Showing posts with label AUD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AUD. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 November 2013

RBA Governor Stevens takes the first steps in weakening the Aussie


After months of complaining about an “uncomfortably” high Australian dollar, RBA Governor Stevens has finally said enough to ease Aussie momentum.

The RBA’s latest monetary policy minutes, revealed that although the effects of the last rate cut are still filtering through the economy, the committee haven’t closed the door on lowering rates further. The central bank has raised the issue of a persistently strong Aussie and the potential problems this can cause for the recovery. Consequently, there have been several attempts to talk down the AUD, but this has failed to make any lasting impact. The prospect of looser monetary policy has not shaken the markets enough to encourage significant Aussie weakness.

This morning, RBA Governor Stevens claimed that he is ‘open minded on intervention to lower AUD’ and this comment got the ball rolling. GBPAUD opened at 1.7253 and has jumped over two cents to 1.7470 during trading today. The fact that Governor Stevens is ‘open’ to intervention suggests the RBA are serious about the currency’s strength, and could act to weaken the Australian dollar if need be.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst

Friday, 20 September 2013

Why the Reserve Bank of Australia are in denial


Over the past two RBA monetary policy meetings, the minutes released have revealed a somewhat positive outlook on the housing market. The minutes for the September 3rd meeting reiterated the view that the housing sector has continued to show signs of development. It also outlined that low interest rates have contributed to the improvement in the housing sector.

What is worrying here is the fact that the central bank has failed to identify how this could contribute to another boom-bust housing cycle. Australian homes are already regarded as overvalued, and as the mining boom cools, it is easy for the central bank to become more reliant on the housing sector as a source of growth. The recent uptrend in housing figures from Australia has confirmed this, and with household debt currently at 150% of GDP the Australian housing market is definitely something to monitor.

Even the Aussie’s neighbours have taken steps. The central bank of New Zealand have already acknowledged the potential risk to their economy and have put in place macro prudential policies, such as loan to value ratio restrictions, in order to curb housing related credit growth and price pressure. RBNZ Governor Wheeler outlined that this would help better position banks in the event of shocks, limiting damage to the housing sector and the economy.

The chart below shows the world’s most overvalued economies, with Australia not too far behind New Zealand.
Source: OECD

Chart 2 allows us to analyse the effects of the base rate against house prices more closely. From this we can see that when interest rates were higher, house prices rose more steadily, such as the period from 2005 through to March 2008. As the global crisis took hold in 2008 house prices plummeted and rates were lowered in order to support the economy. The lower rate then fuelled a sharp acceleration in house prices which tumbled shortly after, highlighting the significance of lower interest rates to house prices. The problem is the RBA fails to recognise that the effects of record low interest rates are already being seen. If the central bank needs to cut rates further to support economic growth, we could potentially see the housing market spiral out of control. In addition, the RBA has stated that a weaker Aussie will help the recovery, but a weak Aussie, coupled with high household debt that is likely to increase if rates are cut further, can easily create turmoil in the housing market and vulnerability to shocks.





RBA Asst Gov Malcolm Edey has said we should not rush into a bubble analogy, but surely recognition and consideration of the potential longer-term effects, of an already overvalued housing market is not too much to ask? Especially considering we have witnessed the repercussions when such signals are ignored.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX 

Friday, 9 November 2012

Reserve Bank of Australia cuts growth prospects


The news as far as the aussie dollar has been concerned this week has been remarkably positive. We have to hold our hands up and say that we were expecting the RBA to cut its 3.25% interest rate again at its meeting this week, though we did warn that it was an incredibly close call. On top of this, data revealed that 10.7 thousand jobs were added to the Australian labour market, which was away ahead of expectation. The aussie unemployment rate also unexpectedly remained 5.4%.

What followed all this was last night’s RBA monetary policy statement. In it, the RBA warned that the aussie mining boom will peak earlier and at a lower level than has previously been thought. It was previously thought that the mining boom would peak at 9.0% of GDP, expectations are that it will now peak at 8.0%. The central bank also complained further about the strength of the Australian dollar (change the record!)and proceeded to downgrade aussie GDP projections for this year from around 3.00% to around 2.75%, though admittedly we might have expected this downgrade to be more drastic.

The RBA stated that the current interest rate is appropriate and that past rate cuts are still filtering through and benefiting the Australian economy. The statement also sounded confident that the Chinese economy has stabilised, anticipating a gradual recovery in growth from here.

We suspect that Governor Stevens may be getting ahead of himself with respect to Chinese growth and Australian growth. While this week’s strong aussie jobs data may see the RBA delay a rate cut in December, we’d be surprised if we had to wait past January for another cut. 

Richard Driver,
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

What can we take from the RBA minutes?


Last night’s Reserve Bank of Australia minutes were unsurprisingly dovish given the downturn in Chinese and global growth over the past few weeks and months. The minutes explained the key drivers behind the central bank’s decision to cut interest rates at its meeting earlier this month. As well as slower growth in Asia, lower commodity prices and weaker domestic growth also topped the RBA’s list of concerns. The bank is now envisaging a peak in resource investment, sooner and lower than initially estimated.

An ongoing decline in coal coking prices is alarming the RBA and there are reports of early closures of older mines and low take-up of new resource projects. The mining boom has been a huge driver of Australian growth in recent years and these tell-tale signs of decline are bad news for the economy and the AUD as a result. Weakening demand from the eurozone is clearly taking its toll on Chinese growth and the knock-on effect is weaker demand for Australian commodities.

The RBA is also very concerned about the aussie labour market. We have had a decent Australian employment update this month but the unemployment rate has climbed up to two-year high of 5.4% and the central bank is anticipating a deterioration in the coming months, in no small more part due to projected mining sector weakness. The mining sector has masked underlying weakness in the labour market for a while now, the truth should now emerge. 

Australian Treasurer Swan indicated last month concerns over a fall in Australian tax receipts, while the Government is committed to returning to a budget surplus. The difference is being made up in budget cuts, which will also weigh on Australian growth in the coming months.

Amid all these downside risks to Australian growth and the noticeably dovish tone in these latest RBA minutes, we are expecting another interest rate cut at the RBA’s next meeting in November. October 24 brings a key quarterly Australian inflation figure but an upside surprise does seem very unlikely and the path should be clear for another rate cut. This leaves plenty of scope for AUD-weakness in the coming weeks and months. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst 
Caxton FX

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

RBA signals interest rate cuts in October


The Reserve Bank of Australia released the minutes from its September meeting last night and the Australian dollar has since weakened. This is because the minutes were probably the most dovish we have seen from the RBA in six months, suggesting a cut to its 3.50% interest rate could be just around the corner. To say the RBA has signaled a move may be an overstatement but the we are hearing the hints loud and clear.
The minutes included the assertion that "the current assessment of the inflation outlook continued to provide scope to adjust policy in response to any significant deterioration in the outlook for growth." This is a telling statement.
Australian data has not overall been particularly positive of late but it is hardly reason for the RBA to panic. Indeed, the RBA appears to be confident that domestic growth is on the right path. Investment looks to be positive for the rest of the year, consumer confidence is up and the unemployment picture is relatively stable, as shown by the recent fall to 5.1%.
Rather, evidence of renewed weakness in the Chinese economy is a major driver. Linked to this is the second issue on the RBA’s mind, which is declining commodity prices, in particular iron ore and coal prices. It’s not just China that the RBA is concerned with either; data from the eurozone and the US is also pointing to a further global slowdown.
So the bank has changed from a neutral tone to an easing bias. The comments reflect those within the RBA’s March meeting, which was followed by a 0.50% interest rate cut in April. We don’t expect a 0.50% cut in October, but we do expect a 0.25% cut, and then another in November or December. The Fed and the ECB’s recent monetary policy decisions will surely aid global growth eventually but this will take time to feed through and results won’t come soon enough for the RBA.

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Monday, 3 September 2012

Aussie dollar is struggling but tonight’s RBA should spare it another blow tonight


The AUD has suffered a 5.0% drop against the pound in the past month, as well as a 3.6% drop against a broadly weak US dollar. Weak Chinese data added to the negative regional tone evident in the Asian markets at present. The Chinese manufacturing sector contracted in August for the first time since November 2011 and by more than was expected. All is not well with Australia’s key export partner and data has been poor on the domestic front also. Data this week has revealed that Australian retail sales contracted by an alarming 0.8% in July. Understandably, the aussie dollar has fallen further out of favour as a result.

A key factor which is adding pressure to the AUD is the fact that iron ore prices have plummeted of late, in line with the deteriorating growth and demand outlooks for China. Interestingly, the Reserve Bank of Australia’s McKibbin has commented recently that “things have changed a lot in the last month…I now have further downside risks in my forecasts for interest rates.”

So what is the Reserve Bank of Australia going decide at its monthly meeting tonight? Well, ahead of an Australian GDP figure which is likely to indicate growth of around 0.9% during the second quarter, it is hardly panic stations. This is very backward-looking data though and the truth is that economic conditions in Australia have really declined in the third quarter. Nonetheless, very few will be expecting the Reserve Bank of Australia to cut its 3.50% interest rate tonight, and we are not among them.

It seems quite clear that the central bank is very much in ‘wait and see’ mode. RBA Governor Stevens recently emphasised that is “too early…to tell how much difference the sequence of decisions to lower interest rates has made to the economy." The RBA will be concerned with the Australian economy’s recent underperformance but not overly surprised, as downside risks to near-term growth were noted in August. Another rate cut is wholly possible, if not probable in Q4 (which could be brought forward if the Eurozone crisis drastically deteriorates), but the RBA will remain on hold for tonight. However, this is unlikely to provide the AUD with much relief.
Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Friday, 20 July 2012

The aussie dollar is flying high but where does it go from here?

Australian dollar has gained by over 6.5% over the pound in the past two months, strengthened by nearly 7.5% against the USD in the past six weeks, and hit fresh record highs against the euro only this afternoon. The Reserve Bank of Australia cut its interest rate to 3.50% in early June and its key trading partner China continues to slowdown, so what is driving this latest rally in the aussie dollar?

One major factor fuelling the current positivity towards the AUD is the development that the German central bank, the Bundesbank, is set expand its portfolio of Australian assets. The eurozone crisis has caused central banks all over the world to review their reserve allocations and among others who are set to invest in Australian assets is the Czech central bank. This factor has completely overshadowed any dampening effects you might have expected as a result of the collapse of risk appetite that saw many higher-yielding currencies and equities decline since early May.

In addition, Australian economic data has in general held up remarkably well given the decline being seen in the Chinese economy (Chinese GDP has slowed down from a pace of 9.5% to 7.6% in the past year). Recent data revealed that Australian GDP expanded by an impressive 1.3% in Q1 of this year, well up from Q4 2011’s figure of 0.6%. This domestic economic strength gave the Reserve Bank of Australia the confidence not to cut its interest rate again in July.

However, we are seeing considerable risks of a rate cut in August as this domestic performance looks unlikely to persist. Recent Australian data has taken a downturn, particularly in terms of the domestic labour market. As well as July’s weak labour numbers, forward-looking indicators point to further softness.

Importantly, data revealed a sharp drop in Chinese imports from Australia in June and weekly New South Wales coal shipments have also fallen off this month. Equally, Chinese steel production has declined and its iron ore inventories have climbed, suggesting waning demand for aussie exports in the months ahead. As well as further deterioration in Chinese growth, we take a gloomy view as to the outlook for global growth and financial conditions, driven not least by eurozone risks. If a rate cut doesn’t come in August, we would be very surprised if it didn’t come in September.

For these domestic and international reasons, we see the AUD rally halting soon. AUD/USD should fail to sustain any breach of 1.05 and we should see this rate head back down toward and below parity in the coming months. In terms of GBP/AUD, downside scope is looking increasingly limited. The aussie is deep in overbought territory and we expect 1.55 will be seen once again before long. In addition, when the aussie dollar does endure its downward correction, it could well be quite a brutal move.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Greek coalition talks collapse and prospect of new elections hurts euro

Sterling remains flavor of the month
Sterling has climbed by a further three cents against the euro in the past fortnight. Sterling’s progress against commodity currencies such as the AUD, NZD, CAD and ZAR has been ever more impressive in the past few months. Sterling has climbed by over 10% against the ZAR and NZD since mid-Feb, while it has advanced against the ZAR by the same margin since mid-March.

Sterling’s safe-haven status is behind its demand and this is not something we see disappearing any time soon. Also helping the pound was last week’s MPC vote against further quantitative easing. Whilst there will be some nerves surrounding the voting pattern (to be revealed by the MPC minutes next week), stubbornly high inflation seems to be of greater concern to the policymakers (thus making more QE harder to justify). Tomorrow’s Quarterly Inflation Report from the Bank of England will be highly relevant in this regard. A firmer inflation outlook is likely to be provided, which again should be broadly supportive of the pound.

Euro suffers from lack of Greek coalition agreement

Global investor confidence and risk appetite has taken a turn for the worse in the past fortnight, driven by concerns over Greece. Since the failure of the ruling Greek coalition to maintain sufficient votes at its recent election, major doubts have arisen as to whether Greece will remain within the euro. Coalition talks have collapsed and another election will be held in mid-June, which means the current uncertainty will be extended. As a result, Spanish and Italian bond yields are on the rise, with the former’s 10-year debt yields looking particularly alarming at fresh 2012 highs over 6.25%.

Should an anti-austerity coalition government surface from the current mess, then Greek bailout funds would be withheld, leading to default and a probable Greek breakaway. The knock-on effects in the eurozone and the global financial system as a whole are expected to be more drastic than those of Lehman’s collapse. It is no surprise then, that the euro has suffered a significant decline, with perceived safer-currencies such as sterling and the US dollar filling the void.

GDP data out of the eurozone was very mixed indeed this morning. Italy broadly stuck to the script by contracting by 0.8% in Q1 of this year, while French growth remained stagnant. However, the German economy grew by 0.5% in Q1, which helped the eurozone economy as a whole avoid a technical recession by posting a 0.0% GDP figure. This development has given the euro a mild boost today but with so much austerity still to be delivered in the eurozone and today’s forward-looking economic sentiment surveys showing a fairly sharp decline, eurozone growth is highly likely to return to negative territory this year.

Sterling is trading at €1.25 today, which represents near enough a three and a half year high. We are not calling a top to this pair’s ascent just yet either, with nerves surrounding Greece likely to deteriorate over the coming weeks. In risk averse conditions, the pound has understandably traded a little softer against the US dollar, coming off its highs of $1.63 to trade two and a half cents lower today. This pair could well test the $1.60 level fairly soon, though we are not anticipating any major collapse.

End of week forecast

GBP / EUR 1.26

GBP / USD 1.5950

EUR / USD 1.27

GBP / AUD 1.61

Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up

Bernanke holds fire on QE3...for now


Last Friday saw Ben Bernanke give his Jackson Hole speech, at which the Fed Chairman ushered in QE2 last year. Many had high hopes for indications of a third programme of monetary easing this time around, but were disappointed. It is clear though that the market has not given up on the Fed pulling the trigger at some point. Nor should it, if US data continues on its current path, then there can be no doubt that the Fed’s hand will be forced on the issue. US consumer confidence data this afternoon was incredibly poor, hitting its lowest point in over two years, at which point the US economy was deep in recession. The signs are all there and we remain bearish on the dollar in the longer-term, though safe-haven flows have been plentiful today.

Tonight’s Fed’s meeting minutes are unlikely to reveal much we don’t already know, further easing is not quite necessary at present but the Fed will act accordingly if US data continues to disappoint. Many will be turning their heads towards next month’s Fed meeting.

Friday also saw the release of the all-important quarterly US growth figure, which undershot consensus forecasts to show 1.0% growth (annualised). This week’s major release is the monthly update from the US labour market, a poor figure here will certainly increase QE3 bets.

Sterling on the back foot amid improved risk appetite

Sterling has performed well in recent weeks, benefiting from increased safe-haven appeal but risk appetite has improved in recent sessions. Global stocks are recovering and safe-haven flows are being redirected from the pound.

This week brings the monthly growth updates from the UK manufacturing, construction and services sectors. The services sector spearheaded growth last month and the same will need to be true this time if concerns of further UK quantitative easing are to be kept at bay.

Euro trading strongly despite usual issues

We have seen fairly weak demand for Italian debt at an auction today, suggesting that it could be the subject of the next episode in the eurozone debt saga. The issue of demands from Finland for collateral in return for Greek aid has re-entered the headlines today, which has put the single currency under pressure today.
Nonetheless, the euro is back at a seven week high against an out-of-favour pound, and is towards the higher-end of its range against the dollar. As ever, Asian investment is keeping the euro fairly well-bid.

On the downside for the euro though, the ECB interest rate outlook has come into question. With data last week revealing a further slowdown in the eurozone (though not as bad as many expected), speculation is growing that we may see interest rate cuts in coming months. Our bet is that this speculation underestimates just how hawkish the ECB is and will continue to be.

Sterling is trading under €1.13 and under $1.63 this afternoon. This GBP/USD level looks a little too weak and we could see it bounce back in coming sessions. Against the euro, sterling looks a little more vulnerable but losses below €1.12 look a stretch.
 
End of week forecast
GBP / EUR 1.13
GBP / USD 1.64
EUR / USD 1.45
GBP / AUD 1.5150

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Over or under valued?

The pound is trading near six-month lows against the euro; the Australian currency is at post-float highs against the US dollar; and the euro is also at 15-month highs against the greenback. Most would agree that these levels – as well as many other pairings at present – do not reflect fair value. However, there is a great deal of benefit to be had in the longer term from having an undervalued currency.

A weak currency provides a real boost to the country’s exporters and this has been targeted as a key route to recovery by many global economies, in particular the UK. Britain needs to rebalance its economy and in the longer term a weak currency should encourage that process. Unfortunately it also exacerbates inflationary pressures, but there can be little doubt that over a longer time frame, the British economy stands to benefit from a lower pound – even if that isn’t immediately apparent for those heading abroad this Spring!

The US dollar is also very weak at present, and this has become the subject of some debate. As a major importer, the US does not necessarily stand to benefit from a weak currency and indeed the Fed has reiterated its commitment to a strong dollar. Its market value tells a different story however, and the greenback is unlikely to claw back losses until the Fed take steps toward tightening monetary policy.

The Chinese yuan has been at the heart of the ‘currency wars’ debate. The Chinese export sector has been booming on the back of a hugely undervalued yuan, much to the consternation of other countries. With inflation particularly high in Asia, China is now beginning to allow the steady appreciation of its currency, but this will be a slow process. China can ill afford to slow its rate of growth too drastically.

The countries that have shown extraordinary resilience to the strength of their currencies include Canada, Australia, and New Zealand., which have all reached multi-year highs against the US dollar in recent months. This strength, though warranted, is far from supportive for the economy and Canadian policymakers in particular have expressed their concern. We’re certainly unlikely to see any material intervention in the market to curb this strength, but comments talking down the currency should have the same effect.

In the case of Australia, such is the demand from China’s booming economy that exporters appear capable to withstand the strength of the aussie dollar. High levels of risk appetite combined with soaring commodity prices look set to keep higher-yielding currencies well-supported throughout year. Indeed the aussie and kiwi dollars could have even further to climb in the short term; who would want to bet against them frankly? These currencies may well be overvalued, but a turnaround in trend remains a distant prospect at best.

Richard Driver

Senior Analyst – Caxton FX


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Monday, 4 April 2011

The Aussie, the Kiwi and the Loonie- will the good old days of two or three to the pound return?

GBP/AUD: 1.56

GBP/NZD: 2.10

GBP/CAD: 1.56

These are the current interbank rates for sterling against the aussie, the kiwi and the loonie (Canadian dollar). Four years ago, one pound would buy you two and half aussie dollars, almost three kiwi dollars, and well over two Canadian dollars. These levels are reflective of historically riskier currencies versus the size and safety of the UK economy in years gone by. So, will we see these sorts of levels again or must be consigned to a new trading range?

In the case of the export-driven Australian and New Zealand economies, these have benefitted on a huge scale from the rise of China. Now the world’s second largest economy, China is a major trading partner to these two antipodean nations, and with commodity prices so high, their currencies have appreciated strongly. The higher interest rates of these two economies has for the past few years also provided investors with a far higher yield than those available in the UK, the US or Japan for example. This interest rate differential is set to be maintained for at least the next couple of years to come. The global recession hit the UK far harder than either Australia or New Zealand and it will take some time yet before a full recovery is established and it cope with fully normalised monetary policy (ie higher interest rates).

The loonie has also had reason to perform well, though for different reasons. Canada’s economy has benefitted from a broad rise in oil prices and from improving conditions in the US economy, its main trading partner. Canada’s economic fundamentals are solid – far more so than the UK’s - and the loonie had appreciated against the pound despite having equally low central bank interest rates.

None of the factors that have caused these ‘growth-linked’ currencies to appreciate against the pound, particularly the strength of the world’s two largest economies, look likely to fade any time soon. It would therefore be of huge surprise even in the long term to see a return of the levels of four years ago. The outlook for the British economy, in comparison to the “riskier” ones discussed above, looks distinctly pessimistic. With UK suffering economic contraction in the last quarter of 2010 and continuing to struggle with persistently high inflation, it might be argued that sterling is presently a riskier currency than the aussie dollar on a fundamental level. The day the pound has fully regained, for instance the near 40% it has lost against the aussie in the past 4 years, looks a very long way off indeed.

Although we actually view sterling to be undervalued at present (many others do not), it certainly appears that the current lowly trading ranges are set to continue for some time.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX


For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Monday, 20 December 2010

Downgrade risk hurts the euro

The euro is continuing to weaken on speculation European nations will struggle to raise funds after Ireland suffered a five notch credit downgrade.

Ireland’s repositioning just above ‘Junk status’ has sparked renewed concern over the future of other indebted nations in the eurozone. In response, the single currency depreciated against most of its major counterparts including a two week low against the US dollar and Japanese yen, as well a record low against the Swiss franc.

Sentiment is very bearish towards the sixteen nation currency with the prospect of further downgrades looming overhead before the long Christmas break. Whispers in the market point to even France being in the crosshairs of Moody’s et al as the cost to insure French government debt has trebled this year. The abundant credit warnings and increasing speculation over the spirally debt crisis have left the euro looking particularly vulnerable as we head into the new year.

Divisions within the European Central Bank are also not helping the situation. European finance ministers have ‘serious concerns’ that the Irish draft legislation to fix the banking system may threaten the ECB’s ability to run its liquidity operations.

In other news, the aussie dollar continues its run of good fortune as it hits a 25 year peak against the pound and the euro following the Irish downgrade.

Tom Hampton
Analyst – Caxton FX

Friday, 5 November 2010

Dollar steadies

The dollar extended its advance from a nine-month low against the euro as employment data came in almost three times higher than the market has forecast.

The single currency fell early in the session as weaker than expected European retail sales figures and German factory data were published. Further news that the Spanish economy had stagnated re-positioned focus on to the troubled periphery nations and their debt problems.

Midway through the London session, data revealed that October’s US non-farm employment change was up 151,000. The number was a vast improvement on last month’s fall of 41,000 and bettered analysts’ predictions of a lowly 61,000.

Further news of a liquidity problem within a major Spanish bank (not hard to guess which one) has helped depress the euro further.

The greenback is currently trading at $1.4093 and $1.6233 against the euro and the pound respectively.

In other news, the aussie and kiwi dollar look set to notch up their best weekly gains in months and don’t look like stopping. The aussie broke through parity this week to hit a 28 year high (the highest level since the aussie was allowed to float on the open market) of $1.0181 against the US currency.

There is not as much market moving data out next week, however inflation reports from the UK and China could be very important. Especially for our brothers from the antipodes with lofty aspirations. Hopefully England can put one over on them this weekend!

Tom Hampton
Analyst – Caxton FX

Thursday, 4 November 2010

Dollar weakness everywhere!

The US dollar has suffered across the board following last night’s announcement from the Fed that they will issue a further $600billion in a second round of quantitative easing (the figure could actually be closer to $850billion if you include the toxic debt reinvestment scheme).

In the wake of the announcement, sterling has risen to its highest level against the greenback in nine months, almost touching $1.63. The announcement of QEII in the states contrasted with the decision from the Bank of England. At midday, the BoE announced it had decided to keep interest rates and its asset buying programme steady, enabling sterling to rise over two cents on the session.

The euro rose to a session peak of $1.4281 against the US currency after a considered, but slightly optimistic speech from JC Trichet. The size of the new bailout package across the pond, combined with the ECB alluding to a slight upward pressure on the euro from inflation sent the single currency to its strongest position since mid January.

The aussie dollar finally found stability above parity with its US counterpart to a high of $1.0146, that’s right, one George Washington is now worth less than one Queen Elisabeth II (QEII spooky?). The combination of the highest interest rates in the G20, high commodity prices and insatiable demand from China has finally proven to be enough to break through the psychologically important parity level.

This spate of dollar weakness does present a fantastic buying opportunity, especially for those long of the aussie. With the US debacle sorted until next July (hopefully), expect to see a resurgence from the greenback in the future, especially when the eurozone is no longer capable of sweeping its increasing worries under the proverbial rug.

Tom Hampton

Analyst – Caxton FX

Wednesday, 27 October 2010

Sterling maintains 1.14 level after yesterday’s ascent

Sterling is holding its gains today after in the previous session it enjoyed its biggest climb against the euro since May this year.

The pound seems to be holding its ground against all of its counterparts except the US dollar. Against the euro, investors continue to pare expectations about the possibility of further monetary easing from the Bank of England. Positive comments from S&P about the health of the UK economy have also helped to keep the UK currency around €1.1450.

The greenback is making up ground today after a Wall Street Journal article stated that the Fed was likely to “gradually” introduce stimulus measures at their next meeting, rather than the $500bn that the market has been pricing in. Many investors are beginning to see this as a turning point for the US currency as the looming second round of quantitative easing has now been priced in and as problems in the eurozone start to gain headlines once again.

In other news, the aussie’s rally has lost steam momentarily after surprisingly tame inflation data led investors to doubt the central bank would raise interest rates next week.

Tom Hampton

Analyst – Caxton FX

Monday, 18 October 2010

Sterling awaits Wednesday’s MPC minutes

With the calendar quiet on the data front, sterling has fallen by more than half a percent against the US dollar to trade just above the $1.59 level and has also lost ground to the euro, dropping below €1.14.

The pound has come off last week’s eight and a half month high against the greenback on doubts about how aggressive Federal Reserve monetary easing will be. There is also a sense now that Fed easing has been priced in leading some investors to cut their bets against that the dollar will decline.

The UK currency also remains vulnerable ahead of the publication of the latest MPC minutes and the UK government’s spending review, both on Wednesday. The review could increase speculation for more quantitative easing in the UK, and the BoE minutes could see a dovish move led by Adam Posen, putting sterling under further pressure. This all lends itself to the hypothesis that GBP will still have a little way to go towards the downside before things improve.

In other news, the outperforming aussie dollar made a move to beat parity against the US currency on Friday off the back of Bernanke’s speech where he outlined the Fed’s case for more easing, but has since dropped back to 0.99.

Tom Hampton
Analyst - Caxton FX

Friday, 24 September 2010

Is the euro’s ascent sustainable?

The single currency has risen from $1.1923 against the US dollar at the start of June to hit a 5 month high today at $1.3463.

The overwhelming feeling in the market is that these gains are unsustainable amid concern that nations on the region’s periphery will default on their debts despite their surprising ability to raise funds at recent bond auctions.

The euro’s recent rally over the past few days has pushed it back into overvalued territory against a backdrop of deteriorating fundamentals. With Ireland’s GDP shrinking by 1.2% in Q2 and bond rates moving towards the ever important double digit range, a default from a PIIGS nation remains a distinct possibility. Germany cannot support a whole continent forever. Europe’s only saving grace is that each country’s government has implemented austerity measures to try and rectify the situation; their only hope is that with a tough Q4 coming up globally, everybody else has a tougher time than them.

Keen readers will remember that yesterday, at an FX trends seminar the underlying trend for Q4, potentially into next year, is Swissie strength. You will see today that the Swiss franc is at a two and a half year high against the greenback having smashed through several key resistance levels to be hunting down parity. Another currency approaching a level playing field with the US dollar is the Aussie dollar. With continuing strong growth from the tiger nations and the commodity boom, the Aussie is going from strength to strength.

Have a good weekend

Tom Hampton
Analyst Caxton FX

Thursday, 23 September 2010

Has Sterling bottomed out?

My screen is finally awash with green today as sterling pulls back some of its losses from the past few days against all of its major counterparts except the Swiss franc.

The pound is back up near €1.1750 against the euro having sunk to a four month low of €1.1672. Further doubt over the longevity of the European economic recovery spread as poor data showed growth in the eurozone slowed in September, causing peripheral bond yield spreads to widen against German counterparts. Against the greenback, the UK currency did creep above $1.57 earlier in the day. The dollar is continuing its fall from grace with concerns over further rounds of quantitative easing and yet more poor data showing that the amount of jobless claims unexpectedly rose last week.

Be warned, Sterling’s rebound could be a momentary correction as the pound was heavily sold on Wednesday. The UK economy remains extremely vulnerable as the BoE alluded to with the possibility of a fresh monetary injection.

In further news, I spent my morning at a seminar on foreign exchange trends, which was as interesting as it sounds.... The major themes to report for the middle to long term are;
A) A double dip recession (depending on your definition) looks an almost certainty for the US, UK and Europe, while Asia looks to be the engine house for the global economy.
B) The unstoppable ascent of the Swiss franc. The lack of support for the traditional safe US dollar has led risk averse investors to the franc and the Japanese yen. However, with the BoJ’s intervention to depress their currency, the Swissie has become the hedge of choice for many. Great internal economic fundamentals and global uncertainty in Q4 look set to send the franc higher.
C) Those of you looking for a higher-yielding asset may look to the Aussie dollar. Some analysts are saying that it is near the end of its run. However, with commodity prices at an all time high, insatiable demand from China and a high interest rate that is looking likely to be moved even higher, it has every potential.

Tom Hampton
Analyst Caxton FX

Thursday, 28 January 2010

AUD - The pound moved nearly a cent higher against the aussie dollar yesterday, buoyed by comments from a BoE policymaker.

  • The pound made it to three consecutive days moving higher against the Australian currency, with fears about the global recovery stifling demand.

  • However, investors have gone back to aussie buying this morning, relieved after President Obama did not sound too forceful on the banking overhaul during his State of Union address.

  • Currently the aussie is only up around 0.2% though, with the price still hovering above 1.80 with traders apprehensive about possible hiccups in the re-appointment of Ben Bernanke as the chairman of the Fed.

Wednesday, 27 January 2010

Conflicting data of aussie inflation and the UK economy moving out of the recession led to minor gains for the pound.

  • Australian CPI data showed that inflation was up higher than expected last quarter. The figure rose to 0.5%, higher than the forecast 0.4%.

  • This lead to an increase in demand for the aussie dollar as it heightened the expectations that interest rates will rise after the next meeting of the central bank.

  • Data showing that UK has finally emerged from recession allowed the pound to par its gains, though demand remained weak with the figures disappointing expectations.

  • Putting real pressure on the aussie though is the continued wave of risk aversion that has swept the markets following China's decision to curb spending, and the pound has continued to gain marginal ground this morning.