Stocks AND Dollar to Rally in the First Half? Keep Hope Alive
Source: http://blogs.moneyandmarkets.com/blog/currency-corner/0/0/stocks-and-dollar-to-rally-in-the-first-half-keep-hope-alivePosted on Tuesday, January 6th, 2009 | In Financial
PKey Newsbr•nbsp;Obama Is Said to Favor About $775 Billion for U.S. Economic Stimulus Plan (Bloomberg)br•nbsp;Dollar Rally Fizzles in Emerging Markets as Fed Awakens Appetite for Risk (Bloomberg) … [Editor’s note: Are you sure?]br•nbsp;European Inflation Slows, Increasing Scope for ECB to Lower Interest Rates (Bloomberg)br•nbsp;EPA ‘Cow Tax’ Could Charge $175 per Dairy Cow to Curb Greenhouse Gases (Business and Media Institute)/P
PKey Reports Due (WSJ): br7:45 a.m. ICSC Chain Store Sales Index For Jan 3: Previous: -0.5%. br8:55 a.m. Redbook Retail Sales Index For Jan 3: Previous: -0.5%. br10:00 a.m. Dec Non-Manufacturing Index: Expected: 37. Previous: 37.3. br10:00 a.m. Nov Pending Home Sales: Expected: 0.4%. Previous: -0.7%. br10:00 a.m. Nov Factory Orders: Expected: -2.2%. Previous: -5.1%. br2:00 p.m. Dec FOMC Minutes br5:00 p.m. ABC/Wash Post Consumer Conf For Jan 3: Previous: -49./P
PbrQuotable br“If you can count your money, you don’t have a billion dollars.”/P
P nbsp; nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;J. Paul Getty/P
PFX Trading – Stocks AND Dollar to Rally in the First Half? Keep Hope Alive/P
PSo was it Obama yesterday? Was it his words that sent the US dollar chugging higher? Did stocks rally sharply on Friday in anticipation of Obama?/P
PSo it goes, Obama’s newest proposal to drag the US economy out of the ditch it’s in went above and beyond the plans he’d been expected to unroll. The larger-than- anticipated amount of “stimulus” taking the form of tax cuts seemed to have caught many off their guard. /P
POf course, he’s still got big plans for creating new jobs, etc. And this is said to be causing the US dollar and US stock markets to rally because, hey, recovery is now right around the corner … right?/P
PCareful./P
PI’m in agreement that recovery will be a boon to the US dollar’s performance this year. Now, I don’t think we’re at a point when recovery is so close we can taste it. But I do think the growth differential between the US and competing economies will eventually improve for the buck as the US becomes the first to lift its head and creep out of the muck./P
PCould this potential have started the dollar off on the right foot this week? Sure./P
PBut what about stocks? I wonder if it’s not too soon to start thinking a recovery 6-12 months (or more) down the road is good enough to drive share prices higher. Sure, I’m a believer that markets tend to lead major economic turning points. But you’ve got to think it’ll still be a while before the earnings and employment picture even stabilizes.brThere’s been a pretty serious negative correlation between the US dollar and stocks (risk-taking assets.) The US dollar can rally NOW because foreign exchange trading is a relative game — the fundamentals of one currency versus the fundamentals of another./P
PWith stocks though, there’s not really a lesser-of-two-evils … the relative game idea doesn’t really apply when we’re talking about companies within a single economy. Of course some companies are better off than others during in this environment, but when the current is moving heavily in one direction it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense trying to fight it./P
Pnbsp;img alt= src=http://local.content.compendiumblog.com/uploads/user/7e88b461-578b-47f3-88ec-038e212ad053/a56c87c5-8253-45b7-aa80-26c89da2fa75/010609.JPG _width=75 _height=75/P
PSo are the risk-appetite and negative correlation trends to be thrown out the window? My best guess would be “No, not yet.” I believe the US dollar will test its November 2008 high in the next month or two. If stocks don’t roll over to test their November 2008 lows simultaneously or soon thereafter (or vice versa and I’m completely wrong), then it may very well be time to jettison risk-aversion theme and put all the chips on a US recovery./P
POf course, by the end of this month Obama won’t just be a President-Elect anymore. Things could change quickly at that point – for better or for worse./P
PRegards,/P
PJackamp;JR/P
Last 5 posts by Jack Crooks
- Only Gold Is Winning the Ugly Contest - February 26th, 2009
- We’re Bullish on the US Dollar Today ... and Tomorrow! - January 5th, 2009
- Can we rest? Gold may lead the way. - December 22nd, 2008
- A super deal on the U.S. dollar - December 20th, 2008
- Underestimating the power of deflation is dangerous! - December 19th, 2008
ABC, bloomberg, Business and Media Institute;, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Reserve System, Financial, Hope Alive;, J. Paul Getty/P PFX Trading;, obama, United States, USD
![]() About Jack Crooks (http://blogs.moneyandmarkets.com/blog/currency-corner)
John (Jack) Crooks is the founder and president of Black Swan Capital, an independent advisory firm specializing in foreign exchange and currency markets investing for retail and institutional clients. A seasoned financial advisory with nearly 20 years of investment experience, Mr. Crooks uses both quantitative and qualitative approaches to determine the fundamental driving force(s) behind the movement of the currency, capital, and commodities markets. He is the editor of Weiss Research’s latest investment offerings, World Currency Alert and World Currency Options, which were launched in August 2007. Mr. Crooks also founded Ross International Asset Management, a discretionary money management firm specializing in global stock, bond, and currency asset management for retail clients. Previously, he was general manager of Plexus Trading, where he specialized in currency futures and commodities trading. During his successful career, Mr. Crooks served as chief currency and futures strategist of M2 Futures Inc., an investment boutique headquartered in Chicago, as well as vice president of Global Strategic Research for an international investment boutique, where he was responsible for providing daily advice and global strategy analysis. Prior to entering the investment arena, Mr. Crooks held various corporate finance positions. He has written extensively on the subject of global currencies and international economics and has been published in Asian Times, Futures Magazine, Barron’s, Bloomberg, Dow Jones Newswire, and across many financial websites. He has also appeared on Bloomberg TV and CNBC. Mr. Crooks holds a bachelor’s degree in finance from Florida State University and a master’s in business administration from the University of North Texas. |



