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efta-01449242DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01449242
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16 May 2013
FX Blueprint Dashing Buck
Overview
Asia, not the US, has provided the biggest surprises of
2013 so far. Chinese FX reserve accumulation has
grown at a pace not seen since 2010. Much seems to
be due to speculative dollar sales, but whatever the
reason, the likely rebalancing has provided support for
non-dollar reserve currencies such as the euro and
Australian dollar. The other surprise has been the scale
of the Japan "shock" with Abenomics proving to be
the most radical set of policies since the depression-era.
The yen has fallen markedly; competitor nations such
as Korea have seen their currencies weaken, while
suppliers to Japan such as Thailand and Malaysia have
seen their currencies strengthen. Through all of this the
dollar has marched higher even with the market
wavering over an early move to tapering by the Fed
and still absent equity re-allocations to the US.
Dollar Break-Out Time
The resilience of the dollar should be taken as a signal
that the dollar is in the midst of a major uptrend. Over
the coming months, economic data will likely improve
after a soft patch, which should keep real yields well
supported. More importantly, despite continued US
equity market outperformance, international investors
have still favoured the Euro-area, Japan and EM Asia
over the US in terms of flows. This is unlikely to
continue. Chinese reserve accumulation should also
slow down, not least because of measures by
authorities to clamp down on speculative inflows. The
euro will no doubt lose out with such a backdrop.
Additionally, the ECB has re-opened discussions of
easing, while the Fed is contemplating how to wind
down easing. On the flow side, lower euro risk premix
should see much less repatriation, and if anything a
greater allocation to foreign assets by Euro-area
investors. We go long the dollar trade-weighted index
and short EUR/USD.
Japan 3 hoi.k
Though many want to fight the trend, we continue to
stick resolutely to a bearish yen view. The next three to
four months should see a wave of events and
announcements that will reinforce the potency of
Abenomics, whether through elections, structural
reforms or monetary policy. Expectations will remain
one of the key channels through which Abenomics will
influence the direction of the economy. The flow
picture also remains negative for the yen thanks to
M&A outflows and the potential for further unwinds in
past inflows to short-term Japanese instruments. We
stay short the yen against the dollar.
GBP. CHF. Nowhere To Hate
Two other currencies should lose out to an unwind of
safe-haven inflows: sterling and the Swiss franc. The
negative sterling picture is aggravated by the fact that
recent strong data will not change BoE policy, while
the negative net investment income balance points to
Page 2
an extremely negative current account deficit dynamic.
The franc meanwhile will suffer from a resumption of
portfolio outflows from Swiss-based investors. We sell
both GBP and CHF (vs EUR and USD).
Rest of C; 0
Swedish disinflation and Norwegian household debt
issues should lead to central bank biases that support a
long NOK/SEK trade. Finally in GI0, we like to go long
CAD against the JPY and NZD on the back of Canadian
growth catching up to US growth, a stabilisation in the
housing market and en upturn in natural gas prices.
We are neutral on the Australian dollar, but given the
recent sharp decline would consider buying AUD
upside options, which appear cheap making the risk-
return look attractive.
Asia
China+ Japan
The yen-centric Asia FX trade, short Korean won and
long Malaysian ringitt, should continue to perform well.
As well as competition from Japanese companies.
Korea will likely suffer from portfolio re-allocations to
Japan. Malaysia meanwhile should benefit from a pick-
up in bond and equity inflows after the recent election.
As for CNY. at annualized appreciation pace of 12%,
we are concerned. The state of the economy does not
justify that, and measures to clamp down on
speculative inflows should reduce the appreciation
pressure. Moreover, a band-widening should, if
anything, lead to CNN' weakness. We like to sell CNN'
via options.
Rest of EM
Of the remaining currencies, we find the Brazilian real
attractive thanks to its carry and policy support for a
range in the currency. We go tactically neutral on the
Mexican peso. Big picture the currency looks attractive,
but positioning is crowded. In EMEA, we look for
additional strength in the Israeli shekel after its recent
sell-off on the back of a strong economy. We remain
negative on the Hungarian forint and South African
rand, and positive on the Turkish lira. We enter option-
based trades to express those views.
How We Did
Turning to how our trades performed from January's
blueprint, it is clear that our weaker yen and stronger
euro calls were key factors behind our overall return of
+3.8%. Carry trades also performed well. Our biggest
winner was long USD/JPY (up 17%) while our biggest
loser was short a 1 year USD/PHP NDF (-1.5%). The
trades made 3.8% on average with a hit ratio of 78%..
511a/ Hafeez
London, +44 (20)7547 1489
Past performance is not inthcatrve of future per1OO713t1Ct
Deutsche Bank AG/London
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
DB-SDNY-0104566
SDNY_GM_00250750
EFTA01449242
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