Tuesday, 3 November 2009




November 03, 2009
The Scariest Thing on Wall Street
By Jeff Clark

While ghouls, ghosts, and goblins were gearing up to haunt neighborhoods across America, something else was spooking Wall Street last Friday. It was the threat of a rising dollar and the potential end of the dollar "carry trade."

The ability to short dollars at virtually zero cost and then use the proceeds to buy other assets – like stocks, bonds, gold, and oil – has been a winning trade since the dollar peaked and the stock market bottomed back in March. But now that trade is getting a little long in the tooth and the markets are getting nervous. With good reason...

You see, never before has the dollar been so despised as a currency. It seems as though everyone is riding the "dollar is doomed" bandwagon. And this rampant dollar pessimism is occurring at a time when everyone is falling in love with stocks and commodities.

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So we have a beaten-down currency being used to prop up other assets, which have already inflated considerably in just a few months. It's the exact opposite of what we had in March, when everyone was selling assets at rock bottom prices and rushing toward the safety of the U.S. dollar.

Have economic conditions really changed so much?

Things have improved somewhat. We are no longer on the brink of a financial meltdown, and there are signs of modest growth in the U.S. economy.

But income-tax receipts are still declining, foreclosures are still on the rise, banks still haven't written down the value of bad loans, and the consumer is still not spending. In other words, we still don't have the economic foundation to support rapidly rising asset prices.

The gains of the past several months are principally the result of a falling dollar causing asset price inflation. Traders who have been short the dollar and long riskier assets have profited on both sides as the carry trade bungee cord has stretched far beyond its normal limits.

What happens when the bungee cord snaps back? What happens when the carry trade begins to unwind?

If you've ever been on the wrong side of a short squeeze, then you know the answer. When heavily shorted stocks stop falling, traders step in to cover their positions. The ensuing rallies can be spectacular.

Consider the case of Fannie Mae (FNM). FNM is a worthless company, and the stock really has no equity value behind it. But FNM rallied more than 140% in just four days back in August when short sellers panicked and rushed to cover their shares.

Imagine that those traders used FNM short-sale proceeds to buy other stocks. And then they had to sell those other stocks in order to buy back FNM shares.

Not only would they have gotten crushed when trying to cover their short FNM positions. But they'd also suffer as their other stocks cascaded lower amidst a flurry of sell orders.

 
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That is the risk of an unwinding carry trade. As soon as there's a sustained uptick in the dollar, traders will need to sell their other assets in order to buy back their short dollar positions.

Given the overwhelming short interest in the dollar, a small rally in the greenback could lead to a truly frightening correction in stocks.

Best regards and good trading,