USD: Be careful chasing the dollar rebound
The release of quarterly earnings in the US continues to paint a better picture for American corporates, with big tech companies beating estimates yesterday. However, concerns about the US banking sector have returned after First Republic’s shares dropped 49% following the larger-than-expected drop in deposits and announced restructuring plans. Ultimately, a risk-off mood has prevailed, despite the overall contagion effect having been significantly more contained than in previous instances in March: the 3-month FRA-OIS spread ticked higher to 32bp, but is a far cry from the 50bp and 60bp peaks seen last month.
In FX, this still translated into a fully-fledged flight to safety, with the yen outperforming and the dollar recovering ground yesterday. High-beta currencies came under pressure, particularly the Norwegian krone, which is the least liquid currency in G10 and inevitably very vulnerable to adverse swings in risk sentiment.
The dollar’s rebound followed its natural correlation with risk aversion yesterday, although we signal how in multiple instances when concerns about the stability of the US banking system rose in the past month-and-a-half it was the dovish repricing in Fed rate expectations that had a more tangible short-term impact on the dollar. We would therefore warn against chasing a dollar rally that is fuelled by idiosyncratic negative news on a US bank, especially in the run-up to the FOMC meeting.
Read next: Base effects distort Hungarian wages data| FXMAG.COM
The dollar hasn’t really connected with the dovish repricing in Fed rate expectations, with rate cut expectations that have risen steadily since the end of last week. From 55bp of easing priced in by year-end on Friday to 75bp this morning. We suspect that some help to the dollar momentum shown yesterday would need to come from good US data over the remainder of the week. Ahead of the more important GDP and PCE figures tomorrow and Friday, we’ll take a look at durable goods orders and wholesale inventories today.
All in all, we think the balance of risk is tilted to the downside for the dollar today, as some stabilisation in sentiment would pave the way to at least partly re-link with falling Fed rate expectations. DXY may slip back to the 101.00/101.50 range by the end of the week.
Francesco Pesole
|