By Kathy Lien, Chief Strategist of DailyFX.com
US Dollar: Outlook is Grim but a Recovery Could be Swift
The news that Bank of America will be plowing $2 billion into Countrywide Financial Corp was supposed to be very bullish for the financial markets, but the move in the Dow today was far from impressive. Carry trades and high yielding currencies are only higher because of gains in the Asian and early European trading sessions. The Nikkei closed up 400 points after the Bank of Japan left interest rates unchanged. Credit and housing concerns continue to grapple the market as traders and investors alike question whether the worst is truly behind us. Although everyone may be breathing a little easier with no new blowups announced, the drop in bond yields suggest that many buyers still prefer to park their money in Treasuries or cash. Jobless claims were slightly higher than expected last week, but not as bad as they could be given the recent layoff reports. According to the Wall Street Journal, in the past 10 days alone, mortgage companies have shed 13k jobs. In all likelihood, many of those people have yet to file for unemployment benefits. Non-farm payrolls for the next few months should be particularly horrid. Meanwhile, new home sales and durable goods for the month of July are due for release tomorrow. Home sales are expected to drop for the third straight month. The market is only looking for a modest 1.7 percent drop, but sales could easily be a lot worse. If they are not, that would only mean that the August and September numbers would bear the brunt of weak demand. Last month, home builder confidence dropped to a 16 year low while housing starts dropped to a 10 year low. Builders and home owners are both feeling the crunch. RealtyTrac announced earlier this week that foreclosures in the January-July 2007 period jumped 60 percent compared to last year. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd also added that the rate of foreclosures is at a 37 year high. The outlook for the US economy is grim, but the eventual recovery could come quickly. The strong demand for Treasuries indicates that companies and global investors are still awash with cash. They only want to hoard that cash for the time being until the storm passes and once it does, buyers may come back in force.
Euro Rallies as ECB Sticks to Plan for Raising Interest Rates
Despite the turmoil in the financial markets, the European Central Bank still wants to push forward with raising interest rates next month. After injecting EUR$40 billion Euros into the financial system, they put out a press release saying that they still hold the same monetary policy stance as the one expressed by ECB President Trichet on August 2, 2007. On that day, he had told the markets that they needed to exercise strong vigilance, which was their way of saying "expect an interest rate hike next month." Last night's reminder sent a strong message to the markets about the ECB's plans to continue raising interest rates. As a result, rate hike expectations have soared from 5 percent up to 50 percent. This renewed possibility of an interest rate hike has helped the Euro rally against both the US dollar and Japanese Yen. As long as there is no new blowup driving another wave of flight to safety, the expectations of three interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve before the end of the year against the possibility of a rate hike from the ECB should keep the EUR/USD above 1.3450.

Kathy Lien, Chief Strategist, Daily FX



