Showing posts with label Fed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fed. Show all posts

Monday, 28 April 2014

Weekly Analysis - Sterling holds strong, Euro proves resilient, but the US and Australian Dollars fall. This week will be heavy with US and UK data and should be relatively volatile. Sterling has the momentum, but positive US data could well reverse those gains.

GBP – In the UK, The last week brought relatively good news for the pound. The Bank of England meeting minutes revealed a positive revised growth estimate for the UK on Wednesday, and Retail Sales m/m figures on Friday beat estimates with at least a small sign of growth. The pound has held up against most other currencies and has the momentum to push higher next week. Data to watch for this week from the UK will be the Prelim GDP q/q on Tuesday, Manufacturing PMI on Thursday, and Construction PMI on Friday.

EUR – In the Eurozone, Manufacturing data from last week and an improved PMI figure confirmed that business activity has increased overall. However, with inflation at such low levels, the Eurozone is increasingly concerned with a stronger Euro, which would further destabilize growth. Data is limited this week, but with a CPI Flash Estimate y/y figure on Wednesday, there will be a more complete picture of how prices have increased when compared to economic growth in the region.

USD – Last week, the Dollar provided some resistance to the advancing pound and Euro with positive durable goods orders last Thursday, but much will depend on the preliminary US GDP figure this coming week. This week, the all-important day will be Wednesday, as markets prepare to digest the ADP Non-Farm Employment Change, Advance GDP q/q data on Wednesday out of the US, and the FOMC will make a statement at 7pm GMT. The FOMC is also scheduled to reduce its bond buying by another $10 billion down to $45 billion this week, and with a relatively stable market, it will be easy for the Fed to proceed with this. Also, let’s not forget Thursday, as Janet Yellen will be speaking at a policy summit meeting in Washington D.C.

Canada – Canadian data will also be heavy this week, as the loonie has proved that it has had some forward momentum with positive Core Retail Sales m/m last week. BOC Governor Poloz is speaking this week on Tuesday and Wednesday will bring Canadian GDP m/m figures. The Bank of Canada has been under increasing pressure to lower their benchmark interest rate of 1% since growth has been slower than expected in the past year and the Canadian Dollar has been sliding as a result. 

Australia – Last week, the Australian Dollar was weakened significantly when Australian CPI q/q and the HSBC Flash Manufacturing PMI both came in negatively and undermined the AUD. This week, we could see a similar phenomenon, as there will be CNY Manufacturing PMI on Thursday, expected to improve marginally from a month ago. Also, there will be Australian PPI q/q expected to improve from the last quarter. The Australian dollar has been strengthening from its 2013 devaluation slide, but it seems to have stalled with poor Australian and Chinese data. This week will be an additional focal point to determine the direction of this rate.

End of week forecast
GBP/EUR – 1.2200
GBP/USD – 1.6900
EUR/USD – 1.3930
GBP/AUD – 1.8200


Nicholas Ebisch
Corporate Account Manager
Caxton FX

Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Caxton FX Weekly Report: Sterling keeps the pressure on


Sterling soars
It seems that nothing can stop demand for sterling now. The BoE’s adjustment to forward guidance went down well with the market and fuelled significant strengthening of the pound. Although the central bank ruled out any immediate tightening, confidence about the UK outlook and the prospect for a policy tightening in the first half on 2015 is strong. This week there is an opportunity for the pound to advance further as unemployment data could help the pound rebound after inflation came in below estimates. Some more encouraging numbers here will most likely keep the dollar and the euro on the back foot for yet another week.

The latest MPC minutes will be published, and it is unlikely that this will encourage any significant sterling buying. In the last monetary policy meeting the committee opted to maintain the current level of asset purchases and hold the bank rate at 0.50%. Considering the Inflation Report was released just last week, we doubt rhetoric in the minutes will differ much and therefore expect minimal movement on the back of that release.

PMI attempts to rescue the euro 

Despite some solid GDP figures last week, the euro is still struggling against sterling, and has failed to really push the EUR/USD rate further through 1.37. Growth across the region has boosted hopes that the worst of the regions crisis is behind it and this has made the outlook for the eurozone a little brighter. This week Eurozone PMI data will be key and some impressive results should contribute to more a positive view, and therefore be reflected into euro strength.

Last week talks of negative deposit rates in the Eurozone resurfaced as ECB member Coeure implied the ECB had seriously been discussing this option. Although the effect on the euro was temporary the market is still unsure about what is to come from the ECB, which could keep the euro vulnerable.


An important week ahead for the dollar


The greenback has taken a huge hit, especially against the pound as US data continues to disappoint giving investors more excuses to favour sterling. Comments from Fed chair Yellen were regarded as dovish and this has also weighed on the dollar’s performance. A buoyant pound has pushed cable towards three year highs and with sterling buyers waiting in the wings, US figures this week will need to impress to ease pressure off the dollar.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will release the minutes from their last monetary policy meeting. Considering remarks made by Fed Chair Yellen, the market will be looking closely for any sign of a dovish bias from the central bank. Since their last decision to reduce asset purchases further by $10bn, yet another disappointing employment report has been released. Although this is unlikely to have a significant impact on their stance, it has provoked some concern about the labour market and an upbeat tone is needed in order to provide the greenback with some support. Pressure on the dollar has eased slightly, however with plenty of event risk ahead, it may not be long before the dollar is penalised for more disappointing figures.


End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.2150
GBP / USD
1.6675
EUR / USD
1.3675
GBP / AUD
1.8550


Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst


Tuesday, 2 April 2013

April 2013 Outlook: Sterling edges higher as debt crisis resurfaces


After an awful start to the year, sterling has benefited from a welcome boost on the exchange rates in recent weeks. A couple of positive domestic economic developments have helped matters but events in the eurozone have been the key driver, helping to put the UK’s troubles in perspective. Domestic growth data in March did little to significantly improve the outlook for the UK recovery, though a couple of bright spots have provided a much-needed source of hope. There has also been a lack of further dovish leanings within the Bank of England, though we do expect more QE to be announced in May.

There was a collective sigh of relief that Cyprus avoided an unprecedented euro-exit and more
importantly that the eurozone banking system avoided the shockwaves which would inevitably follow. Nonetheless, events in Cyprus have understandably shaken the euro in the past month. The bailout deal that Cyprus reached with the Troika will leave the country deep in recession for a long time to come but this won’t be the market’s primary concern. Alarm bells are ringing following mixed rhetoric from within the EU leadership over whether the “bail-in” – where private investors and depositors, not taxpayers footed the bill for the refinancing – represents a special case or not. Some dangerous precedents have been set and with other larger eurozone strugglers such as Portugal and Italy exhibiting some tell-tale signs of crisis further down the line, the euro could be set for a troublesome few months.

GBP/EUR

Cyprus has investors fleeing for safety

Sterling looks to have bottomed out against the euro for the time being. The wave of anti-sterling sentiment has abated for now, amid a feeling that most of the bad news is already out in the open with respect to the UK economy. If the last few weeks have taught us anything, it’s surely that all the bad news is certainly not out in the open with respect to the eurozone.                      
                            
The pound emerged from the Annual Budget more or less unscathed, despite Osborne revealing that the Office of Budget Responsibility has slashed its 2013 GDP expectations from 1.2% to just 0.6% (which will most likely be undershot). Osborne effectively passed the buck to the Bank of England in terms of efforts to stimulate UK growth, directly expanding its mandate to that effect.

The latest from the Bank of England is that Mervyn King and his two fellow doves (Fisher and Miles) remain in the minority on the key quantitative easing debate, with the other six members seemingly too concerned with rising UK price pressures. In addition, the March MPC minutes revealed that there were fears surrounding an “unwarranted deprecation in the value of the pound,” which will concern many of those betting against the pound. We feel safe predicting that there will be no dovish majority in favour of QE in this Thursday’s MPC meeting, though we see a probability that we will see the voting swing in favour in May.

UK Q1 GDP figure comes into focus

Growth in the UK clearly remains very weak indeed. February’s data revealed the worst monthly construction growth in three years, whilst manufacturing is also firmly in contraction territory. Gladly, there was some relief in that the dominant UK services sector posted its best figure in five months and February’s 2.1% retail sales growth was excellent.  However, the key issue of whether or not the UK economy will avoid a triple-dip recession, when its Q1 GDP figure is announced on April 25, remains finely balanced. The March PMI figures released over the coming sessions will be highly significant; this morning’s manufacturing update got things off to a weak start but as ever, the pressure will be on Thursday’s services figure to deliver again.

Dangerous precedents will hurt the euro

While, there have been some rare sources of positivity with respect to domestic developments, this pair’s recent climb is explained mostly by events in the eurozone. Cyprus stole the headlines; the dreaded euro-exit has been avoided once again but the market has been left with some rather uncomfortable lessons. In a fundamental shift in eurozone banking relations, private individuals and companies with large amounts of cash in European banks now find themselves at risk of other potential ‘bail-ins’ in other struggling nations. This new credit risk is likely to leave a major psychological mark on euro-depositors and will have many heading to the exits and targeting perceived safer options like the GBP and USD.


Where will the next debt crisis hotspot be? Italy is looking a decent bet. Political instability is not the only issue the country faces, economic contraction remains a major issue and perhaps more pressingly, the health of Italian banks is deteriorating at an alarming rate. If things continue at this rate then Italy could find itself in a similar position to Cyprus, in need of recapitalising its banks, with Germany opposing a fix-all bailout from the European Stability Mechanism.

Some dangerous precedents have been set in Cyprus in terms of depositors being forced into a ‘bail-in,’ senior bondholder suffering haircuts, major and extended capital controls being implemented, the ECB imposing strict deadlines on their liquidity provision. Lines in the sand have been drawn, which are fundamentally likely to undermine confidence in the euro.

Debt crisis to one side, eurozone data has remained disappointingly true to its downtrend.  Monthly growth data from Spain, France, Germany and the eurozone as a whole has all undershot expectations, which suggests that Draghi is being more than a little overoptimistic with respect to his expectations that the region’s recession will stabilise soon. Naturally, events in Cyprus have hurt confidence and sentiment gauges.

Sterling has recently posted seven-week highs of €1.1890, although this pair currently trades over a cent off this level. We do see GBP/EUR recovering further in the weeks ahead, particularly if the BoE delays QE this month and the UK services figure is solid. Asian reserve managers already appear to be responding to eurozone developments by taking a step back from the euro. We see this trend continuing, which could take this rate as high as €1.20 in the weeks ahead.

GBP/USD

Sterling finally enjoys a bounce

There is no doubt that sterling’s safe-haven status has waned in recent months, in line with the loss of the UK’s AA credit rating. It has therefore been no surprise to see the USD benefit from the lion’s share of safe-haven currency flows stemming from increased tensions in the eurozone. Nonetheless, the pound has managed to eke out some gains in the past three weeks or so, despite the uptrend in US economic figures.

Those economic figures have revealed a particularly strong increase in US retail sales and industrial production. However, with housing market data mixed and consumer sentiment gauges indicating some weakness, there remains more than enough cause for concern to see the Fed continuing with QE3 for the time being. Indeed, the Fed recently downgraded its 2013 GDP projections in anticipation of a fiscal drag later this year.

More improvements in US labour market

As ever analysis from inside the Fed and therefore throughout the market, will focus on the US labour market, from which the news has been distinctly positive over the past few weeks. The US unemployment rate dipped back down to 7.7% in February- its lowest level since February 2009, while the headline figure revealed 236,000 jobs were added to the payrolls – the biggest monthly increase in a year. There is plenty here to fuel the Fed hawks’ calls for scaling back QE3 but the bottom line is that Bernanke and his fellow doves still require further progress. They may well get what they want as this Friday’s key US labour market update once again promises to be robust.

There were some notable phrases within the Fed’s March statement, among which was the emphasis that the central bank has the ability to vary the pace of QE3 in response to changes in the US economic outlook. So it really does seem as if they are gearing us up for fazing QE3 out, though this remains conditional to labour market progress.

Sterling may well face some short-term weakness if the UK services figure disappoints and there is room here for a move down to $1.5050. However, our baseline scenario is for a further upward correction for this pair. A move up towards $1.55 is possible in the weeks ahead, though this comes with the caveat that the UK must avoid a triple-tip recession (no sure thing). Beyond this near-term upward correction, we maintain a negative outlook for this pair in H2 2013, in line with our positive outlook for the US dollar.

GBP/EUR: €1.20
GBP/USD: $1.53
EUR/USD: $1.27

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX

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Thursday, 21 February 2013

BoE edges towards QE, Fed edges away, while the eurozone remains firmly in recession

We have to hold our hands up and admit that we were caught well and truly offside with respect yesterday’s MPC minutes. We did not even fully expect David Miles to continue voting for QE but not only did he stand firm, he recruited to additional doves to his cause in the shape of Paul Fisher and (more significantly) Sir Mervyn King. With the merits of an interest rate cut also carefully discussed, it was no surprise to see sterling take a beating as a result. We have to now change our position on the BoE’s monetary policy outlook and expect an additional top-up of QE around May time. Not good news for sterling, which continues to suffer from weak growth and the high probability of a UK debt downgrade.

By contrast, the minutes from the US Federal Reserve’s recent meeting gave a real boost to the US dollar last night. They revealed that Bernanke & Co are assessing when and how to scale back their QE3 operations, which was a major driver of dollar-weakness in the last few months of 2012. There have been hints that substantial improvements to the US unemployment rate would be needed before QE3 was wound down but the minutes revealed there was some support for doing so before such improvements are seen. It goes without saying that there remains majority support for maintaining QE3 as it is until greater progress is made with the US recovery and no change to this looks particularly imminent. However, the discussion and the divergence of views within the Fed could lead to a tapering off of QE3 later on in the year. This is why the dollar has rallied.

From the eurozone, we have had yet more weak growth data. A German economic sentiment survey was excellent earlier on in the week but this morning’s PMI figures pointed to a slowdown in the powerhouse economy this month. The German manufacturing sector remained in growth territory by only the smallest margin. Meanwhile, French figures pointed to a sharp dip further into contraction, against expectations of stabilisation. The same is true for the eurozone as a whole, which is set to contract again this quarter.  This is being reflected in a weaker euro today, though GBP remains very vulnerable. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

February Currency Outlook: GBP, USD, EUR


February 2013 Corporate Report:  Sterling friendless

January was another rough month for the pound, against almost every major currency, and the coming weeks do not look likely to be particularly fertile for a recovery. Sterling has been among the poorest performing currencies in the market, with a wide range of concerns over the UK economy weighing heavily. There are risks of a triple-dip UK recession, which in turn raise the probability of further quantitative easing from the Bank of England and a loss of the UK’s AAA credit rating. Until UK growth shows some signs of a recovery, the pound is likely to remain under pressure.

The euro’s remarkable rally continued in January, helped by further market calm in the eurozone and subsequent improvements to global market sentiment. ECB President Draghi gave the euro plenty of support by quashing speculation that his central bank would opt to cut interest rates (watch out tomorrow for further rhetoric). This optimistic approach has actually been bolstered by significant improvements to German economic data, even if growth in Italy, Spain and France remains very weak indeed. It only takes one look at bond yields in Italy and Spain to realise that nerves towards the debt crisis are at a low ebb and that confidence is pretty stable. That said, the past week has seen tensions rise ahead of Italy’s election this month.

Other than against the euro, the US dollar is also in pretty good shape. However, the recent weak US GDP figure for Q4 2012 hasn’t done the greenback any favours and will play into the hands of Ben Bernanke and the other dovish leaning policymakers within the US Federal Reserve. Positive sentiment towards the euro looks likely to limit the dollar’s gains in the coming weeks, but we still expect the USD to have a strong 2013.

GBP/EUR

Triple-dip fears dog the pound

Sterling is hugely out of favour at present; depreciation was so drastic in January that sterling’s trade-weighted index dropped by the most since February 2010. Economic weakness, speculation of more UK monetary easing and a more general loss of faith in the GBP as a safe-haven are all issues which have weighed heavily. The warnings as to a UK debt downgrade have been understandable and whilst predicting the timing of a downgrade is tricky, it would surprise us if the move was delayed beyond June.
Does sterling really deserve the battering it has received? Well, it certainly deserved some punishment; negative growth and a lack of progress on the UK’s debt situation are always issues likely to make themselves felt on the exchange rates.

There remain some brighter spots within the UK economy; the Funding for Lending Scheme appears to be bearing some fruit - bank lending is on an uptrend. The UK labour market continues to defy the wider domestic downturn. However, these rare good news stories have been of little use to sterling, with investors questioning how positive these factors can really be if they are not resulting in any genuine economic growth.

Unfortunately it’s quite clear that it will not be a particularly robust start to 2013, thanks to January’s snowy weather. The truth is that last summer’s Olympics concealed very weak underlying growth, which will become even more apparent over the rest of Q1. Sterling has at least been granted the relief that the UK services sector returned to growth in January but the risks of a triple-dip recession are still finely balanced.

Despite weak growth, we do not expect the Bank of England to opt for another dose of quantitative easing at its February meeting on Thursday, with most members satisfied with the Funding for Lending Scheme as an alternative to QE. David Miles is likely to remain the only voter in favour of QE in the February 7th meeting; we expect the MPC under Sir Mervyn King to continue opting against further easing.

What will be more interesting on February 7th will be Mark Carney’s appearance in front of the Treasury Select Committee. The market will be watching very closely for clues as to how Carney, who will take over from King as BoE Governor on July 1st, will approach monetary policy. Unlike King’s comparatively hawkish doubts over the efficacy of more QE, Carney has been vocal on the utility of further easing and has pointed to other “unconventional instruments” which suggests he will strike a more dovish tone on Thursday. This is unlikely to be good news for the pound.

Germany perks up to help the euro
Once again, it’s been fairly quiet on the eurozone front, which has been a major factor behind the ongoing gains being made by the euro across the board. The weak investor sentiment towards the eurozone that characterised so much of 2012 is being unwound, as the risks of a eurozone break-up recede.
German data has been particularly encouraging in recent weeks with forward-looking sentiment and confidence surveys hitting multi-month highs. Still, the PMIs out of the eurozone as a whole continue to point to further economic contraction, which should lead to euro-weakness later on in the year. However, at present the market appears content to overlook awful growth and celebrate the signs that the worst of the debt crisis is behind us. This is really why GBP/EUR’s decline has been so aggressive.

There is evidence of burgeoning political tensions in the eurozone. Italy’s elections are scheduled for February 24-25 and considerable uncertainty lingers with respect to the outcome, particularly with the latest polls suggesting that Berlusconi is closing the gap. In addition, there is scope for Berlusconi’s PdL party to block the governing coalition’s laws in the upper house. Elsewhere, there are calls for Spanish PM Rajoy to resign after having been embroiled in a corruption scandal. This could potentially derail Spain’s reform programme and damage the stability we have seen in peripheral bond yields.

On the monetary policy front, ECB President Draghi has been very helpful to the euro, sending strong signals that he will not elect to cut interest rates once again, regardless of weak eurozone growth and record-high unemployment. Also propping up the euro has been Draghi’s refusal to express concern at the euro’s impressive rally to 15-month highs against the pound and US dollar. Euro bears will be watching this Thursday’s press conference very Draghi closely for signs that he is uncomfortable with the euro at current levels. We suspect they may be disappointed.

Sterling has depreciated by around 6.0% from where it started the year (marginally above €1.23). Amid the ongoing anti-sterling sentiment that is still simmering away, we don’t expect that this pair’s trough of €1.1470 will be as low as it goes. If Draghi sounds in confident mood on Thursday, we’d expect the downside to be tested once again in the coming weeks, with significant risks of a move down to €1.1364 (88p). However, we do expect this pair to bottom out soon and remain confident of a sterling recovery thereafter.

GBP/USD

Dollar flexes its muscles despite stalling US growth
The news out of the US economy has been typically mixed over recent weeks and there was no real change in stance from Ben Bernanke and the US Federal Reserve as a result. The fourth quarter US GDP figure for 2012 actually confirmed a surprise 0.1% contraction, rather than the modest 1.1% growth that was expected. In addition, the US unemployment rate jumped back up to 7.9%, which considering Bernanke’s obsession with bringing the jobless rate right down before ending QE3, was not good news for the US dollar.

The market has been correct not to panic at the US economy’s weakness at the end of last year, much of which can be put down to the effects of Hurricane Sandy. The Fed was clear that it was a case of growth pausing as opposed to it representing the beginning of another dip back into recession.

The GBP/USD pair’s sharp decline in the year to date has finally started to reflect the contrasting conditions and outlooks for the UK and US economies. Whilst the US has suffered some temporary weakness, 
underlying growth is still in decent shape and this will continue to be the case in 2013. The UK, by contrast, did not grow in 2012 and will struggle to eke out much growth in 2013.

An interesting theme over recent weeks has been the US dollar’s strong performance against currencies like the GBP, despite its extreme weakness against the EUR (EUR/USD climbed to a 15-month high only last week). We are already seeing concerns over the political situation in Spain and Italy spark doubts over how much higher EUR/USD can go. If we see the downward correction in EUR/USD that we continue to expect, then we expect GBP/USD to suffer as a result. Sterling is struggling with weak domestic news as it is, without major euro-dollar flows adding further pressure. This may well be delayed until later on in the year but it would be no real surprise if it came sooner. 

We may see GBP make another attempt above the $1.57 level in February but we expect that would represent an attractive level at which to sell. This should signal another move lower and potentially take this pair to fresh 6-month lows below the recently hit $1.5650 level.

GBP/EUR: €1.14
GBP/USD: $1.55
EUR/USD: $1.3650

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Caxton FX Currency Round-Up: GBP/EUR, GBP/USD


Euro under pressure as ECB indicates cut to deposit interest rates 
The euro has been hit by a few different factors in the past few sessions. ECB President Draghi gave the single currency a knock last Thursday by revealing that whilst there would be no change to the Bank’s policy this month, we might expect some monetary easing next year. From Draghi’s comments, we no longer draw the conclusion that the ECB will cut the headline interest rate in Q1 next year. However, there were real indications that if growth disappoints and eurozone nerves spike in the coming months, we could see a cut to the deposit rate in a bid to encourage banks to step up lending.

Both the ECB and the German central bank (the Bundesbank) have delivered some fairly gloomy growth predictions in the past week. The former now sees the eurozone economy contracting by 0.3% next year, after previously predicting growth of 0.5%. Meanwhile, the Bundesbank disappointingly slashed its forecasts for German growth next year; reducing its June forecast of 1.6% growth to 0.4%.

We have had some good news today on the German front however, with a key economic sentiment survey hitting a seven month high. The latest sentiment and confidence surveys out of Germany suggest the country may narrowly avoid a recession, though a contraction in Q4 2012 looks highly likely. The German economy may not be in as weak as many had expected but the hopes for the rest of the eurozone are rather dimmer. This could well be highlighted by Friday morning’s eurozone PMI growth figures.

Italy hits the headlines as PM Monti announces resignation plans
Technocratic Italian PM Mario Monti dropped a bomb over the weekend by announcing his intention to resign once the Italian parliament has passed its 2013 budget. Berlusconi is waiting in the wings but his approval ratings suggest this is too big a mountain for even him to climb. Nonetheless, this political uncertainty - which raises serious question marks over Italy’s ability to deliver the necessary cuts and economic reforms to keep bond yields stable - could weigh on the euro significantly in the coming weeks and months.

All eyes on US Federal Reserve QE decision
Last week’s surprisingly strong figures from the US labour market are unlikely to satisfy the US Federal Reserve at its meeting over the next two days. We expect the Fed to decide to replace Operation Twist (which is set to be concluded) with a further $40bn in asset purchases, to bring its QE programme up to $80bn per month. There are various tweaks that the Fed can make to its monetary policy, to which the US dollar will respond differently. Given that sterling is trading at a very healthy rate of $1.61 at present, we would urge dollar-buyers to act now.  

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.2450
GBP / USD
1.60
EUR / USD
1.29
GBP / AUD
1.53


Sterling has enjoyed a welcome little recovery against the euro amid some rather negative eurozone developments. At €1.24, we have not abandoned hopes of one last push for €1.25 before the end of the year. There is not much to get excited about with respect to sterling at present but we do expect enthusiasm towards the euro to wane from here. A move below €1.23 is looking increasingly unlikely.



Richard Driver
Currency Analyst 
Caxton FX

Monday, 5 November 2012

November Outlook: Euro set to decline


After some weak figures from the UK economy to kick October off, we have enjoyed a pretty steady flow of positive domestic news. The highlight has been the recent preliminary UK GDP figure for Q3, which indicated growth of 1.0%, almost doubling expectations. With headlines surrounding the UK economy’s emergence from recession, sterling has enjoyed some renewed interest, though with domestic growth so far this year almost completely flat, you don’t have to look far to find the sceptics.

As far as the US economy is concerned, conditions are certainly perking up. The recent advance US GDP figure for Q3 revealed annualised growth of 2.0%, so it was a case of anything the UK can do, the US can do better.  The Fed will also be encouraged by significant improvements in the US labour market. It appears that the recovery of the world’s No.1 economy from its mid-year slump, albeit later than expected, is well under way. Nonetheless, the risk of the US fiscal cliff continues to pose serious threats to US and indeed global growth in 2013.

It has been fairly quiet on the eurozone front in recent weeks. Spain remains frustratingly tight-lipped on the issue of a bailout request. However, we are heading into a crucial week in which the Greek parliament will decide whether or not to approve an austerity package that is essential to the release of the country’s next tranche of aid.

GBP/EUR
Sterling benefits as UK exits recession

Sterling spent much of October under pressure against the euro, with no major panic headlines emerging out of the debt crisis. Disappointing domestic data also kept sterling pinned well below the €1.25 level for long periods, with the services, construction and manufacturing sector updates all disappointing.

However, we have seen a decent turnaround in figures in the past fortnight or so, which has provided sterling with renewed support. The labour market continues to make impressive strides, as shown by the unexpected dip in the UK unemployment rate to a 13-month low of 7.9%, while retail sales were also in good shape in September. These figures were topped off by a 1.0% preliminary UK GDP figure, which was well above the 0.6% estimates that were prevailing in the build-up. With the data revealing that the negative growth that dominated the first half of the year has been recouped, the UK government enjoyed a rare sigh of relief.

MPC to vote against QE this month

This all leaves the Bank of England interestingly poised in terms of its next move. MPC members have been quick to warn that we can expect a much weaker growth figure from the fourth quarter, once the temporary factors of the Olympics and the bounce back from the extra Q2 Jubilee bank holiday are discounted. However, judging by the minutes from last month’s MPC meeting, not only is the MPC split on the desirability of another dose of quantitative easing, but there appears to be plenty of scepticsm with respect to the usefulness of such a move. In addition, there have been hints that the government’s Funding for Lending initiative, where bank lending is incentivised, is making a real difference.

There is plenty of reason to suspect that last quarter’s GDP figure was a temporary surge for an economy that still needs nurturing back to health. The latest updates from the services sector suggests the UK has made a soft start to Q4 but we nevertheless expect the MPC doves to fail to muster a majority vote in favour of QE this week.

Greece vote gets euro nerves jangling again

As far as the euro is concerned, focus has centred on the familiar issues of Greece, Spain and deteriorating eurozone growth. Greece will dominate the eurozone headlines this week, with PM Samaras presenting a controversial package of fresh austerity measures which will be voted on by the Greek parliament later this week. The vote will come right down to the wire, though we are expecting the package to be approved.
We are sticking to the ‘muddling through” assumption that Greece will do what is demanded of it and in turn will receive some concessions, along the lines of lower interest rates, extended loan maturities and extended austerity deadlines. The stakes are simply too high to allow the Greek saga to blow up again.

With Spanish bond yields coming away from the dangerous 7.0% mark in the aftermath of ECB President Draghi’s pledge to buy up unlimited peripheral debt, the pressure on PM Rajoy to request a bailout has eased somewhat. However, the market is likely to take an increasingly dim view of Rajoy’s ongoing procrastination through November (talk has emerged that he will wait until next year). Ratings agency Moody’s handed Spain some breathing space last month, sparing it the blow of downgrading its debt to ‘junk’ status but there is little doubt it will wield its axe once again if progress fails to emerge.

As ever, major concerns are stemming from the deteriorating state of eurozone growth, as the region is dealt round after round of austerity. Whilst the ECB now looks set to hold off from cutting interest rates until next year, declining demand from peripheral eurozone nations continues to filter into weakness in the eurozone’s core. German figures were yet again poor in October, compounding fears that the powerhouse economy is heading into recession. The region’s declining economy is really showing few bright spots, while the headlines out of the UK economy contrastingly highlight its re-emergence from recession.

Sterling is trading just below the key €1.25 (80p) level and direction from here over the coming weeks will really depend on whether the pound can make a sustained move north of this benchmark. We can’t discount another move back down towards €1.23 but we maintain expectations for this pair to move above €1.25 in the coming weeks.

GBP/USD
Dollar to benefit from upturn in US growth

Sterling has traded very positively against the USD in recent weeks but has finally suffered a downward correction in the past week. GBP/USD is still only a couple of cents off April’s multi-month highs above $1.62 with stronger UK data and diminishing risks of QE providing the pound with plenty of support at $1.60, just when a move back down to the $1.50s has looked on the cards.

The USD is attracting increased demand at present on the back of some strong US economic figures. The US unemployment rate fell to 7.8% in September, the lowest level seen in almost four years (though this bounced up to 7.9% in October). The advance US GDP figure for the third quarter came in above expectations at 2.0% (annualised), powered by a surge in consumer spending and a temporary boost from defence spending. November’s excellent employment update, suggests we can expect further improvements over Q4.

Global concerns to highlight dollar’s safe-haven status

With the fiscal cliff a month closer, so too are the risks of a massive hit to US growth. This in our view will increase appetite for the safe-haven US dollar as we approach year-end. Meanwhile, we are struggling for progress on the Spanish debt/growth problem and broader concerns with global growth should also underpin the greenback.

Whilst the US Federal Reserve is engaging in QE3, the US economy is still outpacing the UK by some distance and we believe this will soon be reflected in some dollar strength. The UK’s last GDP figure may have been impressive (1.0% in Q3) but looking at the year to date, growth has essentially flat lined and with the eurozone recession deepening, major risks to domestic growth remain.

This week’s US Presidential election makes short-term swings highly probable and highly unpredictable. Not only is it unclear how the dollar will react to whoever wins but there is also the issue of which party will control Congress. Our conservative bet is that the status quo will broadly remain, with Obama emerging victorious but with doubts remaining over his ability to strike a deal to avert the fiscal cliff. We maintain our position that that we will see this pair spend most of the rest of the year below $1.60. Sterling’s two-month low of $1.5920 should be tested soon and we believe this will ultimately be broken, paving the way for move back into the mid-$1.50s.

1-month Outlook
GBP/USD:  1.58
GBP/EUR: 1.2550
EUR/USD: 1.26

Richard Driver 
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

GBP/USD Outlook for Q4


US growth data pointed to a marked slowdown in Q3, which prompted the US Federal Reserve to finally deliver the long-awaited QE3 in mid-September. This has helped to keep the dollar on the back foot for much of the last month. The prospect of another round of QE to boost the world’s largest economy allowed US and European equities to maintain their summer momentum, never an environment conducive to dollar-strength.

The ECB’s pledge to purchase unlimited quantities of distressed debt (particularly Spain’s) and the Germany Constitutional Court’s approval of the European Stability Mechanism, which has been launched this week, also eased market worries and weakened demand for the safe-haven US dollar. This all coincided with a solid upturn in UK data; growth in August particularly picked up around the Olympics and GDP data for Q2 was revised up to an improved -0.4%.

However, some poor UK growth figures in the past week from the manufacturing and services sector in particular have taken the edge off the GBP/USD rate. Investors are once again stepping up their bets that the BoE will decide in favour of further QE in its closely watched November meeting. Much will depend on the initial UK GDP for Q3, which is released on October 25. The NIESR’s estimate this week of 0.8% growth may be a little too punchy.

Eurozone frustrations are now creeping into some dollar-strength. Spain is dragging its heels on requesting a bailout, while there remains uncertainty surrounding whether or not Greece will receive its next bailout tranche and whether we will see another Greek debt restructuring. In addition, we have seen plenty of evidence that not only is the eurozone heading into a recession, but that Germany could well be unable to resist this downward spiral. Some distinctly gloomy growth forecasts for the global economy from the IMF have also weighed heavily on market sentiment this week.

The combination of renewed weakness in UK data and renewed eurozone concerns saw the GBP/USD pair top out at $1.63 last month. This level represented a one-year high and GBP/USD’s resounding failure to breach this benchmark has resulted in a fairly sharp decline to $1.60, where it is currently finding support.

We expect the dollar to maintain the ascendancy in the fourth quarter, which should force the GBP/USD rate to make a sustained move below the $1.60 level in the short-term. Beyond this, we see the rate closer to $1.55 by the end of the year. There is plenty on the horizon to be nervous about; the US election and fiscal cliff, Spain (including probable credit rating cuts), Greece and global growth, which should all filter into a stronger US dollar. This baseline scenario of a lower GBP/USD rate relies on a decline in the EUR/USD rate and a continued loss of momentum in global equities, both of which we are sticking to. One major caveat to this positive outlook for the USD is that at some point in the coming weeks, Spain looks likely to bite the bullet and request help, which will likely give the euro a temporary lift and hurt the USD. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Monday, 1 October 2012

October Monthly Outlook: GBP/EUR and GBP/USD


Sterling to benefit from resurgent UK economy

From the eurozone, September’s two key events were ECB President Draghi’s announcement of his long-awaited bond-buying plan and the German Constitutional Court’s decision to approve the permanent bailout fund. Since then, there has been a real lack of any further concrete developments, which has understandably frustrated many market players and caused some risk aversion. As the next major event in the timeline of the eurozone debt crisis, speculation over the imminence of a Spanish bailout request is dominating market thinking at present. PM Rajoy does not actually appear to be much closer to making a formal request; he looks likely to wait until after Spanish regional elections to be held on October 21.

From the US, we have finally seen Ben Bernanke deliver what the market has been waiting for – more support for the US economy in the form of QE3. The move was priced in to a large extent but the dollar has been unable to stage any significant recovery in the immediate aftermath of the Fed’s announcement.
Conditions here in the UK continue to look a little brighter, though understandably many investors will still need further positive evidence to be truly convinced that the economy is on a path to a sustained recovery. However, with the Japanese and US central banks engaging in QE in September and the European Central Bank also taking monetary easing measures of its own (though rather more unconventional), the market is beginning to look more favourably upon the pound again.

GBP/EUR

Spanish delays will hurt the euro

Sterling has made a decent recovery against the euro in recent weeks, after what was quite a sharp decline as a result of the optimism that followed the announcement of the ECB’s bond-buying plan. There has been a positive response to some of the UK figures that have emerged in recent weeks; trade balance data revealed a dramatic rise in exports to destinations outside the EU, suggesting UK businesses are adapting to deteriorating eurozone demand. Meanwhile, UK unemployment figures continue to defy the overall weak picture of UK economic growth by making significant strides. From retail sales data to public sector borrowing figures, the UK economy has been beating market expectations time and again and this is filtering into some sterling strength. Another positive has emerged with the latest upward revision to the UK’s Q2 GDP figure to -0.4%, considerably better than the original estimate of -0.7%. Hopes are high for a very strong showing for the Q3 UK GDP figure released on October 26.

The minutes from the MPC’S September meeting revealed a unanimous vote against further QE (for now). The decision in favour of leaving the BoE 0.5% base rate unchanged was also unanimous. The fact that one MPC policymaker saw a good case for QE in September did not go unnoticed but as things stand, the Bank of England is understandably in wait-and-see mode. In light of the increased room for domestic optimism and the easing of financial conditions in the eurozone in recent weeks, it will not come as much of a surprise to learn that we are not expecting any fresh monetary easing measures from the Bank of England this month. November is likely to see the Bank assess its options much more carefully though.

Coinciding with strong economic figures has been an increased appetite for the pound as a relative safe-haven. Gilt yields have declined in recent sessions as investors attempt to take cover from renewed uncertainties from the eurozone and as usual this has boosted the pound by association. With the QE decisions from the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan in September, sterling has climbed a little higher up many investors’ wish lists in recent weeks.

Putting improved UK conditions to one side, the major factor behind GBP/EUR’s climb in the past month has been a shift in sentiment against the euro, as is predominantly the case when this pair climbs. The market relief that followed the ECB’s commitment to buy unlimited quantities of distressed peripheral debt has well and truly worn off. Investors have refocused on the major issues facing Spain and Greece in particular.

PM Rajoy has thus far snubbed the opportunity to take advantage of the ECB’s offer to purchase Spanish debt, fully aware of the austerity demands that will accompany such intervention. Rajoy is under enormous pressure domestically, with the rich Catalonia region demanding independence and fierce protests taking place in Madrid over existing austerity measures. The market is likely to have to wait until after regional elections held on October 21 for Rajoy to bite the bullet, which leaves a good three weeks of frustration ahead. That said, if rating agency Moody’s cuts Spain’s credit rating to ‘junk’ status, then a spike in Spanish bond yields could force Rajoy’s hand a little sooner.

Greek saga remains volatile

The situation in Greece also remains typically uncertain. October is an important month too, with some chunky bond repayments maturing. Disagreements not only exist between Greece and the Troika (EU, ECB and IMF) but between the IMF and the EU. With the Greek debt profile blown even further off track by a deeper than expected recession, the IMF is now pushing for another Greek debt restructuring in order to get its debt sustainability back on track. Unsurprisingly, more ‘haircuts’ is not at the top of the EU’s list of priorities.

It looks as if there is some consensus over giving Greece an additional two years to meet its targets and the government appears to have been reached an agreement for €13.5bn in additional spending cuts that they hope will unlock the vital next tranche of aid. However, the agreement still needs Troika approval and would need to be approved by the Greek parliament, which amid violent public protests in Athens is no dead cert. Speculation has surrounded the need for a third Greek bailout but this option looks to be a non-starter as it would require parliamentary approval from individual member states. The bottom line is that Greece may well leave the eurozone but EU leaders are unlikely to let this happen while conditions in Spain remain so tense. The pressure for stronger signs of progress will be turned up once again at the next EU Summit on October 18-19.

Sterling has recouped its mid-September losses against the euro and is back trading above the €1.25 level. With market confidence so shaky at present, any concrete progress - most importantly from Spain in the form of a bailout request – will likely give the euro a significant lift. However, our baseline scenario is that this will not occur and that sentiment will continue to weaken towards the euro, helping sterling to build on its domestic economic resurgence and resume its uptrend against the euro.

GBP/USD

Dollar to strengthen despite QE3

The US Federal Reserve finally pulled the trigger on QE3 in September, which meant it was another very soft month for the US dollar. There have been some bright spots amongst US figures in the past month, with trade balance, retail sales and consumer confidence figures all showing some improvements. However, there has been plenty of evidence of continued economic weakness to support Ben Bernanke’s decision to turn the printing presses back on; last month’s key employment update gave little to cheer about. In addition, the final US GDP figure for Q2 was sharply and unexpectedly revised down to 1.3% from 1.7%.

The issues of weak US economic growth and a long period of quantitative easing are by no means at the top of most investors’ list of concerns. The US dollar has strengthened a little in the past fortnight, amid waning euphoria surrounding the QE3 announcement and the ECB’s pledge to purchase peripheral debt. Spain has not asked for a bailout, Greece has not secured its next tranche of aid and growth across the world is slowing. These are all dollar-friendly factors and the slowdowns being seen in China and the eurozone (including Germany) are of particular concern.

Whilst UK growth data has been remarkably positive in recent weeks, the ongoing fragility of the UK recovery has already been highlighted this week by a weaker than expected manufacturing figure. If sterling is to avoid another short-term sell-off against the US dollar, the UK services figure released on October 3 must be firm. However, sterling should get plenty of support in the form of the preliminary Q3 UK GDP figure released on October 26; we are looking for a robust quarterly showing of around +0.6%.

As things stand, sterling is trading almost two cents below September’s 13-month high of $1.63 and we think this high will remain a ceiling for this pair. Regardless of QE3, we see plenty of scope for increased demand for the safe-haven US dollar. We are still anticipating weakness in the EUR/USD pair, which should send GBP/USD back below $1.60 in October. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Thursday, 6 September 2012

September Monthly Outlook: GBP/EUR, GBP/USD


August was another strong month for the single currency as the financial markets continued to take comfort in ECB President Draghi’s pledges to do “whatever it takes” to save the euro. There were no major swings among the major pairings, with August typically being a sleepy month where traders and policymakers alike take their summer vacations. Despite a recent upturn in US economic figures, the dollar remains on the back foot, with QE3 speculation more prevalent than ever.

Recent domestic data suggests conditions have improved somewhat in the past month, which gives hope to the market and consumers that the UK economy can yet stage some sort of recovery in the second half of the year. The Bank of England will be content to see how this bounce in activity progresses, so fears of imminent quantitative easing should subside for the time being. Moreover, with a busy calendar for the US and the eurozone in the coming weeks, the UK economy is very much out of the spotlight at present.

The month ahead could well be a pivotal one in the timeline of the eurozone debt crisis. We are seeing the European Central Bank preparing to launch a programme of unlimited bond-purchases as part of a wider bailout package for Spain. The pressure will now build on Spanish PM Rajoy to make the necessary request for help but the conditions Germany pushes for is likely to be subject to tense negotiations.

Next week (September 12) brings the long-awaited decision from the German Constitutional Court on the legality of the European Stability Mechanism and the fiscal compact agreed earlier in the year, around which there is considerably uncertainty. There is also plenty of political risk in the form of a general election in the Netherlands, while the Troika will spend much of September assessing Greece’s attempts to reform before deciding on whether to release the essential next aid tranche. In addition to all these eurozone events, we will learn whether the Fed will finally pull the trigger on QE3 this month.

GBP/EUR
Sterling remains at strong levels against the euro; it is quite clear that the market has spent recent weeks waiting to see how September’s events panned out before punishing the euro any further. Indeed, whilst decisions and concrete actions have yet again been conspicuous by their absence, comments from ECB policymakers and eurozone political leaders have been falling on sympathetic, or rather, hopeful ears. This has fuelled a rebound for the euro.

Signs of life in the UK economy
The UK economy has enjoyed some good news in the past week in the form of some better than expected manufacturing and services sector growth figures, with the latter in particular raising hopes for a recovery. UK unemployment continues to make progress, with the jobless rate falling to an 11-month low of 8.0%. However, the market will need more convincing that the worst of this double-dip recession is behind us before sterling really begins to reap the benefits of improved data. The initial Q2 GDP figure of -0.7% was revised up to -0.5% but confidence is understandably still very fragile. The Bank of England looks content to remain in ‘wait and see’ mode with respect to the need for further QE, so the risks to sterling in this regard are limited for at least the next month.

Will Super Mario save the day?
Positivity surrounding an imminent bond-purchasing plan to deal with soaring Spanish and Italian borrowing costs has been the key feature of the debt crisis in the past few weeks. Timescales as to the launch are immensely tricky to pin down due to the need for Spain to request help from the ECB but the central bank’s fire-fighting measures are likely to be seen a positive for the euro when it does finally come about.

However, these unconventional measures do little to address the fundamental issue at the heart of Spain and Italy’s predicament – their lack of competitiveness. The eurozone periphery cannot bounce back with the euro as overvalued as it continues to be (regardless of the depreciation we have seen this year). Indeed the ECB’s commitment to fire-fighting this summer has exacerbated the situation by strengthening the euro. Crisis management policies like bond-purchases will not see the eurozone through this crisis. We have seen this year that ECB interest rate cuts weaken the euro and for us, it is only a matter of time before the ECB takes this option again, finally putting concerns over inflation to one side. The incentive to cut rates is all too clear; the ECB itself has this week significantly downgraded the eurozone’s growth prospects for both this year and next (possibly as low as -0.6% and -0.4% in 2012 and 2013 respectively).

The ECB and Germany’s opposition to granting the ESM a banking license also continues to stand in the way of any so-called ‘silver-bullet’ solution. Such a move would effectively give the permanent bailout fund unlimited access to ECB funding, eliminating the concerns that linger over inadequate firepower.

Huge risk events ahead in September
The next major obstacle in store is the German Constitution Court’s ruling on whether the new role for the ESM (the permanent bailout fund) and the eurozone’s fiscal compact complies with German law. If it does not, then this would be disastrous for the euro and while the probability is of a positive outcome, the risks to the contrary are significant. September 12 is made all the more important by the Netherlands’’ general election, which has been centred on the issue of the debt crisis. If anti-austerity parties do as well as polls are suggesting, then this is likely to weigh on the single currency.

Concerns over Greece are likely to come to the fore again this month, as the Greek coalition struggles to work through another €11.5bn of spending cuts and as the Troika returns to complete its review of Greece’s efforts to address its fiscal position. A positive Troika report is necessary in October if Greece is to receive its essential next emergency loan, without which it will default and most likely exit the eurozone.
Sterling may well have another slow month against the euro in September as the market prices in a (temporary) resolution to Spain’s crisis. However, we do see this pair resuming its uptrend beyond the short-term, slowly creeping higher towards, though probably falling short of €1.30 by the end of the year. €1.25 should provide plenty of support and we don’t see sterling weakening below this level but equally, provided the German constitutional court give a positive ruling on the ESM and fiscal compact, sterling could well spend much of the coming weeks below €1.2650. 

GBP/USD
Sterling is flying at a 3 ½ month high at present, despite the UK economy’s significant underperformance of its US counterpart. The QE3 issue continues to haunt the US dollar and delay what we continue to believe will be a robust end to the year for the greenback. There is no doubt that the US Federal Reserve has engaged in greater discussion of further monetary accommodation, with several policymakers convinced of the need of QE3. However, Ben Bernanke chose not to utilise his annual Jackson Hole speech to signal another round of QE, though crucially he said nothing to discount it.

Can the US dollar avoid QE3?
It does appear to be a case of ‘when’ not ‘if’ with regard to QE3. The Fed’s reasoning on QE3 seems to have changed from a stance of committing to more QE in the event that the US recovery deteriorates further, to a commitment to QE unless conditions markedly improve. Economic figures out of the US have been somewhat improved in the past few weeks, which may well convince Ben Bernanke to keep his powder dry on September 13. However, there is every chance that Q4 will bring the decision the market is hoping for.

The sounds out of the Bank of England in recent weeks have given the market some reason to look kindly upon the pound. A cut to the BoE’s already record-low interest rate has effectively been discounted and Mervyn King appears content to wait to see the impact of its Funding for Lending Scheme before introducing further quantitative easing. Whether or not more QE comes in November really depends on growth figures in the interim but the latest indicators do suggest a mild upturn.

Nonetheless, we continue to envisage a significant move lower for the EUR/USD pair in the coming months. If this comes about, it will weigh on the GBP/USD pair to a great extent. The euro’s rally against the USD is looking increasingly stretched at current levels of $1.2650 and given that we see this pair below $1.20 by the end of the year, we do expect GBP/USD to retreat significantly from the $1.59 level where it is trading at present. A rate of $1.57 is realistic in the coming few weeks. 

Richard Driver 
Currency Analyst 
Caxton FX

Thursday, 30 August 2012

Will Bernanke signal QE3 at Jackson Hole on Friday?


The US Federal Reserve’s annual retreat to Jackson Hole, Wyoming is always a headline-hitter. In 2010, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke signalled QE2 in his Jackson Hole address and hopes are sky high that he will usher in a third round of quantitative easing tomorrow afternoon. Coupled with the eurozone debt crisis, US monetary policy has been the market’s obsession for a long time now.

The US recovery certainly hasn’t bounced back as expected from the weakness prevalent in the first half of the year. However, US data has been on an uptrend of late. We have seen monthly jobs growth improve for three consecutive months, whilst housing figures and consumer sentiment have also been on the up. In addition, data this week has revealed that the US economy grew at an annualised rate of 1.7% in Q2, rather than the initial estimate of 1.5%. This won’t have gone unnoticed at the Fed.

The minutes from the Fed’s last meeting stoked QE3 earlier bets this month, hinting that Bernanke & Co were preparing to act - “many members judged that additional monetary easing would likely be warranted fairly soon.” However, the wind was soon knocked out of the market’s sails when Fed policymaker Bullard stated that the minutes were “stale,” pointing to the upturn in recent US growth data as good reason for investors not to get ahead of themselves.

Nonetheless, it is probably fair to say that the majority of market participants are expecting Bernanke to signal QE3 tomorrow. It’s without doubt an extremely close call but our bet is that he will fall short of this benchmark, particularly in light of recent data. The Fed has various other policy options at its disposal, such as giving guidance on how long he expects US interest rates to remain “exceptionally low.” The bar has been set high though, only a QE3 signal is like to satisfy the market’s appetite tomorrow.

What will be the market’s response to the absence of a QE3 hint? Well, equities will no doubt take a hit and commodities and precious metals would follow suit. As for the dollar, well it should rally if Bernanke disappoints. Even if Bernanke gives the market what it wants, with QE3 priced in to the extent that it is, there is a good chance that investors will choose to take profit on short-dollar positions, which again would strengthen the greenback. With this in mind, we would prefer to be long of the dollar ahead of Jackson Hole. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Monday, 13 August 2012

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up: Dollar poised for rally

Pressure on for revised UK Q2 GDP figure

Last week’s all-important Quarterly Inflation Report from the Bank of England provided sterling with support just when a return to the €1.25 level was looking probable. King seemed to discard the option of another interest rate cut, describing it as potentially “counterproductive” and the likely effects to be “neither here nor there.” There were no real signals that the BoE is poised to introduce further quantitative easing, which again was supportive of the pound. The MPC minutes released on Wednesday should provide further clarity in this regard; we expect a unanimous decision to hold fire on more QE.

In addition to being less dovish than expected on monetary policy, Mervyn King also stuck to his guns in arguing that UK growth is not as weak as headline data has suggested. King’s comments have increased hopes and expectations that the initial -0.7% GDP figure for Q2 will be revised up. This was supported by last week’s better than expected, although still alarmingly weak in the bigger picture, manufacturing and industrial production figures from June. If an improved GDP figure is not forthcoming on Friday 24th August, then sterling could well be hit hard.

ECB has done nothing so far but hopes remain high

Despite the ECB having failed to take any concrete action at its meeting at the start of this month, the euro remains well away from its late-July lows. This is largely thanks to ECB President Draghi’s indications that the central bank is gearing up to resume the purchasing of Spanish and Italian bonds, in an effort to bring down their unsustainably high borrowing costs.

However, while some short-term relief for the euro would likely follow some concrete action from the ECB, it will be no panacea. Bond-purchases will be tied to very strict conditions with respect to economic reforms. Mario Draghi has suggested that ECB bond-purchases would only occur once a country had requested help, but this request may not come if Germany is too strict with the conditions it attaches. At the very least, German demands may could easily delay progress. In any case, bond-purchases took place last year but we are back in panic mode once again, so we find it hard to believe that ECB action will provide anything more than a short-term lift for the single currency.

Despite the positive sentiment that has built towards the euro over the past few weeks, we continue to hold a distinctly bearish view of the single currency over the rest of 2012. While sterling has plenty of its own domestic issues, chief among which are ongoing weak growth and the threat of the UK losing its AAA credit rating, it should be able to climb higher towards €1.30 this year.

GBP/EUR is currently trading at €1.27 and another push higher may prove tricky in the short-term as GBP/USD is looking ripe for another downward correction. Despite ongoing debate within and outside the US Federal Reserve, the central bank is still resisting the urge to announce or even signal QE3. This case has been strengthened most recently by last month’s better than expected US labour market update. The dollar looks well-positioned for a return to strength this month then, which could bring the GBP/USD rate well down from the current $1.57 level.

End of week forecast

GBP / EUR 1.2750
GBP / USD 1.5550
EUR / USD 1.2250
GBP / AUD 1.5000

Richard Driver

Analyst – Caxton FX
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Monday, 6 August 2012

Sterling set for a tough month

As has been the case for many months, eurozone concerns dominated market sentiment in July, so much so that the euro hit fresh multi-month lows across the exchange rates. Immediate concerns over the situation in Spain and Greece hurt confidence significantly, with weak economic growth across the globe adding to concerns. However, market sentiment and the euro have picked up considerably in recent sessions.

After the so-called progress that was made at the June EU Summit, there have been no material developments. The peripheral bond markets are always a good indicator of market tensions with regard to the debt crisis and Spanish 10-year bonds have hit fresh euro-era highs above 7.6% in recent weeks, with equivalent Italian debt setting its own record above the 6.5% level. Whilst economic growth throughout the eurozone is contracting sharply, Spain is edging towards a full-blown bailout and Greece could yet fail to secure its next bailout tranche, which is essential if the country is to avoid collapse.

Economic conditions in the US continue to provide plenty of cause for concern. The US economy slowed from a pace of 2.8% in Q4 2011 to a pace of 1.5% in Q2 2012. Poor performance in the world’s largest economy stunted the US dollar’s progress in recent weeks by increasing speculation that the US Federal Reserve is edging towards introducing the much-debated QE3 measure. However, the Fed’s recent meeting produced yet more ‘wait-and-see’ rhetoric, which has taken some weight off the dollar for the time being.

News out of the UK has also been far from comforting. Recent data has indicated that the domestic economy contracted by 0.7%, which is a shockingly poor figure well below expectations. The Bank of England has introduced another round (£50bn worth) of quantitative easing and the government has initiated an interesting new Funding for Lending Scheme to encourage banks to step up lending, but the effects of these are some way from being felt. In the meantime, UK growth is expected to remain very weak indeed. Sterling still holds some safe-haven demand, though this may be insufficient for it to avoid losses against the euro and dollar this month.

GBP/EUR

Having hit near four-year highs up towards €1.29, this pair has since erased its gains and at the current level of €1.26, it is back where it started in July. Whilst we do maintain that the pound will remain on its longer term uptrend, we anticipate some further short-term sterling softness in the coming weeks.

Spain spooked the markets in July, with borrowing costs soaring well above the 7.0% level amid a request from the Spanish regional government of Valencia’s request for financial aid and concerns of similar emergency needs across Spain’s regions. Spain’s banks have already agreed a bailout with international creditors and it has certainly discussed a full-blown sovereign bailout with Germany, which continues to demonstrate growing bailout-fatigue. In terms of austerity and economic reforms, PM Rajoy is doing all he can but investors are still hammering Spain in the bond markets. A sovereign bailout is looking increasingly unavoidable.

Last week’s ECB meeting was the most eagerly-awaited in a very long time but the market was left wondering what could have been. Draghi had a plethora of options available to him and after he stated that he would do “whatever it takes” to preserve the euro, he delayed any action whatsoever. The decision not to cut interest rates was unanimous after June’s 0.25% reduction, despite ECB President Draghi predicting that the eurozone economy is likely to recover only very gradually, whilst noting significant risks to further deterioration. Q2 was an awful one for the eurozone, with weakness in the periphery spreading to core states including Germany. The latest German and French manufacturing figures reveal a sharp contraction and eurozone unemployment remains a major issue, having recently reached a fresh record high of 11.2%.

Draghi disappointed the markets by suggesting that the European Stability Mechanism will not be granted a banking license, which had been previously indicated by an ECB policymaker and would have greatly increased the bailout funds’ firepower. Importantly, Draghi indicated that the ECB may move to buy up peripheral debt to ease pressure in the bond markets, but his comments fell short of a pre-commitment, never mind concrete action. German resistance to ECB bond-buying and demands for fiscal restraints represent a key obstacle to ECB emergency action.

Whilst alarm bells ring in the eurozone, the UK economy is also in a very weak state, which is best demonstrated by the recent-0.7% GDP figure from Q2, leaving the UK economy firmly in recession. Initial signs have not been positive for Q3 either; the UK manufacturing sector posted its worst figure in three years and the UK services sector gave its worst showing in eighteen months in July.

The Bank of England is clearly concerned with economic conditions in the UK, having introduced another round of quantitative easing in July to support the economy. The MPC voted 7-2 in favour of the £50bn top-up and there were suspicions that another dose would be approved at its recent August meeting in response to the latest shock GDP figure, though sterling has been spared this development. The government has also taken its own action to try to drag the UK out of recession in the form of its Funding for Lending initiative, designed to incentivise UK banks to increase lending, something that the Project Merlin initiative failed to do.

It needn’t be all pessimism towards the UK economy; there remains some fairly strong scepticism over the reliability of the awful initial Q2 UK GDP figure and in combination with the improved weather conditions, hopes for a significantly stronger second half of the year are not misplaced. The effects of the additional round of QE, the Funding for Lending programme should help the UK return to growth, though this may have to wait until Q4. Unfortunately though, initial expectations that the London Olympics will add 0.5% to UK GDP this year are receding.

The sharper than expected recession has highlighted the question marks over the UK’s treasured AAA credit rating. Rating agency Moody’s has retained its negative outlook for the UK’s credit rating, though fears have been quelled somewhat by Standard & Poor’s recent reaffirmation of the UK’s top rating with a stable outlook.

Sterling is trading at €1.26 at present, which represents a pretty aggressive decline from its multi-year high of €1.2878. With weak UK growth figures set to flow this month, we expect this rate to retrace further in the coming weeks down to €1.25. There is a risk that this pair will revisit its June lows of €1.2270 but on balance we think this is unlikely.

GBP/USD

Sterling has remained range-bound against the US dollar over the past month, fluctuating between $1.54 and $1.57. The news out of the US economy has broadly been very disappointing; June’s labour figures were alarmingly poor, manufacturing data was shaky and retail sales contracted sharply. In addition, the US economic growth rate of 1.9% (annualised) in Q1 slowed down to 1.5% in Q2 - almost half of the rate we were seeing at the end of last year.

Naturally, weak growth figures saw bets on QE3 ramped up yet again, which has been a thorn in the US dollar’s side for some time now. Ben Bernanke disappointed the market yet again in his July US Federal Reserve Press Conference. There was no QE3 announcement, nor any real signals that a move is imminent. Clearly this is good news for the US dollar, if not for global market confidence.

The recent release of July’s US non-farm payrolls figure should free up the US dollar to make some gains this month. Data revealed that 163 thousand jobs were added to the payrolls in July, which represents the best showing in five months and should ease fears of a sharp slowdown in the US for now. One thing is certain though, QE3 will remain very much on the Fed’s list of options for the foreseeable future. We see the Fed pulling the trigger on QE3 at some point in Q4.

Despite Moody’s recent reaffirmation of the UK’s AAA credit rating, market confidence in the pound appears to be waning thanks to a steady flow of weak UK growth figures. More of the same can be expected this month and to make matters worse, anecdotal evidence suggests the Olympics will fail to provide the economic boost that was initially expected. The Bank of England held off from adding another dose of QE at its July meeting but suspicions of another top-up will grow with every negative piece of UK data.

We hold a negative view of the EUR/USD pair in the coming weeks, based on continued uncertainty on all fronts; sharp contraction in eurozone growth, a possible Spanish bailout, Greek uncertainty and a continued imbalance between talk and genuine action. If EUR/USD heads down towards $1.21 as we expect, then this would almost ensure GBP/USD declines even if UK news is positive. Given that we expect news out of the UK to be negative, we feel this pair’s downturn could be quite aggressive. A move down $1.52 looks realistic in the coming weeks.

Richard Driver

Analyst – Caxton FX
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