Posts belonging to Category 'Spain'

May 14, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
European money markets have fallen as the continuing political uncertainty in Greece and Spain undermines investor confidence.
Greek 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.
Categories: Credit Crunch, Debt Repayment Plans, Germany, Greece, Interest Rates, Money Markets, PIGS, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Uncategorized, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, Germany, Greece, Money Markets, PIGS, slowing economies, Sovereign Debt, Spain |
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May 10, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
Developments in France, Greece and Spain continue to weigh on euro sentiment, driving the single currency lower across the board.
Investors continue to be risk adverse as European voters take their toll on austerity loving- politicians.
The Spanish government has part-nationalised stricken lender Bankia, taking a 45 per cent stake in exchange for €4.5 billion in emergency loans and we can expect this to be the first of several injections of capital by the Spanish authorities into their struggling banking sector.
The search for a Greek government also looks set to drag on, after the second placed Syriza party in the recent elections failed to form a coalition.
The mandate now looks set to pass to the third placed Socialists in a ludicrous game of pass the parcel, with every failure racheting up the pressure to find a solution.
Much needed bail-out funds are being withheld until a government is in place, but with no end in sight to the election merry-go-round, EU officials need to act quickly to avoid making the situation worse than it already is.
This morning is an important one for Sterling with Industrial Production data due along with the Bank of England announcement on interest rates and the asset purchase scheme at midday.
The IP number for March is expected to show further declines in output but a number to the upside is a possibility after the rebound in construction in the last two months.
As we’ve mentioned before this week, it would be a huge surprise if the Bank of England made any changes to rates or QE.
Australian employment came in much better than expected, 4.9% against expectations of 5.3% catching the markets completely on the wrong side.
The AUD is off around 4% against the USD and GBP over the last few weeks after the central bank cut interest rates and looks set to cut further this year.
The market was quite short the Aussie, and the buying back of those positions has forced a quick 50 point rally overnight.
Categories: Central Banks, Credit Crunch, France, Greece, Money Markets, Spain, Sterling, Uncategorized, United Kingdom, eurozone |
Tags: Bank of England, banks nationalisation, credit crunch, euros, eurozone, France, Greece, Money Markets, Spain, Sterling |
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May 1, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
In a surprise move over night the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has slashed interest rates after concerns over their own economic forecasts.
The widely expected move was for a 0.25% cut, however the key rate moved from 4.25% to 3.75%.
This is the first acknowledgment by the RBA that Australia is beginning to be affected by the global slowdown, particular in China.
“This decision is based on information received over the past few months that suggests that economic conditions have been somewhat weaker than expected, while inflation has moderated” according to the RBA.
As you would expect the AUS Dollar has been heavily sold off since the announcement and currently trades at 1.5720 against Sterling, from 1.5564 before the decision.
In other news Spain followed the UK yesterday by confirming they were in a technical recession following negative growth in the first quarter of the year.
This data coupled with poor Greek retail sales falling by 13% and a 0.3% negative growth figure weighed heavily on the single European currency yesterday pushing Sterling higher.
These gains have been given back this morning following UK PMI data which has fallen to a reading of 50.5 following a reading of 51.9 in March and below expectations of 51.5.
The sharp fall is the lowest since Christmas and has been largely attributed to low demand from the eurozone which has hit manufacturing and meant UK exports fell to levels not seen since May 2009.
Consequently Sterling now sits at 1.2213 against the single European currency and Cable at 1.6205.
Categories: Central Banks, Credit Crunch, Interest Rates, Money Markets, Spain, Sterling, Uncategorized, Weak Currencies |
Tags: Australian Dollar, economic data, eurozone, Interest Rates, slowing economies, Spain, Sterling |
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April 30, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
Fears in Europe have escalated a notch amid growing concern on both economic data and political cohesion.
This morning S&P have taken a negative rating action on 16 Spanish banks, in addition press reports out of Germany suggest that a Merkel-Hollande alliance will not be as straightforward as the Merkozy alliance.
At the moment the euro is holding up fairly well as the market has been selling the US Dollar on sentiment that the Federal Reserve will ease further, however the underlying negative tone will be a concern to the markets.
Later this week the ECB are expected to leave interest rates on hold, however Mario Draghi will face tough questions in the press conference on the strategy for Europe amid growing concerns for a growth compact.
USA jobs data will be a main data point to watch this week.
Friday’s non-farm payroll report will form important sentiment for the pace of the US recovery after last month’s disappointing number which followed a good run of jobs data.
The number is expected to be a good number and the feedback on this data will be a key factor for the Feds future strategy-a bad number and we can expect more easing.
In the UK, attention will focus on the PMI data tomorrow and Thursday which will offer a snippet of growth feedback following last week’s preliminary Q1 GDP which came in negative.
Again if data proves negative it could trip the Bank of England to pump more QE through the system- possibly at the May MPC meeting.
Categories: Central Banks, ECB, Money Markets, Sovereign Debt, Spain, US Dollar, Uncategorized, Unemployment, United Kingdom, Weak Currencies, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, euros, eurozone, Spain, UK recession, unemployment, US Dollar |
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April 27, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
Like the rain in the UK over the last few weeks it never rains, but it pours.
The weather in Spain may be better, but economically the situation continues to be dire.
Overnight S&P the ratings agency, cut the Spanish credit rating to BBB+ from a reflecting the increased fear that the government will need to provide further fiscal support to the ailing banking sector.
To compound matters, the Spanish unemployment number came in higher than expected; a staggering 24.4% of the population is now without a job.
The figure is higher amongst younger people, with almost half looking for work.
As labour market laws are overhauled unemployment is likely to get worse before it gets better, meaning there will be further pressure on the Spanish credit rating and hence the rate at which Spain can borrow in the market moving forward.
Amazingly, Sterling shrugged off the negative GDP figure on Wednesday and now trades slightly higher against the Euro and Dollar than before the announcement.
This is probably due to the worse than expected European news more than Sterling gaining, but the Pound is likely to come under pressure at some point over the coming week.
The US Dollar remains subdued after the Fed statement earlier in the week neither confirmed nor ruled out further easing.
The uncertain stance has left the Dollar slightly rudderless given that we are also fairly risk neutral across the markets as a whole (but on the negative side of neutral).
That should come to an end when the US GDP number comes out this afternoon, with expectations of an annualised rate of 2.5%.
Categories: ECB, Money Markets, Spain, Uncategorized, Unemployment, United Kingdom, Weak Currencies, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, euros, eurozone, slowing economies, Spain, unemployment, weak euros |
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April 16, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
The cost of borrowing for Spain has jumped above 6%- increasing fears of a bailout.
The 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.
Categories: Central Banks, Credit Crunch, Debt Repayment Plans, Interest Rates, Money Markets, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Uncategorized |
Tags: credit crunch, debt consolidation, economic data, eurozone, Interest Rates, Spain |
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April 11, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
The spotlight is returning to Europe after a brief period of calm.
The 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.
Categories: Central Banks, Credit Crunch, Debt Repayment Plans, Germany, Italy, Money Markets, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Sterling, Uncategorized, United Kingdom, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, euros, eurozone, Germany, Italy, Pounds, slowing economies, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Sterling |
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January 16, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
A new shockwave filtered through the markets on Friday as the credit agency Standard & Poors (S&P)- downgraded France, stripping them of its prized AAA rating.
The decision to remove this vital asset in keeping borrowing costs to a minimum left France with a AA+ rating, a judgment that will likely cost billions in higher repayment costs.
S&P said “Europe’s austerity and budget discipline alone were not sufficient to fight the debt crisis and may become self defeating”.
Alongside France, S&P cut the rating of Italy, Spain, Cyprus, Portugal, Austria, Slovakia, Slovenia and Malta though it was expected that these countries would have their ratings lowered.
Overall, the picture isn’t looking good for Europe and with further downgrades likely over the next few months, it will be important to see how the ECB reacts in keeping this ongoing debt crisis under control.
The main winner from this continues to be the US Dollar with further gains against most currencies likely as investors pile more money into the global reserve currency.
For as long as the Greenback keeps this status, it will remain the market leader in these testing times as Europe sits on a knife edge between growth and recession.
There is very little data out today with the only comment of note coming from a speech by ECB President Mario Draghi due at 6pm UK Time.
It is likely he will focus on the downgrade on France and how the ECB will look to repair the damage it has caused.
Categories: Central Banks, ECB, France, Interest Rates, Italy, PIGS, Portugal, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Uncategorized, Weak Currencies, eurozone |
Tags: debt consolidation, euros, eurozone, France, Italy, PIGS, Portugal, slowing economies, Sovereign Debt, Spain |
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January 13, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
The wise money markets continue to be driven almost exclusively by extreme changes in sentiment on a day to day basis.
The recent euro rally stems from the positive outcome of Spanish and Italian bond auctions yesterday.
Both countries we able to place the bonds at considerably lower rates than in recent auctions lifting sentiment and the euro throughout yesterday and into this mornings trading.
Worryingly data just out showed Spanish Banks borrowing almost €140bn from the ECB in December, almost the record high set back in July 2011 and this tugged sentiment back in the negative direction.
Both central bank decisions were tame affairs, neither the ECB nor BOE changed rates or announced any change to existing QE programs.
For the Bank of England it seems to be a very much wait and see approach before they announce further asset purchases.
Mario Draghi and the ECB can be pleased with the results so far from the LTRO in December.
Confidence seems to be improving in the European banking system because investors now feel the ECB stands behind the banks, and this is translating into lower yields for European Government debt.
The positive US data flow of recent weeks came to a halt yesterday afternoon, with retails sales figures lower than estimates.
This afternoon’s confidence survey will be very interesting to watch to gauge the state of the consumer given such weak retail sale figures and increasing jobless claims this week.
Looking towards next week there is a huge amount of Chinese data to digest first thing Monday.
Positive Chinese data is generally seen as bullish for the world economy, and hence US negative, so the release will probably set the tone for sentiment for the early part on the week.
Categories: Central Banks, Credit Crunch, ECB, Interest Rates, Italy, Money Markets, Sovereign Debt, Spain, Uncategorized, United Kingdom, Wise Money, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, euros, eurozone, Greece, Italy, PIGS, Spain, Wise Money |
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January 12, 2012 | Posted by Dr Search- Principal Consultant at the Search Clinic
Europe will remain under the spot light over the next couple of days with the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting today, alongside debt auctions in Spain and Italy.
The speculative market is predominantly short EUR while policy makers, specifically German Chancellor Merkel and French President Sarkozy are making the right noises; it appears the penny has dropped for Eurozone officials that it is not only about austerity but also about growth and reform.
Reports that Fitch ratings are unlikely to downgrade France’s ratings this year has provided a welcome boost to Eurozone confidence.
However Greece could yet spoil the party given the continuing dialogue with the Troika to decide the second bailout package for the country.
Political resistance within Greece suggests that more austerity may not be easy to execute.
For the time being there are ongoing questions about the degree of write-downs that Greek debt will endure.
In spite of these issues it looks like investors are becoming more immune to events in the Eurozone. While we still have high bond yields for Italy and other euro sovereigns it seems that risk appetite has improved.
One feature that is providing support to sentiment is the positive news out of the US.
Even though the Q4 earnings season has not started particularly well, data releases look rather more positive.
Last week’s US December jobs report continued to filter through positives to the market and we have also seen a pick up in small business confidence and a rise in consumer credit.
These recent improvements in economic data snaps highlight the gradual recovery process underway in the US and the growing divergence with the eurozone economy.
This supports the view of the US Dollar out performing the euro in the short to medium term.
Categories: Central Banks, ECB, Greece, Italy, PIGS, Sovereign Debt, Spain, US Dollar, Uncategorized, eurozone |
Tags: credit crunch, euros, eurozone, Greece, Italy, PIGS, Spain, US Dollar |
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