Data has revealed that the Swedish economy took a surprise upturn in the first quarter of this year. This improved domestic economic performance has given the Riksbank the confidence to leave interest rates unchanged for the second consecutive meeting, though there remain calls for another cut within the central bank’s ranks.
A brighter picture in Sweden has coincided with a mild recovery in global equities and risk appetite, in the wake of May’s crisis of eurozone confidence. Greece has managed to form a coalition government and concerns surrounding a messy Greek default and exit from the eurozonehave eased, for the time being at least. Spain’s situation looked capable of spiralling out of control, with the country’s 10-year bond yields setting new euro-area records up above the dangerous 7.0% mark. Some progress has been made with regard to Spain; an agreement has been reached for the bailout of its banks and some unexpected decisions made at the recent EU Summit have eased some short-term concerns.
Whilst market confidence has turned distinctly negative in recent sessions, the positive Swedish data in recent weeks has provided plenty of support for the Swedish krona, suggestive of a strong second half of the year for the Swedish economy. However, we view the risks to market sentiment and developments in the debt crisis to be heavily skewed to the downside. As such we don’t see too much more upside for the krona from here over the next couple of months.
GBP/SEK
After this pair peaked close to 11.50 in mid-May, the krona has rebounded impressively over the past two months. Sterling has struggled against many of the riskier currencies in recent weeks. Global stocks have staged an impressive recovery from their May sell-off and the krona has tracked that bounce inrisk appetite.
Events in the UK have not helped sterling’s cause of late. Growth data has been consistently weak, suggesting there will be no swift bounce back out of the double-dip recession that the UK has found itself in. Data confirmed the UK economy contracted by 0.3% in Q1 and we expect another contraction in UK GDP in Q2. The Bank of England’s response to fading domestic activity has been to introduce yet more quantitative easing, which is of course a negative for the pound. This factor has contributed to GBP/SEK’s poor performance over the past couple of months.
The Riksbank decided to leave its interest rate at the current level of 1.50% in July. Only two votes out of six were in favour of another cut to the Riskbank’s base rate, with the majority satisfied with the upturn in Swedish activity. The Swedish economy grew by 0.8% between Q4 2011 and Q1 2012 and the Riskbank is expecting overall growth of 0.6% this year, up from previous estimates of 0.4%. We have seen some positive figures comes out of Q2 as well;Swedish industrial production rose by an impressive 3.0% in May, while industrial orders rose by 4.5%, which has sparked a good degree of optimism surrounding the Swedish growth outlook.
There remains plenty of reason for caution. Swedish unemployment is rising (up at 4.4% from 4.0%) and the Swedish economy remains very vulnerable to deteriorating eurozone conditions. This second factor will ensure that another interest rate cut later this year is always a possibility, but on balance we expect the Riksbank to hold fire. We don’t see much further downside for this pair and expect a bounce back above the 11.00 mark over the coming weeks.
EUR/SEK
This pair has come under some aggressive selling pressure in the past two months. The risks of economic disaster posed by the eurozone debt crisis are building every monthand this has seen the single currency take another sharp turn for the worse.
The short-term risks posed by Greece have eased now that a coalition government is in place but when the bailout term negotiations commence there is plenty of scope for alarm bells. Concerns over Spain have more than stepped in to fill the void; its banking sector has had to seek a bailout and despite significant progress at the recent EU Summit, Spanish bond yields remain dangerously close to 7.0%.
Investors are still sceptical towards the euro and rightly so – no long-term solution is in sight; the bailout funds are still insufficient, Germany continues to obstruct the introduction of Eurobonds, peripheral borrowing costs remain high and eurozone growth is contracting. Even the progress made at the recent EU Summit has been placed in doubt by the German constitutional court delaying ratification of the ESM changes and the fiscal pact. In addition, the euro’s yield differential has once again been reduced by a 0.25% ECB interest rate cut (to 0.75%) this month, with further monetary easing in the form of another rate cut or cheap loan offering likely this summer.
With the euro losing ground across the board, the SEK is shining out as a safer European alternative backed by stable domestic economic growth and low debt levels. There are plenty of rumours that the SEK is a popular target with the Swiss National Bank as it continues its project of recycling the euros it acquires whilst weakening the CHF.
This pair is trading at an 11 ½ half year low; whilst we do not expect any major progress in the eurozone over the next couple of months, we do expect to see this pair to benefit from a minor bounce after its sharp recent decline. The SEK remains vulnerable to major panic in the eurozone. A bounce up towards 8.80 over the coming weeks looks a good bet.
USD/SEK
As one of the safest currencies available, the US dollar has been a strong performer since early May, which has helped this pair continue the uptrend that has played out over the past year. Eurozone fears have reached new heights and the safe-haven dollar always strengthens in this environment.
The US dollar has not been without its own domestic issues though; the US economy slowed down sharplyover the first half of 2012, the Q1 GDP figure was revised down to 1.9% (y/y) from 2.2%. Consistently soft figures out of the US labour market in particular have ramped up speculation that the US Federal Reserve will announce a third round of quantitative easing (QE3). Regardless of the risks of QE3 this year though, we envisage enough safe-haven demand for the dollar to outperform.
We envisage plenty more gains for the US dollar in the second half of this year, with USD/SEK heading back up towards it recent highs around 7.30 in the coming few weeks, with fresh highs above 7.50 likely towards the end of Q3.
NOK/SEK
The Norwegian economy continues to shine, having grown by 1.1% in the first quarter of this year. The latest updates in terms of Norwegian manufacturing and industrial production were positive and retail sales growth was particularly impressive in May. There is no doubt that the Norwegian economy is proving extremely resilient to the global and eurozone economic downturn that has developed this year. Rising investment in Norway’s lucrative oil sector is providing steady support to growth and with forward-looking economic surveys looking positive;the Norges Bank has revised its GDP forecasts upward to 3.75% from 3.25% for 2012.
Clearly the Norges Bank has been eager to highlight the external threats to the Norwegian economy, most notably from the eurozone debt crisis. Indeed it stated in June that “turbulence and weak growth prospects abroad suggest the key policy rate should be kept on hold.”However, the Norges Bank is one of the few global central banks not inclined towards easier monetary policy and we currently expect an interest rate hike from the Norges bank around the turn of 2013. Of course, this will be highly sensitive to developments in the eurozone and how drastically this affects Norwegian exports.
The Norwegian krone is still a commodity currency and although Norway’s strong economic fundamentals have to a large extent offset the effects of declining oil prices on the krone, the slide has still weighed on the currency. Since the uncertainty triggered by the Greek elections in early May, the price of Brent crude has declined by almost 20% from $120 to under $100 per barrel.
This factor has contributed to a sharp downward correction in the NOK/SEK rate, dragging it down from two-year highs above 1.20 to current levels just above 1.14. We consider these levels to be much too low and are confident that we will see a strong bounce off these lows up towards 1.18 over the next few weeks.
Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report
Showing posts with label oil prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil prices. Show all posts
Wednesday, 11 July 2012
Wednesday, 7 March 2012
Swedish Krona March Outlook
The Swedish krona and other risky currencies finished 2011 strongly and made an impressive start to 2012. Risk appetite has been spurred on by the ongoing impact of the European Central Bank’s (ECB) mid-December LTRO (cheap loan offering), further improvements to the US economic recovery and the emergence of a Greek bailout agreement.
However, huge uncertainties surround both the Greek and wider eurozone debt situation. In addition, data this year clearly points to the onset of a recession in the euro-area. The risks to a downturn in market sentiment, which will inevitably weigh on the krona, are all too apparent.
In terms of the Swedish economy, growth has deteriorated and the prospects for this year have weakened. Amid diminishing internal and external demand and rising unemployment, the Swedish economy contracted by 1.1% in the final quarter of 2012. Accordingly, the Riksbank is forecasting growth of just 0.7% for 2012.
The Riksbank cut the Swedish interest rate by 25 basis points to 1.50% in February, following the rate cut we saw in December. Further monetary easing this year cannot be discounted if conditions continue to worsen. In addition, after an impressive surplus last year, the Swedish National Debt Office has recently announced that it expects a budget deficit of 11bn krona this year.
We hold a pessimistic view for Greek and eurozone developments this year, on both the growth and the debt front. This should weigh on risk appetite and combined with the Swedish economy’s downtrend, the outlook for the Swedish krona is decidedly vulnerable.
GBP/SEK
Interest rate developments have gone against the Swedish krona in recent months, with the Riskbank reducing its yield from 2.00% to 1.50%. The moves were down to both diminishing global and domestic growth. With the eurozone accounting for more than half of Swedish exports, the recession that the region is heading into is likely to weaken Swedish growth to an even greater degree. The Swedish inflation outlook is also distinctly tame, so there is little scope for a Riksbank rate hike this year, while a further cut will certainly be considered if conditions both internally and externally deteriorate.
This Swedish downturn contrasts with the good news that has emanated from the UK economy in the past few weeks. UK retail sales figures have been excellent; the services sector continues to show decent growth and the construction sector also bounced back in February. These firmer figures have made a return to positive growth (after last quarter’s -0.2% GDP figure) highly likely in Q1 2012. This in turn should dissuade the MPC from deciding on further UK quantitative easing this year. It also increases the likelihood of the UK hanging onto its prized AAA credit rating, which is a major pillar of support for sterling.
The ECB’s cheap loans have fuelled a rally in risky assets in the past three months, as shown by the FTSE 100’s recent climb to a seven month high. However, an improved outlook for the UK economy (and therefore sterling), a deteriorating Swedish economy and a fairly sharp decline in risk appetite have seen GBP/SEK show signs of resuming last year’s uptrend. In line with a pessimistic view towards the overall eurozone situation, we see GBP/SEK consolidating on its recent bounce in the 10.7-10.8 area over the next few weeks. In the medium and longer-term, the risks are skewed towards a further upside move towards 11.00.
EUR/SEK
There have been some positive developments in the eurozone in recent months. The ECB’s cheap loans have ensured that credit conditions in Europe have eased this year and have fuelled a rally in eurozone equities and brought key peripheral bond yields in Italy and Spain down to more sustainable levels. A long-awaited Greek bailout agreement finally arrived in February, quelling fears of a messy Greek default in mid-March (albeit temporarily).
However, the market also remains incredibly tense about the Greek situation. A Greek bailout is by no means assured, which means we may yet see a messy Greek default this month. Greece has until the evening of Thursday 8th March to convince enough private bondholders to sign up to the debt-swap arrangement, failure to do so could result in a credit event in which credit default swaps are triggered.
The potential Greek scenarios that are currently on the table are many and varied and this lack of certainty is what is weighing on risk appetite at present. Even in a best case scenario in which Greece gets its second bailout and avoids a default without triggering a credit event, there are strong arguments that suggest this is simply an exercise in buying time and we could be back in bailout and default territory before long.
In addition, eurozone growth remains a key concern. The region contracted by 0.3% in the fourth quarter of 2011 and judging by growth figures out of Germany and the region as a whole, a slide back into a prolonged recession is now looking somewhat inevitable.
By virtue of the Swedish krona’s negative correlation with low levels of risk appetite and in line with our view that we are entering a period of damper market confidence in which safer assets than the krona will be turned to, we are confident that EUR/SEK will continue to climb. We have seen a sharp spike from 8.80 to over 8.90 in the past week and we are looking for a push towards 9.00 in March.
USD/SEK
To buck the global trend of weakening global growth, the US recovery has really gathered pace in recent months. The US economy grew at an impressive annualised pace of 3.0% in the fourth quarter of last year and there have been significant improvements to America’s chronic unemployment problem. This upturn seems to have caused US Federal Reserve Chairman (Ben Bernanke) to indicate that QE3 will not be utilised, which is a real positive for the US dollar.
By contrast, the US dollar made a very weak start to 2012 but we believe the greenback will be a major outperformer this year. With intervention doubts surrounding the other traditional safe-haven currencies (the yen and the swiss franc) and with the EUR/USD pairing looking increasingly vulnerable to a collapse, the USD is set for major gains in what will surely be a highly uncertain, dollar-friendly environment this year.
The bounce in the USD/SEK rate (from 6.55 to 6.80) in the past week should represent the start of a major reversal of dollar weakness. We see the USD strengthening in excess of 7.00 krona level in coming months, though over the next few weeks gains will probably be limited by the 6.90 level.
NOK/SEK
The Norwegian krone has made an extremely impressive start to 2012. It is the top performing currency over the past month thanks to a combination of domestic economic strength and soaring oil prices. Norwegian manufacturing and retail sector growth and declining unemployment has improved sentiment towards the NOK, while a widening trade surplus shows that exports are not being hit as they are in neighbouring Sweden. The Norwegian economy outperformed the Swedish economy in the fourth quarter of 2011 by growing 0.6% (versus Sweden’s 1.1% contraction) and is almost certain to continue outshining this year.
Oil prices have risen by 15% already in 2012 amid worrying developments in Iran; Brent crude is currently trading just off a multi-month high above $125 per barrel. As a major producer of oil, the Norwegian economy stands to benefit and so too does its currency.
The only real question mark hanging over the Norwegian krone is the monetary policy of the Norges Bank. The state of Norwegian economic growth wouldn’t suggest another cut to the Norwegian base rate, which currently stands at 1.75% (slightly higher than the Swedish 1.50% rate). However, Governor Olsen has reiterated that the Norges Bank will consider the strength of the krone when evaluating its interest rate policy. Another rate cut may well come if the NOK continues to appreciate but the krone is likely to remain in demand regardless.
With the NOK/SEK rate having bounced from just above 1.14 to just below 1.20, the Norwegian krone is the clear outperformer here. NOK/SEK is actually trading only marginally below a 25-month high. However, the current pace of appreciation is unlikely to persist for another month as Norges Bank intervention concerns will inevitably temper progress. Still, we should not see too much of a downward correction away from the current 1.20 trading level.
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Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Is the rally in commodity prices coming to an end?
In October last year, Brent crude oil was trading at around $80 per barrel. In January this year, it was trading just below $100, and on Monday of this week, it exceeded $126 per barrel, a high not seen since early 2008. However, in the past two days we have seen the price drop by $5 per barrel, and the price of gold has also dropped significantly. This begs the question –has the rally in commodity prices (as driven by oil prices) run out of steam?
The trigger for the recent sharp decline in oil prices on Tuesday can be attributed to Goldman Sach’s, who earlier suggested that investors should take profits after the International Monetary Fund voiced concerns that higher energy prices could hinder the global economic recovery. Speculators quickly jumped on Goldman’s advice; accentuating the price decline and making clear that the drop was the result of an independent intervention from a major market player rather than a natural slide.
So what’s the outlook for oil prices? Well, based on the International Monetary Fund’s downgraded economic growth estimates for the US and for Japan (two of the world’s largest three economies), demand for oil looks set to decline. However, geo-political tensions in the Middle-East are constraining the supply side and OPEC recently announced that Saudi Arabia is unable to increase output to cover the decrease in Libyan output.
In a recent blog on the Wall Street Journal Digital Network, a strong argument indicating that June could be a point at which commodity prices come off their peaks. In November 2008, Brent crude was trading under $50 per barrel, since then it has been on a steady uptrend. What triggered this rally? The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programme. – which is set to draw to a close in June; potentially cutting short the supply of funds currently directed into oil futures.
How might this affect the currency markets? Oil producing states such as Canada, Russia, Norway, and other commodity-linked economies such as Australia are currently benefitting from greater profits on their exports. This has been a major factor in the strong performance of their currencies in recent months. If oil prices continue to show signs of topping out, it may trigger investors to take profit on considerable gains made on riskier currencies.
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.
The trigger for the recent sharp decline in oil prices on Tuesday can be attributed to Goldman Sach’s, who earlier suggested that investors should take profits after the International Monetary Fund voiced concerns that higher energy prices could hinder the global economic recovery. Speculators quickly jumped on Goldman’s advice; accentuating the price decline and making clear that the drop was the result of an independent intervention from a major market player rather than a natural slide.
So what’s the outlook for oil prices? Well, based on the International Monetary Fund’s downgraded economic growth estimates for the US and for Japan (two of the world’s largest three economies), demand for oil looks set to decline. However, geo-political tensions in the Middle-East are constraining the supply side and OPEC recently announced that Saudi Arabia is unable to increase output to cover the decrease in Libyan output.
In a recent blog on the Wall Street Journal Digital Network, a strong argument indicating that June could be a point at which commodity prices come off their peaks. In November 2008, Brent crude was trading under $50 per barrel, since then it has been on a steady uptrend. What triggered this rally? The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programme. – which is set to draw to a close in June; potentially cutting short the supply of funds currently directed into oil futures.
How might this affect the currency markets? Oil producing states such as Canada, Russia, Norway, and other commodity-linked economies such as Australia are currently benefitting from greater profits on their exports. This has been a major factor in the strong performance of their currencies in recent months. If oil prices continue to show signs of topping out, it may trigger investors to take profit on considerable gains made on riskier currencies.
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.
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