The surprise withdrawal of Federal Reserve Chairman candidate Lawrence Summers will likely give risk-on trades, such as battered emerging market currencies, a boost, analysts say."Summers' removal means Janet Yellen is a near certainty. Her dovish-ness will be highly supportive to emerging market currencies and you can already see that in early trade," said Evan Lucas, market strategist at IG. The rupee strengthened on the news in early Asian trade on Monday opening over 1 percent higher from Friday's levels.
Summers, who had been seen as President Barack Obama's preferred choice, officially withdrew his name for consideration to succeed Fed chair Ben Bernanke, on Sunday. Many industry watchers had been nervous about the prospect of Summers taking the role due to his hawkish economic views and fiery temperament. With dovish Fed vice-chair Janet Yellen back in the running, risk-on trades are likely to get a boost, analysts say. And indeed, the world's largest fixed income investor PIMCO, tweeted on Monday that According to Steven Englander, global head of G10 FX Strategy at CitiFX, currencies from countries with larger current account deficits are in line for a boost now Summers has been removed from the running.
"The main buying opportunities are probably high current account deficit emerging markets, Aussie dollar and the yen," he said."In that vein, Lawrence Summers' withdrawal from next Fed Chairperson race leaves the field open for Fed Vice-Chair Yellen and USD on the back foot," said Vishnu Varathan, market economist, at Mizuho bank. "Overall, it looks like a 'risk on' bet with the AUD's knee-jerk jump as proof of the pudding," he added, referring to strength in the Aussie dollar, which rallied roughly 0.8 percent by mid-morning in Australia on Monday.
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