Forex Blog

June 30, 2011

ECB Again Signals Interest Rate Hike

Comments made today by European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet once again point to a likely interest rate increase when the ECB meets next week to deliver its July statement. Inflation did hold steady in June but it remains well above the Bank’s inflation rate target.

“We are strongly determined to secure that inflation expectation remain firmly in-line (with our expectations),” ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet told the European Parliament’s economic and monetary affairs committee. “The current monetary policy is accommodative and … as I said we are in a state of strong vigilance,” he said.

The phrase “strong vigilance” has regularly been deployed to signal a rate hike in the past.

Source: Reuters

Little Change to US Unemployment Applications

The number of new applications for unemployment benefits declined by only 1,000 to a seasonally-adjusted 428,000 last week. The fact that new claimants remained basically unchanged for the week provides further evidence that the U.S. economy is failing to make inroads on improving employment.

In May, only 54,000 new jobs were added compared to an average of 220,000 new jobs per month for the previous three months. The decline has caused the unemployment rate to climb to 9.1 percent.

Source: Associated Press

EUR following the Script?

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:15 am

Papandreou clinched enough votes to pass the first part of an austerity plan aimed at meeting EU aid requirements and staving off a default. The EUR did what most anticipated, rally up towards 1.45 as residual speculative shorts are closed. Now what?

According to the script, upside momentum is expected to stall around these levels as markets turn their focus to this morning’s Greek vote on implementation of the various fiscal measures, weekend discussions on private sector participation in the 2012 bailout, and risks around key US PMI data due out tomorrow.

On the flip side, the EUR is certainly looking prettier than GBP and the USD this morning, proving to be market resilient. Certainly strong proof how fundamentally flawed the markets treatment of the dollar and sterling is!

The US$ is a weaker in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is lower against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ session ahead of the second of Greece’s votes.

Forex heatmap

Finally, a pleasant surprise or is it? May’s US pending home sales index rose +8.2%, well above the market expectation of +3.2%. Analysts note that we should be appreciating the rise in the context of the -11.3% decline that was registered in April. It’s this print that verifies the unimpressive trend in existing home sales. Last month’s spike looks like a correction from the April release. Housing data reported of late does not point to any correction. Yesterday’s pending numbers are consistent with existing sales data, while mortgage information from NAHB and MBA points to further market weakness. The +13.4%, y/y, pending home sales figure is caused by the May 2010 tax credit expiry, which pushed the numbers to move below the underlying trend from the ‘previously inflated levels’. The future trend remains flat at best.

The dollar is lower against the EUR +0.31%, CHF +0.03% and JPY +0.47% and higher against GBP -0.28%. The commodity currencies are stronger this morning, CAD +0.40% and AUD +0.47%.

The Canadian headline inflation number yesterday can be seen as a total ‘head-fake’ (+0.7% vs. +0.3%). Analyst’s noted that the spike can be explained away by seasonal adjustments, gas clothing and footwear. The surprise print does not speak to a ‘fanning out of inflationary pressures’. While headline (+3.7%, y/y) and core-CPI came in higher than expected in unadjusted terms, adjusting for seasonality, inflation still remains well contained with both headline and core-CPI up +0.2% m/m, one-tenth below that registered in the prior month, a scenario that Governor Carney has already alluded to. On an unadjusted basis, both food and gas prices continued to move up in May. However, next months report will likely show ‘modest’ headline gains as gas and energy prices decline.  

Investors liked the data, pricing in a BoC hike for October and pushed the currency to a monthly high outright, aided by rising oil prices. Any fear about rate hikes after yesterday’s print may be tempered by this morning’s GDP data. It’s expected to be weak and underscore the headwinds facing the economy, again backing up Governor Carney’s recent rhetoric.

Will the second leg of Greek voting today have investors looking to pare some of their recent risk appetite? With the Fed cutting its growth objective for the remainder of the year should have higher yielding growth sensitive currencies trading under pressure. Expect the Canadian dollar to be subjected to the pull of either risk or risk aversion trading strategies. CAD is vulnerable now with US data likely to continue to print weak into mid-July (0.9662).

The AUD has ignored the slew of mixed domestic data and traded higher in the O/N session. Job vacancies in the three-months to May fell -4.5% from the previous period. Rismark House prices continued to decline last month and fell -0.3%. Private sector credit growth remained a subdued +0.3% in May and personal and business credit growth softened, while housing credit increased +0.5%, following an increase of +0.4%in April.

The currency advanced for a third consecutive day against the dollar as traders pared bets on a cut in interest rate by the RBA. Investors have been buying equities, pulling markets higher as a relief buying spilled into another session after Greece moved closer to receiving more aid to avoid a sovereign default.

Gains have been capped on fear that that a Greek austerity plan will not resolve Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis. Technically, the market is waiting for funding schedule clarity. Currently, the market is pricing a no hike in August unless inflation and employment surprised on the upside and the situation in Greece clears up sufficiently for a powerful rebound in risk appetite. Global data needs to improve before we can embrace any rate hike policy thinking. Investors remain better sellers on rallies (1.0724).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($94.50 -0.27c). Crude extended this week’s gains after the weekly EIA report showed a larger-than-expected decline in inventories and as more Americans signed contracts last month to buy previously owned homes, a sign that the real estate market may be rebounding from its lows. Also aiding prices was a market concern that the Saudis would cut production in response to the IEA dumping move last week. Tropical Storm Arlene seems to be causing a stir in the Gulf of Mexico.

The market is concerned that the ‘tightness’ in the oil market will continue to undermine the fragile global economic recovery and the reason why the IEA and its members agreed to release crude from their SPR’s to ease some of this market tension. According to analysts, this supply move is significant, as it ‘represents a reach by member countries for the remedy of last resort to high oil prices’.

Oil inventory fell much more than expected last week as imports declined and gas stocks recorded a surprise fall. Crude stockpiles dropped for the fourth-consecutive week by -4.38m barrels to +359.47m. The market had been expecting a drawdown of -1.4m barrels. Weekly crude imports fell-271k barrels per day to +8.84m. A surprise was gas stocks unexpectedly falling -1.43m barrels to +213.1m. Analysts had projected a build of +600k barrels. Distillates (heating oil and diesel), rose +258k to +142.2m. Refinery utilization came off its 10-month high, falling -1.1% to +88.1%.

This year’s energy spike is being cited ‘as the reason for the global economic slowdown. Analyst’s note, that from its peak, crude is off-20%.The technicals see strong support first appearing at around $87.

Gold rallied for a second consecutive day after dropping to a five-week low, encouraging some investors to buy the precious metal as a protection of wealth and alternative to currencies. Last week, the commodity fell -4.4% and is up +6% this year.

After a positive Greek vote, the market had been wishing to see more of a pull back as people reduced their safe heaven position taking. This has not occurred because too many speculators have had the same thought.

Gold is viewed by some investors as a hedge against inflation, and the surprise release of crude oil stockpiles last week from developed nations’ reserves has dampened sentiment amongst investors for rising prices. However, commodities dependency on the buck and the outlook for US rates is likely to remain intact for now. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on these deep pullbacks ($1,509 -0.90c). Technical analyst’s see $1,485 as the first level of real support.

The Nikkei closed at 9,816 up+19. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,302 up+9; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,895 up+39. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year backed up 5bp yesterday (3.09%) and are little changed in the O/N session.

The US yield curve rose from almost a record low ahead of this week’s three-treasury auctions ($99b-2’s, 5’s and 7’s), on bets that the Greek Socialist Party will get parliamentary approval for its austerity measures needed to secure a troika bailout. So far, they are two-thirds of the way there.

The US 10-year benchmark was able to back up for a third consecutive day as Greece’s lawmakers passed the first part of an austerity plan needed to assure further bailout funds, damping demand for a refuge in US government paper. Today, they get to vote for implementation of austerity. Ten-year yields have gained +21 basis points over the past three days, a volatile market or what?

This week’s five-year auction was not well received and drew the lowest demand in a year as the sharp drop in yields has turned off investors. Dealers were able to create a small concession for yesterday’s 7-year auction, however, the concession was not deep enough, as it too was a horrible auction with dealers having to take down over half of the issue (+56.1% vs. +45%).

After the auction, bond prices hit new session lows. The issue tailed a whopping +3.25bp at a record low yield of +2.43%. The tranche had a 2.62 bid-to-cover ratio (smallest since July 2010) compared to an average cover of 2.87 in the six-prior auctions. Indirect bidders took +32.2% of the issue (the smallest take down in two-years) versus an average of +50.5%.

The jump in yield spreads between 2-year US and Japanese bonds (17 basis points to 30) had been partially responsible for pushing USD/JPY up into the large resting offers of 81, temporarily at least.

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June 29, 2011

Greece Passes Austerity Bill

A contentious bill that will raise taxes and cut spending has been passed by the Greek parliament. The legislation is intended to meet so-called “austerity” targets to reduce Greece’s deficit and is required as part of the deal to provide Greece with emergency funding. Had the legislation been defeated, Greece would have been unable to meet an upcoming series of bond repayments and would have been forced to default.

Source: BBC News

June 28, 2011

EU Bank Stress Tests Due Mid-July

The European Banking Authority (EBA) continues to court controversy with the way it is administering the recent round of bank “stress” tests. The testing process has been in progress since March and is designed to restore confidence in the European banking system awash in questionable sovereign debt.

As part of the evaluation, the banks have been provided with a formula that will “address inconsistencies and excessive optimism” when it comes to assessing risk of these sovereign exposures. Based on the risk assumption, the banks can then determine the extent of the “haircut” to which they could face and then determine how much they need in reserves to cover the potential losses.

What the EBA is not doing, however, is to force the banks to simulate the impact of an actual default or debt restructuring. If the EBA is hoping to restore confidence with this approach, it leave much to be desired. Especially given the track record of the previous round of stress testing.

Last year’s stress test results were called into question from the very beginning simply because so few banks were deemed at risk. Indeed, the Irish banks were given a clean bill of health just months before the Irish government was forced to provide emergency funding to keep them afloat.

Nevertheless, the EBA claims that owing to the improvements introduced this year, the results will provide a truer picture of the state of the financial system. Still, they are not addressing the greatest fear of all investors – an out-and-out default by a sovereign nation.

Testing Results Leaked

A story carried by several news agencies Tuesday morning quoted an anonymous Eurozone insider as saying that potentially one in six of the ninety-one banks tested will fail the testing process. This means up to fifteen banks are deemed at risk based on the criteria imposed by the EBA.

On the surface this appears to be a dreadful result but according to the EBA source, this is exactly what the banking authority wants as it feels this will prove that the EBA is serious in its assessment.

“In order to demonstrate that it is credible, the EBA would need to show that the number of bank failures is significant, without being substantial,” the source was quoted as saying. “A number in the teens is about right.”

The process still has the appearance of being manipulated given the nature of the comments, but in light of last year’s fiasco, there could be a degree of method in the madness. Besides, no one is buying the old “the banks are all right line” line any how, so by finding a significant number as being at risk – but not too many – this may actually show investors that authorities are indeed serious this time.

Final results are due in a couple of weeks at which point we’ll see once and for all how the EBA intends to deal with the bank solvency question.

BIS Says Global Interest Rates Must Rise

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) warned yesterday that ultra-low interest rate policies represent a threat to the global financial system. According to the BIS, low borrowing costs have promoted asset bubbles that are now verging on the unsustainable and are eerily reminiscent of the property price collapse that ushered in the recession in 2007.

During the recession many central banks resorted to an “easy money” policy to promote financial activity. As growth has slowly returned to the afflicted economies, central banks are easing interest rates higher but they remain for the most part well below the pre-recession norm.

There are hold-outs to the trend however with the U.S. Federal Reserve refusing to budge from its record low rate capped at just 0.25 percent. Even as recently as the June 23rd FOMC statement the Fed remained committed to the current rate stating that the present conditions “are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.”

China’s Property Bubble

It is not just the U.S. that – in the words of the BIS – risks the creation of “financial distortions” through its monetary policies. Hedge fund manager Jim Chanos was among the first to warn that rapidly rising property values and inflation were creating the perfect conditions for a property bubble within the emerging Asian economies. Chanos continues to caution investors of China’s dependency on development to drive the economy and the possibility that a plunge in property values could trigger a recession.

China has made attempts in recent years to slow the pace of inflation and surging property values. The People’s Bank of China has tightened lending rules, raised interest rates, and even imposed eligibility requirements to limit property speculation and ease demand for new properties. The results have been mixed; in May, despite the Bank’s efforts, new home prices still increased in 67 of 70 cities.

For the global economy there are fears that higher energy and commodity prices in China will be “exported” to other countries through increased costs to the consumer. This means that consumers in America may find themselves sharing the inflation burden through higher prices for products manufactured in China.

This is a case of very poor timing on the part of China’s exporters. American consumer confidence has taken a turn for the worse and higher prices on goods shipped to the U.S. could suffer a decline in demand. Spiking energy and food prices are taking a greater share of each consumer dollar leaving less for non-essential goods and services and consumers are keeping a close watch on their expenditures.

The Final Countdown!

Filed under: Forex News — Tags: , , , , , , , , — admin @ 7:14 am

The market is in a bit of a holding pattern today as the countdown to the Greek vote on austerity is due in the next 24-hours, and as I have mentioned before, this is most certainly not a done deal. Protests in the streets of Greece (riots) have demonstrated the displeasure with the austerity measures and all it would take is a few votes against the austerity to sink the Euro.

Contagion is a much larger concern than Greece itself, which only represents some 3% of the Euro zone economy. If the Greeks end of not accepting the measures and end up defaulting, then this could set off a downward spiral which the Central bankers may not be able to prevent. So there is still a good deal of risk in the marketplace, and this is reflected so far this morning with lower equity prices and mild risk aversion to start the morning. But overall, the markets appear confident that this deal will get done, and that Greece will live to fight another day.

In the UK, GDP figures came in showing a decline in GDP to 1.6% from an expected 1.8%, though the quarterly number came in as expected at .5%. Yesterday noted BOE dove Adam Posen dismissed the BIS call for higher interest rates as “nonsense”. I guess he doesn’t consider 4.5% CPI data as inflationary and cites lower wage growth as reason enough to be dovish.

Later this morning the Case/Shiller home price index is due out and is expected to show declining home prices of around 4%, though consumer confidence figures are expected to have risen from last month’s reading.In the forex market: Aussie (AUD): The Aussie is now higher as the markets have just flipped from risk aversion to risk taking without a major catalyst that can be identified. It should be noted that there is now sentiment in the market that next move for the RBA in Australia may be a rate reduction rather than a rate hike as China attempts to slow their growth. (Click chart to enlarge)

audusd0628.JPG

Kiwi (NZD): The Kiwi is mostly lower after yesterday’s trade balance figures came in lower than expected, but there is additional sentiment that the recovery in Christ Church after the earthquakes has been slowing.

Loonie (CAD): The Loonie is mixed as higher oil prices trading up to a 92 handle have counter-balanced the weak US economic outlook that is causing some US dollar selling this morning. Tomorrow CPI data will be released which could show inflationary pressure.

Euro (EUR): The Euro is mixed as all eyes are on the Greek vote for austerity as riots in the streets of Greece are taking place. Tomorrow will bring German CPI data but this is of little importance in the grand scheme of things.

Pound (GBP): The Pound is mixed after GDP figures came in lower than expected showing that stagflationary forces may be rearing their ugly head. BOE dove Posen’s comments may not be so far-fetched if the economy continues to worsen. (Click chart to enlarge)

gbpusd0628.JPG

Swissie (CHF): The Swissie is higher across the board as money flows from the Euro to the safe haven currency with the risk of the Greek vote in full force.

Dollar (USD): The Dollar is actually weakening at this point despite the risk in the market as investors want to get in one more day of risk-taking going into the Greek vote. Home price figures are expected to show declines later this morning, though consumer confidence is expected to be up from last month.

Yen (JPY): The Yen is mostly weaker but not by much as risk is still prevalent in the marketplace. Retail trade figures came in better than expected showing gains of 2.4%, but big box retail sales decrease by that same amount.

The Greek vote is expected tomorrow morning and represents the single largest risk event currently in the markets. The US debt ceiling debate is also something to be concerned about, but that discussion is for another day.

It is no secret that economies are contracting around the globe, however the days of extend and pretend are over and it is time to face the harsh realities. Look no further than what is taking place in Greece as a microcosm for the global economy.

What happens if the citizens of the UK decide that they have had enough of 4.5% inflation even though the BOE continues to avoid dealing with it for fear of sinking the economy? Or what happens if the confidence in the full faith and credit of the US is called into question if the debt ceiling debate can’t be resolved?

These are all precarious positions which need to be handled by governments and not avoided. Unfortunately, most wait until there is a crisis to provide political cover for making difficult choices which can have negative effects going forward.

So keep an eye on this Greek vote and mitigate your risk exposure.

To learn more about how you can take advantage of world events through the currency market, be sure to check out our currency trading courses!

To follow these events live with a free, real-time practice account, click here! Don’t miss out on the world’s fastest growing market!

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1 in 6 EU Banks Could Fail Stress Test

A source within the Eurozone banking system said that up to fifteen European banks could fail the so-called “stress” tests designed to accurately report the viability of the region’s banking system. This estimate is double last year’s results that were deemed too ineffective in rooting out those institutions at risk of failure.

Most of the failed banks are expected to be in Greece, Germany, Portugal, and Spain and officials are already working behind the scenes to shore up the affected balance sheets.

Source: Reuters

EU Says Greece to Accept Austerity Requirements or Face Default

Refusing to approve the austerity requirements set out as part of the emergency funding deal would result in Greece’s immediate default warned a top European Union official. Olli Rehn issued the statement as protesters took to the streets to demonstrate against the measures in an attempt to convince Greek politicians to reject the passage of the bill to cut spending and raise taxes.

“The only way to avoid immediate default is for parliament to endorse the revised economic program … They must be approved if the next tranche of financial assistance is to be released,” Rehn said. “To those who speculate about other options, let me say this clearly: there is no Plan B to avoid default.”

Source: Reuters

EUR held to ransom

Capital markets remain focused on the parliamentary vote in Greece and on the long-term funding program negotiations. In the near term, the key deadline remains the vote in the Greek parliament on austerity measures, scheduled for tomorrow. The successful outcome to last week’s confidence vote supports market expectations that the austerity measures will pass.

However, according to Prim Minister Papandreou, this vote is too close to call! So much so, that EU members are putting the finishing touches to contingency plans to deal with the possible consequence of a sovereign default in the Euro-zone. Financial markets are pricing in an +80% chance of this occurring.

A positive austerity voting outcome should bring only limited relief to this already nervous market. Without a comprehensive funding program with clarity on the degree of participation for private bondholders, the EUR will remain vulnerable to headline risk.

The US$ is a stronger in the O/N trading session. Currently, it is higher against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘subdued’ session.

Forex heatmap

Yesterday’s US consumption spending data was noticeably weaker than expected due to the downward revisions to prior months. The -0.1% decline in real-PCE for May was in line with market forecast, and largely reflects the supply driven decline in auto-sales. The surprise was in April, where real consumption spending was revised down from +0.1% to -0.1%. That pulled the annualized growth rate of real consumption spending for the first two-months of this quarter relative to first quarter to +0.6%. Capital markets expect second quarter growth to slip into the +1 to +2% because of weak consumption throughout May.

There were fewer surprises in the price data. The PCE price index matched the CPI with gains of +0.2% in the headline index and +0.3% in the core. Analysts expect the indexes to soften next month due to declining energy prices in the headline index, fewer energy spillover effects in the core and an easing of supply pressures in the auto industry.

The dollar is higher against the EUR -0.08%, GBP -0.30% and lower against CHF +0.14% and JPY +0.09%. The commodity currencies are mixed this morning, CAD -0.22% and AUD +0.13%.

The Canadian dollar, despite trading within its recent tight range, continues to inch closer to parity, touching a three-month low yesterday, as investors remained wary ahead of the vote in Greece tomorrow, to approve an unpopular austerity plan and as commodity prices fall.

Last week, the loonie posted its biggest weekly drop in two-months as risk-averse investors sought refuge in the most liquid of assets, the greenback. Higher yielding growth assets have come under pressure as investors risk-appetite goes ‘walkabout’ on the back of commodities softening on speculation that global economic growth may falter. US consumer spending, which accounts for +70% of US economic activity, came in flat for the first time in nearly a year, and slipped -0.1% when adjusted for inflation yesterday. Personal income also rose less than expected. The disappointing data added to the general cloud over the global economy.

The loonie is headed for the first two-month loss in a year, as rising concern that debt-strapped Greece and other Euro-peripheries will default and an economic slowdown in the US makes interest-rate increases by the BoC less likely.

With the Fed cutting its growth objective for the remainder of the year has higher yielding growth sensitive currencies trading under pressure. Expect the Canadian dollar to be subjected to the pull of either risk or risk aversion trading strategies. CAD is vulnerable now with US data likely to continue to print weak into mid-July (0.9878).

The AUD dropped through key technical support levels to an eleven-week low after the dollar rallied in the O/N session. The currency remains under pressure on concerns that a Greek austerity plan will not resolve Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis and will continue to dampen appetite for higher yields. Supporting the selling pressure was the RBA’s board minute’s for June reaffirming a noncommittal Central Bank. Concern that global growth is slowing is prompting traders to bet that the RBA will cut interest rates. Governor Stevens may reduce his benchmark rate by 19bp over the next 12-months, compared with bets on a +25bp hike on June 1st.

Governor Stevens and company cited growing concerns in Europe, downside surprises in US data and deterioration in non-mining related industries as giving the board enough reason to remain on hold until further notice. The minutes were also less explicit than RBA Governor Stevens’ speech last week on emphasizing upcoming data like the CPI report. The market is pricing a no hike in August unless inflation and employment surprised on the upside and the situation in Greece clears up sufficiently for a powerful rebound in risk appetite. Global data needs to improve before we can embrace any rate hike policy thinking. Investors remain better sellers on rallies (1.0452).

Crude is higher in the O/N session ($91.05 +0.44c). Oil prices fell yesterday as Greece’s debt crisis and the decision to tap global oil reserves continued to weigh on prices. The IEA said its members would release crude from their SPR’s. They intend to inject +60m barrels of government-held stocks onto the global market, immediately increasing world supply by +2.5%. Weaker global data is also put the commodity under pressure this week. US consumer spending stagnating last month and a preliminary Chinese PMI showing that factory output may rise at the slowest pace in 11-months in June is questioning global demand.

Previously, ‘tightness in the oil market has threatened to undermine the fragile global economic recovery’. Year-to-date, unrest in the crude-producing Middle-East and North Africa has sparked hefty price gains. According to analysts, this supply move is significant, as it ‘represents a reach by member countries for the remedy of last resort to high oil prices’. The spike in energy prices is being cited ‘as the reason for the economic slowdown and this is a reaction to that’. Analyst’s note, that from its peak this year, crude is off-20%.The technicals see strong support first appearing at around $87.

Gold prices yesterday were little changed as indecisive moves in FX-land and ongoing negotiations about a potential bailout for debt-laden Greece have left the market in ‘walkabout’ mode. Last week, the commodity fell $50 after a pledge by EU officials to stabilize the region’s economy slashed demand for the commodity as a haven. Margin calls in other asset classes also required investors to raise fresh capital by selling the yellow metal.

Gold is viewed by some investors as a hedge against inflation, and the surprise release of crude oil stockpiles from developed nations’ reserves damped sentiment amongst investors for rising prices. The commodity could still see a strong pullback if the Greek austerity measures win parliamentary approval tomorrow, as it would likely reduce short-term investor concern and demand for safe-harbor assets.

The commodities dependency on the buck and the outlook for US rates is likely to remain intact for now. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on these deep pullbacks ($1,502 +$5.70c). Technical analyst’s see $1,485 as the first level of real support.

The Nikkei closed at 9,648 up+71. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,129 up+22; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,753 up+32. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year backed up 5bp yesterday (2.91%) and are little changed in the O/N session.

The US yield curve rose from almost a record low ahead of this week’s three-treasury auctions ($99b-2’s, 5’s and 7’s), on bets that the Greek Socialist Party will get parliamentary approval for its austerity measures needed to secure a troika bailout.

The US 10-year benchmark was able to back up for the first time in four days as Chancellor Merkel’s coalition government welcomed proposals from French banks and insurers on voluntary participation in a roll-over of Greek debt. The market to date has seen a steady grind to lower yields without a significant pullback. Investors seem to be waiting for the ‘storm to pass until there is some clarity from Greece’.

The US Treasury auctioned $35b 2-year notes yesterday. The issue tailed +1.2bp at a record low yield of 0.395%. It was the first tail in three months and was to be expected because of record low yields. The auction had a 3.08 bid-to-cover ratio compared to an average cover of 3.32 in the six-prior auctions. Indirect bidders took +22% of the issue (the smallest take down in three-years) versus an average of +30.5%. Direct bidders took +13.5% of the issue versus a +14.5% average. Today, we get to take down +$35b 5-years and tomorrow $29b 7-years.

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