On October 5, 2004 we published the following chart showing the next
four moves we expected the dollar to make.
With seasonal trends
pointed down into the end of 2004 we forecasted a test of the key 80
level followed by a rally to 91/92 in July. We also forecast that once
the dollar did rally off the 80 support level the media would shift its
focus from the "trade deficit" to "interest rates."
Have you noticed how many fewer references there are to the trade
deficit this year? Its no coincidence. The media
"rationalizes" moves in the market and currency analysts
simply follow the trends. They do not make long term forecasts. If they
do, they are usually wrong.
One year ago this
forecast stood all others on their heads. But our rational was that the
US would see higher short term and long term yields. Following that
“unexpected” rally from January to July 2005, we expected a pullback
to the key 85 level between August and December of 2005. Then, a renewed
rally to the 100 handle in 2006. By mid-September we alerted subscribers
that the forecasted correction had ended prematurely and that the next
big move for the dollar was up.
Amazingly, the dollar
has followed our suggested moves around key pivot points perfectly
(compare the top chart with the updated one below). We now think the
final phase of the dollar rally (leg #4) is now underway.
Longtime readers
know that we prefer to follow the relative direction in short term
rates as the key indicator of interest rate expectations. By
following moves in the 3-month Tbill relative to longer term
maturities we can accurately gauge where the market thinks rates
are going. By extension we can forecast the direction of the
dollar. But long term rates are also a handy indicator as a spike
in interest rates often will coincide with a rally in the dollar.
In the next chart
below we show the 30-month cycle in 10-year Treasury yields that
bottomed last month. Note that in each case (blue boxes) this has
preceded a sharp rally in the US dollar. This is yet another
reason we remain bullish on the dollar’s prospects and think
that today’s low 88.75 offers a good buying opportunity in the
dollar for those that have not yet gone long. As such, we now
expect a move to 95/100 over the coming months to cap the dollar's
counter trend rally which will set up the next vicious bear market
decline.
Finally, one
point we made at last year’s Las Vegas Traders Expo was that
everything you trade is priced in some currency.
Therefore, a
helpful tool is to look at everything priced in gold to compare
real gains to phantom gains. Another helpful tool is to compare
long-term trends in currencies and commodities as long as both are
priced in the same currency.
In the chart
below we show the 32-year chart of copper prices and the Swiss
franc – both priced in ever depreciating US dollars.
Note that copper
prices are testing a 30-year rising trend line that has capped all
previous rallies. Subsequent declines were vicious and seem to
work independent of gold prices which moved higher all through the
1970s without suffering a collapse as you see here. (Remember that
we are bullish on gold but want to wait for the US dollar rally to
complete its move before cycling back into gold).
The orange lines
show that the major tops in copper lined up perfectly with equally
significant highs in the Swiss franc. Now recall from last
week’s report that the 10-year Treasury yield is breaking out to
new highs in conjunction with the 30-month cycle bottom just as
junk bonds are collapsing. Rising rates = tighter money = stronger
dollar.
The final
observation is that copper appears to make a “three step” move
when it screams to new highs every ten years or so. It looks like
copper made another three steps with this month’s high meaning a
reversal is now immanent. As such, we feel the dollar is poised to
rally significantly in the coming months, while copper should see
at least a 30% retracement of recent gains.

© 2005 Jes Black
Editorial Archive
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Contact
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Jes
Black
FX Money Trends, LLC
One Henderson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
646.229.5401 Tel
201.222.5577 Fax
www.fxmoneytrends.com
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