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  • 17 hours ago
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00:00Let's talk about this FX market driven in the first half of this year by perceived capital flows.
00:04Do you believe that in the second half of this year it will be driven by rate differentials and why?
00:12Rate differentials up to a point, expectations about growth which are often the same thing.
00:17But yes, I think that people are genuinely uncertain in the sense of at the moment they're uncertain
00:22but aware of the fact that the world is very long dollars because we've all put so much money into the U.S. equity market,
00:28because money has gone into the U.S. treasury market, because the U.S. has been outperforming for so long
00:32and that if the economy slows, rates need to come down significantly,
00:36then some of the returns people have enjoyed are pretty vulnerable.
00:41I think the market's confused about the short-term rate story
00:44but confident that the answer is, is the U.S. economy slowing a little
00:49or is it in more danger of a more significant slowdown?
00:53And that means we're overreacting to every single piece of macroeconomic data
00:57with the exception perhaps of the really sort of minor data we saw yesterday.
01:01But we're lining up to overreact to each piece we get going into September.
01:04Taking a step back, Kit, earlier this year it seemed like a one-way freight train of sell dollars,
01:09sell the United States.
01:10That was the trade and pretty much everyone lined up behind it.
01:13Is it over?
01:14We've kind of plateaued and kind of shifted around this level for a couple of months now.
01:18Are we seeing sort of the end of the sell the America trade
01:21and going back to this sort of nuanced overreacting to every data point type of landscape?
01:27I think the data will decide that.
01:29I think the question then is whether the U.S. economy is slowing significantly.
01:32I mean, you know, a currency can't go down as fast as the dollar did
01:35or go up as fast as currencies like the euro did for very long.
01:40An inflation-targeting central bank reacts to fast currency moves.
01:45An economy reacts to fast currency moves.
01:47So the move we had in euro dollar from 102 up to 118 was too fast.
01:53We have to take time out.
01:54Whether that takes us to 125 or we get stuck here depends on how much
02:00or how little the U.S. economy slows in the next three months, I would have said.
02:04And if we got a repeat of last month's payroll numbers,
02:07if we got something genuinely soft,
02:09then I think we're going to head off into the middle of the 120s for euro dollar.
02:12We've got another 5% to 10% weakness in the dollar in this cycle to come.
02:17But, you know, I wouldn't want to over-interpret some of the data
02:22that we've had in the summer and extrapolate it out blindly
02:25as saying that is what's definitely going to happen.
02:27Again, if the inflation hit from tariffs isn't too big,
02:31the economy is not going to slow too much.
02:34And a very gentle easing in U.S. growth doesn't justify much dollar weakness at all.
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