Friday, May 29, 2009

investors’ short-term deflationary fears are slowly giving way to long-term inflationary worries

TO BE NOTED: From Alphaville:

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Oil at six-month high

Crikey, that’s quite a spike in WTI oil futures on Friday:

Nymex WTI Crude frutures

Interestingly, this is how the dollar is trading versus the euro on Friday:

Euro/Dollar

Dollar index:

Dollar index - CNBC

No similarity there at all, huh?

Related links:
So who says there’s no oil/dollar correlation - FT Alphaville
The coming oil-equity disconnect or the end of efficient markets theory?
- FT Alphaville
Oil, the great inflation hedge
- FT Alphaville


"
So who says there’s no oil/dollar correlation?

When oil behaves irrationally at the moment, it seems there’s usually only one explanation offered: it’s trading in an opposite direction to the dollar.

RBC Capital sums up the return of this significant correlation in the following chart:

Dollar/Oil correlation - RBC Capital

As can be seen, it appears the correlation slipped out of place from October 2008 until February 2009 - the peak of the financial crisis - and since then has increasingly been coming back into play.

Barcap’s David Woo, meanwhile, makes a similar observation, but this time charts oil’s performance versus EUR/USD specifically:

EUR/USD vs oil - Barcap

Interestingly he concludes (our emphasis):

If the key drivers behind the spike in the EUR/USD-oil correlation in the middle of last year were aggressive interest rate cuts by the Fed and the strong consensus at the time about decoupling, what is driving up the correlation now? In our view, the context is different but the reasons are the same. In recent weeks, sentiment towards global growth has improved, and in particular, the acceleration of the Chinese economy has fuelled hopes that Asia and some parts of Latin American will recover before the US.

At the same time, investors are concerned about the lack of a credible exit strategy from QE and the potential long-term consequences of the massive buildup of US government debt and contingent liabilities. The fact that inflation breakevens on TIPS are widening and gold prices remain above $900 an ounce (Figure 4) despite the dramatic abatement in risk aversion is consistent with the hypothesis that investors’ short-term deflationary fears are slowly giving way to long-term inflationary worries.
Related links:
The coming oil-equity disconnect or the end of efficient markets theory? - FT Alphaville
Oil, the great inflation hedge
- FT Alphaville
A commodity anchor, or oil as money
- FT Alphaville
BNY Mellon’s fx team: Ultimately, buy gold
- FT Alphaville

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