- U.S. Dollar Soars As 10-Year Yields Rise 10%
- Stocks Collapse, Driving Risk Currencies Lower
- AUD Hit Hardest By Risk Aversion
- Euro Most Resilient
- U.S. Personal Income, Spending Numbers Next
The U.S. dollar is reaping the benefits of rising yields. Since the beginning of the year we’ve seen 10-year bond yields in the U.S. move from 0.91% to a one-year high of 1.56%. This trend started at the turn of the new year but gained significant momentum in the past few weeks. At first, currency and equity traders resisted the move, with stocks powering to record highs and the U.S. dollar continuing its slide, but today, investors are finally waking up to the ramifications of rising interest rates. U.S. policy-makers say they aren’t concerned, but the spike in yields has a direct impact on consumer rates. Mortgage rates, for example, rose to their highest level since August, which could put an end to the refinancing boom.
Yields are rising because investors are optimistic. They believe a strong sustainable recovery is right around the corner and prices will rise as demand comes roaring back. In this type of environment, bond yields should be higher regardless of whether the Fed raises interest rates. Currencies are particularly sensitive to interest rates, which explains why the U.S. dollar had such a significant reaction to the 10% spike. The same is true for stocks. Rising yields increase borrowing costs and affect the discretionary incomes of consumers. A 1% to 1.5% increase is big on a percentage basis, but on an absolute basis, it is still very low. It took some time for the U.S. dollar and stocks to respond, but we could see a multi-day rise in the greenback and corresponding slide in equities.
The U.S. is not the only country experiencing rising yields. Ten-year German bund yields also climbed to their highest level in 11 months. In contrast to the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank officials say they are closely monitoring the evolution of long-term nominal bond yields. They will ensure that they remain favorable, according to ECB member François Villeroy. With the ECB more eager to act on rising rates than the Fed, EUR/USD should be trading lower. Unlike other major currencies that fell sharply today, EUR/USD was unchanged, but it should only be a matter of time before the pair turns lower as well.
The Australian dollar was hit the hardest by the rising U.S. dollar, which is not unusual because the currency is especially sensitive to the performance of stocks. Whenever there is a big market sell-off, we typically see AUD/USD and AUD/JPY sell-off. The New Zealand dollar also sold off aggressively, but NZD’s decline was supported by a downwardly revised consumer confidence report. USD/CAD enjoyed its strongest one day rise since Jan. 27. A move like this should be followed by continuation but the rise in oil prices holds the pair back.
The second worse performing currency was sterling, which dropped reversed towards 1.40. Given how much GBP/USD has risen this month, profit-taking has long been expected. GBP/USD is a trending currency, so after the biggest one-day drop since October, a further decline is likely.