Posts belonging to Category 'Debt Repayment Plans'

Money markets fall on PIGS political worries

European money markets have fallen as the continuing political uncertainty in Greece and Spain undermines investor confidence.Money markets fall on PIGS political worriesGreek President Karolos Papoulias failed to form a coalition government through talks on Sunday and will continue discussions with political leaders on Monday evening.

Bank shares are worst hit, particularly in Spain and France, with Madrid’s Ibex index down 2.8% and the CAC down 2.3%. London’s FT 100 share index is down 1.7% and Germany’s Dax down 2%.

French banks were among the biggest fallers as investors worried about their exposure to other troubled eurozone countries. BNP Paribas was 3.4% lower, Societe Generale lost 3.3% and Credit Agricole fell 3.4%.

Spanish banks Banco Santander and Bankia were down 3.4% and 4.4% respectively, as they said they would set aside an extra £2.16 billion (2.7 billion euros) £1.68 billion euros respectively to meet new government requirements aimed at cleaning up the country’s ailing property market.

Meanwhile, both Spain and Italy carried out successful bond auctions on Monday.

Appetite for Spanish and Italian debt was more than strong enough, but the return demanded by investors in Spain’s debt was higher than in previous auctions, reflecting a dip in confidence.

The difference in the rate demanded by Spanish 10 year bond investors over the equivalent German bunds hit 4.83%, its highest level since the creation of the euro.

The yield, or interest rate, on Spain’s key 10 year bonds, which are traded on the market, jumped 23 basis points to a record high of 6.22%.

Greece’s lack of a government puts in doubt its ability to stick to austerity measures imposed as part of its financial bailout. Without holding to agreed cuts it will not get the rest of the support funds it needs to function.

Adding to the lack of clarity is the fact that anti-bailout parties did well in the elections.

Anti-austerity feeling may be growing in Germany as well as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party suffered a defeat on Sunday in an election in North Rhine-Westphalia, the country’s most populous state.

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Euro faces fresh blows to it’s credibility

Yesterday European shares and the euro came under renewed pressure after confirmation that Spain’s economy was again in recession and German PMI for April was unexpectedly down. Euro faces fresh blows to it's credibilityTo add fuel to the growing fire the Dutch PM and entire cabinet resigned piling political worries on top of economic woes.

Along with a steep fall in shares we saw spreads widening between struggling sovereign Euro economies and Germany, in addition the Dutch/German spread widened.

Lots of risk aversion in afternoon trading yesterday with the main benefactors being the US Dollar and the Japanese Yen.

Today we have started a little brighter and bond spreads have narrowed slightly from yesterday- the main reason for this is that Dutch, Spanish and Italian bond auctions all went well helping to firm up the Euro from yesterday’s lows.

The main take from yesterday is just how quickly things can turn sour and this highlights the fickle position of the ailing euro.

Today we have seen UK data in the form of public sector net borrowing which showed that the government borrowed more than expected for March but still met its annual target.

Tomorrow we see the crucial preliminary first quarter GDP data.

We have seen some bright sparks in the UK economy of late in relation to unemployment data and retail sales.

However the data has been inconsistent and we have seen a weak performance in the construction sector which could lead to a negative number.

Tomorrow’s number if negative would be a huge blow psychologically to the UK’s recovery and will undoubtedly hit confidence in the UK’s recovery strategy and the pound.

Conversely if we see a stronger than expected number we could see the Pound rally further after a strong performance recently.

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IMF raises over £250 billion- but is it enough?

The International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) has raised an additional £268 billion ($430 billion) for the pot meaning another set of support for the eurozone when it will be required.IMF raises over £250 billion- but is it enough?However, several other uncertainties persist to bother markets signifying that any rally could be short lived.

There is plenty of data and events this week including central bank decisions in the US, Japan and New Zealand.

In addition, US corporate earnings will stay under the spot light while bond auctions in the eurozone will also provide market drive.

It is doubtful that the Fed meeting tomorrow and Wednesday will incite any change in the currently low FX volatility atmosphere given that strategy settings will stay unchanged, with the bulk of FOMC members likely to look for the first alterations at the earliest in 2014.

The Fed as a result is unlikely to stir the Greenback out of its daze and if anything a fall in durable goods orders, little change in new home sales and a pull back in consumer confidence will play in support to Dollar bears over the coming week.

Even a relatively firm reading for Q1 GDP will be seen as backward looking given the slowing expected in Q2.

Over to Europe and the single European currency will have to compete with political proceedings as it absorbs the outcome of the initial round of the French presidential elections.

The reality is that the political course will carry on to a second round on 6 May which will act as a limit on the euro.

A variety of ‘flash’ purchasing managers indices (PMI) readings and economic opinion gauges will present some primary direction for the Euro but mostly stable to softer readings suggest little stimulation.

As a result euro/ US Dollar will largely remain within its recent range although news from Spain and Italy and their debt markets will have the potential to bring into play larger moves against the euro.

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Spain bond yields jump above 6%- increasing bailout fears

The cost of borrowing for Spain has jumped above 6%- increasing fears of a bailout.Spain bond yields jump above 6%- increasing bailout fearsThe yield on Spain’s 10 year bonds reached 6.1%, ahead of auctions of debt on Tuesday and Thursday that could be increasingly expensive for Spain.

Investors have been worried by data showing Spain’s banks are entirely dependent on emergency ECB loans.

In comparison, the yield on 10 year bonds from Germany- the eurozone’s strongest economy, is only 1.73%.

Spain is suffering from a deep economic slump brought about by a bust in its property and construction markets and over spending by the autonomous regions on health and education.

The rise in Spanish bond yields adds to the evidence of storms returning to the eurozone.

Interest rates of over 6% are not affordable if sustained indefinitely, though Spain is still below the 7% threshold that has sometimes been seen as triggering the need for a bailout.

There are also worries that the government might face a large bill to prop up the country’s banks, which made heavy losses on loans to property buyers.

The Bank of Spain said recently that the county’s economy contracted in the first quarter of the year – but it did not say by how much. The economy shrank by 0.3% in the three months to December, so this additional contraction implies that Spain’s economy is in recession.

On Friday, the Bank of Spain – the central bank – said its net lending to its banks in March had risen to 228 billion euros (£188 billion), up from “only” 152 billion euros a month earlier.

The big jump was mainly due to a second auction of three year emergency loans carried out by the European Central Bank, which has given 1 trillion euros to banks since December.

This money was intended to be lent by the ECB to national central banks, which is turn lent to commercial banks who would buy their country’s debts and bring borrowing costs down.

But these loans are creating their own financial headaches- as Spanish banks are now sitting on rising loses as spanish government debts fall.

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Eurozone currencies still in danger zone

The eurozone is still heavily under the spotlight as Spanish and Italians’ debt interest rates are still dangerously high.Eurozone currencies still in danger zoneHowever sentiment that the ECB could resume emergency bond buying has helped to ease fears.

The euro still remains pegged toward 1.31 against the US Dollar and 1.30 remains a key support area for EUR/USD and given the consolidation at 1.31 we could see some recovery towards 1.3150 to 1.32.

The Pound on the other hand is going from strength to strength and has hit a one year high on a trade weighted index- that is the Pound as a measure against a basket of currencies.

The Pound initially edged higher against the euro in line with euro concerns and improved economic numbers from the UK.

Sterling however has not managed a sustained push higher against the euro. This suggests a lack of appetite to sell the euro too much as the market adopts a wait and see approach to the developments on Spain and Italy.

In other news the yen fell for a second day against the dollar and euro after Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa indicated further easing of monetary policy.

Later today we see further feedback from the US with initial jobless claims and the producer price index- with markets in risk off mode and following weaker than expected payroll numbers last week a good set of numbers is hoped for.

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Spotlight returns to risky Europe

The spotlight is returning to Europe after a brief period of calm. Spotlight returns to risky EuropeThe spread between the benchmark German 10 year bond and its Spanish and Italian counterpart’s widened on continued bearish data and rumours that GDP estimates across the southern Mediterranean countries will be sharply revised downwards.

The uncertainty remains whether the eurozone has enough left in reserve for when Spain or Italy need emergency rescue loans.

The worry is dragging down equity markets from recent highs along with risk currencies like Sterling and especially the commodity currencies which have been the main casualty of recent risk aversion.

There are several bond auctions in the eurozone today; Germany and Italy tap the well for smallish amounts of €3 billion and €5 billion respectively.

There will be strong demand for German debt as ever, but with the problems from last week’s Spanish auction fresh in the mind today’s offering from Italy will be closely watched for overall demand and also the price the market charges the Italian government.

The ECB meeting is on Thursday this week where it is unlikely that they will make any changes to interest rates or the special liquidity measures.

With risk sentiment waning, extra importance will be given to the Chinese GDP data due on Friday.

The data is expected to be around the magical 8% level, as it always seems to be.

Anything lower would be a real shock and compound the bearish trend we’ve followed this week.

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Euro weakens on new greek debt rumours

The euro suffered again overnight as reports in various papers talking up the possibility of Greece badly missing their deficit targets. Euro weakens on new greek debt rumoursThe news has caused another shift out of the euro as investors have looked for safer places to invest their funds.

The articles, if proven true, will add yet more pressure onto the rest of Europe with major doubts already surrounding the success of the latest bailout for Greece worsening.

However, unlike when Greece was still seeking this bailout, the US Dollar hasn’t been the sole beneficiary.

Sterling has held its own against the Greenback by slipping back only 1 cent compared to the 3 cents it lost last time.

This is partly due to improved sentiment which was kick-started by the US with strong data realises from their jobs sector.

The UK announced its latest employment figures today with the unemployment rate remaining at 8.4%, a set of results which weren’t too bad.

Apart from this, it is another data light day with little of note being released. We can expect the US Dollar to remain strong as fears being to grow about Greece’s latest bailout.

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Deadline Day for Greece bond holders

EU officials are desperately trying to convince private holders of Greek bonds to accept a crucial debt swap deal ahead of today’s deadline. Deadline Day for Greece bond holdersIn order for Greece to receive a second bailout it will need at least two thirds of bondholders to take a 53.5% cut in the value of their holdings and the deal is considered essential in Greece’s attempt to avoid a default.

According to the Institute of Finance yesterday just under 40% of the bond holders had agreed to the new deal leading to a nervy countdown at 8pm GMT deadline later today.

If the total number of bond holders reach the required 66% (approx €150bn) agree to the swap, the government can force the other bond holders to take the haircut too.

Remarkably the euro remains relatively resilient in the face a Greek default up slightly against the Greenback reaching 1.3217.

Back to the UK and Quantitative Easing has knocked £90 billion off pension funds according to National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF).

The news came from two recent studies and blamed lower bond yields and consequently pushing final salary pensions further into the red.

Joanne Segars, Head of the NAPF, said: “Businesses running final-salary pensions are being clouted by QE.  Deficits that were already big now look even bigger because of its artificial distortions.

“Firms are legally obliged to fill the deficits, and that diverts money away from jobs and investment, and will lead to further closures of final salary pensions in the private sector,” she explained.

Finally, today we have interest rate decisions in the UK and Europe both expecting no change and consequently little FX impact.

Reduced revisions to ECB growth forecasts will however, could underpin a more negative tone in this afternoons press conference.

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Greece threaten bond holders with default option

Greek Politicians are applying increasing amounts of pressure to bond holders in a last ditch attempt to obtain the necessary 75 per cent to agree to the terms of the looming bond swap tomorrow.  Greece threaten bond holders with default optionThe Hellenic Republic is threatening to invoke Collective Action Clauses (CACs), agreed by Greek politicians last month, to force through the deal which if used would almost certainly constitute the first sovereign default in Eurozone history.

Any default would trigger credit default swaps on the bonds, a type of insurance that could lead to be very lucrative to those investors refusing to participate in the deal but might also lead to renewed uncertainty in the market.

CDS contracts are traded over the counter and are fairly opaque in nature and it is unclear exactly how many contracts might be triggered and who might be on the other (losing) side of the bet.

The uncertainty is naturally translating into risk-off, with equity markets declining along with the Risk-on currencies such as the euro and Sterling.

The US is once again the big winner, rising across the board over the last few days on a run that can be expected to continue until full details of the bond swap are announced.

It is fortunate given the levels of volatility in the market that both the ECB and Bank of England are unlikely to make any changes to monetary policy at their respective meetings this week.

In Europe interest rates will stay at 1%.  Mario Draghi will hopefully talk in detail about the success of the LTRO but is unlikely to be drawn to talk about Greece, much to the markets disappointment.

The Bank of England is also likely to keep monetary policy on hold; another boost to the asset purchase scheme would be seen as the Bank panicking and would probably do more harm that good at this stage.

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Greek investors ponder how much money to lose on debt burden

Greece has a potentially difficult week ahead as a group of private investors consider the terms and conditions of an arrangement that’s intend to cut €107 billion from the Greek’s €340 billion debt burden.Greek investors ponder how much money to lose on debt burdenThe whole deal hinges on whether the creditors are willing to take a hit of 75% on their holdings in return for a combination of long term Greek bonds and debt issued from the bailout fund.

Due to terms of the second bailout if over a third of the bond holders reject the deal the overall bailout could collapse as per terms put through Government last week.

The reaction from the rest of Europe specifically Austria is now sceptical about the overall viability of the package.

Chancellor Werner Faymann said yesterday that the second bailout is not the end of the matter.

“I would not trust anyone who says that for Greece is enough,” Faymann told Austrian media.

“For Greece it depends on whether they can stick to these measures over several elections.”

Greece will begin voting at the end of this month with a general election in the offing.

In the interim, Greek officials are required to gain the backing of a minimum of 2/3 of its private holders by Friday to employ the debt swap and comply with the requirement terms of its second bailout.

Worst case scenario Greece could run out of funds in less than a fortnight and could prompt an unruly and possibly catastrophic default.

As you would expect the news is weighing heavily on the euro right now and has seen EUR/USD slip to 1.3191 from 1.3440 at the same point last week and Sterling is approaching the key psychological figure of 1.20 at 1.1981 against the single European currency.

Money markets will keep a close eye on developments in the med and this will provide the impetus for sentiment this week.

Elsewhere the week is largely dominated by Central Bank interest rate decisions with announcements in Australia, New Zealand UK, Europe and Canada all expecting no change in the overall rate.

Any variance from these expected figures, with any turbulence from Greece and Friday afternoons US Non-farm payroll data could lead to a volatile week for the markets.

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