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Fund has potential for greenback bears

Thursday, August 12, 2010

SKOT KORTJE

Skot Kortje has been analyzing stock market trends for 15-years using trend analysis. For more go to Stocktrends.ca

The Stock: PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bearish Fund ETF (UDN-NYSE)

Recent price: $25.89

The Trend

History may well show that structural cracks in the post-war global economic framework are the biggest challenge facing a generation of new investors now struggling amid the aftermath of a financial meltdown. Against that backdrop, the plight of the U.S. dollar is likely to play a key role in the drama ahead.

The dollar story, however, will prove hard to follow. Although the greenback, prior to 2008, had been in a long-term drift downward, the recent financial crisis and subsequent European debt woes revealed that absent a viable alternative reserve currency, heightened risk in global markets delivers international capital back to U.S. assets - propping up the U.S. dollar.

Of course, serious pessimists about monetary stability can be found in the gold bullion supporters' camp. Indeed, hard commodity assets in general are coveted in times of monetary instability. But currency volatility creates a fertile ground for traders looking to capitalize on short-term shifts in exchange rates as capital markets navigate structural economic shifts. Not surprisingly, forex is, by far, the most actively traded market.

Equity investors also must be aware of how exchange rate risk affects their holdings - how they stand to benefit or suffer in a world of currency volatility. Investors in commodity sectors are also tuned into currency instability that fuels capital flows in asset classes. While forex trading may be inadvisable to many - perhaps most - investors, other active equity traders can directly trade the greenback story by riding short-term trends in exchange traded currency funds.

The Trade

The U.S. Dollar Index measures the value of the greenback against a basket of foreign currencies. Because of the specific makeup of the currency basket, the index is not a practical hedging instrument for real economic interests with trade flow risks. However, trading in the index's derivatives does represent speculative interest in moves in the greenback's value. The PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bullish and PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bearish exchange traded funds represent the performance results of long and short futures trading strategies of the dollar against the index components. Like its underlying index, the PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bullish fund has been dropping for the past two months and is in a Stock Trends Weak Bullish category, a sign of the change in trend. The greenback's risk premium through the euro debt crisis has slipped away and the currency's relative value now reflects a return to equilibrium and softness in the U.S. economy. Investors looking to capitalize on this move can short the index by buying units of the PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bearish fund.

The Upside

Trading volume in both the long and short PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index funds seems to heighten around inflection points as the greenback shows signs of being overbought or oversold. Trading in neither fund is currently elevating this concern, with the recent appreciation of the bear fund developing in very low trading volume. The price of the underlying U.S. Dollar Index could drop in the short-term another 3 per cent to the next support area, but a 10 per cent drop to the level the index was priced at before the 2008 crisis and the more recent Euro crisis would be an anticipated trend for dollar bears.The Downside

Believe in a U.S. recovery? Think higher U.S. interest rates are imminent? Afraid the European house of cards will collapse? Maybe this is not the trade for you. A small rally for the dollar over the very near term is also a possibility. A fund price drop below $25 would be an appropriate stop on this trade.

gam