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efta-01459696DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01459696
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12 January 2016
FX Blueprint: Forever Young
Overview
Forever young FX mar Pet
This year's Blueprint title is not intended to argue
against the grimness with which risk assets have
started 2016. Instead, it is an expression of confidence
in a trend that has proved remarkably resilient since the
end of the financial crisis: the ongoing strength of the
dollar. Albeit maturing and far from young, we still
believe there's vigor left to the dollar in 2016. There are
plenty of fresher themes in this year's Blueprint too.
First, we see scope for more weakness in those
currencies that have lagged the dollar upcycle. This
makes us particularly bearish on GBP but less so on the
JPY. Second, we have a particularly negative bias on
Asia. Not only have the region's currencies lagged
overall dollar appreciation, but internal vulnerabilities
are high and rising. China's currency adjustment has
much more to go. Third, we have a lesser focus on RV
and intra-regional opportunities compared to last year.
In a world of high volatility and low liquidity, we mostly
stick with big picture macro drivers in FX: a market that
remains "forever young" in both its themes and trading
opportunities for 2016!
Euro to break parity
We remain euro bears and target a move down to
95cents by the end of this year. The key difference
from last year is that the dollar will have to do more
legwork. This is why we also like buying the trade-
weighted dollar. The USE) should be helped by its move
into the ranks of a high-yielding currency by year-end,
large-scale repatriation of American capital, and the
record run of negative US data surprises that poses
upside risks versus expectations. Europe can't be
forgotten either, however. There remain persistent risks
of additional easing from the ECB, but we show that
even a potential (hawkish) repricing of ECB QE
expectations later in the year will not matter that much
for EUR/USD compared to the Fed.
It's not over for the Renminbi
We believe yuan weakness will continue over 2016.
Further unwinds of carry trades, FX liability hedging
due to poor fundamentals and higher credit risk, and
higher tolerance for currency depreciation by Chinese
authorities should all help. More broadly, Asia stands
out among EM FX as the region which has the most to
adjust from post financial crisis imbalances. Output
gaps, domestic indebtedness and demographics are all
likely to be exposed to widening rate differentials
versus the US in 2016. We expect persistent currency
weakness in CNH, KRW, T1-16 and TWD.
We'ro not turning bullish JP`r yot
Consensus is becoming bullish on the yen, but we
think it's too early. The BoJ is unlikely to tolerate
additional FX strength, while Japan Inc's support for
Page 2
USD/JPY is also likely to stay strong. The balance of
payments doesn't point to JPY strength either. The
current account has been improving, but this has been
more than offset by persistent FOI and portfolio
outflows. We thus like buying USD/JPY.
Watch out Britannia
The UK will undergo the largest fiscal tightening of any
major economy this year. Add to that a stretched
current account deficit and likely referendum on the
country's future in the EU, and a big fall may be on the
cards.
We
stick
with
our
bearish
GBP/USD
recommendation entered into at the start of November.
By contrast, long-awaited Swedish krona strength
should materialize this year. Near-term, though, the
Riksbank will be reluctant to tolerate more appreciation
given wage negotiations in the first quarter. We couple
a medium term short GBP/SEK trade with a tactical
recommendation to buy a 3m EUR/SEK risk reversal.
We also like re-entering CHF shorts against euro and
yen based on renewed outflows and light positioning.
Diverging commodities bloc
AUD and NZD have little to cheer about this year.
China FX weakness impacts both disproportionately
given their trade-weights, but it also supports domestic
commodity production in China by pushing commodity
breakeven prices lower. Combined with challenging
balance of payments dynamics and FX that has lagged
the overall rally in the dollar we are bearish on both the
Antipodes. We are less negative on CAD given the
magnitude of the adjustment and closer ties to the US
business cycle and would buy against NOK.
Rest of Ervi EX
In the rest of EM we retain our long-standing
bearishness in ZAR as there are few signs of the
required
external adjustments and
SA remains
particularly exposed to China. We see scope for PLN
outperformance versus HUF given divergent growth
and monetary policy and are also bearish ILS. In LatAm
we like to buy MXN/COP on fundamental divergence,
greater Banxico FX tolerance and undervaluation
versus oil. We also like buying PEN/CLP and argue that
EUR/EM volatility is underpriced.
Last year's Blueprint trades
Our three FX Blueprints generated a combined return
of 4.2% last year with a hit rate of 55%. The best-
performing trade from the September Blueprint was
long USD/ZAR (+14%) and the worst-performing was
long AUD/NZD (-5%). See detailed returns on p. 31.
On to 2016!
George Sal-dye/cc:
London +4420)754-79118
Akan Rusf,in
Now York +7(272)250-3646
Deutsche Bank AG/London
CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL
DB-SDNY-0 120322
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