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I was struck the
other day when reading the words of Marc Faber in a Bloomberg article
about the global economy--he called himself a “reluctant holder of
dollars.” Remember that phrase for a moment; I’ll come back to it.
Look,
just about anybody you’ll talk to right now, whether bull or bear,
will look at the Dollar and say that it’s due for a pullback.
Certainly, a look at a 1-year chart of the US Dollar index shows it to
be extended by most short-term measures:

Further,
a look at the recent commitments of traders also suggests there has
indeed been a shift toward the greenback and away from non-Dollar
holdings such as gold, foreign currencies and many commodities, with the
technical conditions of each of these assets suggesting an oversold
bounce could occur anytime.
My
problem is: the idea of a Dollar pullback just seems too obvious at the
moment.
Further,
I would argue that the move into the Dollar thus far in 2005 has not
been a full-force embrace of the currency but a tentative or, to use
Faber’s revealing word, “reluctant,” shift on the part of
investors. Heck, I’ve been banging the drum about a Dollar rally since
early December, and I’d even call myself
a reluctant holder of Dollars (here’s the article
stating my original shift from Dollar bear to bull, written even before
establishing Delta Global in January, knowing exactly how immodest this
sounds, if there was a better call as to what the first half of 2005
would look like, I’d like someone to show it to me)!
Still
too obvious are the “twin deficits,” too popular are the dollar-perma
bears and too simplistic is the notion that foreign central banks will
abandon the Dollar, bringing about economic calamity in the U.S. at any
moment (as a side note on this theme: in March, the most recent month
for which such figures are available, foreign central banks, including
both Japan and China, were actually net sellers of U.S. Treasuries. Some
Dollar perma-bears did make their “a-ha!” mention of the statistic,
but my thought was this: if they were net sellers in a month the Dollar
rallied and Treasuries were essentially flat, doesn’t this at least
call into question the notion that the American economy would collapse
if such buyers went missing? One month doesn’t make a trend, but my
contention recently has been that not only would there be no mass exodus
from U.S. Treasuries as the world’s central banks are clearly trying
to manage their way out of these economic imbalances, but that the bond
market is also far too deep to think that any one or two players control
it).
So,
sure, the U.S. Dollar is overbought, is facing technical resistance as
the Dollar Index approaches 90 and it is indeed quite likely to pull
back sometime soon (perhaps a “surprise” French ‘yes’ vote on
the E.U. Constitution this weekend would give traders reason to buy
Euros and sell Dollars, though this has little to do w/the anemic
statistics we’re seeing from that region’s most important
economies… personally, I’d still consider a ‘no’ vote to be the
surprise despite what recent polls are saying), yet I suspect any
pullback will be as short-lived as this year’s previous corrections.
Based on the residual mistrust of a currency that fell in a straight
line for 3 years, expect even the slightest hiccup in the Dollar’s
recent performance to quickly bring about a rise in pessimistic
sentiment, one that merely provides another Dollar buying opportunity.
I’m
neither bull nor bear here and if I thought it was time to be a
long-term bear on the Dollar once again, I’d be happy to say so and in
the hopes of later bragging about correctly calling the move in both
directions. More and more, however, this Dollar rally is feeling like a
train I wouldn’t want to step in front of, one that may have more
staying power than even I originally imagined.
To
view things from a different perspective, take a look at a 20-year chart
of the Dollar:

Not
only is there the heavy support at 80 on the Dollar Index that I’ve
talked about in the past, but notice the PMO, Carl Swenlin’s
interesting indicator that functions very much like the more familiar
MACD: from a long-term perspective, this isn’t exactly an asset that
looks overbought. At extreme readings, the PMO tends to be very useful
and accurate with regard to stocks, stock indices, currencies, you name
it… I’d suggest it is not to be taken at all lightly in the chart
above.
Along
these same lines, take a look at chart of gold over that same long-term
timeframe, perhaps the ultimate anti-Dollar holding:

I’m
one that has still been calling himself bullish on gold in the
long-term, but even that thought is starting to worry me somewhat.
Again, the PMO reading on the chart above doesn’t suggest an asset
that’s exactly near its lows and screaming to be bought. And from this
longer-term perspective, essentially all the non-Dollar assets look the
same.
When
the Fed Funds rested at 1% and the benchmark 10-year Treasury was in the
4.5% range, we were witnessing by far the greatest yield curve in
American history, in percentage terms. Watching this metal’s recent
performance, lately I’ve been finding it hard to shake the following
thought from my head: we recently saw the most purposefully
accommodative monetary policy ever, yet gold only managed to make it to
$450. What’s it going to take to move gold to $1000 and beyond as the
Dollar perma-bears so fearlessly promise?!
Further,
while there is certainly a chance those perma-bears could be proven
right (though it’s not guaranteed, as they state with such
conviction), it’s also possible they’ll be dead right 5-10 years
from now or more, long after most investors will have been beaten up to
the point of exhaustion.
For
those who have been overweight non-Dollar assets all year and are
starting to feel the pinch, you may catch a breather soon. We’ll all
analyze any such correction as it occurs, but it may be wise for such
investors not to treat any such retreat as the resumption of the
Dollar’s ignominious march to zero, but as an opportunity to
re-consider their asset mix and possibly re-balance their holdings
accordingly.

© 2005 Chip Hanlon
Editorial
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CONTACT
INFORMATION
Chip
Hanlon
President
Delta Global Advisors, Inc.
Huntington Beach, CA 92648
Phone: 800-485-1220
Email l Website
A
renowned technical analyst, Mr. Hanlon served as the C.O.O./Chief
Domestic Strategist at Euro Pacific Capital prior to taking the reins at
Delta Global. He had previously been the President of Unfunds, Inc. and
spent 7 years prior with Sutro & Company as a Vice President and the
company's Los Angeles Director of Syndicate Offerings. His current firm
provides direct trading access to international markets and he is also a
regularly-published expert on commodities and precious metals.
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
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