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Market turmoil deepens as oil prices push to a new record of $142.22 per barrel,
triggering fresh declines in global equities. The US-centric nature of bank
write-downs and macro economic weakness is prolonging broad USD weakness, which
is making the current turmoil different from that of November, August and February
when the unwinding of the carry trade was boosting USD, JPY and CHF at the
expense of the high yielding AUD, NZD and GBP.
Dissecting Currency Returns in first 6 months
The first chart on the left shows the Swiss franc, Australian dollar and euro
are the top performing currencies in terms of total returns, outperforming
the Canadian dollar (worst performer), New Zealand dollar and US dollar. The
British pound has also moved up from the bottom of the ranks after surging
UK inflation reduced expectations of further rate cuts from the Bank of England.
Another way to gauge secular currency performance is to assess gold performance
in the various currencies and to compare returns in gold terms. The chart on
the right is consistent with the left the chart, showing gold is the highest
performer against CAD, NZD and USD and the least performer against CHF, AUD
and EUR.

The strength of the Swiss franc is underlined by the currency's dual
benefiting from reduced risk appetite and its high correlation with the euro.
Specifically, Switzerland's current account surplus of more than 14% of GDP
is the main rationale of the currency's safe haven status. Unlike the Japanese
yen, which has been hit by slowing US growth and rising oil import costs, the
Swiss economy is less exposed to the US.
The Aussie continues to gain from rising prices of wheat, copper and gold as
long as inflationary expectations remain robust, which continue to justify
the RBA's 7.25% interest rate. Unlike in past bouts of falling risk appetite
when the Aussie would drop rapidly across the board including the USD, today
the currency remains close to its record highs against the dollar and the pound.
This maintains our bullishness with the pair, eyeing interim resistance at
0.9635, followed by the 24-year high of 0.9665. Unlike the NZD, whose high
8.25% rate is seen hampering the already faltering NZ economy, AUD remains
underpinned by surging commodity receipts and robust demand from China and
rest of Asia/Pacific. Recall in our 2008 FX Preview, we anticipated AUDUSD
to have 70% chance of hitting parity in H2 2008. The path remains alive and
well. We also continue to favor AUD vs GBP, NZD and CAD.

EUR continues to stand among top performing currencies, partly resulting
from its role of anti-USD as well as from hawkish rhetoric from the ECB. An
ECB rate hike next week is likely to prompt EURUSD past $1.59, while rising
oil prices, which remain propped by their own fundamental dynamics persist
in boosting the single currency. These forces are offsetting the perceived
cracks in the Eurozone economy.
Today's oil-driven CAD rally does not reflect the currency's overall performance
of the past 6 months, which has remarkably fallen to worst performing
currency due to aggressive rate cuts from 4.25% in December to 3.00% today.
The Bank of Canada's active talking down of the currency has managed to offset
the usual positive impact from oil prices. The role of the US downdraft on
Canada's economy can be compared to that on the Japanese yen, which is another
currency showing more modest performance than last year. Nonetheless, we
expect USDCAD to remain capped at 1.03 in the medium term, while support
is seen climbing at 0.9980.
Although JPY has lost some of its negative correlation with falling equities,
we anticipate renewed but gradual gains vs USD and NZD with 102 and 77 seen
as the likely targets before end of June. As long as the Fed refrains from
succumbing to market and economic pressures, equities will continue to lose
support, breaching key technical levels as the chart shows below. Recall last
week we warned that the S&P500 was a few points away from falling below
the 100-week moving average, a pattern not seen since April 2001. Yesterday,
the moving average cross over did occur, a leading to a technical significance
underlined by the fact price repercussions of short-term moving averages falling
below longer term averages, implying that the appreciable rate of deterioration
in current price trends. The importance of the relationship is also substantiated
by the fact that 100-50 week average crossover of April 2001 occurred when
the S&P500 dropped 13% off its March 2000 high, while the current price
point coincides with a 17% decline off the October record high.

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