Interest Rates Hikes (effect on Currencies & Gold)

mark004

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When a company raises its dividend, its stock becomes more attractive to investors. Its share price rises. When a bank raises interest rates on its savings accounts, people deposit more money in the bank. It's the same way in the currency markets. Rising interest rates make a currency more attractive and it rises against other currencies with stable interest rates. Central banks around the world have been cutting rates for two years, and interest rates are as low now as they've ever been.

The governor of Australia's central bank hinted there would be more interest rate rises on the way. This could be the start of a new trend of rising interest rates around the world. If this is the start of a new trend of rising world interest rates, you can expect big new trends in the currency exchange markets, too. That's because interest rates are the single most important driver of exchange rates in the currency markets.

So how do we make money from a new global trend of rising interest rates?

While other central banks are considering raising rates, the Fed has so far refused to join the party. The dollar is the worst-performing major currency in the world this year as a result.

The recent unemployment report showed that somewhere close to 6 million jobs have vanished from the American economy in the last 18 months. The employment situation hasn't been this bad. With the ongoing unemployment, rate hikes in America are unlikely until next year.

First, this gives us a great opportunity to buy the dollar right now, while it's cheap and no one is anticipating rate hikes from the Fed. By the time Bernanke announces his first rate hike next year, the dollar will have already rallied 10% or more.
Second, a trend of rising interest rates on currencies is great for people looking to buy gold at lower prices. Gold has no interest rate. So when interest rates rise on world currencies, they become more attractive – and they rise – relative to gold. This is especially true with the dollar. It's the world's reserve currency and gold is incredibly sensitive to movements in its interest and exchange rates.

As long as unemployment keeps rising, there's no way the Fed raises interest rates and gold prices will stay high. But next year is a different story. The first hint of rate increases by the Fed will send shockwaves into the gold market.

Regards
Mark
 
When a company raises its dividend, its stock becomes more attractive to investors. Its share price rises. When a bank raises interest rates on its savings accounts, people deposit more money in the bank. It's the same way in the currency markets. Rising interest rates make a currency more attractive and it rises against other currencies with stable interest rates. Central banks around the world have been cutting rates for two years, and interest rates are as low now as they've ever been.

The governor of Australia's central bank hinted there would be more interest rate rises on the way. This could be the start of a new trend of rising interest rates around the world. If this is the start of a new trend of rising world interest rates, you can expect big new trends in the currency exchange markets, too. That's because interest rates are the single most important driver of exchange rates in the currency markets.

So how do we make money from a new global trend of rising interest rates?

While other central banks are considering raising rates, the Fed has so far refused to join the party. The dollar is the worst-performing major currency in the world this year as a result.

The recent unemployment report showed that somewhere close to 6 million jobs have vanished from the American economy in the last 18 months. The employment situation hasn't been this bad. With the ongoing unemployment, rate hikes in America are unlikely until next year.

First, this gives us a great opportunity to buy the dollar right now, while it's cheap and no one is anticipating rate hikes from the Fed. By the time Bernanke announces his first rate hike next year, the dollar will have already rallied 10% or more.
Second, a trend of rising interest rates on currencies is great for people looking to buy gold at lower prices. Gold has no interest rate. So when interest rates rise on world currencies, they become more attractive – and they rise – relative to gold. This is especially true with the dollar. It's the world's reserve currency and gold is incredibly sensitive to movements in its interest and exchange rates.

As long as unemployment keeps rising, there's no way the Fed raises interest rates and gold prices will stay high. But next year is a different story. The first hint of rate increases by the Fed will send shockwaves into the gold market.

Regards
Mark

Well put and I agree that the dollar will stabilize when the fed starts to hint about raising rates. But I don't see any reason why the dollar can't get weaker until then.
 
This is kind of like saying 'buy oil now while it's cheap, cos it's gonna run out one day'.

(plop)
 
Every man and his dog is bearish or short the dollar, which in my opinion, is why it won't significantly weaken from here.

I'm pretty sure this is why everyone who has been short equities for about a month because 'every man and his dog is bullish' has been losing money hand over fist.
 
I'm pretty sure this is why everyone who has been short equities for about a month because 'every man and his dog is bullish' has been losing money hand over fist.

Although inversely related, I wouldn't say the sentiment for a further stock market rise is as strong as the sentiment for a further dollar decline. Also as Jesse Livermore proved, even with a correctly deduced contrarian view you can still lose your shirt without getting your timing right.

Personally speaking, Until the Dow reverses it's uptrend I wouldn't be a seller, the same with buying the dollar. These people losing money 'hand over fist' might well be right in their longer term view, but it's irrelevant without timing their shorts right.
 
Yeah, but almost any trade you put on will be right eventually. Fundamental views are all well and good, but unless you've got some deep pockets they're not going to be much good to you as a day trader.
 
Well taking a broad risk measure (S+P in this case) and a broad USD measure (DXY, for simplicity), and looking back over the past few years, correlation has been pretty negative, reasonably consistently, a couple of hiccups aside, so I think you can't just sit there and say rates are the only, or even always the major driver, directly, on currencies. I think the analysis is an oversimplifaction at best.

Just my $0.02

GJ

p.s. inputs were; monthly data, 24 period correlation. I chose monthly as a grudging nod to the forces of portfolio rebalancing, my own opinions on how misrepresented the real money world is in terms of methodology notwithstanding.

p.p.s. I know this stuff isn't rocket science, but then again I'm not a rocket scientist. Simple robust stats work in my opinion. Don't get me started on Elliot Waves.....
 

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I agree, it's very difficult and potentially dangerous to trade fundamentally on a day trading basis. However if you're looking to run trades over weeks, a fundamental view can help to keep you in a winning trade, riding out the swings that get most people out of a trending move.
 
Don't get me started on Elliot Waves.....

What's your poinion on EWP Gamma? When I first came here people used to laugh it out the door but seems to hold a bit of swing in the prof community if articles are anything to go by but I've always dismissed it as a pseudo science due to my T2W bias.

Gonna look into myself. Only recently found out that Elliot was an accountant :p
 
A simple real, fake or "voodoo could exist" will suffice. I plan to read up on this myself rather than parasitically leech off of your well earned spare time.
 
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