Joseph Trevisani

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What did not happen this past week was more interesting than what did. Jobless Claims did not deteriorate, the Dow did, oil boomed, the United States housing market swooned and for all the negative news the dollar gave ground only grudgingly against the euro. The dollar did not collapse. It ended Friday three figures higher than where it began the week, but despite the provocation currency traders seem no more inclined to buy the euro beyond 1.6000 than they were three weeks ago. The US economy is in no worse shape than it was last month and the newest threat to an American recovery, the price of oil, is an equal opportunity danger.

Crude oil at $131.00 and rising will hurt the EMU economies as much or more than the US. American GDP for the first quarter will likely be revised higher to 1% or more this coming week. That is not a great deal lower than recent projections for the EMU. If the US is still growing at one percent and higher with the prolonged housing decline shaving percentage points from economic growth, and after the liquidity crisis and its attendant problems and the Europeans are at that growth level without having suffered any appreciable economic trauma what does that say about the next several months as the oil prices begins to bite hard into growth potential? Will EMU growth hold up under the flail of vastly higher energy prices and without any of the stimulus applied by the Federal Reserve? It is not likely. At least it is a bet currency traders seem reluctant to make.

The US economy, a far more flexible and integrated entity than the EMU fell from 4.9% GDP growth in the third quarter of 2007 to 0.6% growth in the fourth. Is the EMU, with a far less active consumer sector, not capable of such a dramatic fall?

The bad news absorbed by the US$ over the past two months is considerable: job losses for four months running, generational lows in consumer sentiment, a sub 50 manufacturing ISM, weak retail sales, and stocks and housing as mentioned above. One might ask what else the market needs to see before it takes the euro higher. Or to ask the question another way, is there any statistic that will convince traders that, for one-- the Europeans will not shortly have a slowing economy of their own to contend with and two—the ECB will not soon begin lowering EMU rate?

Yes, spokesman for the ECB have been adamant and on message -- inflation is our concern, inflation is the target, price stability is paramount, we will fulfill our mandate. But to judge from the trading levels of the euro there is deep skepticism in the currency markets for that program.

The market expectation for an eventual ECB rate decrease is not just a wish. Traders and analysts are not simply talking their book knowing that lower rates are good for business or helpful to bank profits. The market 'expectation’ for a lower ECB refinancing rate is an expression of its collective judgment on European monetary policy and on how the ECB will respond to a future economic situation that is deemed to be distinctly possible.

If the market’s judgment differs from that of the ECB and its public policy pronouncements, that does not negate its validity. The ECB has several reasons, not all of them economic, for retaining its public anti-inflation mandate. Remember that the US markets had priced in rate cuts long before they occurred and remember too the Fed statements in the weeks between the onset of the financial and sub prime crisis in August and its first rate cut in mid September. Or recall Chairman Bernanke’s very deliberate rhetoric for much of the subsequent time. It is only recently that the Fed has publicly subordinated inflation to growth. Even so, the Fed has been accused of caving to market desires. The ECB has even more policy strictures because of its inflation mandate so it also has a grater need to preserve its independence and credibility.

Currency traders continue to place more emphasis on what is happening in the States than across the Atlantic. A great deal more has happened in the US and a great deal more is expected happen here. As we have noted before, expectations are fine and good, and can drive the markets a long way, but until the US economy delivers on the Fed promise, no trader will stake long term profit on the dollar. The limit of expectation has a very concrete aspect for traders; it is 1.5250.

This article has 4 comments:

  •  
    May 26 05:39 PM
    [Comment edited for abusive language. Commenter put on notice]

    Speaking of Europe and your statement that oil @ $131 will affect them as much or more than us, I respectfully differ. Since oil is priced in dollars, and the dollar has been collapsing in a rather healthy manner almost in lock-step with the rising price of oil, a barrel of oil costs only 83 Euros. Moreover, European countries have huge fuel taxes... and it's far easier for them to lower taxes slightly to maintain their economies than it is for the US to print and loan, print and loan fresh new dollars at 2%, as the more dollars Uncle Ben has printed, the weaker our dollar gets and conversely the higher the price of crude goes. It's a vicious cycle, but mainly for holders of the once and nevermore mightly US dollar.

    And while that may be open to some debate, I think it simply cannot be argued that you need to use a different mugshot... and I don't mean the one they took from the side. :)

    Full disclosure: Long and heavy on FXA (better interest than FXE).

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  •  
    Joseph

    So much non sense. Travel to EU and you will see three things:
    1)They have public transportations and are used to High oil.
    2) Euros buy more oil than dollars...
    3) their currency is worth more than the confetti we call the US $
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  •  
    May 27 07:58 AM
    Nominal GDP at 1% and nominal inflation at 6% is no way to run a country though - we need a Volcker type cure soon.
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  •  
    In July 2007 the average price of retail premium gas in six European countries (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, UK) was $7.14 per gallon. At the end of June this year it was $9.06, a 26.9% increase. In the US the price rose from $3.17 to $4.31, a 36% increase. The difference being the decline in the dollar against the euro. Americans are paying more for their fuel relative to the Europeans than a year ago, but that does not mean the European are not paying more as well. Higher fuel prices have the same damaging effect in Europe that they have here. It is the differential price that matters to consumers and economic growth not the absolute level.
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