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Christine St. Anne: Last year the Australian dollar enjoyed some record highs, but will it continue to appreciate this year? Today I am joined by City Index's Kara Ordway to give us her view on the outlook of the Australian dollar and some of the major currencies.
Kara, welcome.
Kara Ordway: Thank you.
St. Anne: Kara, what's your outlook for the Australian Dollar? Do you think it will continue to appreciate?
Ordway: Yes, certainly. We've seen a very big rise for the Australian dollar over the first half of 2012. We have seen a high of 1.0573, which is quite a significant move for such a short period of time. What this has really come from, is more of acceptance of what is going on in the Eurozone. We are seeing a bit more risk appetite. Really, those equity markets from six-month highs has meant that people are more willing to buy into these high yielding currencies like the Australian dollar, and that's what has really pushed it higher at the moment. Now, we have seen all-time highs against the Euro, and these highs of 1.05 against the U.S. dollar, so it has really done quite well in the beginning part of this year.
Now, with the lower volatility that we are seeing at the moment, the high commodity prices, this has tended to keep it above these levels and consolidate around the 1.04, 1.05, that we are seeing at the moment. Now, what we also have to consider, is that the Australian dollar is a very high yielding currency, which means it's very expensive for traders to actually short that currency, and that's what's also kept it afloat over the first part of this year. So certainly, a very resilient Australian dollar, compared to what's going on in the Eurozone at the moment.
St. Anne: There has also been some talk about domestic interest rates easing. What implications would that have for the Australian dollar?
Ordway: Yes certainly, alongside all this resilience that we are seeing in these high numbers traded, actually what a lot of traders are saying now, is the Australian dollar is largely overpriced, and we are seeing a lot of technical levels now that are actually indicating that it has been over bought at these levels. One of the key factors in bringing it down would certainly be the RBA rate decisions over the first half of this year.
Now CPI numbers will be a large indicator of whether they have got room to bring those rates down. If inflation is eased then certainly, we will be looking for a rate cut in February, and certainly going on to into the second half of the year. So that's one of the reasons that we could see the Australian dollar actually trade lower, despite it trading so high at the moment. So, we'd be looking forward to that. And actually, saying that it's overbought, we're actually in a very fragile state for the Australian dollar at the moment, sitting on the edge of what's going on in Europe, and it wouldn't actually take a very large catalyst to bring it off those highs, at these overbought level.
St. Anne: Kara, you've mentioned the European situation, what about the euro, would that continue to be resilient?
Ordway: Well, we've seen a very resilient euro over the past couple of weeks, and actually throughout 2011 as well. So, we're trading around the 1.29, 1.30 levels, and despite going down to the 1.26 levels against the U.S. dollar at the first part of 2012, it's actually showing a further bit more of optimism going into the end of January. So, really though looking at the fundamentals, I see no real argument for the euro to trade higher than this 1.30 level.
I think, what we're seeing is these pockets of optimism where people are really desensitized at the moment of what is going on in Europe, and they're managing to push this euro higher at the moment. What's also a factor is that we're seeing record number of shorts in the euro market at the moment. So, that short side of the euro is really largely saturated at the moment. So, any movements upwards creating stops in the market, people having to come out of their short positions, and really when we're seeing these large amount of shorts, it's really indicating that the market is largely exhausted and it's not hard to facilitate a bounce at that time, when we're seeing so many shorts in the market, so that's why it's been so resilient.
Certainly, I don't know whether it will, this will be able to continue into 2012. For me, as I said, there's no real meaningful reason for it to be trading this high. It's still above the average that it's... from when it opened in 1999. So, we're still on relatively safe levels, but certainly going into 2012, despite some probably capital flight and repatriation of funds back to the Eurozone, no one really knows what the exposure of Europe has to the rest of the world.
So, certainly for me, I'm still bearish on the euro going into 2012, and I think at the moment, the more realistic number we should be looking at is around the 1.20 level, rather than the 1.30 at the moment.
St. Anne: Kara, China's latest numbers indicated some easing in growth, what are the implications for the renminbi on the back of this slow growth?
Ordway: Exactly. Well, we've seen those growth numbers in China actually decline - they were released last week. Where growth was coming in around 10% we're now seeing it more around the 8% mark. So, certainly there is a definitely a slowdown in China occurring that is set to continue into 2012.
Now, what that implication has on the Yuan or the renminbi is likely not appreciate as much as it would first be thought. So, certainly the market expectations of appreciating have declined. China will be more reluctant to let it appreciate in these type of conditions and certainly what we'll see, whether the global conditions improve or decline, it's certainly going to be up to China as to how they appreciate it and when they appreciate it, and I doubt they will take any pressure from the U.S. despite all these factors.
St. Anne: Kara, finally what currencies are you bullish on?
Ordway: The currencies that we are looking at this year, definitely the Canadian dollar. They've got a strong fiscal start, so certainly looking to the Canadian economy for some support. It's not as overbought as other commodity currencies like the Australian dollar and the New Zealand dollar. So, certainly there the Canadian dollar is one to buy.
Also, actually the Norwegian krone. We've seen a lot more activity in the Nordic crosses over the past couple of months as traders try to get exposure within Europe not using the euro. They also have a large fiscal surplus, and so definitely the Norwegian korne is looking good over 2012.
But I definitely think this year will be characterized by a different dynamic in the FX markets, particularly driven by the euro. We are not going to see those traditional risk-on, risk-off trades. The correlation between the euro and the S&P has declined quite significantly. So, we are no longer seeing in terms of risk-on people, buying into the euro and that is really going to create a different dynamic throughout 2012 for the FX market. So, it will be an interesting one to look out for.
St. Anne: Kara thanks for your insights today.
Ordway: Thank you.
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