by MrBill » Mon 24 Apr 2006, 10:40:23
Wrote this back in March to try to explain FX moves on the purchase price of crude in dollars, euros and yen. The logic is basic.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')osted: Fri Mar 03, 2006 4:47 pm Post subject: Re: Trader's Corner 2006
RE housing affordability and silver. They may converge, but that may mean that houses get cheaper in real terms. Global interest rates are on the rise. The ECB is hiking rates, the BOJ is taking their foot off the brake, the Chinese see the downside of running an ultra-loose monetary policy, and they are reluctant to keep building their foreign reserves much further. That and higher energy and commodity prices that are also acting as a deflator by raising the costs of production, weakening margins and/or giving consumers less spending power. At this point in the cycle, I wouldn't touch Turkish (+) debt for sure, nor would I be buying houses in a market like Calfornia, in which only about 14% of the population can afford a house*. However, I do see a weaker dollar feeding into energy and commodity prices as rises will be more moderate as measured in euro, yen and yuan.
Using today's $65/1.2000 = 54.17 euros and using an end of the year forecast for dollars of 1.2600 = $68.25 in nominal terms without raising the price at all euros.
If the yen appreciates to 110 from 116 that would mean that Japan would also be buying oil in yen at today's price even if it climbs to $68.25 in nominal terms. But that is being very conservative. We may easily see a 10% fall in the value of the dollar against the yen to 105. Although I am not sure that the euro would appreciate that much against the dollar as there will be sellers of the euro against the yen as well.
Assuming no world recession that would be a double competitive advantage for Japanese exporters. One their economy uses only two thirds the energy as the other G7 countries per unit of output, and secondly in yen denominated terms oil would be getting cheaper for Japan relative to either oil in euros or dollars. Especially as inter Asian trade is growing as an overall percentage of overall trade.**
*Affordability Index (as measured by 25% downpayment, 25 year mortgage, today's prices and making payments using no more than 30% of their gross income at current interest rates).
** if my math is correct should be someting like this
$65 x 1.05% = $68.25
$1.2000 x 1.05% = $1.2600
$65 / 1.2000 = 54.16 euros
$68.25 / 1.2600 = 54.16 euros
116/1.05% = 110.48
$65 x 116 = 7540 yen
$68.25 x 110.48 = 7540 yen
$68.25 x 105 = 7166 yen
7166 x 0.667 = 4778 yen
crude at 4778 yen is equivalent to $68.25 x 100% of G7 average using a USD/JPY exchange rate of 105 versus 116 today.***
1.2000 x 116 = 139.20 EUR/JPY
1.2600 x 105 = 132.30 EUR/JPY
is equal to a 5% real appreciation of the yen against the euro
***obviously crude is not the only factor which determines manufacturing competiveness. Land, labor, capital, technological know-how, patents, productivity per worker and other metrics also affect the cost of production. But as we know that Japan is a successful export orientated economy we can then just look at the marginal effect of higher energy prices on their competitiveness.
(+) Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela and some other EMs have announced plans to buy back external debt in dollars starting in the short-end of the curve, which is putting upward pressure on bond prices and compressing yields. Some countries like Ukraine have underperformed, but overall it has been an interesting asset class. Even Turkey has benefited from ME oil revenue that has been invested in infrastructure there. However, if the yen carry unwinds some hedge funds may have to sell EM debt as well. Therefore, these countries will have to replace those funds either domestically in local currency or through higher interest rates in foreign currency.
Last edited by MrBill on Fri Mar 03, 2006 5:45 pm; edited 1 time in total
Trader's Corner
Keep in mind that according to Doly, my maths are nineteenth century at best, so if there is a mistake, I apologize in advance.
So as we see since then, the price of crude has climbed from $65 to almost $75 here or $10 in dollars which is +13.33%
But that is 13.33% x $1.2000 / $1.2350 = 12.95% in euros over the same period
And 13.33% x 115 / 116 = 13.21% in yen terms, which is not a huge difference, but that is less than two months, so by year-end the changes may be more exaggerated.
For your guide, there is a very low correlation, which is statistically insignificant, between the strength of the dollar and the price of crude depending on your measurement period, but in the past we have seen a weaker dollar feed through into higher commodity prices during shorter measurement periods. And that goes against the argument that crude priced in dollars supports the dollar. It is only one factor of many that determines the value of the dollar, but total world trade in dollars is a larger factor, as crude as an input is worth less than the finished product, so to speak.
By the way, Mockva, nobody can lose money like Volkswagen when it comes to hedging their foreign exchange risk. They simply have a knack for locking in the rates at the wrong times! ; - )
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.