The US dollar is sporting a slightly
softer profile, but the price action is really
more of a consolidation than a trend reversal. The euro has gained nearly 0.5% today but remains well last Friday's high of
about $1.1375.
The euro's gains late yesterday and
earlier today were partly fueled by signs
that the Swiss National Bank had intervened. We had previously suggested that the
price action appeared to be consistent with intervention
after the cap was removed. Many
were skeptical, thinking the removal of the cap was an indication that 1) the
SNB was under pressure, not to expand its
balance sheet further and 2) was stepping away from the market.
Yesterday's weekly report showed that
sight deposits rose 8% in the week ending January 23. This is the largest rise in sight deposits since July 2013.
This was followed up by comments by the SNB's Danthine,
who reinforces this interpretation, arguing that current franc levels are
unjustified and that the SNB was still prepared to intervene. As we do not think the SNB's worldview has not
changed, we suspect that what is ultimately
involved here is a change in tactics. The cap offered a Maignot
Line of sorts. It committed the SNB to obvious
intervention. The new tactics inject more ambiguity and intervention
discretion.
That said, the euro-franc cross remain
volatile. It initially extended yesterday's gains to the post-cap high
near CHF1.0385 only to be sold back off below CHF1.01 in mid-morning European
activity. As the euro came off against the franc, it also surrendered
some of its gains against the dollar.
Greece bonds and stocks
are lower. Market participants remain divided.
Some remain concerned that the demands
that Syriza has for its official creditors are too much. Any
concessions, they worry, will be similarly demanded
by others. There are still those who think that Syriza is
"blackmailing" the creditors with the threat of default. On the
other hand, we continue to expect hard negotiations and officials have until
the end of February to reach an agreement. At the end of February, the
two-month extension ends. We expect compromises
to be struck. It could include a
smaller target for the primary budget surplus. It could include some
reduction in the debt servicing costs.
The major economic data of the day was the
UK's Q4 GDP report. The 0.5% quarter-over-quarter
expansion was slightly below market expectations (0.6%) and Q3's 0.7% pace.
The year-over-year rate slowed to a still respectable 2.7% from 3.0% in
Q3. A detailed breakdown is not available with
the first estimate. However, the modest slowing of the UK economy is not
surprising. It has been unfolding since the middle of last year.
Sterling slipped roughly half a cent on the news, after initially extending
toward $1.5120.
The December 2015 short-sterling futures contract that
retreated yesterday, following the weekend bearish comments by Carney and Forbes, slipped further today. The implied yield is testing the 20-day average near 75 bp. The implied rate has not closed above its 20-day
average in since early December 2014.
Given the Greek election, the beginning of
the Italian presidential selection process at the end of the week, investors
are sensitive to broader political developments. The UK election is roughly 100 days away. The latest Sky poll shows
Labour winning 286 seats to the Tories 265. This would leave Labour 40
seats shy of a majority. In the UK, when a party fails to achieve a
majority, it is often called a hung parliament. In other countries, it is
simply called a coalition government.
The ECB provided 38.6 bln euros in funding
at its main repo operation (MRO) today. It is the most since last May. The driver here
appears to be the expiry of the remaining LTRO funds. There is roughly 40
bln euros outstanding. Today's demand appears
to have been bolstered by the replacement
of this with MRO funds. It is not unexpected or very surprising. Since it
is replacing one source of funding with another, the impact on the overall
liquidity is unlikely to be significant.
The PBOC also provided extra liquidity to
its banking system. It provided CNY60 bln via 7- and
28-day repos. The main aim seems to be avoiding a liquidity crunch around
the New Year. Given that the yuan nearly moved the entire 2% allowed vs.
the fix yesterday, there is some predictable talk that the band maybe widened.
We suspect such a move is not imminent.
Meanwhile, the ruble has pared some of its losses
scored in the wake of the new sanction threat and Russia's loss of investment
grade status by S&P. It is the first rating agency to do
so. This may not impact many institutional investors. Although
split ratings are awkward, many mandates require two rating (of three or four) rating agencies to take away the
investment grade rating before it is truly considered lost.
There has been a sharp reversal of
fortunes. There had appeared to be some softening of Europe's
commitment to sanctions on Russia. However, the Ukrainian government went
on a powerful offensive in east Ukraine. Some suspect influence by some
foreign governments, encouraging Ukraine. This was a trap for the rebels
and Russia, who were forced to escalate
or lose negotiating ability, let alone strategic territory. Now the idea of modifying the sanctions appears off the table again. The conventional
view was that Russia would use its foothold in east Ukraine to destabilize the
entire country. Instead, it looks like Ukraine with some allies is using east Ukraine to keep Russia isolated.
The US reports December durable goods
orders. This will be the last piece of data for economists fine
tuning Q4 GDP estimates ahead of the report at the end of the week. The
Bloomberg consensus calls for a 3.0% annualized pace. The FOMC begins
its two-day meeting today. Little change in the statement is expected when it is released tomorrow.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand meets
tomorrow. It is expected to signal that its mini-tightening cycle has
ended. A more neutral stance is
anticipated. Tomorrow Australia reports Q4 CPI. An expected
softening of price pressure will likely fan expectations that the RBA could cut
rates as early as next month. Both currencies are little changed today.
Dollar Softer, Consolidating Recent Gains
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
January 27, 2015
Rating: