Forex Blog

February 6, 2012

Greek Public and Private sector plan strikes

The Greek political leaders are under significant pressure to reach an agreement on needed cutbacks on Monday to comply with demands from the European Union and International Monetary Fund to secure a second bailout worth €130 billion ($171 billion).

After a meeting on Sunday, Mr. Papademos said that the political leaders agreed on some of the basic points of the international lenders’ demands, including spending cuts equal to 1.5% of gross domestic product in 2012 and reduction of supplemental pension benefits to Greek workers. The most difficult terms, where the government hasn’t yet reached agreement, are wage cuts, labour reforms and a plan to recapitalize Greece’s banks.

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos faces a strong internal opposition to the terms requested by the European Commission, IMF and European Central Bank—also known as the troika. Greek government officials say the reduction in wages being sought by the troika will only deepen the country’s recession and widen its budget deficit, because it will reduce both tax revenues and contributions to its teetering pension funds.

Unions representing both Greece’s public sector and private industry have scheduled a nationwide strike for Tuesday in protest against painful reforms.

Wall Street Journal

January 5, 2012

Euro-Dollar Pair Craters

By Sam Mattera
Benzinga Guest Writer

On Thursday, the EUR/USD traded sharply lower, at one point dropping below the $1.28 mark—a level that had not been seen since September of 2010. This move comes after a better than expected jobs figure might have strengthened the dollar, while negative events in Europe may have weakened the euro.

In Europe, yields on Hungarian paper soared.

A three-year Hungarian bond auction failed when the Hungarian government rejected all bids. The failure of the bond auction prompted Hungarian CDS to rally sharply.

CDS bought on Hungarian paper could give investors protection against a default by the country, although the effectiveness of CDS instruments may have been thrown into doubt by recent events in Greece.

Although Greece was given a 50% haircut on its debt, CDS failed to protect investors from this loss. The Greek haircut was ruled “voluntary” and therefore did not trigger CDS contracts. The International Monetary Fund and European Union had been negotiating a bailout with the country to avoid a default. However, that bailout was thrown into doubt when the IMF and EU broke off the talks. The Hungarian parliament had been considering some changes to its central bank—changes that the IMF and EU opposed.

Meanwhile, in France, another bond auction struggled.

France missed its maximum target on a debt auction. Although not a complete failure, the market may have interpreted the event negatively. The yield on the Italian 10-year rose back above 7%.

Those factors may have been working to push the value of the euro down, while positive data in the US may have been pulling the dollar in the other direction.

ADP payrolls came in much better than expected, reporting in at almost double the expectations on the Street. ADP payrolls came in at 325,000 versus an estimated 175,000.

Initial jobless claims came in slightly better than expected, reporting at 372,000 against an estimated 375,000.
Given the boost in jobs, the American economy may be showing signs of further recovery.

If conditions in the Eurozone continue to weaken, while the US economy continues to improve, the currency pair could continue to trade lower.

Still, it may be hard for the US economy to thrive when Europe is weakening. US equity markets dropped on Thursday, as traders may have been pricing in a possible contagion effect.

November 17, 2011

Cumberland Advisors’ David Kotok: The Eurozone Crisis and The U.S. Economy

By Scott Rubin

Benzinga Radio recently had the opportunity to speak with David Kotok, the founder and Chief Investment Officer at Cumberland Advisors.

Kotok is a frequent contributor to CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox Business, Yahoo Finance, and other financial media outlets. His articles and financial commentary have also appeared extensively in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Barron’s, among others.

According to Kotok, at this point, Italy has become the center of the crisis. If the Italian government is unable to roll its debt, it will signal the next leg of contagion has arrived and the situation will deteriorate further. Conversely, if Italy is able to access the markets, it could potentially become a turning point, he said.

“If the market doesn’t provide financing, then there is a real problem,” Kotok said, “because Italy is the third-largest issuer of debt in the world. It is a huge amount of debt, a large country in Europe, and has a very high debt-to-GDP ratio.”

The second major event, Kotok said, will take place in Greece. The country must roll its debt in the second half of December. Greece, however, does not have access to its bond markets and will be forced to rely solely on EU bailouts.

“At the same time, Greek revenue does not match expenditures – even if we cut the expenditures,” Kotok said. “So, the country is not sustainable. We have a real collision course in Greece.”

While the European Central Bank (ECB) reactivated its bond-buying program in August in an effort to help shield Italy, Spain, and other debt-strained euro nations from rising yields, there is considerable political pressure – including from the U.S. – for the ECB to do more.

A contingent of global leaders want the ECB to become the lender of last resort to the struggling EU nations and essentially fully monetize their debt through massive bond purchases financed by money printing. Kotok thinks that in the end, this is likely to happen. He said that while the ECB clearly does not want to take this step, there may be no choice.

“Central bankers don’t like to monetize,” Kotok said, “but central bankers also have another test. That is, when you are faced with catastrophe, do you let the economies melt down into a slump, or do you provide the emergency finance, even though you don’t want to do it?”

According to Kotok, European banks also find themselves in a similar situation as the sovereigns with regard to their ability to roll debt and access the markets. The issue is exacerbated by complex oversight mechanisms within the EU, where banks are surveyed and regulated by their respective national banks.

On the home front, Kotok told Benzinga that he is of the view that the U.S. can continue to grow despite the current turmoil in Europe. He said that he thinks growth is picking up slightly in the fourth quarter and that he is not currently in “the recession/double-dip camp.”

“There is a lot of evidence – especially recent data releases – to support the fact that we will have slow growth, but that’s not shrinking,” Kotok said. “That’s growing.”

As a result, Kotok said that he thinks that stocks are cheap, but he did concede that it all depends on your view of whether the U.S. economy is headed towards another recession. In this, his outlook is pretty straightforward.

“So, the real question is: do you bet on a recession, or do you bet no recession?” Kotok said. “If you bet no recession, then you want to own stocks, because they are cheap. If you bet on a recession – you think we are going to have one – then you don’t want to own any stocks. You want to live in the cave and bring in bottled water and canned food.”

Listen to the full episode on Benzinga Radio here.

November 3, 2011

What’s the ECB to do?

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:35 am

Right now it’s not about Greece, it’s about the ability to contain contagion into Italy and other sovereign states. How much help is the region going to get from the ECB this morning? Until now, policy makers have been fulfilling the dual role mandate of stimulating growth and providing enough liquidity to grease the financial wheels by bond repurchasing. The market has priced in a +35% chance of a rate cut later this morning and a +100% chance of a cut next month. With Trichet gone and Draghi now chairing his first meeting, the easier route is to believe that he will focus policy makers commitment to providing liquidity to the banking system and to signal policy easing at next months meeting.

However, weaker Euro PMI last month and a collapse in Italy’s coupled with higher unemployment in Germany and a “contained” regional core inflation certainly provide enough reasons for the ECB to take its foot off the rate peddle. Analysts expect Draghi to argue that the SMP (special markets program-bond buying) will act as necessary to ensure “Euro area monetary transmission mechanisms remain functional”. Will Draghi, like Trichet before him, argue that the responsibility for stabilizing yields rests with governments, not the ECB? Currently, its a losing battle for the ECB, you only have to look at the Italian Government. The ECB, by controlling liquidity is the “only enforcer of fiscal and structural changes in the region”.

If Draghi surprises, and eases or indicates more of an easing bias or an aggressive SMP then investors will see risk appetite and the EUR rally.

Forex heatmap

US data yesterday gave investors the tentative green light to apply some risk. The ADP employment report showed a gain of +110k to private payroll numbers last month. It’s not enough to change forecasts to tomorrows NFP figure (+98k). It was a touch higher than the median forecast of +101k. The revisions to the past two months revealed a net gain of +21k (August-4k, while September was revised higher by +25k). Digging deeper, manufacturing was again a drag on the headline for the third consecutive month, subtracting-8k while service added +114k. Small businesses were the weakest contributors adding just under +50% of the gains. Usually they contribute closer to +60%. Is ADP a good indicator? In relative terms it’s been a whole lot more volatile compared to NFP this fiscal year. Its “absolute” miss has been +/-63k. Last month’s print saw a-46k underestimate.

US policy makers again are buying time. Bernanke’s press briefing yesterday presented downward revision for GDP growth as opposed to their June projections. They also went out of their way to make it clear that they discussed tools to enhance communication but no decisions have been made. The same variables remain a black spot on growth. The labor market is sluggish as the economy is not strong enough to push the unemployment rate down at a faster pace. Risks for the economic outlook are the same as in September, mainly stemming from the global financial crisis. The inflation profile has not changed, with some moderation near term due to lower commodities and stable inflation expectations in the long term.

The dollar is lower against the EUR +0.06%, GBP -0.00%, CHF +0.14% and JPY +0.01%. The commodity currencies are weaker this morning, CAD -0.27% and the AUD -0.64%.

Like a phoenix, the CAD has risen from its lowest level in almost two weeks outright on increased demand for this particular higher-yielding growth currency. The Fed acknowledged that US economic growth “strengthened somewhat” in the third-quarter, giving global equities and commodities a boost. This is always favorable for growth sensitive currencies, especially one that have such a strong trade association with the US. Strong private employment numbers down south suggests that the US may skate a recession. Tomorrow, the market gets the privilege to trade last months NFP and Canadian employment reports. What’s good for the US tends to always be good for its largest trading partner.

The Canadian Finance Minister stated earlier this week that the BoC’s mandate will remain unchanged, allowing Governor Carney to rule the roost the same as before. The CAD, when under duress this week, certainly outperformed other risk sensitive currencies. The BoJ’s intervening actions indirectly dragged the dollar higher and at the same time the loonie was reluctant to fall.

Carney’s comments last week were very transparent. He is concerned about sustainable growth and the market will have to be cautious in trying to push the currency higher at speed. Corporate buyers remain below as dealers focus on the risk reward of owning the loonie at these levels (1.0159)

Growth sensitive currencies are not going to hack it through this trading environment. The AUD fell against the yen and pared its outright advance versus the dollar after the referendum pledge from the Greeks and after the Fed refrained from taking additional steps to ease monetary policy. The chances of a disorderly default has raised the stakes that global growth is unsustainable. Earlier in the week the RBA cut rates (-25bp to +4.50%) and has moved to a more neutral policy stance. In Governor Stevens communiqué, the RBA concluded that a more neutral monetary policy stance would be appropriate to maintain growth now that inflation is likely to stay within its 2-3% target over the next two years. The RBA noted that while financial conditions have eased, overall conditions remain tighter than normal and the AUD is still at historically high levels.

The market is now estimating and pricing a neutral policy rate at around +4.0-4.5% and that the RBA is likely to cut by another-25bp in Q1 of next year. Futures dealers have priced in a market easing of about-88bp in total along the curve throughout this cycle. Currently that looks a tad rich, but hindsight is another matter. These cuts are likely to constrain and cap the Aussie. However, on the flip-side, better than expected data out of the US coupled with resilient growth from the Chinese economy will be supporting antipodean currencies. In this current environment, the market remains a better seller of the currency on rallies (1.0277).

Crude is lower in the O/N session ($91.80 down-0.71c). Oil prices rallied for the first time in four day’s yesterday after the ADP private employment report showed US companies adding more jobs than forecasted (+110k) and as the “mighty buck” found it difficult to maintain this weeks early gains. The job numbers certainly suggest that the US economy may be skating a recession. However, this morning session has pared some of that enthusiasm. The commodity has retreated on the back of Euro leaders threatening to hold back aid to Greece, calling into question sustainable regional growth. Last week’s inventory report is also aiding this morning’s bearish tone.

The EIA report showed that crude inventories rose +1.83m barrels to +339.4m, just above a projected build of +1.1m. Imports of the black stuff fell by-419k barrels per day to +8.92m. Not to be left behind, gas stocks rose by +1.36m to +206.2m barrels, compared to a-600k draw forecasted by the street. The average gas demand in the last four-weeks fell by an aggressive-4% compared with demand this time last year. Distillates (heating oil and diesel) fell by -3.58m to +206.2m barrels, compared with analyst’s forecast for a smaller -1.5m draw. The four-week average demand for distillates (+4.2m) was the highest in two-years. The refinery utilization rose by +0.5% to +85.3%. Analysts had been expected a smaller gain of around +0.1%. Finally, the stockpiles at the Cushing, Oklahoma (NYMEX deliveries), rose by +560k to +32m barrels.

Overall market sentiment near-term remains bearish, given precarious growth sentiment, projected EUR weakness through the fourth quarter of 2011 and slowly improving supply prospects has dealers better technical sellers of the commodity on rallies.

The market is back to wanting to own some of the “shiny metal” as a safe haven investment away from market turmoil. Gold earlier in the week had buckled under pressure from the dollar after Greece blindsided the financial markets by calling a referendum on a supposedly agreed financial plan. There is more of a risk aversion type dynamic developing because of all the complications around Europe. Any political or macro uncertainty is promoting risk aversion trading strategies. Investor’s interest in the yellow metal has continued to pick up all week, as reflected by the inflows of metal into ETF’s according to analysts.

Investors have been using the commodity as a safe-haven alternative to equities or FX. Individuals seem to want to insulate themselves from steeper price falls. The bullion is in its eleventh-year of a bull market and is up +20% this year.

Bigger picture, the commodity has also found support on concern that US monetary policy aimed at shoring up growth will eventually spur inflation. With global sentiment in the fragile category, gold remains the go to “safer-haven” prospect. If we include the demand for ‘physical’ gold from India, then both of these reasons should provide the strongest tangible support to want to own some on these pullbacks ($1,732 up+$3.10).

The Nikkei closed at 8,640 down-195. The DAX index in Europe was at 5,882 down-84; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,447 down-37. The early call for the open of key US indices is lower. The US 10-year eased-22bp yesterday (+1.98%) and is little changed in the O/N session.

Treasuries again have rallied, extending the longest winning streak in two-years, as renewed concern Greece will default and the European rescue plan will unravel boosted demand for a safer asset class. Aiding prices was the Fed leaving intact its promise to keep its target interest rate in a range of zero to +0.25% until 2013. Policy makers again forewarned investors of impending dangers. “There are significant downside risks to the economic outlook, including strains in global financial markets”. The Fed remains disappointed in the overall economy’s performance and that if anything, “downside risk still permeates the future forecasts on both the inflation and employment mandate”. The Fed it seems is just looking for the right time to pull the QE3 trigger.

Investors are becoming more bearish on the global economy after Europe suspended the next aid tranche to Greece until after next months national referendum. European leaders have warned Greece that it will give up all aid for the region if voters reject a bailout package agreed on last week. The global growth question is now front and center again!

Next week, the US treasury will auction +$72b in 3’s, 10’s and 30-year debt. This market still has a G20 and an NFP to overcome before they can call it a week.

October 12, 2011

EFSF Bond Insurance Plan Gaining Traction

With time running out to finalize the euro zone’s bailout fund, a plan by giant German insurer Allianz to turn the fund into a bond insurance program is gaining traction, the company’s top executives said Tuesday.

The proposal to turn the European Financial Stability Facility into a institution that protects investors against a portion of losses has garnered support from other major European insurers and banks in the region, Paul Achleitner, the proposal’s architect and a member of Allianz’s board of management said during an interview with the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires. After initial setbacks, the plan is now also being taken seriously by euro zone governments, Achleitner said.

With EUR450 billion in global insurance assets and EUR1.5 trillion in overall assets under management, Allianz is the continent’s largest investment institution.

“Don’t use the EFSF as a lender, use it as a bond insurer,” said Achleitner, who added that his plan would expand the impact of the EFSF, which currently has a lending capacity of 440 billion euros, to cover more than EUR3 trillion in bonds. That estimate assumes that 20% of the debt issued is insured and that it draws upon the full EUR780 billion that euro-zone governments have agreed to guarantee as backstop to the EFSF.

The WallStreetJournal

August 24, 2010

Fed split on on Boosting Economy

The Aug. 10 meeting of top Federal Reserve officials was among the most contentious in Ben Bernanke’s four-and-a-half year tenure as central bank chairman.

With the economic outlook unexpectedly darkening, the issue was a seemingly technical one: whether to alter the way the Fed manages its huge portfolio of securities.

But it had big implications: Doing so would plunge the Fed back into the markets and might be a prelude to a future easing of monetary policy, moves that divided the men and women atop the central bank.

At least seven of the 17 Fed officials gathered around the massive oval boardroom table, made of Honduran mahogany and granite, spoke against the proposal or expressed reservations. At the end of an extended debate, Mr. Bernanke settled the issue by pushing successfully to proceed with the move.

The debate over the decision to keep the Fed’s $2.05 trillion stock of mortgage debt and U.S. Treasury holdings from shrinking, described in interviews with several participants, set the stage for a more consequential discussion inside the Fed that remains very much alive: what to do next, if anything, about America’s stubbornly weak recovery and troublingly low inflation.

Mr. Bernanke gets an opportunity to elaborate on this crucial and unresolved question when he and other Fed officials gather Friday and Saturday, along with foreign counterparts and a gaggle of academic experts, at the Fed’s annual meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyo.

Wall Street Journal

July 27, 2010

Consumer Confidence Falls But Wall Street Goes to the Bulls

With the release of today’s consumer confidence report, there appears to be a growing “outlook gap” between institutional investors, and the average consumer. According to the Conference Board, a private research group that tracks consumer confidence, the US consumer confidence index fell to 50.4 in July, from a revised 54.3 index rating in June. This pessimistic outlook flies in the face of the actions of some of the country’s largest professional money managers who have been returning to equity stocks at a pace not seen in a year and a half.

This is apparent when you examine a breakdown of the positions held under management. Latest figures indicate that equities now account for more than 68 percent of the holdings of institutional investors, compared to just 63 percent in April.

This move to equities by money managers seems to be at complete odds with the sentiment of consumers who if anything, are feeling more pessimistic with each passing day. The reason for the discrepancy becomes clearer once you understand that consumer fears can be traced to one nagging concern – the slow pace of employment gains.

The employment level has stabilized somewhat from the beginning of the year when it officially topped 10 percent, but it is still in the range of 9.5 percent. The reality however, is that the actual unemployment rate is considerably higher. The number of workers who have exhausted their extended benefits continues to climb, and these individuals are no longer included in the unemployment count. The lack of clarity over whether the government will expand the extension of unemployment benefits also adds to the concern as more families are forced to get by solely on their savings.

For those fortunate enough to have maintained their employment through the recession and recovery, there is no guarantee that further layoffs will be avoided. Thus, even with full employment, consumers are watching their spending and trying to build reserves should they find themselves out of work in the near future.

Contrast this with recent actions on Wall Street where the bulls are said to be displacing the bears in ever-growing numbers. All this makes for interesting reading of course, and while the return of the bulls is a positive and welcome sign, it may be a bit premature to declare the crisis truly over. For instance, according to the Bank of America Corp., hedge funds – which historically are more aggressive with respect to holding short equity positions than other investor groups – have actually increased their bets on certain equities losing share price. Bank of America claims that hedge funds currently have, on average, only 27 percent more long positions, than short. Traditionally, the range is 35 to 40 percent more in favor of stock prices appreciating.

With so many conflicting signals, where should we turn for guidance? Bill Miller, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer with Legg Mason Capital Management provides his take on the situation. While not a ringing endorsement perhaps, Miller believes that stocks will be “a grinding process” that overall, “will continue to advance”.

Jobless Recovery

In addition, I would offer that the rate by which the economy advances, is tied directly to the rate at which jobs are added to the US economy. Until there is an appreciable gain in employment, consumer confidence will continue to lag, as will the overall pace of recovery. This fact is not lost on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke who continues to warn that job growth will remain weak well into next year. The idea that the US is experiencing a “jobless recovery” is an oft-repeated theme and is likely to dominate Fed policy for some time yet.

July 5, 2010

Technical Analysis Points to Market Downtrend Continuation

U.S. markets are closed today for the Fourth of July holiday, but gloom continues to reign on Wall Street and other major global markets. For the most part, technical analysts maintain their negative view, providing little optimism that stocks will reverse a two-month trend of losses by week’s end.

“Only about 30 percent of stocks are above their 200-day moving averages, so the vast majority are on a downtrend,” noted Shield & Co. analyst Frank Getz, in New York. “The market needs to prove itself with a rally on strong volume, and that’s going to be hard to get with the holiday and the bad news we’ve seen creating more pessimism”.

The June Non-Farm Payroll report last Friday showed that employment remains a primary concern. A total of 125,000 jobs were lost in June, representing the first month-to-month loss since last October. It was noted however, that approximately 225,000 part-time census jobs wrapped up last month, and this was the main reason negative job growth was recorded in June.

Nevertheless, total private employment gained by 83,000 positions. To date, 593,000 new jobs have been created in the private sector and unemployment fell slightly to 9.5 percent from 9.7 percent.

While unemployment remains much higher than June of 2007 when nearly 8 million more people were working than are currently employed, there are some who suggest that the market is due for a rebound. As we near the so-called corporate “earnings season”, John Butters, Director of U.S. Earnings for Thompson Reuters, said that there were 1.2 negative company pre-announcements for each positive one. Generally, the ratio is closer to 2 negative for each positive.

April 20, 2010

Days After SEC Announces Investigation, Goldman Earns Huge Profit

Just days after Friday’s bombshell announcement that the SEC was investigating Goldman Sachs for its derivatives sales, the Wall Street investment firm announced it earned $3.46 billion in profit for the first quarter of 2010. This is nearly double last year’s Q1 profit of $1.8 billion.

Source: BBC News

April 14, 2010

Obama to Focus on Financial Regulation as Brown Admits Mistakes

Filed under: OANDA News — Tags: , , , , , , , — admin @ 4:08 am

Today U.S. President Barrack Obama will meet with White House officials to discuss Wall Street Regulations. It is unknown how much political capital the U.S. leader has left after his victory on Health care.

Financial Reform has been a recurrent topic worldwide as earlier today the British PM Gordon Brown expressed an admission of guilt on behalf of the UK government regarding bank regulation.

The US$ is weaker in the O/N trading session. Currently it is lower against 10 of the 16 most actively traded currencies in a ‘whippy’ trading range. The USD$ is higher against the JPY -0.33% and lower against the EUR +0.31%, CHF +0.08%. The commodity currencies are a stronger this morning, CAD +0.33% and AUD +0.43%. The market should expect the AUD to remain better bid on any pull backs (0.9328).

Forex heatmap

Crude is higher in the O/N session ($84.70 up +65c). Oil snapped a 5 day losing streak as investors are flocking to the commodity looking for an inflation hedge. Inventories released later today will most likely point to an increase which will put downward pressure on the black stuff. For the moment a weaker dollar is keeping crude at current levels. Last week’s EIA report revealed that crude stocks rose by +2.9m barrels to +354.2m. The market had been expecting an increase of +2.4m. The surprising factor in the report was that gas inventories recorded a modest gain, unlike the previous couple of weeks. Stocks increased +313k barrels to +224.9m w/w vs. a forecasted decline of -1.85m barrels. Other reports showed that OPEC’s crude-oil production slipped from a 14-month high last month. Technical analysts have their eye on $90 by year end.

Commodities prices remain contained despite a weakened dollar. Gold rose for the first time in the last 3 days as its alternative investment status is restored after depreciation of the USD$ ($1,159). Platinum and palladium have outperformed Gold as jewelry demand and Chinese auto industry demand have picked up. Yuan revaluation is also expected to boost gold as its price would become more attractive to Chinese buyers of the metal.

The Nikkei closed at 11,204 up +43. The DAX index in Europe was at 6,2626 up +31; the FTSE (UK) currently is 5,791 up +30. The early call for the open of key US indices is higher.

Note: Dean will be away traveling for the next two week’s and will return to publication on April 29th.

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