. dollar, the main focus will be Fed speak, equity market moves and risk appetite.

Sterling was one of the worst performers. This was a big week for UK data, and while some reports surprised to the upside, others, like this morning’s retail sales numbers, disappointed. Economists were looking for consumer spending to rise another 1.6% in May, but retail sales fell 1.4%. Excluding autos, demand fell 2.1%, the first drop in four months. The details were not as grim as the headline, as the report shows spending shifting from shops to restaurants. Still that did not stop GBP/USD from dropping to its lowest level in six weeks. Sterling could rebound ahead of the Bank of England’s meeting on Thursday. The BoE was one of the first central banks to reduce asset purchases. And with the Fed expressing its confidence in the recovery by signalling that it is closer to doing so as well, we are looking for less dovishness from the BoE.

The euro was fairly resilient compared to sterling and the commodity currencies. Stronger German producer prices and Eurozone current account balance helped to stem the currency’s slide, but how far EUR/USD falls hinges on next week’s Eurozone PMI reports. If these numbers show no improvement, the contrast between Europe and the U.S. could drive EUR/USD towards 1.16.

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Latest comments

helli gi
Stop deleting my comments! People need to know youre a fraud!
Nice of you
Excellent analysis as always thank you
where do we listen to this fed speak in real time?
it seems today usdjpy can bullish
market will be bearish or sideway till the Markit Services PMI, Germany news on 23rd that will influence eur n all it's pairs
Bullard said that is natural for FED to be hawkish and tilt towards tapering MBS purchase due to overheated housing market...If more FED members will come with similar statements, stocks will go down , USTs yields will go lower , USD will stay DXY ~91,00 . Waiting for data Daly's view and Powell's testimony.
Alright
Great 👍
great analysis. great story. looks true to me.
a single lady cant decide mood of market and analysis. strong support for eur and gbp on current rates, over sold every where, in between bank of england already announced for supporting pips for GBP value.
post modern era people are experiencing their great depression, and they tend to change people. for instance. my grandfather use to draft 6' behind semi rigs on the freeway, to save on gas. it freaked my grandmother out. and, he'd shave under 15 watts of light.I think the spending projections are high. I think most people will be thrifty for a long time.
Heard the federal reserve lid and clear? Absolutely not, in fact, just the opposite. Did you sleep thru the announcement? The fed said very clearly that the US economy is doing great. Get your facts straight before you go writing manipulative trash like this. I agree with Li, everyone should read or listen for yourselves.
compared to what? it's not going great, and at most points short expectations. the fed said the exact same things all the way up to the actual 08 crash. people are smart. they pull out because they don't want to lose their money, and the markets snowball downhill picking up size and momentum.
The fed are the ones manipulating and lying straight to our faces, not the author of this article.
Actually the Dow fell ten days in a row , it fell 533 on Friday and 1530 since the high 34820 ten days ago
Please, everyone, go watch the actual FOMC announcement from this last Wednesday. Society needs facts not sensationalism.
And you sure that FOMC is truthful, not even close. So facts are somewhere out there and future will tell.
Dow Jones lost over 400 points for the 10th straight day....when? The rest of the article is ok. Thanks.
Kathy your analysis needs some more homework...
you mention that the euro was fairly resilient compared to the pound ... again, what? you need a fact checker kathy. since the fomc announcement on weds the pound has fallen 2.9 cents or just over 2% ... the euro has fallen 2.6 cents which is about 2.1% ... so the euro actually fared worse than the pound.
what? you wrote that the dow jones industrial average fell by more than 400 points for the tenth straight day?? that would be a combined 4000 point loss.  in fact the dow had 2 up days in a row last weds & thurs and in total the dow has lost about 1500 points over the last 2 weeks since its all time high on june 4th. the djia is actually still quite elevated and despite recent losses is up over 3000 points since jan 1st.
Congratulations to the use of at least some paragraphs, Kathy! :)
Thanks Kay?
hi
imo, we have to get back to normal interest rates and yields. what's the point in buying a home at a 3.4% interest rate, if the home drops 35% in value by next year, and the bank ends up owning the house, because you don't want to make upside down payments for 10 years? the real question, is why do they choose to not manage bubbles, before they get so big?
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