5 Reasons Why the Dollar Could Continue to Lose Value

6 Comments
last
change
volume
Last Updated: 10 min ago

Freshly back from Australia, I am hardly surprised by the fresh wave of dollar weakness. Over the past few months we have talked extensively about why the dollar could continue to fall. As the EUR/USD cracks above 1.50 for the second time in 2 months and USD/JPY extends its losses below 90, there are many reasons why the overall trend in the dollar is still down.

5 Reasons Why the Dollar Could Continue to Fall

1. Dollar Carry Trade Overused but not Overplayed

The primary reason why the dollar is weakening is because of the overused term "dollar carry trade." However although it is overused it is not overplayed because we have long said that how the dollar performs will depend upon where the Federal Reserve stands compared to the rest of their peers. Last week, the Fed reaffirmed their steady as she goes mentality by leaving the FOMC statement virtually unchanged. The Fed is very happy with the way things are right now and are not in a rush to unwind Quantitative Easing. In contrast, the central banks of Australia, the Eurozone and even Japan are much more likely to continue "deloosening" monetary policy. We still believe that the U.S. central bank will be amongst the last to raise interest rates and for that reason, the dollar carry trade should remain intact. Back in October, we published this chart of how close the market believes each of the major central banks are to raising interest rates and for the most part, it still applies.

2. G20 Pledges Continued Stimulus

The latest reason why the dollar is falling is because of the G20's pledge to provide ongoing stimulus. More stimulus is positive for the equity markets which in turn has helped to lift the EUR/USD and other risk trades. Over the past 2 years, there has been an 80 percent correlation between the S&P 500 and the EUR/USD. As long as members of the G20 are not paring back stimulus, high yielding currencies should outperform the U.S. dollar.

Source: Bloomberg

3. Geithner Avoids Talking about the Dollar

Treasury Secretary Geithner also avoided talking about the U.S. dollar at the G20 meeting. Typically, good old Tim likes to take this opportunity to reiterate the U.S.' strong dollar policy and his failure to do so may be more than just a careless mistake particularly in an audience of countries who hold massive dollar reserves and are fidgeting about the continued weakness of the U.S. dollar. It is no secret that the U.S. only pays lip service to its strong dollar policy. In a low inflation environment such as today, a weak dollar helps more than it hurts the U.S. economy.

4. Economic Fundamentals

Friday's non-farm payrolls number indicates the tough economic environment in the U.S. The unemployment rate has climbed above the psychologically hobbling 10 percent mark to 10.2 percent as job losses continued for the 22nd month. Millions of Americans are out of work and could have a tough time finding work over the next year which means that we could be facing a particularly weak holiday shopping season. Unless the U.S. labor market turns around, the impressive GDP growth that we saw in the third quarter may not be sustained.

5. Little Technicals Support

Finally, there is little technical support underneath the dollar. Taking a look at the dollar index, 74.93 is the 14 month low and the index is trading just above that. If this level is broken, the next major point of support is not until 71.50. For the EUR/USD a break above 1.5060 opens the door for a move towards 1.55 and for USD/JPY support is at 87. Futures trades have also trimmed their bets on dollar weakness which means that a break of support levels could encourage a wave of new short dollar positions.

Source: Bloomberg

Comments (6)

FXDragon
November 09, 2009 at 11:26 AM ET
Great to have you back! Welcome.
What does the number for dollar index mean? I mean how did they create that number.
Also, if futures did not trim bets, would it not be possible for dollar to weaken?

Thanks,
Neal
November 09, 2009 at 05:01 PM ET
The US Dollar Index (USDX) is an index (or measure) of the value of the United States dollar relative to a basket of foreign currencies.

It is a weighted geometric mean of the dollar's value compared only with

* Euro (EUR), 57.6% weight
* Japanese yen (JPY), 13.6% weight
* Pound sterling (GBP), 11.9% weight
* Canadian dollar (CAD), 9.1% weight
* Swedish krona (SEK), 4.2% weight and
* Swiss franc (CHF) 3.6% weight.
klien
November 10, 2009 at 11:38 AM ET
Thanks for answering this question Neal
dealer
November 12, 2009 at 07:30 AM ET
hi Neal
You can explain more about you explain the figures and how do you extract these numbers .
thanks again .
regards
klien
November 12, 2009 at 09:05 AM ET
These numbers are widely published. Here is the wikipedia link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Dollar_Index
dealer
November 12, 2009 at 09:57 AM ET
Thank introduction of this link. But I mean plan question is whether we can analyze by usdlfx-eurlfx-gbplfx-..... a deeper recognition of the path following the fx intensify?whether lfx can change direction faster than the FX FX show?
Thank s again

Add Your Comment

Please login to post a comment or sign up for an FX360® account.

About The Author

Kathy Lien began her FX trading career 10 years ago at J.P. Morgan Chase. After graduating New York University’s Leonard Stern School of Business at the age of 18, Kathy joined the bank's interbank FX trading desk and eventually moved to the cross markets proprietary trading desk. In the interbank market, her ability to create solid fundamental and technical analysis from the myriad of information on the market helped her trade forex spot and options. Her experience eventually led her to be chief strategist at Daily FX where she worked until she joined GFT in 2008.

With her knowledge of forex, as well as her experience trading other products, such as interest rate derivates, bonds, equities, and futures, Lien has built a reputation as an international currency analyst. She is frequently quoted on CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox Business and Reuters. Lien has also written for publications like Active Trader, Futures, and SFO magazine. She is the author of the newly updated Day Trading the Currency Market: Technical and Fundamental Strategies to Profit from Market Moves, and the co-author of Millionaire Traders: How Everyday People Are Beating Wall Street at Its Own Game with Boris Schlossberg.

To buy Kathy’s newly updated Day Trading and Swing Trading the Currency Market: Technical and Fundamental Strategies to Profit from Market Moves, click here.

TRADE RECOMMENDATIONS

  • Trades to Watch
  • Trades in Progress
currency recommendation
EUR/GBP
Medium term



Sell Sell at .9119
Stop at 0.9139
Target 1 at 0.9089
Target 2 at 0.9063
GBP/USD
Medium term



Buy Buy at 1.6118
Stop at 1.5982
Target 1 at 1.6322
Target 2 at 1.6474
GBP/AUD
Medium term



Buy Buy at 1.7555
Stop at 1.741
Target 1 at 1.7786
Target 2 at 1.796
There are currently no trades in progress.

QUOTEBOARD

  • Key Quotes
  • Currencies
  • Markets
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • EUR/USD
  • down
  • 1.4729
  • 1.4732
  • 1.4682
EUR/USD
5 min chart
  • GBP/USD
  • down
  • 1.6252
  • 1.6277
  • 1.6237
GBP/USD
5 min chart
  • USD/JPY
  • up
  • 88.49
  • 88.69
  • 88.35
USD/JPY
5 min chart
  • OIL
  • up
  • 77.46
  • 77.46
  • 77.46
CLZ9
5 min chart
  • GOLD
  • up
  • 1132.3
  • 1132.8
  • 1127.2
.GOLD
5 min chart
  • US Stocks
  • up
  • 10301
  • 10302
  • 10277
.US30
5 min chart
  • UK Stocks
  • up
  • 5226.8
  • 5227.2
  • 5217.6
.UK100
5 min chart
  • DEM Stocks
  • up
  • 5682.8
  • 5683.4
  • 5669.0
.DE30
5 min chart
  • JP Stocks
  • down
  • 10027
  • 10047
  • 9992
.JP225
5 min chart
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • EUR/USD
  • down
  • 1.4729
  • 1.4732
  • 1.4682
5 min chart
  • GBP/USD
  • down
  • 1.6252
  • 1.6277
  • 1.6237
  • USD/JPY
  • up
  • 88.49
  • 88.69
  • 88.35
  • USD/CHF
  • up
  • 1.0255
  • 1.0282
  • 1.0253
  • USD/CAD
  • down
  • 1.0630
  • 1.0651
  • 1.0624
  • AUD/USD
  • down
  • 0.9053
  • 0.9055
  • 0.9022
  • NZD/USD
  • down
  • 0.7081
  • 0.7082
  • 0.7056
  • USD/MXN
  • down
  • 12.9154
  • 12.9169
  • 12.9154
  • EUR/JPY
  • down
  • 130.33
  • 130.45
  • 129.80
  • GBP/JPY
  • up
  • 143.82
  • 144.33
  • 143.52
  •  
  • current
  • high
  • low
 
  • OIL
  • up
  • 77.46
  • 77.46
  • 77.46
5 min chart
  • GOLD
  • up
  • 1132.3
  • 1132.8
  • 1127.2
5 min chart
  • SILVER
  • down
  • 17.704
  • 17.729
  • 17.581
5 min chart
  • US500
  • down
  • 1092.9
  • 1093.2
  • 1090.4
5 min chart
  • UK Stocks
  • up
  • 5226.8
  • 5227.2
  • 5217.6
5 min chart
  • DEM Stocks
  • up
  • 5682.8
  • 5683.4
  • 5669.0
5 min chart
  • JP Stocks
  • down
  • 10027
  • 10047
  • 9992
5 min chart
  • AU Stocks
  • down
  • 4618.5
  • 4619.5
  • 4598.5
5 min chart
  • Bund
  • down
  • 123.19
  • 123.23
  • 122.80
5 min chart
Data source: GFT

FX NEWS ALERTS

Receive daily forex commentary, technical analysis reports and potential strategies from Kathy Lien, Boris Schlossberg and their team of technical analysts.
  • Your first name:
  • Your last name:
Your email address:


close
Just a few more things...
Your city:
Your state / province:
Your country:
Your phone number:

Country Code Area / City Code Phone Number
close
One last step: choose your alerts.
Top stories in financial news, recent data releases and upcoming events to look out for, detailed technical analysis and potential strategies for major currency pairs. Four to five emails daily.

Analysis and key outcomes of recent market movements and news announcements with a forecast for upcoming market activity. Five to seven emails daily.

close
Thank You for Subscribing to FX News Alerts!
Based on your request, you will receive daily alerts and/or commentary via the email address you provided.
Please note that you may receive other information, including but not limited to free reports, promotional offers and other related communications.

CENTRAL BANK RATES


What is social bookmarking?

Social bookmarking refers to a method you can use to store, organize and manage bookmarks of web pages that interest you. These could be news articles, movie reviews, places you want to visit — any type of web page. The main advantage is that unlike traditional Internet bookmarks that are specific to one computer, you can use social bookmarking to add and access bookmarks from any computer with an Internet connection.

Another benefit of social bookmarking is the ability to share web pages with friends, family or anyone who has similar interests. Likewise, you can visit the pages that other social bookmarkers share with you.

All pages within our website include links to social bookmarking websites. These websites are free to use and require only a simple registration. This allows you to capture useful information you find on our website and share it with other traders like yourself. Your GFT bookmarks can become a reference if you have a question, want to revisit a concept that you found valuable or would like to tell someone about GFT.

Learn more and get started at Reddit, Digg, Del.icio.us, Google and Yahoo.