Hedge funds have kicked off 2018 with their biggest bet ever on the euro rising, a clear vote of confidence in the single currency but, with positioning so stretched, one which could backfire in the near term. Data from the Chicago Futures Trading Commission show that hedge funds and speculative accounts ramped up their net long euro positions by more than 35,000 contracts to 127,868 in the week to January 2, a bet worth $19.3 billion.
That's the largest net long euro position since the single currency's inception 19 years ago, overtaking the previous high of 119,538 contracts registered in mid-May 2007. The 'fast money' community's bet on the euro has been a major driver of the currency's rise. It gained 14 percent against the dollar last year, its best year since 2003 and third best ever.
It's easy to see why. Positive surprises from the euro zone economy beat positive US economic surprises for much of 2017 (although that trend reversed late last year) and the euro zone economy grew at 2.6 percent in the third quarter, its fastest since 2011. According to the European Commission, the European economy, the bulk of which comprises the 19 nations that use the euro, grew 2.3 percent last year compared to the United States' 2.2 percent.
The "euroboom", as it has come to be known, is one of the most important components of a wider economic upswing that now has world growth closing in on 4 percent. The euro climbed to a four-month high last week of $1.2089, within a whisker of breaking above September's peak of $1.2092 which would have heralded a fresh three-year peak.
Analysts at Deutsche Bank, among others, have raised their forecasts for the euro. They see it reaching $1.30 by the end of the year on the back of strong capital flows into the region. But with positioning so stretched, the question is whether the euro's upward momentum can be sustained. The euro on Monday was down for the second day in a row, something not seen for a month. It was back below $1.20, albeit it only just, and recent history suggests it will be difficult to stay above that level for any length of time without fresh tailwinds. Much depends on the relative paths of US Fed and European Central Bank monetary policy.
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