Forex Blog

January 17, 2012

Will China Weaken the Yuan to Boost Its Market?

By Sam Mattera
Benzinga Guest Writer

In the second half of 2010, David Tepper achieved a level of notoriety after he had made the correct call on equities for the second half of that year and the beginning of 2011.

Tepper suggested investors get bullish. He made this recommendation on a simple assumption: either the economy improves, in which case equities should rally, or the economy does not improve, in which case the Federal Reserve boosts the market with additional easing measures.

Following Tepper’s call, in November, the Fed unleashed the second round of quantitative easing. QE2 elevated markets higher, as equities traded up for most of the first half of 2011.

Now, are investors seeing much the same situation in China?

On Tuesday, Chinese GDP beat estimates, coming in at 8.9%. This was widely hailed by market pundits as being an ideal reading—slower, so as not to push inflation, yet not so low as to an indicate a “hard landing.”

The Shanghai Composite rallied strongly in the wake of the report, gaining over 4% on the session. The index had been badly beaten down in recent months, as investors may have become concerned with China’s future growth prospects.

Tuesday’s Shanghai rally may have been in reaction to investors anticipating a far lower number. 8.9%, while great for a developed nation, is comparatively poor for China.

The rally may have been motivated more so by easing expectations. With growth slowing, Chinese officials may have no choice but to engage in large-scale easing.

China’s leadership is set to change this year, and the People’s Bank of China has already signaled their willingness to ease, as they have recently cut reserve requirements.

That additional yuan circulating in the economy could mean higher asset prices and a better market in China. It may also mean China’s aggressive expansion continues, which could support commodity prices and related economies like Australia and South Korea.

Yet, are investors set to be disappointed? With Chinese GDP reporting lower, the Asian could economy have more downside from here, even if Chinese officials ramp-up easing policies.

In terms of the USD/CNY, the currency pair could show strength. The pair rallied slightly on Tuesday—yet, as the PBoC directly pegs the value of the yuan, the currency’s movement is limited.

One way for the PBoC to ease would be to change its peg. Although some have predicted that the PBoC would increase the peg—making the yuan stronger to fight inflation—it may be more likely that the PBoC will weaken the yuan by lowering the peg. That would be bearish for the value of the yuan relative to the dollar.

At any rate, China continues to be a major player in the global economy. US equity markets traded higher on Tuesday, perhaps due to the rally seen on the other side of the globe.

September 16, 2011

Spanish Regions’ Debt Surges to a Record

Spanish regions’ debt burden surged to a record in the second quarter as administrations struggled to rein in spending amid a slump in tax revenue.

The 17 semi-autonomous regions’ outstanding debt burden rose to 133.2 billion euros ($183.7 billion), or 12.4 percent of gross domestic product, from 11.6 percent in the first quarter, the Bank of Spain said on its website today. The overall public- sector debt load amounted to 65.2 percent of GDP, compared with the government’s year-end forecast of 68.7 percent.

Bloomberg

September 14, 2011

Banks Say Canada Could Be First to Return to Recession

It appears that it is no longer a case of “if” the global economy will fall back into recession but “when” and according to some of Canada’s largest banks, it could be Canada that begins the trend.

Following a cut in the projected growth for Canada, the Bank of Nova Scotia today said that Canada could be one of the first major economies to experience two consecutive quarters of negative growth – the technical definition of a recession. The report noted that for the second quarter of the year, growth contracted by 0.4 percent and the latest projection for the third quarter suggests that, at best, no change in growth will be recorded for the three months ending September.

Source: CBC News

August 31, 2011

Negative 2nd Quarter Triggers Canadian Recession Fears

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Wednesday’s release by Statistics Canada revealed that for the three months ending in June, the Canadian economy contracted by 0.1 percent. With a recession typically defined as two or more consecutive quarters of negative growth, Canada is already half way back to a recession.

Like most of the industrialized world, Canada suffered through a recession triggered by economic events in late 2007 and 2008. For Canadians, the recession lasted from the final quarter of 2008 to the end of the second quarter of 2009. While growth as measured by Gross Domestic Product (GDP) during the recession declined by more than 3 percent, this was still better then most other G7 countries where losses were much more pronounced. Canada also was one of the first to emerge from recession returning to positive growth by the third quarter of 2009.

These realities helped the country garner a reputation as somewhat of a fiscal prodigy. Hoping to continue to build on this legacy, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty downplayed the GDP result noting that Canada’s economic and fiscal fundamentals remain “sound and sustainable”.

“The weakness in Q2 was largely due to external factors — the tsunami and earthquakes in Japan in the second quarter had a very strong effect on the auto sector, particularly auto imports,” he said. “And of course there was some slowness in U.S. growth, so that affected our exports. The domestic situation is much stronger.”

As much as Canadians may wish to believe it, the ability of Canadian monetary policy to manage the economy is often overpowered by a much stronger force – the huge market lurking below the 49th parallel. For most of its existence, Canada has been an exporting nation and remains so to this day. An abundance of resources combined with an educated and skilled workforce situated within sight of the world’s largest consumer market has for the most part, served Canadians positively for well over a century.

However, there is a downside to this arrangement; today, about 75 percent of Canada’s exports find their way to the American market. When times are good and American consumers feel confident regarding their economic future, Canada enjoys a trade surplus that prior to the last recession, averaged more than $70 billion a year. In 2009 and 2010 the surplus declined sharply to $20 billion a year.

Should the U.S. economy tip back into recession and force consumers to cut back even further on their spending, this will certainly impact Canadian export sales. It may even push Canada’s economy to recession. Already the Bank of Canada has noted that Canadian growth is likely to ease in the final two quarters of the year and all talk of an interest rate hike appears to now be a thing of the past.

August 26, 2011

US Growth Output Downgraded

As Federal Reserve members continue their two-day session at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the Commerce Department released a revised growth figure for the U.S. economy for the second quarter. The revised figure shows the economy grew at an annualized rate of 1 percent for the three months ending in June compared to an earlier estimate of 1.3 percent. The worse-than-expected result will add pressure to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to announce further stimulus efforts.

Source: BBC News

August 16, 2011

Germany’s Growth Decline Adds to Euro Concern

The latest GDP figures from Germany show that growth in the German economy declined in the second quarter to a barely-positive 0.1 percent. This is a dramatic drop from the 1.5 percent increase for the first quarter and considerably worse than the predicted 0.5 percent growth.

The news is particularly troubling in that analysts are now questioning Germany’s ability to carry the Eurozone and help see it through the ongoing credit crisis. With France also expected to show weaker growth for the quarter, it is expected markets will see losses as investors reassess the Eurozone’s prospects.

Source: BBC News

July 29, 2011

Loonie Suffers after Weak Growth Report

The Loonie extended its losses versus its U.S. counterpart after a report showed Canada’s economy unexpectedly contracted in May by the most in two years as production in the mining and oil and gas sector declined.

Canada’s currency fell versus a majority of its major counterparts as a report showed the U.S. economy grew less than forecast in the second quarter, after almost coming to a halt at the start of the year, as consumers retrenched. Crude oil, Canada’s largest export and global equities, traditional drivers of Canada’s dollar, declined.

“The fact that Canada and GDP weren’t great just took a toll on the Canadian dollar,” said Brian Kim, a currency strategist in Stamford, Connecticut, at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. “Disappointing GDPs in North America in general are not helping the currency.

Bloomberg

July 14, 2011

US Retail Sales Disappoint

US retail sales for June increased by just 0.1 percent as consumers continue to battle with elevated unemployment and a slowing economy. Total sales however, were boosted by an unexpected increase in demand at auto dealers that will not influence figures on consumer spending for the second quarter that the government will publish later this month.

“Consumers are cautious,” said Michelle Meyer, a senior economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in New York. “There is still pretty slow momentum. It still shows we’re in a fragile recovery.”

Source: Bloomberg

July 8, 2011

UK-Style Austerity Trap

The chanting may be louder and the protests more violent but like Greece, the UK is suffering through its own austerity program. However, unlike Greece which is having restraint forced upon it in exchange for emergency funding from the European Union, the UK is engaging in a self-imposed program of spending cuts and tax hikes in an attempt to balance its budget.

In the three years prior to the 2010 British election, government spending and total debt ballooned to levels not seen since the Second World War. In the final few years of the previous government’s 13-year reign, spending had become so out of control that Britain found itself in violation of the debt and deficit limits imposed by the 1992 Maastricht Treaty.

Under the terms of the treaty, all European Union members must ensure yearly deficits do not exceed 3 percent of GDP while total debt must not exceed 60 percent of GDP. By the end of 2009, Britain’s deficit was more than 11 percent of GDP and the country’s accumulated debt stood at nearly 70 percent.

During the campaign period leading up to the election early last year, the Conservative party led by David Cameron made economic reform the center plank of the party’s election platform. While Cameron ultimately won the election to become Prime Minister, he needed the support of the third-place Social Democrats to form a coalition and gain the majority necessary to pass legislation. More on that later.

Coalition Delivers an “Austerity” Budget

Less than two months after forming the government the newly-minted Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, released a budget that Osborne described to the media as “tough but fair”. The main objective of the budget was to begin the process of balancing the books that the government claims will be accomplished primarily through spending cuts rather than tax increases. The government estimates it can accomplish the task within five years.

Despite the pledge to rely more on reduced spending as opposed to raising taxes, one of the leading elements in the budget released last June was to increase the Value Added Tax (VAT) to 20 percent from 17.5 percent. The budget also contained wide-ranging spending cuts starting with a cap on public sector wages and other programs designed to reduce overall spending.

The government has been forthright in admitting that these moves – while necessary to restore confidence in the economy – will be difficult in the short-term. An understatement perhaps for any of the 300,000 or so public sector workers who are expected to lose their job in the coming months. Private sector rolls could also suffer as the government reduces or even withdraws funds set aside for large-scale infrastructure projects.

To date, the employment outlook has actually improved in the months following the budget. Last May unemployment was pegged at 8 percent climbing to 8.1 percent by October – by the end of the first quarter of 2012 unemployment had fallen to 7.9 percent with the most recent reading for May placing unemployment at 7.7 percent.

Time will tell if the economy can continue to add jobs as the austerity measures take greater effect. Still, while employment has performed better than expected so far, wages themselves continue to be depressed. Wage increases are on-hold across the spectrum and while workers are certainly not enthusiastic about this reality, there is comfort in continuing to receive a regular pay cheque.

The impact of wage stagnation is further amplified, however, by rapidly rising price inflation. This past May higher energy and food costs, coupled with the government’s increase in the Value Added Tax, helped pushed inflation to more than twice the Bank of England’s 2 percent inflation target.

Despite the increase in price inflation, overall economic growth remains constrained. The latest projection by the National Institute for Economic and Social Research has Britain’s economy expanding by a mere 0.1 percent during the second quarter of the year. This has caused a dilemma for the Bank of England – should interest rates go up to deal with inflation at the risk of overall growth, or should interest rates remain low to promote growth while possibly driving inflation even higher?

Not surprisingly, the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) remains divided on the question but at this point at least, those arguing against rate hikes are in the majority. On Thursday, even as the European Central Bank was raising interest rates in the Eurozone by a quarter point, the Bank of England announced it would maintain the current 0.5 percent benchmark rate.

Can the Coalition Hold Itself Together?

As consumers feel the pinch from stagnant wages and rising inflation the government comes under greater pressure to ease up on the pace of change. The two parties forming the coalition are at opposite ends of the political spectrum making it difficult to imagine sufficient common ground can be found to maintain the arrangement for the duration of the current mandate. Indeed, it is a marvel that a full year has already passed with relatively little acrimony between the two parties.

July 6, 2011

EUR in the Crosshairs

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:26 am

Sovereign debt contagion fears have resurfaced, with bank stocks suffering the brunt of investor selling this morning, after Moody’s downgraded Portugal’s credit rating and rumors that Ireland is now in the crosshairs, has virtually eliminated all of last weeks capital markets risk recovery.

To think that the market thought it was going to be quiet ahead of the ECB, BoE and NFP announcements? Softer Euro-zone data and concerns over the health of the Chinese economy have again pushed investors away from riskier currencies back towards those perceived to offer safety as traders scuttle towards the exit’s ahead of Trichet’s ‘now’ highly anticipated press conference after the ECB’s supposedly +25bp tightening tomorrow. What can he say to stop the Euro-zone bleeding?

The EUR is trying to get a small lift from ‘paunchy’ German manufacturing orders (+1.8%, m/m), however, fear continues to dominate.

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 ‘volatile’ session.

Forex heatmap

There are some tentative signs that US manufacturing is growing. Yesterday, US factory orders ‘modestly’ advanced in May, with the increase less than expected (+0.8% to $445.3b). Digging deeper, the increase was broad based, but less than the +1% that the market had hoped for. A barometer of business spending within the data, non-defense capital goods orders ex-aircraft, increased +1.6%. This report is ‘mildly’ positive for US GDP, which is due for release at the end of this month. The US economy has suffered through the first three-months of 2011, weighed down by higher gas prices and unemployment.

Moody’s downgraded Portugal’s sovereign ratings by 4 notches to Ba2, citing the risk that Portugal will need a second bailout. In addition, the second Greek aid package by the EU/IMF will mean that any future aid to Portugal will require costly private market participation. Moody’s is the first of the big three agencies to rate Portuguese bond as sub-investment grade. It’s worth noting that the Portuguese government so far has strong political support for the austerity measures and has IMF/EU funding committed through 2013.

The dollar is higher against the EUR -0.53%, GBP -0.33%, CHF -0.37% and lower against JPY +0.05%. The commodity currencies are weaker this morning, CAD -0.13% and AUD -0.03%.

The CAD continues to ‘chop’ around, as investors move out of higher yielding currencies and into the buck. Not having any significant economic releases in North America, the loonie is taking its cues from broader market sentiment. Over the past week, the CAD had appreciated +3%, breaking through some key support levels. Investors have been booking some modest profit, trimming holdings of riskier assets after S&P’s said a debt-rollover plan for Greece may prompt a ‘selective default’ rating for the country.

Higher than expected inflation data last week (not seasonally adjusted, +0.7% vs. +0.3%), has investors pricing in a BoC hike for October and the reason they pushed the currency to a monthly high, aided by rising oil prices. Expect the loonie to be subjected to the pull of either risk or risk aversion trading strategies ahead of North American employment data this Friday. The currency is vulnerable with US data likely to print weak into mid-July (0.9648).

The AUD, for a higher yielding risk sensitive currency, stayed close to home outright ahead of a government report that the market expects this evening to show that the country added the most jobs in three months. The currency has advanced for a second consecutive day as traders pared bets on a cut in interest rate by the RBA. Earlier this week, investors had been buying stocks and risk currencies, based on a belief that the passing of the proposed Greek austerity measures would see a large degree of fear and anxiety dissipate. That’s not to be the case, capital markets now have both Portugal and Ireland in their crosshairs.

Any of the aggressive gains have been capped, on fear that Greek austerities plan will not resolve Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis. Technically, the market is waiting for funding schedule clarity. Concerns that global growth is slowing has prompted some investors to bet that the RBA will cut interest rates some time later this year.

Currently, the market is pricing a no hike in August unless inflation and employment surprised on the upside and the situation in Greece and the Euro-zone peripheries 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 (1.0687).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($96.87 -0.02c). Crude prices climbed to their highest price in more than two weeks yesterday after the Greek bailout signaled that global economies may stabilize, boosting fuel demand and on the back that recent technical selling was overdone at the end of the second quarter.

WTI crude slumped-11% last quarter, as Greece’s debt crisis fueled concerns that Europe’s economic recovery might be stalled. EU officials agreed last weekend to make the expected payout to Greece, after their parliament passed new austerity measures. Euro-zone finance chiefs gather next week to tackle the country’s long-term lifeline.

Providing crude support, the IEA said members would release +60m barrels from strategic reserves over 30 days to make up for a supply shortfall in Libya, was Goldman Sacs cutting its estimate for the potential price affect of the release, because the actual amount sold may only be about +39m barrels, as some member countries plan to only reduce inventory requirements for refiners.

The market is concerned that the ‘tightness’ in the oil market will continue to undermine the fragile global economic recovery. This is 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’.

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% and from the IEA announcement down -4.3%. The technicals see strong support first appearing at around $87.

Gold prices have recouped all the previous two session losses, as concerns about global debt problems persisted despite last week’s Greek bailout. The strength of the yellow metal comes on the back of increased safe-haven demand for the commodity after S&P’s warned Greece that it would treat rollover of privately held Greek debt as ‘selective default’ and on Portugal’s credit cut. According to FT, Trichet would continue to accept Greek government bonds as collateral for loans to banks as long as at least one ratings firm does not deem Greece to be in default.

Longer term, weaker fundamentals are expected to support this crowded trade during the second half of the year. It’s hard to find another catalyst for gold prices to push higher just now. The yellow metal is likely to be range-bound between its long term strong support level of $1,485 and $1,530 ahead of this Friday’s NFP.

The commodities dependency on the buck and the outlook for US rates is likely to remain a supporting factor. This ‘one directional trade’ is far from over, with speculators continuing to look to buy the metal on these deep pullbacks until proven wrong ($1,516 +$4.20c).

The Nikkei closed at 10,082 up+110. The DAX index in Europe was at 7,428 down-12; the FTSE (UK) currently is 6,000 down-24. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year eased 3bp yesterday (3.15%) and another 3bp in the O/N session (3.12%).

After five day’s of declines, treasuries managed to stop the bleeding as a deteriorating credit outlook for China’s banks encouraged demand for the safety of US Fixed Income. Moody’s issued a report claiming that China’s local government debt is $540b larger than officially reported. Not to be left in the cold, S&P’s said on Monday that a debt-rollover plan for Greece may prompt a ‘selective default’ rating for the country.

Last week yields aggressively backed up after the Greek parliament reduced the risk of default by implementing austerity measures and after EU officials approved an aid payment to the country, to prevent ‘this’ default. Analysts believe we are now approaching ‘yield levels’ that are more justifiable.

According to a new poll from ICAP, money managers are more bearish on Treasuries than they have been all year, believing yields to remain elevated after this Friday’s employment report. NFP is expected to show employers added more jobs last month.

With rumors that the PBoC would raise interest rates as early as this weekend should temporarily cap yields in the short-term, as does Portugal’s rating cut with rumors of Ireland to follow.

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