Friday 1 June 2012

Sterling/Euro June Report


Sterling has continued to rally against the euro in recent weeks, as conditions in the eurozone go from bad to worse. Uncertainty, as ever, is the buzz word. The pro-bailout New Democracy Party has edged ahead in the Greek opinion polls in the past week or so, which has lifted market hopes that the country can receive the additional funding it needs and remain ‘safely’ within the eurozone.  But there is plenty more debate to be had in Greece and few will be truly confident of a positive result ahead of the fresh elections on June 17th.

The chances of a messy ending to the Greek saga remain very high. Even if a pro-austerity, pro-bailout coalition does emerge out of this month’s elections, they will still have to find a way to deliver the major reforms and deficit reduction that the country’s €130bn bailout agreement requires. The EU Commission reminded Greece earlier this week that its bailout payments remain highly contingent but whoever wins this month’s elections, you can expect some desperate efforts to have the bailout terms relaxed to a significant degree.

Greek concerns, though likely to return to the fore as the elections draw closer, have been put on the back burner for the time-being. True to form, another struggling eurozone nation has stepped up to fill the void – Spain, or more specifically, Spain’s banking sector.  Bankia, Spain’s fourth-largest bank, requires €19bn worth of recapitalisation and it is becoming more and more apparent that Spain will need help to shore up its banking sector. The issue is having a significant impact on Spain’s government borrowing costs, with 10-year bond yields climbing dangerously towards the unsustainable 7.0% level. As ever with this debt crisis, market fears build so much they become a self-fulfilling prophecy. In short, Spain is in very serious trouble and may have to seek external help, which is no small issue given it is the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy and will inevitably turn the market’s gaze towards the third-largest – Italy.

The UK economy is looking particularly downbeat at present, having been hit with the confirmation that it is firmly in double-dip recession territory. Unsurprisingly, consumer confidence has taken a sharp downturn. April’s growth data from the services and manufacturing sectors was poor and a gauge of UK retail sales showed the worst figure in almost four years. The last update from the UK labour market was a little more encouraging but we will need to see more than one good month before hoping for sustained improvements.

Amid all of this bad domestic economic news, as well as the grave threats posed by the eurozone debt crisis, it might be assumed that more quantitative easing is bound to be introduced by the Bank of England in order to drag the UK out of recession. Certainly the IMF has made its views known on the issue, encouraging the BoE to act soon to safeguard the UK economy.

However, the noises out of the MPC have not suggested that such a move is imminent, despite the recent sharp decline UK inflation from 3.5% to 3.0%. A key reason for this is that the BoE sees UK inflation in the medium term as equally likely to exceed its 2.0% target as undershoot it.  In addition, Spencer Dale has recently stressed the argument that the recent quantitative easing doses are still feeding through to provide stimulus and that a further round is not appropriate at present. This position is supported by the recent improvement in UK money growth.

With only one MPC policymaker voting in favour of QE at the MPC’s May meeting, in the form of David Miles, there is plenty of dovish recruitment to be done in the coming months if the BoE is to pull the trigger again on further monetary easing. Sterling seems safe in this regard for June at least, though eurozone risks could feasibly escalate sufficiently to prompt BoE action in July or August.  

So, despite the UK economy sitting uncomfortably in a double-dip recession and facing a prolonged period of period of stagnant growth and ultra-low interest rates, sterling looks free to continue taking advantage of an increasingly euro-negative environment. Sterling/Euro climbed a further two cents in May, leaving this pair with gains over 4.0% in the past two months. We envisage further gains for the relative safe-haven pound in June, with the Greek elections and rising Spanish bond yields providing plenty of motivation to exit the euro.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX

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