Dollar bulls may be a vanishing breed, but they’re far from extinct.
With the greenback extending last year’s slide into 2018, markets are broadly positioned for more weakness. That bias is seen in speculators’ positioning in the futures market and in the money flowing into US exchange-traded funds that invest in foreign stocks and don’t hedge out currency swings.
But dollar bulls such as Sinead Colton are holding their ground, and should they prove right, the bears would face a painful squeeze. Ms Colton, a global investment strategist at BNY Mellon Asset Management North America, expects the dollar to rebound against currencies such as the euro as the US tax overhaul leads the American economy to outshine the euro region.
“What currencies tend to respond to is the rate of change in economic growth,” said Ms Colton. “So yes, the euro zone is expanding, but that pace of positive surprise has declined. And actually the US, given the tax-reform package, is starting to outpace it.”
The Bloomberg dollar index sank 8.5 per cent last year amid vibrant growth abroad and the prospect that other central banks would join the Federal Reserve in tightening policy. It’s down 2.3 per cent in 2018, partly on concern over US budget and current account deficits.
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However, Ms Colton expects euro weakness to take hold in the next three to six months as growth dynamics in Europe and the US shift. Euro-zone gross domestic product will probably expand 2.3 per cent in 2018, compared with 2.8 per cent for the US, according to forecasts in Bloomberg surveys.
The euro is her largest short position, while the dollar is the biggest bullish wager.
That’s in contrast to the consensus of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, which predicts the euro will climb to $1.26 by the end of 2018, from about $1.23 on Tuesday in New York. Being bearish the dollar is the second-most-crowded trade across financial markets, after long bets on certain technology companies, according to a March fund manager survey from Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research.
Ms Colton has company in calling for a dollar comeback.
The currency is set for a boost because the Fed is probably going to signal a more aggressive path of rate hikes this week, according to Niall Coffey, chief investment officer of Avoca Global Advisors.
Policymakers’ latest quarterly forecasts will probably indicate a greater likelihood of 100 basis points of tightening in both 2018 and 2019, according to a March 14 research note from Coffey, formerly the chief foreign-exchange dealer at the New York Fed. In December, officials projected three quarter-point hikes this year, followed by about two in 2019.
“The US dollar is likely to find support as the FOMC outlines a persistent policy tightening agenda,” Mr Coffey wrote.