European Investors Bet Big on Dollar Decline as Market Turbulence Spurs Shift
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Street Buzz
lunes, 19 de agosto de 2024, 11:00 am ET1 min de lectura
BAC--
G--
European investors have started to short the US dollar amid recent market turbulence, according to Bank of America. This trend could potentially lead to a near 2% rise in the euro against the dollar by the end of 2024. Bank of America's forex strategists, Howard Du and Vadim Iaralov, pointed out that as US economic data aligns more closely with the rest of the world and yields decline, the dollar's appeal to foreign investors is dropping.
The investment bank highlighted that while the US dollar had significant gains earlier this year due to trading activities mainly from Europe and Asia, European investors have lately offloaded their long positions in August. According to a Bank of America survey, the number of investors anticipating a weaker dollar rose almost two-fold in the past month.
In the bank’s monthly confidence survey, about 23% of respondents stated that their most confident trade was shorting the dollar, up from 8% in July. Despite the greenback outperforming most G-10 currencies this year, its rally has faltered in the past month as data reflects a weakening US economy. This has led traders to bet on significant rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
Bank of America's rate strategist, Ralf Preusser, mentioned, "Investors are less concerned about the upside risks to the dollar stemming from persistent inflation." He emphasized that this shift should initiate a decline in the dollar from its historical highs.
Survey responses between August 2nd and 7th from 45 global fixed-income fund managers revealed that 39% are bullish on the bond market, up from 31% in July and 49% in May. This shift in sentiment further underscores the anticipation of lower yields.
The investment bank highlighted that while the US dollar had significant gains earlier this year due to trading activities mainly from Europe and Asia, European investors have lately offloaded their long positions in August. According to a Bank of America survey, the number of investors anticipating a weaker dollar rose almost two-fold in the past month.
In the bank’s monthly confidence survey, about 23% of respondents stated that their most confident trade was shorting the dollar, up from 8% in July. Despite the greenback outperforming most G-10 currencies this year, its rally has faltered in the past month as data reflects a weakening US economy. This has led traders to bet on significant rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
Bank of America's rate strategist, Ralf Preusser, mentioned, "Investors are less concerned about the upside risks to the dollar stemming from persistent inflation." He emphasized that this shift should initiate a decline in the dollar from its historical highs.
Survey responses between August 2nd and 7th from 45 global fixed-income fund managers revealed that 39% are bullish on the bond market, up from 31% in July and 49% in May. This shift in sentiment further underscores the anticipation of lower yields.
Divulgación editorial y transparencia de la IA: Ainvest News utiliza tecnología avanzada de Modelos de Lenguaje Largo (LLM) para sintetizar y analizar datos de mercado en tiempo real. Para garantizar los más altos estándares de integridad, cada artículo se somete a un riguroso proceso de verificación con participación humana.
Mientras la IA asiste en el procesamiento de datos y la redacción inicial, un miembro editorial profesional de Ainvest revisa, verifica y aprueba de forma independiente todo el contenido para garantizar su precisión y cumplimiento con los estándares editoriales de Ainvest Fintech Inc. Esta supervisión humana está diseñada para mitigar las alucinaciones de la IA y garantizar el contexto financiero.
Advertencia sobre inversiones: Este contenido se proporciona únicamente con fines informativos y no constituye asesoramiento profesional de inversión, legal o financiero. Los mercados conllevan riesgos inherentes. Se recomienda a los usuarios que realicen una investigación independiente o consulten a un asesor financiero certificado antes de tomar cualquier decisión. Ainvest Fintech Inc. se exime de toda responsabilidad por las acciones tomadas con base en esta información. ¿Encontró un error? Reportar un problema

Comentarios
Aún no hay comentarios