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11/25/23, 9:56 AM Investors dump dollar in bet that US rates have peaked

US Dollar

Investors dump dollar in bet that US rates have peaked


Asset managers sell greenback at fastest pace in a year as market prices in more rate cuts next
year

Recent weakness has left the dollar index roughly where it started this year © Bloomberg

Mary McDougall and Stephanie Stacey in London YESTERDAY

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Investors are selling dollars at the fastest rate in a year as they raise their bets that the US Federal
Reserve has finished its aggressive campaign of interest rate increases and will deliver multiple
cuts next year.

Asset managers are on track to sell 1.6 per cent of their open dollar positions this month, the
largest monthly outflow since last November, according to State Street, which is custodian to
$40tn of assets. Managers had made “significant” sales every day since weaker-than-expected US
jobs data on November 3, according to the bank.

That has helped put the greenback on course for its worst monthly performance in a year, with
analysts warning that sales by asset managers could just be the start of a longer-term trend among
investors to reduce exposure to US assets.

“Flows in the past two weeks point to a rapid rethink with dollar demand,” said Michael Metcalfe,
head of macro strategy at State Street, adding that recent sales marked the unravelling of “an
unusually large US [dollar] overweight” position.

“Investors think ‘if [rate cuts are] actually going to be delivered then I don’t need to hold as many
dollars’.”

There have only been six such rapid unwinds of dollar holdings in the past two decades, according
to State Street. The most recent of these happened in November last year, when the dollar index —
a measure of its strength against a basket of six currencies — went on to weaken by around 10 per
cent by the end of January.

Metcalfe added that, despite the recent unwind, asset managers were still overweight dollars
compared with other currencies, a sign that dollar weakness could have further to run.

The greenback enjoyed a huge bull run last year, driven by the Fed’s rate rises. The dollar index
had risen by as much as 19 per cent by late September, delivering large profits to macro hedge
funds with bullish positions, before weakening sharply in the fourth quarter.

This year it surged by more than 7 per cent between July and October as robust economic data
pushed benchmark US borrowing costs to a 16-year high and convinced investors that rates would
stay higher for longer.

But the narrative has changed again in recent weeks. US inflation fell by more than expected in
October to 3.2 per cent, prompting investors to price out any prospect of further rate rises. Recent
weakness has left the dollar index roughly where it started this year and futures markets are now
pricing more than 0.5 percentage points of Fed rate cuts by September next year.

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11/25/23, 9:56 AM Investors dump dollar in bet that US rates have peaked

Geoff Yu, foreign exchange strategist at BNY Mellon, custodian to $46tn of assets, said that over
the past 20 days the firm’s custody clients “have been selling dollars at the fastest pace this year”,
with a preference for buying the Japanese yen, Canadian dollar and a range of Latin American
currencies.

Selling pressure on the dollar will come as welcome news for Japan’s finance ministry. It has been
on red alert for a possible currency intervention as the yen traded close to a 33-year low against the
greenback earlier this month, adding to inflationary pressures by pushing up the cost of imported
goods.

While the yen has fallen by around 12 per cent against the dollar this year, November has offered
some reprieve with the currency strengthening by around 1.5 per cent.

Yu expects yen strength to continue, with the Bank of Japan widely expected to drop its negative
interest rate policy in the coming months. “There’s not much point in being short the yen [betting
on a falling price] as every Bank of Japan policy meeting will be a live event,” he said.

Dollar weakness also comes as a relief for emerging markets. It makes it easier for them to repay
dollar-denominated borrowings and could start to lure investors back into developing economies
after heavy sales of hard-currency debt this year.

“We are overweight emerging market equities and overweight commodities,” said Florian Ielpo,
head of macro, multi-asset at Lombard Odier Investment Managers, adding that the weaker dollar
environment was “unravelling some of the very tight [bullish] case for US equities”.

MSCI’s emerging market stocks index has added 3 per cent so far this year, well behind a rise of
almost 19 per cent for the US S&P 500 index of blue-chip stocks.

Francesco Sandrini, head of multi-asset strategies at Amundi, said heading into 2024 he expected
dollar weakness to continue “in part because we anticipate less turbulence between the US and
China”, meaning investors had less need of the greenback as a safe haven.

However, he added that, since the start of the Russia-Ukraine war, “something is broken” in the
usual rotation between developed and emerging markets, noting that a preference for equities in
Mexico and Brazil was partly down to a perception that these countries are well placed politically.

“We are seeing a lot of interest in emerging markets — but I think that these two forces, the weaker
dollar and geopolitical concerns, are a little in conflict,” he said.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2023. All rights reserved.

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11/25/23, 9:56 AM Investors dump dollar in bet that US rates have peaked

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