Wednesday, February 18, 2009

US DOLLAR: WAITING FOR OBAMA

With US equity and bond markets closed for Presidents Day, trading was relatively quiet for currencies. The G7 meeting did not lead to any fireworks but the dollar did gap higher against all of the major currencies except for the Japanese Yen at the Asian open on Sunday. Despite the Congressional approval of the $787 billion stimulus package, the US dollar and Japanese Yen have strengthened across the board which indicates that risk aversion dominates. So far, the prospect of the bill being signed by President Obama has not helped the market. The official G7 statement singled out the Chinese Yuan but not the Japanese Yen. The tone towards China was rather conciliatory with the Group of Seven welcoming China’s fiscal stimulus measures and their steps towards a more flexible exchange rate. These comments and lack thereof suggests that the US is trying to play nice after Geithner suggested that China may be branded a currency manipulator. As for Japan, the lack of comments suggest that no is interested in intervening to stop the Yen from rising anything soon. There was no US economic data released this morning, but a number of reports are due for release over the next 24 hours. This includes the Empire State Manufacturing survey, the Treasury International Capital flow report and the NAHB housing market index. All of these are Tier 2 economic data which means that they should not have much of an impact on the US dollar. Instead, all eyes will be on how the market reacts to the official announcement of the Economic Stimulus Bill.
Source www.fx360.com

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