Tuesday 4 March 2014

March 2014 Currency Report: Eurozone inflation eases pressure on ECB

Sterling has remained in favour over the last month although it has lost a little ground. GBP/EUR is still trading above 1.21 whilst levels in cable remain elevated above the 1.67 mark. The BoE Inflation Report was released and the upward revisions in UK growth triggered aggressive sterling buying as optimism about the prospect of a rate hike increased. This month developments in the UK economic climate will be watched
closely especially considering recent concern that growth is slowing.

It is the same story again this month with focus primarily on eurozone inflation and the next move from the ECB. Data last month was not particularly impressive, but GDP figures at least pointed towards a slightly brighter outlook for the euro area. There is still talk circulating about the possibility of negative positive rates and this will be a key discussion ahead of the policy announcement.

The Fed tapering debate continues to be at the forefront of things and now the discussion is surrounding whether the Fed will continue to pull back purchases at the pace of $10bn a month or pick up speed. Economic figures from the US haven’t been particularly impressive over the last month especially the last two payroll readings; another disappointing number this Friday could result in some severe dollar selling.

Pound still in favour, but for how long

Demand for sterling hasn’t faded just yet and some of this is due to orders in relation to the Verizon and Vodafone merger. Other factors underpinning the pounds resilience is the on-going speculation regarding the path of UK interest rates. Although the central bank have consistently reinforced the fact that rates will remain low for a while yet, expectations that policy could tighten in the first half of 2015 have kept the currency competitive. Forward guidance is now based on broader measures with the focus of the MPC on reducing slack and increasing productivity. Comments from monetary policy committee members such as BoE member Weale have encouraged speculation by claiming the bank rate could rise even sooner if wage growth rises more quickly. The revised UK GDP figure confirmed the initial reading of 0.7% q/q growth but what was particularly encouraging was the contribution from business investment and exports. The BoE have highlighted the need for a pickup in business investment to help spur productivity growth, and this figure suggests that the recovery is broadening. As a result we expect sterling bulls will be comforted by this. The pounds performance this month will be partly dependent on whether data releases can keep the optimism brewing. Recently there has been some concern that growth in the UK is slowing and although the second GDP estimate was in line with expectations, PMI data this week will need to impress in order to keep demand for sterling strong. Wage growth in particular will be scrutinized considering the implications this has for monetary policy.

GBP/EUR

Will the ECB act?

Eurozone inflation data was released last week and this has resulted in some repositioning in both the GBPEUR and EUR/ USD rate. A lot of the reasoning behind the euro’s vulnerability has been the uncertainty behind what is to come next from the ECB. Recent data has not been disastrous as GDP data showed the French economy finally returned to growth in the fourth quarter. PMI figures on the other hand were not as positive but what cannot be denied is the progress being made by the euro area.

The reading of 0.8% y/y inflation can be considered a relief if we take into account the potential effect of a dip lower to 0.6%y/y. This would have definitely increased the pressure on the ECB to act. At least for now, the central bank has more room to assess the medium to long term outlook for inflation before deploying their monetary tools. There is still a lack of clarity about what tools in particular the ECB will choose when and if the time comes to act against deflation. Talks of negative deposit rates resurfaced last month and only temporarily weakened the euro. This highlights the uncertainty surrounding the issue and we expect the market to listen out for further clues as to what weapon is the central bank’s first choice.

GBP/USD

Third time lucky?
The past two US nonfarm payroll readings have been disappointing, and adverse weather has been blamed for the poor results. It was hard enough to get the market to swallow that reasoning after the last figure was released, but another weather excuse for this month’s reading won’t wash too well with investors. Other economic figures haven’t been particularly impressive either, as some were also affected by the climate. This month the market needs to see some solid numbers, especially if the Fed is to continue to withdraw their asset purchases.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen testified before the Senate Banking Committee last week and this gave the dollar some support. Taking into account Yellen is considered a dove, her remarks regarding the direction for monetary policy suggested that the recent developments will not result in a halt in the Fed’s tapering plan. The key focus for the market this month will be the decision by the FOMC when they meet mid month. The
statement will provide further clues about the committee’s current stance and attitude toward the pace of tapering. We expect the FOMC to continue reducing purchases by $10bn for now.

GBP/EUR- 1.2170
GBP/USD- 1.66
EUR/USD- 1.37

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst