Posts belonging to Category 'Weak Currencies'

Dollar and Yen continue to rise as risk aversion spreads

Risk aversion remains the main theme across the money markets this week with equity market continuing to slide and the safe havens of the US Dollar and Japanese Yen performing strongly. Dollar and Yen continue to rise as risk aversion spreadsVery positive German GDP yesterday gave the euro a boost in early trading but again developments in Greece have swamped any positive euro related news and driven the euro lower against the Dollar and Sterling.

News of large euro outflows out of Greece by citizens is not helping the nagging feeling that a Greek exit from the eurozone is approaching faster than European politicians would like.

They have desperately tried to manage the situation to ensure that if the worst did happen, Greece leaving could be orderly.

The fear is now that politicians no longer have the ability to manage the situation and a disorderly exit may now be on the cards.

The Bank of England inflation report is due today at 10.30.

We have covered what the Governor is likely to outline, namely lower that expected growth and higher than expected inflation.

The market has already built that into Sterling and the news will probably play second fiddle to news coming from the eurozone for the rest of the week.

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US manufacturing boosts money markets

A surprise increase in the US ISM manufacturing survey yesterday evening was enough to push the Dow Jones industrial average to its highest level in four years, dragging European bourses higher this morning along with the high risk currencies. US manufacturing boosts money marketsDue to the May Day bank holiday in Europe, markets on the continent are playing catch up with the US and UK and are performing very strongly in early trading.

Chinese manufacturing PMI also showed a slight improvement overnight, but is still below the 50.0 level, signifying a contraction in manufacturing output.

This afternoon the ADP employment report is released in anticipation of the non-farm payrolls on Friday with expectations of 175K jobs created in April, not quite the numbers we saw in the first three months on the year but positive non-the-less.

Portugal goes to the market today, issuing six and twelve month treasury bills.

The target amount is only €1.25-1.5 billion, but the auctions will be closely watched as ever and expect overblown hysteria if we any signs of weakness.

Ahead of the auction the spread between the benchmark ten-year bonds is slightly higher, sitting at 902 bps in current trading.

The euro is marginally weaker this morning against the US Dollar and Sterling.

From the data just out, French and German PMI were broadly in line with the flash estimates but German unemployment rose in April and it is this that is leading the Euro weakness this morning.

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Surprise cut in Australian interest rates

In a surprise move over night the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has slashed interest rates after concerns over their own economic forecasts. Surprise cut in Australian interest ratesThe 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.

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Euro fears default and risk return

Fears in Europe have escalated a notch amid growing concern on both economic data and political cohesion.  Euro fears default and risk returnThis 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.

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Spanish woes increase as unemployment hits 24.4%

Like the rain in the UK over the last few weeks it never rains, but it pours. Spanish woes increase as unemployment hits 24.4%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%.

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US’s FED maintains fiscal stance

Ben Bernanke head of the US Federal Reserve predictably kept policy on hold whilst reducing forecasts for unemployment and raising expectations for higher near term inflation. US's FED maintains fiscal stanceThe US economy is still expected to grow at a ‘moderate’ pace in coming quarters, with the bulk of Fed members predicting the first tightening in 2014 or beyond.

The one concession to markets was the fact that the Fed is ready to do further in terms of policy development if required.

This helped to boost risk assets overnight leaving the Greenback on the back foot.

Headline releases are thin on the ground today leaving markets to consolidate gains in a relatively ‘risk on’ environment.

Sterling came plummeting down from its summit following yesterday’s news that the UK economy entered a technical recession after GDP unexpectedly contracted by 0.2% in the first quarter of the year.

Nevertheless, the fall was short lived, with Cable improving from its losses, helped by a superb reading for UK Nationwide consumer confidence in March.

However, Nationwide cautioned that the spring in confidence may be brief and therefore cautious of reading too much into this.

Sterling gains against the euro look as though they have reached its limit.

Finally, there was no adjustment in policy from the Royal Bank of New Zealand as expected, with policy rates on hold at 2.5%.

However, governor Bollard did endeavour to talk the kiwi lower while stressing worries about the international outlook.

Concerns about kiwi strength will raise the spirit of FX interference though it may also mean a delay in rate hikes.

The announcement was fairly encouraging on the domestic outlook too.

Even though rates are ‘appropriate’ according to the RBNZ there is a good chance of a rate hike in Q3.

The NZD ignored Bollard’s comments, firming on the back of improved risk appetite.

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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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Wise Money transfers your currency out of eurozone

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Davos-”We need a big rethink”.Wise Money transfers your currency out of eurozoneGermany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel has told the World Economic Forum that a “big rethink” is needed in the eurozone within the global economy.

“Structural reforms that lead to more jobs are essential,” she told delegates at the Swiss resort of Davos. “Do we dare to be more European?”

The eurozone is still struggling with a sovereign debt crisis and is trying to agree reform to its political system.

But many want Germany and other nations to boost the size of their rescue fund.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) wants the eurozone to inject more cash into its rescue fund.

The IMF wants the sum available for bailouts to grow beyond 500bn euros (£416 billion) to ensure talks between private creditors and Greece do not grind to a halt.

The situation is urgent according to the IMF, which recently predicted that the economic growth rate in Europe could halve this year from an earlier estimate of 3.3% if the eurozone crisis remains unsolved.
Lessons learnt

Mrs Merkel disagrees with Ms Lagarde about what is needed.

“We have said right from the start that we want to stand up for the euro, but what we don’t want is a situation where we are forced to promise something that we will not be able to fulfil,” she said.

Mrs Merkel said that the austerity reforms being enacted – currently being felt from the Irish Republic to Italy – had to be balanced with reforms of how Europe is governed.

Mrs Merkel also acknowledged “tensions” between countries that have adopted the euro and those that have not inside the European Union (EU).

Given that the main euro paymasters Germany- and the IMF disagree on how to solve the euro credit crunch- there is only one way this story is going to go.

If you want to transfer your currency out of the eurozone, you can do so with our competitive currency converter service, please just click here now.

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Surprising euro bouceback continues

Against all the odds the single European currency has been resilient this week moving up towards the year to date highs of 1.3068, clawing back its losses and more.Surprising euro bouceback continues

The euro’s ability to defend bad news in Europe has been remarkable and its gains have reflected a speculative market that has been extremely short.

As we are light on headline data today the markets will have to observe the outcome of the somewhat positive Spanish and French debt auctions while keeping one eye on Greek debt talks with private investors.

But for yet another failure of talks in Greece the EUR should continue on a positive footing.

How long this will last is uncertain, particularly given the dangers ahead but at a time when investors have become progressively more bearish on the euro it may just extend its bounce over the short term.

One country to watch is Portugal whose bonds have underperformed recently as markets speculate that it could be the next contender for any debt note.

Back to the UK and Retail sales have come been announced close to median forecasts of +0.6% m/m and +2.6y/y.

Sales have improved in December but the improvement is likely to be short-lived, suggesting any support to the Pound will be brief.

Sterling has underperformed even against the firmer EUR of late but this is supporting better levels for the market to take long positions versus EUR.

This explains the move in relative European/US interest rate differentials, which has been linked with the move in EUR/GBP.

Overall Sterling could outperform EUR over coming months to around 0.80, with the former continuing to benefit from the simple fact that it is not in the Eurozone and has therefore acquired a quasi safe haven status.

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Short selling sqeeze drags euro up

The recent rally in the euro was very surprising given the lack of any positive or even specific euro related news over the past couple of days. Short selling sqeeze drags euro upMarket sentiment about the single currency remains low (after a temporary blip last week) because a Greek default is looming ever larger and European policy makers are still arguing over the rules that they hope will make the eurozone less weak moving forward.

In fact short positions (betting that the euro will fall in value) hit record highs over the past couple of weeks, which suggests there recent rally is more about shorts covering their positions, leading to the price of the euro rising forcing other shorts to cover, commonly known as a short squeeze.

If, as is likely, this explains the recent uptick in the euro and so we can expect more euro selling to resume once the squeeze runs out of steam.

Data for the eurozone for the rest of the week is extremely light, with the ECB monthly report showing how much the ECB is lending to stricken banks is due Thursday along with French and Spanish bond auctions.

Both auctions will be closely watched in light of the S&P downgrades on Friday.

Sterling has been fairly steady in the early part of the week.

UK Retail sales are the only release of note for the rest of the week but worth noting because they report over key Christmas period for the retailers and will probably give a good idea to the market if the UK economy is heading for (or is already in) another recession.

The US bank holiday on Monday has meant the US Dollar has also been fairly quiet so far this week, but Thursday and Friday sees a large amount of US data including the CPI figure, which should hopefully give the market an end of week shot of much needed direction in an otherwise rudderless few days.

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