Risk FX retreat catapults dollar to 3-month top as reflation doubts reemerge
Currencies such as the Australian dollar, the Canadian dollar, Norway’s crown and Britain’s pound took a beating on Monday, catapulting the U.S. dollar to its highest in 3 months as a worldwide surge in coronavirus cases hit sentiment in global markets.
The only major currency which did not cede ground to the dollar was the safe haven Japanese yen, which gained 0.3% on the day to 109.74 yen to the dollar.
With England lifting all COVID-19 social restrictions on what some local media has dubbed “Freedom Day”, the continued spread of the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus drew further doubt from investors about whether a total economic recovery to pre-pandemic levels is possible.
Earlier this week, British health minister Sajid Javid announced he had tested positive for COVID-19 and was in self-isolation, also forcing Prime Minister Boris Johnson and finance minister Rishi Sunak into quarantine. Sterling hit a 3-month low against the dollar of $1.3703.
The dollar benefited from the risk aversion in global markets, with the index that measures its strength against peer currencies hitting its highest since April 5. The greenback also benefited from the divergence in trans-Atlantic real yields.
Germany’s 10-year inflation-linked bond yield fell to its lowest in nearly two years on Monday on concerns that the resurgent Delta COVID-19 variant would undermine economic recovery and weigh further on euro zone inflation.
“We’re starting to see the FX markets catch-up to bond markets, and more recently equity markets, in terms of fading reflation bets,” said Viraj Patel, FX and global macro strategist at Vanda Research.
“We think it’s wise to start taking chips off the table as risks of a policy mistake on both sides of the Atlantic are increasing (Fed tightening amid a growth moderation or Europe reopening amid Delta).”
The Aussie dollar, which hit its lowest since December 2020 during Asian hours, extended those losses during morning trade in London to hit a low of $0.7363. It was down 0.6% on the day.
The Canadian dollar, which dropped through its 200-day moving average in Asian trade, fell past C$1.27 against its U.S. counterpart to C$1.2780, its lowest since Feb. 8. It was down 1.2% on the day.
“Despite rising vaccination rates, a return to pre-corona normality seems questionable,” said Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of FX and commodity research at Commerzbank in a morning research note.
If consumption and production were not to return to 2019 levels Leuchtmann said, a significant chunk of productive capacities worldwide would “not just lie idle temporarily but would become devalued on a permanent basis.”
“If we are no longer simply dealing with who will survive the corona period but about whose goods and services will remain in demand long term at all the risk perception of the markets will rise. It is hardly surprising that the FX market cannot decouple from that.”
The euro dipped 0.3% to $1.1777 . Investors will look to this week’s European Central Bank meeting. read more
Also taking a beating among European currencies was the Norwegian crown, which fell 1% to its lowest since November 2020 at 8.9320 crowns per dollar.