There’s a lot of commentary floating around out there this morning about the euro ahead of Jackson Hole.
The single currency’s relentless rise heading into August was starting to weigh on eurozone equities and needless to say, excessive FX strength isn’t something that’s welcomed with open arms by central banks that are still engaged in a balls-to-the-wall effort to stoke inflation.
The ECB minutes sounded the alarm on FX “overshoot” and whereas just a little over a month ago, everyone was convinced Draghi was set to use Jackson Hole as an opportunity to telegraph an ECB policy shift (bullish euro), now there are concerns he’ll do the opposite.
Here’s Bloomberg’s Mark Cudmore:
The base case for most investors is that Jackson Hole will bring no major immediate policy insights. But there’s a reasonable, and widely discussed, risk that Mario Draghi will try to jawbone the euro weaker
With rates markets already pricing the probability of another 2017 rate hike from the Fed as a one-in- three chance, Janet Yellen can’t afford to surprise dovishly if she wants to maintain long-term credibility and retain any flexibility for the December rate decision
Given she’s speaking on financial stability, there’s an obvious possibility she’ll discuss the idea that central banks sometimes need to tighten even when inflation is below target. That would be interpreted as a hawkish signal
That means both central bankers are clearly skewed to surprise negatively for EUR/USD. Given these are theoretically separate topics/angles, they should be independent variables, so the chance that at least one of the two occurs and hurts EUR/USD is significant
Despite all this, EUR/USD hovers within 1% of its two-year high and almost 2% above its 200-DMA. Speculative positioning remains net long even if overall bullishness is down a bit recently
Which just adds to the reasons to be bearish EUR/USD. The impact of any Draghi hawkishness, or Yellen dovishness, would be minimal because the market is already positioned in line with those structural stories
Conversely, markets appear to be ill-prepared for either or both of them to say something that’s negative EUR/USD
None of this logic is particularly profound. The noise created by all the chaos in Washington has effectively killed off traders who were too early in seeking to play for a dollar bounce
But the risks around the Jackson Hole meet-up haven’t shifted. As a result, EUR/USD is likely to suffer ahead of the symposium, with a chance it gets truly battered by official comments at the gathering
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