In the first quarter, there was some speculation that currency pegs
either in the Middle East or Hong Kong were going to give way. We argued that the pegs would in fact hold, and
hold they have. In fact, pressure on the Saudi and Hong Kong pegs have
dissipated.
Since the end of last month, Denmark's peg against the euro (+/- 1% band)
has come under pressure. Indeed, the pressure is the most acute since January 2015. When
the Swiss abandoned the cap on the franc then, speculative attention turned on
Denmark. We argued
at the time that Denmark was not Switzerland and that the Danish peg would
hold.
The Danish central bank demonstrated its resolve. It slashed
its key CD rate to minus 75 bp and accumulated reserves, which at their
peak was around 40% of GDP. As the
pressure subsided, the central bank sold down its reserves and raised rates by
10 bp earlier this year.
The unwinding of its reserves is notable. Neither the Swiss
National Bank nor the Bank of Japan, which also accumulated its reserves
primarily through intervention, have been unable to accomplish. To put
some numbers on it, consider that Danish reserves peaked last March near
DKK737.2 bln. Data released earlier this week showed that reserves stood
at DKK412.4 bln last month. This is
the lowest level of Danish reserves since 2010.
The point is not that Denmark is running out of reserves.
Rather it is to illustrate that Danish officials have the wherewithal to
rebuild reserves if necessary to defend the peg, which is the key objective of
its monetary policy.
The euro has fallen for eight consecutive sessions against the krone
coming into day's session. We suspect intervention will be the
first line of defense, and only if that struggles to turn the market, will
officials cut rates again. The pressure appears to be
emanating from flows into the Danish bond market. The 10-year yield is
off a little more than five bp this week,
the most in Western Europe. Near 31 bp, the 10-year yield appears
to be among the highest for triple-A rated European credits.
Denmark has the capability and political will to defend the peg.
We expect it to succeed once again to maintain the anchor of its monetary
policy.
Disclaimer
Denmark Peg Under Pressure, but Won't be Abandoned
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
April 08, 2016
Rating: