Tuesday 13 March 2012

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up: US economy goes from strength to strength

Private creditors finally participate in Greek debt swap

Greece managed to convince 85% of its private creditors to participate in the long-awaited debt-swap deal. This was converted into 95% participation when the collective action clauses were triggered to force some creditors to sign up. The deal represents the biggest sovereign debt restructuring in history.

The euro suffered from a classic case of ‘buy the rumour, sell the fact’ after the debt swap deal was agreed. The International Swaps and Derivatives Association has classified the Greek debt exchange as a ‘credit event,’ in which $3bn worth of credit default swaps are triggered. This places plenty of financial uncertainty back on the table, though the banking system is better placed to deal with in light of the ECB’s liquidity measures (3-year LTRO’s).

It is fair to say that the market is certain that this debt-swap is not the last time we’ll see Greece occupying the headlines this year. Many players expect Greece to be back in bailout territory before the end of 2012, which explains the rather muted response to the latest development. With regard to the second Greek bailout, Eurogroup head Juncker has indicated that it will be signed off this week and should include a significant IMF contribution.

US jobs figures impress once again and the dollar benefits

227 thousand jobs were added to the US non-farm payrolls in February, another excellent showing that highlights the pace of growth that is accumulating in the world’s largest economy.

The market will also have been impressed to see February’s growth in the US non-manufacturing sector pick up to its fastest pace in almost a year. In a recent speech, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke seemed to respond to the upturn in US growth by omitting reference to further US quantitative easing, to which the US dollar has responded positively.

The week ahead brings a statement from US Federal Reserve (Tuesday evening). If further optimism surrounding the US economy is revealed (which seems likely) then sentiment towards the USD should remain positive. This afternoon should bring some strong US retail sales figures to support this.

The relationship between the US dollar and US economic data is an unpredictable one but at present the two are demonstrating a positive correlation. Later on in the week, we will see some monthly consumer sentiment and manufacturing figures, all of which are also expected to be strong.

Sterling is trading just below €1.1950. Anything below €1.19, or above 84p, is looking a little too rich for the euro, bearing in mind that economic fundamentals seem to be turning the corner in the UK, whilst the eurozone economy continues to deteriorate. We are still having to patient for the GBP/EUR to kick on past €1.20 but in the longer-term we are sticking to this forecast.

Sterling has suffered a major downside move against the US dollar in the past fortnight, falling from just below $1.60 to the current level just below $1.57. We continue to look for lower levels as the US economy streaks ahead and as other safe-haven assets such as the Japanese yen lose their appeal.

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR 1.20
GBP / USD 1.56
EUR / USD 1.30

GBP / AUD 1.4950

Richard Driver

Currency Analyst for Caxton FX