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Euro the Indomitable
Daily FX ^ | February 2, 2005 | y Boris Schlossberg

Posted on 02/02/2005 5:27:26 AM PST by nicollo

Euro the Indomitable
Wednesday February 2, 6:26 am ET
By Boris Schlossberg strategist@dailyfx.com

Despite registering the worst unemployment rate in Germany since World War II, despite suffering sharply lower German Retail Sales than expected, despite breaking the psychologically important barrier of 5 Million Germans without a job, the euro, like the Terminator, continued its relentless rise against the greenback, shrugging off the latest gloomy economic news. During most of the early European session, the euro held near the highs set in Tokyo as most FX dealers ignored the poor German data. Granted, the news was well known ahead of time and market was psychologically prepared for the numbers. Yet the dollar bulls must be truly befuddled at euro's strength especially on a day when the Fed is expected to raise rates another 25 basis points, providing the dollar with a 50 basis point positive carry spread against the euro - a spread that may widen if the ECB decides to lower rates this year in order to stimulate domestic demand.

The market will of course focus on the Fed statement parsing every comma in search of clues to future actions. At present, the consensus view is that the measured language will remain which may explain the market's lackluster interest in dollar longs. However, if this Fridays' Non-Farm payrolls beat expectations of 200K new jobs, they will stand in stark contrast to the bleak data out of Europe. At that point euro bulls will have little immediate fundamental support for their position and the unit may finally weaken.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: dollar; euro; forex; weenies
Now this is getting really fun! Let's see, despite unemployment, despite dropping retail sales (!), despite atrophy of body and soul, despite all the mess of the statist German and other European economies, the euro, The Terminator! on "its relentless rise...." (uh, up half a half a penny or something). Too funny.

Of course the caveat at the end, that maybe, just maybe traders will take note of good news out of U.S. and look more longingly upon the dollar...

So silly. The exchanges have ignored good news out of America over the last year. Actually, they've held nose, covered eyes and ears at the good news, and scolded the dollar in what I can only see as out of institutional brain freeze or, more the likely, a deliberate, delusional strategery of the falling sky.

What's fascinating about this article is that we've got the reverse going on now: they're long on the euro despite admitted good news out of the U.S. and despite bad news in Europe. This logic, too, will pass.

So long as the Chinese keep up their Yuan CYA dance, and they will, the euro stands as but a limp alternative. Reserve currency? Foggettaboutit.

Nicollo unmasked: Bromleyisms here

1 posted on 02/02/2005 5:27:26 AM PST by nicollo
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To: nicollo
i still don't get it either. the european money supply is expanding more quickly than the US money supply; add in the rising interest rates and strong economy and I don't see how a euro rally can be sustained.
2 posted on 02/02/2005 5:30:27 AM PST by music is math
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To: nicollo

the dollar is down because there is an economic war being waged between the EU and the USA... care to guess who is losing??


3 posted on 02/02/2005 5:33:07 AM PST by chilepepper (The map is not the territory -- Alfred Korzybski)
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To: chilepepper

George Soros?


4 posted on 02/02/2005 5:35:24 AM PST by nicollo
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To: music is math

Thanks for the link.


5 posted on 02/02/2005 5:36:46 AM PST by nicollo
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To: nicollo; All

The big question is how much does the China business div. of China inc., run by the Communists, need trade with the US? If they dump their dollars and run our economy down how much do they suffer through lack of orders for their factories? Or, are they at a point worldwide where they don't need us anymore? Questions to which I have no answers.


6 posted on 02/02/2005 5:51:32 AM PST by keysguy (Time to get rid of the UN and the ACLU)
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To: nicollo

I agree, the weak economies of Europe especially the German basket case, cannot continue to support the Euro. I beleive that at least part of the Euro's supossed strength was from European traders dumping their dollars for Euros simply as a "we don't like the US" ploy. My bet is that the Euro is in for tough times in the near future.


7 posted on 02/02/2005 6:21:32 AM PST by The Great RJ
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To: The Great RJ

Half of trading is fundamentals the other half is physcological.....Part of the pressure on the dollar is due to the political division between the twp parties, the EU and the US. They so desperately want to crush us and claim a victory.

But with the underlying economic data such as unemployment above 12%....their bubble is about to pop!


8 posted on 02/02/2005 6:32:09 AM PST by Republic Rocker
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To: Republic Rocker

I've never gone seriously long on dollar prospects vs. the euro. My position has been, always, that the euro never had any strength, thereby its "strength" was a mistaken name for dollar weakness.

There are too many dollars out there, and there is too much outflow, but not enough to worry me about further dollar weakness -- and at the same time too much to drive the dollar up much from where is now. Keep your eye on gold.

That said, in euro-dollar trades, the game is up. It's no longer just dollar weakness. It's now about euro weakness.


9 posted on 02/02/2005 8:20:33 AM PST by nicollo
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To: The Great RJ

Paul Johnson has an excellent peice in the Jan. 31 Forbes, "Germany's Dismal Future."

Johnson looks at fundamentals, and he understands that politics matters. As Nicollo has always preached, all economics are politics.


10 posted on 02/02/2005 8:22:26 AM PST by nicollo
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