The US dollar is confined to narrow ranges against the euro and sterling after pushing higher yesterday. The greenback is staging stronger upticks against the yen but is struggling to resurface above previous support in the JPY122.25 area.
Weak commodity prices and the loss of upside momentum has seen profit-taking in the Australian and New Zealand dollars. The Canadian dollar remains heavy. The US dollar has extended its gains to new multi-year highs. It began the week near CAD1.3360 and is currently trading near CAD1.3660.
The price of oil has fallen about eight percent this week; its worst week since March. OPEC’s decision last week not to provide a new quota coupled with news yesterday that OPEC output rose in the lead up to that meeting. The 230k barrel per day increase in OPEC output to 31.695 mln barrels is about 900k more than its projected 2016 demand. It also marks a three-year high. And this does not appear to be the peak in output. Iranian production appears to account for most of the increase, which more than offset a slight decline in Saudi Arabian output, according to OPEC data.
The continued fall in oil prices and this week’s comments by Bank of Canada Poloz increased the risk of additional easing. Disappointing domestic data and the fall in petrol have also spurred expectations that Norway will cut rates next week. Iron ore prices also remain under pressure. It is poised to extend its losing streak into the ninth week. It is off about four percent this week. The Australian dollar peaked last week below $0.7400. It fell to nearly $0.7170 at mid-week. After yesterday’s bounce is has come back off today, as the correction to the rally that began in mid-November near $0.7020 continues. A break of $0.7160 could see a push toward $.0.7100 rather quickly.
We have argued that emerging market economies that have compromised political institutions are even more vulnerable during this challenging time. The South African rand’s slide is a case in point. The fall in commodity prices was taking a toll on the rand, but the dismissal of the finance minister earlier this week is crushing it. The rand is off 9%+ this week, with a little more than 2% being delivered today alone. The Mexican peso is the second worst performing emerging market currency this week, off 3.8% coming into today. It has fallen every day this week. There is some speculation that the Mexico may follow the Fed to hike rates next week, even though the peso’s decline this year (~14.7%) is not feeding into price pressures. We are less sanguine.
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