The US dollar posted its largest single-day loss in over a year, as speculation for future US Federal Reserve interest rate cut doomed the greenback to further drops. Outlook has grown increasingly dim for the downtrodden US currency, as both speculative and sovereign traders show very little interest in holding dollars. Continued speculation that key oil producing countries may drop the dollar as their primary reserve currency has clearly hurt the USD, while increasingly pessimistic forecasts for US economic growth and interest rates has likewise hurt confidence in the dollar.
The euro easily set fresh record-highs on the renewed wave of dollar selling, trading above the psychologically significant $1.4800 mark through the New York afternoon. Strong euro interest sent the single currency to four-year peaks against the British Pound, with the UK currency continuing to underperform major forex counterparts. The Japanese Yen and the Canadian dollar were the only G-10 currencies to remain even with the dollar, likewise falling significantly against key European currencies.
The afternoon release of Federal Open Market Committee minutes from the board’s October 31 meeting was the clear highlight of the day’s trade, and dollar selling accelerated on renewed bearishness on US economic growth prospects. The Federal Open Market Committee struck a somewhat hawkish tone in minutes from their October 31 meeting, with some officials saying that rate cuts could be reversed “readily”. Indeed, the text said that officials viewed the rate cut as a “close call”, but likewise noted that growth outlook remains more uncertain than that of inflation. Though the Fed claimed it saw little evidence of a clear spillover of the housing market recession to the broader economy, it revised 2008 growth forecasts to a mere 1.8%-2.5% from 2.5%-2.75% previously. The FOMC likewise claimed that financial markets remained “fragile” through its October 31 meeting, and a further deterioration through more recent trading emphasizes the risks to growth on financial market conditions.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell further in the wake of the report, completely erasing its initial 100+ point rally and trading 87 points off to 12,870. The NASAQ Composite showed over twice the percentage decline, tumbling 1.4 percent to 2,557. All the while, the S&P 500 shed 0.8 percent to 1,421. Momentum clearly remains to the downside for recently downtrodden US equity markets. Yet the dollar has failed to gain as a safe haven currency on increased uncertainty over the future of domestic economic growth.
Treasury markets were quite surprisingly stable in the wake of the FOMC minutes, and the 2-year Note yield remained almost exactly unchanged at 3.15 percent.
[I]Written by David Rodríguez, Currency Analyst for DailyFX.com[/I]