Market participants knew that volatility would rise today with the
ECB meeting. What they got was far worse than
could have been anticipated.
It started with
a report on the Financial Times a few minutes before the ECB's official
announcement claiming, disappointingly, that there was no rate cut. The euro took off, spiking to almost
$1.07 from around $1.0550. A few minutes later the ECB announced the ten bp cut in the deposit rate (to -30 bp).
The euro pulled back but then
rallied again to $1.0740 before dropping a cent. And all this before
Draghi's press conference began, and the details of changes in QE were announced.
Ultimately and profoundly the ECB disappointed, and this has
rarely been seen in Darghi’s tenure. It hit a market that had amassed a significant short euro position over the
past several weeks. As it became clear that the ECB was simply
going to deliver the smaller than expected rate cut and extend the program for
six months (at least), the shorts ran for
what must have felt like a small exit,
lifting the euro to almost $1.09.
The ECB announced the inclusion of regional
bonds, but the telling disappointment was in not increasing the size of the
monthly purchases. The small tweaks in the staff projections suggest means may keep expectations low for follow-up
action in March. The euro has retraced
38.2% of the decline that began in mid-October.
It is found just below $1.09. The
50% retracement is a little above $1.10.
Relative to market expectations, and what was
discounted, the ECB tightened policy. It spurred a sharp backing up of European
interest rates and a substantial narrowing of the 2-year interest
rate differential that had been widening with the dollar’s rise.
ECB Fireworks
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
December 03, 2015
Rating: