It's time to bet against the pound and back the dollar

By Dominic Frisby Oct 13, 2011

Dominic Frisby

Share with
friends:

Comments (10) Print this article

The Bank of England announces the next round of quantitative easing (QE). At $75bn, it's 50% more than expected. Yet the pound rallies.

It doesn't make any sense, does it?

Well, no.

But then again, it kind of does.

I'll explain why today as I take a look at the pound and the dollar. And, what's more, I'll tell you where I think both are headed next.

The pound's rally won't last long

In just over a month from August to September the pound went from a respectable $1.66 to a rather embarrassing (if you're the chancellor) $1.53. That's quite a drop. Given such a furious fall, some kind of bounce was inevitable.

Rumours about the next bout of QE were already doing the rounds, so, as soon as the announcement came, the turnaround came. It was your classic 'buy the rumour, sell the news'. To be precise, from the pound's point of view, it was actually 'sell the rumour, buy the news', but you take my point.

Perhaps more significantly than this, however – after all it takes more than forex speculators to move a currency – was the fact that the stock market was rallying. When global stock markets rally, the pound rises. And vice versa. I made this observation back last month and we have already hit the $1.54 target I suggested in that article.

MoneyWeek videos

Video tutorial: The currency marketsThe foreign exchange markets
Tim Bennett explains how the currency markets work.

Watch all of Tim's videos here

Now we're bouncing and, by close of play last night, the pound was hovering around the $1.57 mark.

That rally could well peter out here. Or we may go to a little bit above $1.60. I don't think we're headed much higher than that.

Here's my chart of the pound against the dollar since 1986. You sell if in the red zone, around $2. You buy it in the green zone, around $1.40, and in the amber zone around $1.65 it either meets resistance, or it finds support. For now the amber zone is an insuperable barrier.

GBP sterling index

To get through that barrier, I dare say we'll need some, if not all of: a stronger (ie more popular) government; higher interest rates; less debt; an economy in better shape; and a bull market in equities. Call me unrealistic, but I think we're a way off that.

More likely, the green zone beckons.

Back in August, I had a confirmed 'death cross' – an intermediate-term sell signal - on equities. This is a technical signal. When the 50-day moving average (the average price of the previous 50 days) crosses down through the 200-day moving average, which must also be sloping down, that is confirmation of an intermediate-term down trend. I all but have one on the pound: the only non-confirmation is that the 200-day is flat, not sloping down.

As a consequence I see this rally to $1.57 as nothing more than a counter-trend rally, a relief rally, and an opportunity to get out.


Want a fast way to hunt big dividend paying stocks?

Performance table

Easily compare UK shares by sector or index using our free performance tool.

From the FTSE 100 to penny stocks – easily find out here


Good news for American tourists

The US dollar, however, looks like it's about to make a 'golden cross' – when the 50-day passes up through the 200 – which is an intermediate-term buy signal. The green line is the 200-day moving average. It is turning up. The red line is the 50-day, which is about to pass up through the 200.

US dollar index - last 12 months 

(By the way for keen technical analysts, I find using the golden and death cross principle with the 21- and 55-day moving averages can work well. But here I'll keep it simple and stick with the longer-term 50 and 200).

Below is a chart of the US dollar's overall value since 1983. It experienced dramatic six to seven year falls between 1984 and 1991 and between 2002 and 2008, followed by a three to four year period of basing, when it was stuck in a range: 1991 to 1995 and 2008-11.

For now the dollar has found support in the low 70s. As the world rushes to pay down its debt, are we going to see a flight to the US dollar and a bull market like the one it enjoyed between 1995 and 2000? I think there's a good chance. That would surprise a few people.

US Dollar index since 1983 

Some visiting American and Canadian friends were moaning to me last week about how expensive London is. 'You try living here,' I told them. London will never be cheap, but, for them at least, it could be set to get a wee bit cheaper.

But not for us locals.

Our recommended article for today

This stock may be the best bargain on the market

Food retailing is a classic defensive sector. But not all retailers are equal. Bengt Saelensminde looks at two companies, and explains why one is on the way out, and the other is the best value stock on the market.

Comments (10)

Share with
friends:

Comments

  • 1. Roger

    (13 October 2011, 11:00AM)  Complain about this comment

    It is very sad to see that the UK gets to this stage, the ods of alomost everything stack against the UK for the enxt few years. Even higher debts for young people (university fees), exporting industries (Finance, Education) losing grounds to the Americans (they just become more open in these while UK is tightening), high property costs (lower social mobility), you do not see anything that has any potential for growth. Really sad.

  • 2. Dale Crisp

    (13 October 2011, 11:02AM)  Complain about this comment

    Your thoughts on the doller are interesting.How does this effect gold ?
    Are you still bullish on gold?I am surprised you did not mention it.
    Regards.
    C D Crisp

  • 3. Mauro Junior

    (13 October 2011, 11:03AM)  Complain about this comment

    Sir Dominic,

    I have been reading your article and I had the feeling that I should be trading the Pound against the Dollar. However, I don't have much experience with the Forex.

    How can I receive this macroeconomics graphs information? What are the best programs to deal with it?

    I hope that you can help me out.

    Regards.

    Mauro Junior

  • 4. Adam

    (13 October 2011, 11:18AM)  Complain about this comment

    Dominic, how does this affect the sterling price of gold. A strong $ suggests further weakening in $gold, but a weaker pound could mean a stronger £gold - or perhaps a less-weak £gold. Also, could your analyses on gold be based on the £gold charts, not $gold? Personally I see weakness in the £gold price. but holding up better than the $ price over the next few months. Thanks

  • 5. Steve

    (13 October 2011, 01:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    If the world starts to pay down some of its debt, there will be a reduction in money in circulation and so a fall in asset prices. As a result, there would be deflation rather than a 'bull market like the one between 1995 and 2000'. The amount of quantitive easing currently envisaged would not be enough to off-set the reduction in velocity of money which would occur with paying off debts. Then add into the mix the fact that baby boomers will be selling off assets to pay for retirement. Again, this seems to indicate a long-term fall in the markets.

  • 6. Bob

    (13 October 2011, 02:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    So how do you change pounds into dollars - simply open a US dollar Citigroup account?

    This is one of my bug bears with Moneyweek - you print articles liek this daily but then you don't follow through with info how to actually implement many of the 'tips'.

    I suppose MW is just a niche mag for the City types and not aimed at Joe Public like me.

  • 7. Brian

    (13 October 2011, 05:58PM)  Complain about this comment

    Only one thing surprised me in this article, and it was the reference to "a stronger (ie more popular) government". I wonder what you were thinking of. In times like this, the right thing is rarely popular. There's a difference between a strong government doing the wrong thing, and a strong government getting it right.

  • 8. Gopher

    (13 October 2011, 06:38PM)  Complain about this comment

    6. Bob
    Punting around the website I've found quite a lot of backgound info, previous articles, video etc for Joe Public
    Try typing Forex Trading in the search box at the top

  • 9. Colin Selig-Smith

    (13 October 2011, 09:01PM)  Complain about this comment

    You can trade currencies using ETFs. I'm currently short euros & pounds and long dollars. Getting killed on those particular positions at the moment but we'll see.

  • 10. trev

    (18 October 2011, 07:13AM)  Complain about this comment

    IF the tripple bottom plays out, the target would be 105.00 on the USD index, buy at 78.00, stop at 70.90.

    Reward/Risk ratio = 27/7 = 4

    Allow 2 years for the move to play out.

    Do your own research.

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


FREE - MoneyWeek's daily investment emailJohn Stepek

Our free daily email, Money Morning, is an informative and enjoyable analysis of what's going on in the markets. Written by our Editor, John Stepek, and guest contributors.
Sign up FREE to Money Morning here.

>