Monday 25 March 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Outlook: Things looking up for GBP


Cyprus does what’s necessary but the market remains wary
Cyprus has agreed a deal with the Troika which will see them receive urgently needed loans amounting to €10bn. Though the measures that are part of the deal are likely to leave the country in a prolonged economic depression, disaster has been avoided as far as the wider implications of a euro-exit are concerned. Eurozone-wide contagion appears to have been avoided, for now at least.

The country’s second largest bank, Laiki Bank, will be wound down, with its ‘good assets’ becoming part of the Bank of Cyprus. Large depositors are likely to be hit and hit hard, possibly facing losses as high as 40% - much to Russia’s chagrin. In response, Russian PM Medvedev has bitterly questioned the role that the EUR is to play in Russia’s currency reserves, though we don’t attribute much substance to this.

The deal certainly hasn’t triggered a relief rally for the euro, quite the opposite in fact. Meanwhile, data from the eurozone has been poor again in the past week. The French, German and overall eurozone PMI updates for March made for a sea of red. The recession in the region is deepening and it is a concern to see German manufacturing dipping back into contraction territory. Once again, this really puts the UK’s weak figures into some perspective; we are not the only ones struggling. Unsurprisingly, the latest German business sentiment update has also been hit by events in Cyprus.

MPC minutes trigger some sterling positivity
Last week’s minutes blew the dust of some genuine sterling demand, which was unexpected given the state of UK economic updates over the course of February. Mervyn King was unable to add to the 3-member faction of doves with the MPC, while perhaps even more significantly the minutes noted a desire to avoid “an unwarranted depreciation in the pound.” Added to this, the UK retail sales figure for February was excellent, revealing 2.1% growth, which more than made up for January’s snow-hit start to the year.

The Fed’s QE3 outlook remains unclear

We know that the US recovery is taking decent shape and we know that there is a substantial body of opinion within the Fed that wants to begin winding QE3 down. However, we also know that Bernanke remains cautious and needs to see further substantial improvements in the US labour market. Nonetheless, Bernanke does appear to be setting the stage for an eventual reduction in the pace of Fed asset-purchases, which should be a source of dollar-strength by the summer.

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.1875
GBP / USD
1.5200
EUR / USD
1.28
GBP / AUD
1.45


The pound is looking a little firmer across the board in light of positive domestic developments and ongoing tensions in the eurozone. Against the USD, we now see the recent dip below $1.49 as a temporary base from which it will continue mounting a recovery. Losses in the EUR/USD pair are likely to make it slow and limited progress on the upside, but we do expect GBP/USD to see levels closer to $1.55 in the coming weeks. The picture for GBP/EUR is also looking a little brighter, with a test of February’s highs above €1.18 a very likely development in the near-term.


Richard Driver
Currency Analyst 
CaxtonFX


Thursday 21 March 2013

Bumper UK retail sales data provides some hope for sterling


Data this morning revealed that UK retail sales grew by a whopping 2.1% in February, which is an excellent result, particularly given the dire economic figures that have surfaced over Q1. This is the biggest monthly increase in three full years. Clearly plenty of this can be attributed to a natural recovery from a fairly empty high street in January as a result of the snowy weather. However, the strong showing can’t be entirely attributed to a bounce back and driving the growth in particular was strong demand for computer tablets, sporting goods and jewellery.

We can expect an overall improvement in UK retail sales over Q1 as a whole, which should enable the UK to avoid the dreaded triple-dip recession when the GDP data is released on April 25. In turn, this may well ensure that Mervyn King, Paul Fisher and David Miles remain the three doves voting in favour of QE at next month’s MPC meeting. That certainly doesn’t mean more won’t be convinced by May, which is an important Inflation Report month.

Yesterday’s UK Annual Budget provided a little bit of help for UK households in the form of a scrapped increase in fuel duty. However, real wages are still on a downtrend and UK inflation has also ticked higher lately, so we can be pretty confident that this morning’s UK retail sales won’t be replicated any time soon. Still though, good news is good news and sterling has benefited from it today. GBP/EUR is trading at €1.1750, only marginally lower than its highest level since Feb 10. Against the US dollar, sterling is trading close to the top of its one-month trading range, having just edged half a cent lower from $1.52.  

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Tuesday 19 March 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Analysis: Cyprus hits the markets


Cyprus uncertainty weighs on the market
The weekend headlines out of Cyprus have given the market plenty to consider after what has been an increasingly troublesome few weeks for the single currency. The issue of a Cyprus’ bailout needs is not a new one but what took the markets by surprise is the fact that the plan includes proposals for savings in Cypriot bank accounts to be taxed by as much as 9.9%. Equities knee-jerked lower and the euro also came under pressure, while tensions have understandably increased in the bond markets.

A parliamentary vote on the proposals has been delayed until today at 16:00 GMT. We are likely to see the tax proposals – 6.75% on deposits up to €100k and 9.9% on €100k and above – diluted to a significant degree, with greater emphasis on safeguarding less wealthy depositors. The latest reports suggest deposits up to €20k will be untouched. Whether or not Cypriot MPs will vote in favour of whatever plan emerges is highly uncertain, given President Anastasiades does not enjoy the luxury of a parliamentary majority.

The ECB has been quick to reassure us that Cyprus represents a special case and this does not mean, for instance, Italian and Spanish depositors face similar taxations risks. For those with the luxury of being able to safeguard themselves by parking their funds elsewhere – in a German account, for example- capital flight would seem an intelligent option. However, a widespread bank-run in larger nations would not be our central scenario.

As usual there are more questions than answers but the one thing you can take away from developments in Cyprus, that confidence in the euro and more specifically the banking union will have been undermined.

Good chance of another MPC vote in favour of QE
We know that Mervyn King failed to convince the two extra voters he needed for a pro-QE decision at the MPC’s monthly meeting a fortnight ago. However, what we don’t know is whether he managed to take the vote to a 5-4 split. We expect Wednesday’s MPC meeting minutes to reveal that he did, with Paul Fisher looking the most likely candidate to have drifted into the dovish camp. If this is true and the MPC has edged that little bit closer towards QE, then expect sterling to come under some pressure. Today’s UK inflation figure came in higher at 2.8% but we doubt this will deter the MPC from topping up its QE operations.

George Osborne’s Annual Budget announcement could also take the wind out of sterling’s sails tomorrow. Growth expectations are likely to be downgraded and based on his track record, you would have to be pessimistic on the probability of the Chancellor announcing the convincing growth-boosting measures that the UK economy is crying out for. The Budget will likely serve as an unwelcome reminder of the awful state of UK growth and sterling may struggle as a result.

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.16
GBP / USD
1.4950
EUR / USD
1.29
GBP / AUD
1.4450


The pound has been given a helping hand against the euro, reaching a five-week high of €1.17, though it trades a quarter of a cent lower than this now. We suspect this pair will give back some of this latest rally with the MPC minutes and Annual Budget in mind, though this pair’s lows around €1.1350 look safe for the time being. Much depends on headlines out of Cyprus in the very short-term. Against the US dollar, sterling is in slightly better shape up at $1.51. However, we remain sceptical as to the scope for further sterling gains, given the lack of any real sterling-positive news. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Monday 11 March 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Round-Up: USD flying high


No QE from the BoE…yet
In a week packed with central bank announcements, the Bank of England’s MPC decided against topping up its quantitative easing operations. Mervyn King remained in the minority then, which was a surprise in itself and suggests his influence is waning ahead of his summer exit. Sterling only benefited from a brief spell of relief, which tells you all you need to know about how confident most market players are that the BoE will pull the trigger on QE at some point in the coming months.

February’s UK PMI growth figures were bailed out by a better-than-expected services sector figure, which probably played a significant part in convincing the majority of MPC members to keep their powder dry with respect to their QE votes. Still, as will likely be shown by tomorrow’s UK GDP estimate, it remains touch and go as to whether the UK triple-dip recession will be avoided. Tomorrow’s UK manufacturing and industrial production figures also look unlikely to kick-start sterling demand, with only very meager growth expected from the two sectors in January.

We are confident the MPC will be forced into action in the next few months as far as QE is concerned, though having paused in March, they may be convinced to wait until May, by which time they will have confirmation of the UK’s Q1 GDP figure. UK trade balance data could also be disappointing tomorrow morning, with producers reporting a lack of new export orders, despite the plummeting value of the pound. 

Draghi not so dovish despite weak eurozone output
We continue to see a disparity between the hard data that is coming out of the eurozone – watch out for Wednesday’s eurozone industrial production figure, which will likely show no growth – and the improving eurozone confidence levels. Still, Draghi sounded in confident mood in his monthly press conference last Thursday. He was hopeful that the eurozone recession would stabilize in the first half this year and perhaps even begin a recovery later on in the year.

Despite events in Italy, sentiment towards the euro is actually holding up pretty well at present then, which leads us to believe there is unfinished business with GBP/EUR’s low down towards €1.1350. We could well see this level revisited in the sessions ahead, though a major push below this still looks a stretch.

US unemployment data pushes the USD higher still
The greenback is loving life thanks to further domestic economic improvements. The US unemployment rate dropped to 7.7% and we saw a major hike in news jobs in February. The US recovery is far from “out of the woods” territory but things are definitely looking up and the greenback is benefiting as a result.  2013 is shaping up to be a bumper year for the USD.

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.1350
GBP / USD
1.4770
EUR / USD
1.3000
GBP / AUD
1.4500


We envisage further weakness in the GBP/USD pair. Tomorrow’s slew of UK data, which looks likely to disappoint, could see sterling stoop to areas close to $1.4770. Meanwhile, EUR/USD is still threatening to move below the $1.30 level. GBP/EUR is also looking vulnerable, with €1.1344 a potential target in the coming sessions.

Monday 4 March 2013

March 2013 Currency Report: Italy highlights euro vulnerabilities


 It was a case of more of the same for the pound in February; it posted fresh multi-month and multi-year lows against a host of currencies. Domestic growth data has consistently disappointed and as a result there has been a significant shift in rhetoric from the Bank of England, which is sounding more dovish than ever. The Monetary Policy Committee looks highly likely to set aside concerns over the UK’s higher inflation outlook and focus once again on kick-starting the recovery with further quantitative easing, perhaps as soon as this month. With UK data unlikely to inspire much confidence in the weeks ahead and Moody’s having finally downgraded the UK’s AAA credit rating, there is little domestic news that seems likely to come to GBP’s support. However, to an extent all the bad news is out in the open as far as sterling is concerned, which really isn’t the case with other currencies like the euro.

As seen in the aftermath of the recent worrying Italian election result, sterling will still benefit from rising demand amid periods of eurozone panic. This really is likely to prove the key if sterling is to turn its fortunes around because when market sentiment is stable and risk appetite is in play, GBP looks in poor shape. Given recent developments, it won’t come as much of a surprise that Italy is likely to be the focal point of eurozone tensions in the coming weeks and months.

We are some way from knowing whether an Italian coalition government can be formed, or whether a fresh election will have to be called. Neither scenario is likely to produce a very convincing end-result in terms of maintaining Italy’s commitment to economic reform, so we could well be entering a fairly lengthy period of market uncertainty. This should at halt GBP/EUR’s decline and could yet instil sufficient euro-negativity to trigger a sustained bounce.

GBP/EUR

GBP/EUR finally stops the rot

The pound’s dire start to 2013 continued in February, amid negative economic news, rating agency action and ultra-dovish commentary from our friends in the Monetary Policy Committee. Taking a look at the economic data to begin with, the UK PMI figures have far from eased concerns. A weak set of January figures was put down largely to the impact of the snowy weather. However, February’s manufacturing and construction updates were shockingly poor and hopes are not high for tomorrow morning’s services figure.
Moody’s finally wielded its axe in the direction of the UK’s AAA credit rating, the result of which was a two cent knee-jerk lower (though this was quickly recovered). We shouldn’t have to wait too long (perhaps a couple of months or so) before Fitch and S&P have followed suit but this doesn’t pose much of a threat to sterling in our view. The first move was always likely to be the most damaging and even this didn’t produce a sustained sell-off – the news will now be fully priced in. George Osborne seems set to stick to his guns with respect to austerity, though more details will emerge in this regard when he delivers his March 20th Spring Budget.

More QE likely from MPC

On the monetary policy front, we have an extremely interesting week ahead. The MPC meets on Thursday and we are now expecting a majority decision in favour of quantitative easing. The shift in dovish rhetoric has been pretty drastic in recent weeks. First of all and significantly, last month’s MPC meeting minutes revealed that Mervyn King and Paul Fisher voted in favour of more QE in addition to the previously lone dove David Miles. In his ten years in office as Governor of the Bank of England, only four times has King been in the minority and each time he has found himself in the majority soon after, such is his influence. We expect the same to be true this time.

Last month’s UK inflation report downgraded economic growth prospects and recent data has been surprisingly weak, which suggests now is the time for emergency action. In addition, there has been plenty of rhetoric with respect to a more flexible approach to UK inflation. In other words, the MPC has made its peace with the fact that UK inflation will be well above target for the next three years but boosting UK growth is more important. This means more QE. If the MPC do not decide in favour of QE this week, we’d be surprised if we had to wait beyond May.

Italian elections shake the markets

From the eurozone, Italy has finally given the market reason to pause and question whether the euro really should be the ‘hot pick’ that it has represented over the past six months. A messy election result has produced more questions than answers as to what is next in terms of Italian government. Bersani’s Democratic Party failed to secure a parliamentary majority with Berlusconi’s centre-right coalition making a late surge into second place. Meanwhile, comedian-turned-politician Grillo’s anti-austerity 5 Star Movement came in third, which shows what Italy thought of Monti’s pro-austerity tenure.

Both Berlusconi and Grillo achieved blocking minorities in the Senate. Bersani has rejected the most obvious path of a grand coalition between his party and Berlusconi’s, while Grillo has ruled out offering Bersani his support. Bersani seems intent on forming a government on his own but the chances of another election later on this year look very high indeed now. The bottom line is that Italian efforts towards economic reform and debt-reduction will likely fall back, which should see pressure in the bond markets rise in the months ahead.

On the data front, actual eurozone growth indicators have failed to track improvements in confidence figures. Sentiment gauges out of Germany have been very encouraging indeed but manufacturing and services growth data from the powerhouse economy were disappointing in February, as they were from France and the eurozone as a whole. As shown by this week’s poor eurozone consumer confidence figure, concerns over Italy are likely to weigh for some time now. On top of these weak Q1 figures, data confirmed that almost all eurozone nations contracted at a sharper rate than expected in Q4 2012 – Germany included. Eurozone growth will clearly remain a concern for the European Central Bank but we do not expect an interest rate cut for at least the next few months, though the risks of a cut this year are rising with every month of economic contraction.

There remains a host of other eurozone concerns, from Cyprus’ bailout needs to Portugal’s demands for a renegotiation of its bailout terms, and plenty more besides. Regardless, sterling is seeing a diminished share of the safe-haven flows. Sentiment towards the UK economy remains extremely and unsurprisingly weak, which means we cannot discount another test of February’s lows around €1.1350 in the short-term. On balance, we would expect those lows to hold firm and for this pair to avoid any further major declines in the coming month. In fact, another visit to the €1.1835 high we saw a month ago is still a very realistic target once the dust has settled on this week’s weak UK growth figures and probable QE top-up.

GBP/USD

Greenback still on the up

This pair’s February and year-to-date charts are very ugly indeed as far as sterling sellers are concerned. Growth data has been very disappointing and we cannot discount a triple-dip recession. Moody’s downgraded the UK’s triple-A credit rating and the MPC has been particularly dovish, to which the market has responded by pricing in a pro-QE decision this Thursday.

Meanwhile, the US dollar has been very dominant indeed right across the board, not just against the pound. Firstly, there was positive economic news in the form an upward revision to the initial US GDP figure for Q4, which indicated a contraction. Some meagre growth has now been reported from a rather stagnant end to 2012, which was dominated by concerns over the US fiscal cliff. Data from the US in February remained on an uptrend by and large; consumer sentiment, housing data and manufacturing growth provided some highlights. There are well-placed hopes for a firm rebound in Q1.

Bernanke remains dovish on QE3

What the market is perpetually concerned with is what implications this firmer data has on the future of the Fed’s QE3 programme. Judging by Bernanke’s recent semi-annual testimony before the US House of Representatives, a move to taper QE3 off is not imminent. However, there remains significant support from within the Fed to do so and we expect that as the US recovery continues and uncertainty surrounding US fiscal policy fades, QE3 can begin to be wound down in the second half of this year. If so, this will be very good news for the dollar.

A reversal of the EUR/USD pair’s Q4 2012 rally has been a major weight on the GBP/USD, as was always likely. We expect the euro to lose further ground below $1.30 against the greenback, which should contribute to further pressure on GBP/USD in the coming weeks. There is scope for a bounce back up to the $1.5150 area but really we are expecting to see a sustained move below the $1.50 benchmark in the next few weeks. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst 
Caxton FX