Archive for February 20th, 2012

February 20, 2012

Wells Fargo:Commodity and emerging currencies on the rise

Improved risk sentiment is spreading across the FX market, first after China’s PBoC decision of cutting the banks’ reserve requirement ratio by 50bp (from 21% to 20.5%), and secondly as the Eurozone debt crisis seems to be closing a chapter, with hopes of a second bailout decision by the end of the day.

“Essentially, we would expect Europe’s finance ministers to agree to further Greek financing today and leave only relatively minor technical detail to be resolved”, writes Nick Bennenbroek, head of currency strategy at Wells Fargo Bank. “That could see further gains in the commodity and emerging currencies this week, while it might also mean a neutral to slightly stronger bias for the major European currencies as well.

February 20, 2012

The Countdown To The Eurozone Finance Ministers’ Meeting

At 1530GMT/ 1030 ET Europe’s finance ministers will meet and hopefully agree that Athens’ latest austerity efforts are good enough for them to receive their second bailout from the IMF/ EU and ECB. But as we start the European session we are seeing a bit of a pullback in risk after a strong start during the Asia session.

Right now this is a very normal pullback. The US is out on holiday today and as we enter European trading hours headline risk has massively increased, so investors are booking profits where they can. This has seen EURUSD back away from 1.3240 high and AUDUSD climb down from 1.08, although uptrends remain intact. While the markets lie in wait for the Eurozone finance ministers’ meeting later this afternoon we need to take our cue from the technical signals. In EURUSD any pullback to the 1.3150 level is normal, but below there then the fundamental back drop is likely to have changed for the worse (negative headlines from Greece or the Eurozone’s finance ministers’ meeting).

The outcome of today’s meeting is likely to define the performance of risk assets for the rest of the week. Right now the markets are not priced for an outright collapse of talks between Greece and the Eurozone finance ministers, but there are still many hurdles on the road to Greece paying its EUR14.5bn bond redemption payment on March 20th. Even the chair of the Eurogroup Juncker has said that ‘much negotiation’ is still needed.

Firstly at this meeting the PSI deal is expected to be agreed, the ECB’s position regarding the debt swap is also expected to be formalised and the Eurozone authorities need to be happy that Greece will implement the harshest austerity measures yet and will stick with its bailout conditions regardless of the outcome of April’s elections.

The PSI discussions took an interesting turn at the weekend. It was announced that the ECB would participate in the bond swap with Greece, but it would not face Collective Action Clauses (CACS), unlike other holders of Greek debt. Essentially European authorities can force losses on private bond holders but not on the ECB. I wrote about this yesterday and quoted Pimco chairman Bill Gross who said that this threatened the integrity not just of Greek bonds but of bonds across the entire Eurozone. But this has fallen on deaf ears this morning and Italian bonds have opened higher this morning (yields lower). Even Portugal, which has been targeted as the most at risk Eurozone nation after Greece, has seen its bond yields fall this morning. Thus, if today’s meeting finalises the details of the PSI negotiations then the market may concentrate on the CAC/ no CAC ECB debate, which has the potential to dampen sentiment.

There is also some confusion over whether Greece will get all of its bailout funds or if funds will be withheld until after the April elections. This is the line of action being pursued by the Dutch authorities. The other option is that a portion of Greek bailout funds are placed in an escrow account so that they are used to pay bond redemptions and can’t be used to fund public spending. This would limit Greece’s sovereignty over its own budgets, but would reduce the risk of a third or fourth bailout somewhere down the line.

So the discussions this afternoon could be long and messy and we don’t know for sure if Greece will get the funds it needs. But for now the markets believe it will hence the bullish tone to markets this morning and asset classes are moving higher in unison.

The China RRR cut on Saturday helped to boost sentiment during the Asia session as yet central bank pumps liquidity back into its economy. The US is out on holiday today and US stock markets are not open, so expect the emphasis to be squarely on Greece later.

By FOREX.COM

February 20, 2012

Retail positioning

Source:oanda

February 20, 2012

FXMR:EUR/USD has higher R/R to the downside

FX Market Report believe today’s Eurogroup decision for a €130bn Greek bailout won’t be a full agreement, but a partial deal with “difficult and contentious issues unresolved until a later date”.

“Here at FXMR we remain convinced that Greece is irreparably broke and has no sustainable debt dynamic other that a default and a new beginning”, writes Gavin Grier-Rees, stating that Germany, Netherlands and Finland already voice the same opinion. “That’s why we predict ever harsher conditions will be imposed on the Greeks until they eventually are forced from the single currency. What we are seeing here is both sides trying to avoid being given the blame for ending the dream of a single currency”, he adds.

FXMR analysts believe the strong week start, high at 1.3240, was a relief move as Greece didn’t default this weekend.

“Risk‐reward must be to the downside”, with supports at 1.3110-15 and 1.3145-50. As news disappoints, last week’s lows at 1.2975 is next target.

February 20, 2012

Time For AUD/USD Longs in Risk-On Trade Mode?

Risky assets are higher today, because of cut in China’s reserve-ratio requirement over the weekend by 50BPS to 20.5%, effective from February 24th.

That means that banks are now allowed to lend more money, which of course is good for economy. That’s why we saw a gap higher on commodities, stocks and lower on USD dollar; against the majors, as usually in Risk-on situation.

Finance ministers from the Eurozone are expected to approve a rescue package for Greece today, which is also supportive for the risk trade.

In this week we still favor more strength on FX-majors against the USD since market reversed last Thursday; Euro from 1.2970, Cable from 1.5640, Swiss franc from 0.9300,…

February 20, 2012

UBS:USD to remain bullish in 2012

US economy continues its relentless recovery as shown by last week’s improved results in the labor market and the inflation data. In the same direction, the Philadelphia Fed man survey (10.3 act. vs. 7.3 prev.) and the Empire State man index (19.53 vs.13.48 prev.) both confirmed the foundations for this wave of economic growth are well placed. Why is this so important for traders and investors in the greenback? Simply, it rules out, at least in the near term, another round of quantitative easing. Reinforcing that conclusion, the FOMC minutes has unveiled that the majority of the voting members were supportive of no more relaxing in the monetary policy conditions.

According to M.Mohi-uddin, Managing Director of Foreign Exchange Strategy at UBS, this week’s reports are also expected to confirm the momentum in the economic fundamentals and to slowly get rid of the idea of more QE in the present year. “That keeps us underlying bulls on the dollar against the major European currencies and the yen”, he concluded.