Thursday, June 2, 2011

How do you say Deja Vu in Greek?

The end of the search for Bin Laden and relatively dovish statements from Bernanke (meaning interest rates are going to stay low) should have provided a good start to May. However, negative headlines quickly outweighed positive ones and May 2011 turned into a near identical repeat of May 2010, which similarly witnessed concerns of over Greek debt and double-digit intra-month market swings. 

The euro’s slide and resulting USD strength, combined with what should have been a normal correction in an overheated commodities market, to form a wave of selling of across all markets several times greater than any single newsbyte warranted—a rogue wave of sorts. However, as mentioned last month we expect some positive swings in the USD over the short-term; over a longer-term horizon, however, we still maintain that the USD will remain relatively weak until interest rate differentials narrow. This should be positive for most commodities and non-USD assets.

As such, for new accounts, we used the corrections as buying opportunities in select markets that benefit from a weaker dollar and continued loose monetary policy in the US. For example:

After an initial sell-off in gold in USD terms, gold rallied to new highs in EUR terms and has provided relative stability against violent currency fluctuations. Gold remains a buy on pullbacks (more on this in a future article).

Furthermore, US Treasuries have proved their safe-haven characteristics, defying simple logic, and have rallied despite the imminent end of QE2. In fact, using history as our guide (see Figure 1 below), we think there is high likelihood that US rates will move lower (and bond prices higher), despite prevailing opinion that the end of the Fed’s buying will push rates higher (again more on this in a future article). 


Figure 1: With the Fed buying bonds in QE1 and QE2, one would expect rates to decrease. Instead the opposite occurred. Likewise, with the end of QE1 and QE2, one would expect rates to rise. QE1 proved differently. Will this be the same for the end of QE2?

Data Source: Federal Reserve

Bottom Line: Currently market activity, while volatile, appears to be well within the norm. For the most part, corrections are buying opportunities in select markets, rather than a reason to sell. Should this change and the markets show signs of prolonged deterioration, we will reduce exposure and then get re-invested as opportunities arise again in the future.

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