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The dollar slides across the board, hitting fresh 7-month lows against
the euro at $1.2540 after Fed Chairman Bernanke departs from his usual upbeat
assessment of the US economy and mulls the need to pause policy tightening
in light of recognizing the negative risks of further slowdown in the housing
market.
Market expectations of a June rate hike are slashed in half to 30% from
yesterday's levels, further prolonging the bond market rally and dollar selloff.
Bernanke opted to depart from simply describing the coincidental economic
environment, as did yesterday's upbeat Beige Book, and adopted a cautionary
assessment on inflation with a more sobering outlook regarding the rate of
expansion in the second half of the year. He has managed to temper the market
exaggerated expectations of further rate hikes by reminding markets that
the economic data are in charge rather than bond traders.
Fed moves from Greenspan's "froth" to Bernanke's "significant uncertainty" in
housing
The fact that the Fed is shifting its housing market assessment from Greenspan's "apparent
froth" last August to Bernanke's "significant uncertainty" shows that the
Fed has managed to rein in the housing market, to an extent that merits a pause
in tightening.
Bernnake's cautiousness is in line with the thinking merging from the March
20 meeting and San Francisco Fed's Janet Yellen remarks mulling the extent
of any delayed effect of the 2-year old monetary policy tightening on the US
economy and whether there is a need to pause. The fact that the minutes of
the March 20 meeting recorded members' concern regarding the risk of overshooting
given the existence of policy lags, suggests that rate increase campaign is
nearing its end. And today Bernanke confirmed it.
Bernanke hints that pause is no end
The other resounding hint that the Fed is nearing a pause in June is indicated
by Bernanke's stating that "the Committee may decide to take no action at
one or more meetings in the interest of allowing more time to receive information
relevant to the outlook". This is a notable departure from mainly saying
the Fed is data dependent and is moving towards the need to pause inorder to
better respond to the emerging data.
China's rate hike may imply no revaluation/band increase until Q3
China's decision to raise its interest rates for the second time since 1995
is a signal to the G7 that financial market reform is not all about currency
flexibility but also capital market liberalization, thus resorting to market
mechanisms of raising the cost of debt instead of "admisintrative" measures.
Unlike in the October 2004 rate hike when the PBOC raised BOTH the lending
rate and deposit rates by 27 bps to 5.58% and 2.25% respectively, today's
27-bp hike targeted only the lending rate, which reflects a concrete effort
to:
1) improve banks' capitalization/profitabilty;
2) rein in consumer spending an cooling growth.
Since it is unlikely that China will adopt a currency and monetary tightening
in the same quarter, we push forward our expectation for a revaluation/band
increase to Q3.
Considering China's paramount role in driving up world demand for metals and
fuel, the rate hike announcement triggered a downward kneejerk reaction in
gold. But the metal is back up to the $640 per ounce after the selloff in the
dollar.
Once markets realize the Chinese move mainly consisted of an embryonic tightening
that remains far from reigning in China's expansion, we expect the yen to regain
its form on the rationale that Japan's exports to China shall remain undaunted.
USDJPY nears the key spport of 113.80 -- 38% retracement of the 101.66-121.36
rise, now paving the way for 113.40.
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