Forex Blog

January 18, 2011

Bank of Canada Leaves Rates at 1%

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 2:23 pm

The Bank of Canada has left its trendsetting interest rate at one per cent, unchanged since it last raised rates in September. The central bank says global conditions have improved slightly since its last full report in October, and so have Canada’s economic prospects. But it also says risks remain and the high dollar and low productivity will continue to weigh on Canadian exports and output growth.

The bank expects the economy to grow a moderate 2.4 per cent this year and only slightly better next year at 2.8 per cent. It says the economy won’t return to full capacity until the end of 2012.

Source: The Canadian Press

November 19, 2010

China Raises Reserve Requirements to Cool Inflation

For the fifth time this year, the People’s Bank of China has increased the minimum cash levels all lenders must maintain in reserves. This tightening of the availability of capital is an attempt to restrict lending and slow the rate of inflation within the red-hot economy.

This recent move adds to the speculation that the Central Bank will be forced to increase interest rates again after raising them in October for the first time since 2007.

Source: BBC News

November 11, 2010

Bernanke’s QE2 ineffective

Global investors doubt the Federal Reserve’s plan to buy more Treasury securities will boost the U.S. economy or bring down unemployment and say they believe the government is pursuing a weak-dollar policy, a poll shows.

Three-quarters of those surveyed say the central bank’s securities purchases — or quantitative easing — will have little or no effect on joblessness, according to the latest quarterly Bloomberg Global Poll of 1,030 investors, analysts and traders who are Bloomberg subscribers. More than half say the Fed’s action won’t increase U.S. growth over the next year.

Lower unemployment “is a long way off,” Jonathan Mackay, a poll participant and senior fixed-income strategist for Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC in New York, said in an e-mail.

Bloomberg

October 19, 2010

China Surprises With First Rate Increase Since 2007

With inflation pegged at 3.6 percent, the People’s Bank of China announced on its website that it will increase the one-year benchmark lending rate from 5.31 percent to 5.56 percent. The rate for interest paid on deposits will also increase rising to 2.5 percent from 2.25 percent.

The central bank “wants to stay ahead of the inflation curve,” said David Cohen, a Singapore-based economist at Action Economics. “China’s economy seems to be getting back on track and the inflation rate seems to be creeping up.” He expects another rate increase before year-end.

Source: Bloomberg

September 1, 2010

Fed Could Buy More Debt

Meeting minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s August meeting released yesterday indicate that the Bank is prepared to buy more US debt if the economy were to worsen “appreciably”. The minutes suggest that the Central Bank favors the purchase of government bonds but would buy additional mortgage debt if necessary to protect the credit market.

Source: BBC News

August 19, 2010

Germany’s 2010 Growth Rate Raised to 3%

Following one of the fastest growing quarters in twenty years, Germany’s central bank, the Bundesbank, increased its growth prediction for the second half of the year to 3 percent from 1.9 percent.

“The growth tempo will normalize after the extraordinarily dynamic second quarter,” the Bundesbank said. “But all in all, the fundamental economic situation in Germany is very favorable at the moment.”

The increase in economic activity can be traced almost entirely to growing global demand for goods produced in Germany.

Source: Bloomberg

August 12, 2010

Irish Borrowing costs ridiculous

Central Bank governor Patrick Honohan has described Irish bond market spreads as a “setback”.

Irish bonds spreads widened after the European Commission approved the Government’s move to raise the level of capital it can inject into Anglo Irish Bank.

“The spreads are a setback for our hopes of a narrowing to reflect the fiscal credibility of the country,” Mr Honohan told the Daily Telegraph.

“I don’t look at them every day but at this level they are ridiculous.”

Bond spreads yesterday hit the highest level in a month, reaching almost 300 basis points at one point, and the yield on Irish 10-year bonds broke through the 5.4 per cent mark, while German 10-year bund yields fell to a record low.

They closed just below 289 basis points, and this morning were at 288 basis points.

Mr Honohan also criticised Anglo in his interview, describing the bank as “egregious, in a league of their own”.

Irish Times

February 22, 2010

China Bears Raise Fresh Concerns

The “China Bears” are at it again with one prominent member of the club – Marc Faber – even suggesting that the Chinese economy could “decelerate very substantially in 2010 and could even crash”. Faber – who publishes the Gloom, Boom, and Doom Report – said in a recent Bloomberg TV interview that “it does not make sense for China to build more empty buildings and add to capacities in industries where you already have overcapacity”.

Peoples Bank of China PBOC Central

People's Bank of China

According to Faber, much of China’s recent growth is not because of increased demand, but is actually the result of excessive lending and government stimulus spending. Lending for instance, has forged ahead at a torrid pace that is set to eclipse last year’s record of 9.59 trillion. This is in addition to over $8 billion worth of foreign investment – an increase of 7.8 percent over the previous year – and 4 trillion yuan in government spending. In short, China is awash in cash.

With so much money sitting there just begging to be spent, large state-owned enterprises (SEOs) have become more creative in finding ways to put this money to work. After all, once you’ve completed all the dams, railways, and highways you can possibly build, where can you turn to next? Well, property naturally; and government agencies – together with some of the country’s largest companies – are abandoning their core responsibilities in order to invest in everything from office towers to shopping malls.

Recent actions taken by the People’s Bank of China suggest that the Central Bank is aware of the potential for trouble. While the steps have been tentative at best, the Bank has directed commercial banks to reduce lending to developers. On February 12th, the Bank of China increased bank reserves by 0.5 percent (50 basis points) in a bid to further reduce liquidity in the banking system.

These token measure are unlikely to do much to dampen the land rush however, and the situation is quickly turning into a highly-leveraged, asset bubble. Remember, it was the 2007 collapse of the U.S. housing market that triggered the recession – does the potential for a collapse of China’s economy spell round two?

February 18, 2010

Fed Raises Discount Window Rate to 0.75 percent

US Federal Reserve Fed

US Federal Reserve

The Federal reserve has raised the discount window from 0.50% to 0.75% effective February 19th. The timing of this release is unusual, and the reasons given point to the Central Bank pushing the Banks to acquire the funds directly in the Money Market for their short term needs.

From the Fed Press Release this afternoon.

The changes to the discount window facilities include Board approval of requests by the boards of directors of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks to increase the primary credit rate (generally referred to as the discount rate) from 1/2 percent to 3/4 percent. This action is effective on February 19.

In addition, the Board announced that, effective on March 18, the typical maximum maturity for primary credit loans will be shortened to overnight. Primary credit is provided by Reserve Banks on a fully secured basis to depository institutions that are in generally sound condition as a backup source of funds. Finally, the Board announced that it had raised the minimum bid rate for the Term Auction Facility (TAF) by 1/4 percentage point to 1/2 percent. The final TAF auction will be on March 8, 2010.

US Federal Reserve

February 10, 2010

BOE warns UK Recovery Slower than Forecast

Central Bank of England Governor Mervyn King

BoE Governor King

Britain’s recovery from the recession will be slower than expected, the Bank of England warned today.

Governor Mervyn King downgraded the forecast given three months ago and said the economy ‘continued to bump along the bottom’.

Amid fears of a damaging double dip recession, Mr King cautiously said a ‘gradual recovery in output may now be in prospect’.

But he warned: ‘The strength of the recovery is highly uncertain.’

He downgraded the Bank’s growth forecasts for this year from the 4 per cent predicted in November to around a ’somewhat less strong’ 3.5 per cent.

UK Dailymail

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