What To Watch This Week

Well so much for a “risk on” week. Market sentiment soured at the end of last week following The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) civil action against Goldman Sachs, in which they accused the bank of fraud. The impact reverberated across markets and risk trades were pulled back as a consequence. Bulls shouldn’t be too downhearted though as the drop in risk trades followed several days of gains and part of the pullback could be attributed to profit taking.

Speculation of similar probes in Europe by financial regulators will cast a shadow over markets early this week. Nonetheless, direction will at least in part come from earnings. So far the run of earnings looks upbeat, with around 83% of the 48 S&P 500 companies reporting, beating analysts’ estimates. Overall profits are forecast to increase by around 30% from a year ago but are on track to easily beat this estimate. Bellwether names including IBM, Apple, Coca-Cola, Boeing, Microsoft, and AT&T report this week.

The meeting between Greek officials, ECB, IMF and EU has been delayed until Wednesday. There is little likelihood of Greece seeing any loan money soon as the need for parliamentary approval in some EU countries and upcoming regional elections in Germany on 9 May will put a spanner in the works. An issue of EUR 1.5bn of 3-month Greek debt tomorrow will act another test of market confidence but the recent widening in Greek debt spreads suggests a less positive reception than the previous sale.

There are also a few central bank meetings to contend with this week including Canada, Sweden, India, Philippines and Thailand. The only Bank likely to hike interest rates out of this bunch is the RBI in India with another hike expected, following closely on the heels of the March move. Canada and Sweden are unlikely to shift policy until at last after the end of Q2 whilst protests in Bangkok, Thailand, and the knock on impact on consumer confidence, have effectively sealed the case for no rate move there.

On the data front, attention will turn to US housing market activity. Markets will be able to gauge further clues to whether recovery in the housing market has stalled. An increase in both existing (Thu) and new home sales (Fri) in March is expected, which may allay some concerns although any improvement is likely to continue to fragile against the background of tight credit and high foreclosure levels.

In Europe, aside from the ongoing Greek sage, sentiment surveys will garner most attention, with the release of the German ZEW (Tue) and IFO (Fri) surveys as well as manufacturing and service sector purchasing managers indices (PMIs) across Europe. On the whole the surveys are likely to reveal some improvement as confidence.

Risk aversion will be slightly elevated at the beginning of this week but strong earnings and improving data will help to prevent too much damage. Consequently Risk currencies will start the week under pressure but any pullback will be limited. Given that speculative positioning in risk currencies such as the AUD, NZD and CAD is well above their three-month average according to the latest Commitment of Traders’ IMM data there will be some scope for profit taking. EUR speculative sentiment has seen some improvement but EUR/USD remains vulnerable to a further pull back to technical support around 1.3302 this week.

FX / Economic Preview

The European Union (EU) aid package for Greece and extension of collateral requirements by the European Central Bank (ECB) helped return a semblance of confidence to markets. Although the probability of a Greek default now looks extremely small, further austerity measures, fiscal issues in other EU countries and the negative impact on growth that all of this implies, suggest that Europe will be plagued by various problems for some time yet.

As a result of more favourable market conditions Greece is set to launch a syndicated bond issues today or tomorrow of up EUR 5 billion according to press reports. Attention will also turn to Greek debt rollovers, beginning with EUR 8.2 billion on April 20.

Improving sentiment following the Greece deal has extended to the EUR, with the currency bouncing off its lows around 1.3267. EUR/USD will now look to break through resistance around 1.3446, which would set up a test of 1.3516. There is plenty of scope for short-covering to help the EUR as reflected in the latest IMM Commitment of Traders’ report (a gauge of speculative market positioning) which revealed net EUR positions reaching yet another record low in the week to 23rd March. Whilst sovereign/official buying interest may keep EUR/USD supported this week the currency pair is best played as a sell on rallies.

A similar assessment applies for GBP. Speculative sentiment for the currency also hit a record low in the latest week but unlike the Greek deal helping the EUR, last week’s UK budget has done little to boost GBP’s prospects. Moreover, a report in the Financial Times highlighting hedge funds bets against GBP, suggests that there are still plenty of headwinds against the currency.

Volumes are set to thin out this week ahead of upcoming holidays, whilst the US March jobs report at the end of the week will likely prevent moves out of current ranges ahead of its release. The consensus forecast is for a 190k increase in non-farm payrolls though much of this is likely to reflect hiring for the 2010 US consensus and a rebound from adverse weather effects in February.

In Europe March economic confidence surveys will be watched closely to determine how much damage Greece and general fiscal woes are having on sentiment. Some improvement, in line with the Eurozone Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) and the German IFO business confidence survey, is expected, which will help to give further, albeit limited relief to the EUR.

The Japanese data slate kicked off the week in good form, with the release of February retail sales data, revealing its biggest annual increase in 12-years. It is difficult to see the recovery in sales taking much greater hold given persistent deflation pressures however, and part of the gain probably reflects the government’s shopping incentive program.

Aside from industrial production and jobs data in Japan the key release will be the results of the Q1 Tankan survey on Wednesday. The survey of manufacturers’ confidence is set to show further improvement. USD/JPY is likely to remain supported around 91.67 but will need a further widening in US/Japan 10-year bond yield spreads to push higher.

US Dollar Back On Top As Yields Rise

Two issues are driving markets and both are playing negatively for sentiment; the rise in G7 bond yields and the outcome of the EU summit. At a time when G7 bond yields have been pushing higher the poor response to the US $32 billion 7-year note sale contributed to a further increase in yield. The sale resulted in a yield of 3.374%, which was higher than expected, and a bid/cover ratio of 2.61. A combination of large US Treasury supply, medium term funding issues and signs of improving growth suggest no let up for US Treasuries.

The most reactive currency to yield differentials is currently USD/JPY. The 1-month correlation between USD/JPY and US/Japan bond yield differentials is a high 0.85. The spike in US 10-year Treasury yields especially relative to JGB yields (by around 21 basis points this week) is the main contributor to the jump in USD/JPY over recent days. Given the bearish outlook for US bonds in the near term, it suggests more upside for USD/JPY but also increasingly for other currencies against the USD as the importance of yield increases. Immediate USD/JPY technical resistance is seen around 93.21, with support at 91.87.

The other event of note yesterday was developments surrounding Greece in the European Union summit though in truth it was probably the strong comments by ECB President Trichet that had the bigger impact on EUR sentiment. The final EU communiqué noted the readiness for bilateral loans to Greece and substantial International Monetary Fund (IMF) financing in a Greek aid mechanism. Importantly and a likely sop to Germany, any aid will not contain a subsidy for Greece. Aid by the EU and IMF will only be provided in the event of “very serious difficulties”.

The EU agreement means that no money will be forthcoming immediately, but at least there will be a back stop should Greece have financing difficulties over coming weeks, which will act as an important safety net ahead of substantial Greek debt rollovers. This news was supplemented by the fact that ECB will not raise its minimum collateral requirements at the end of the year, which means that Greek debt will not be excluded in the event of a ratings downgrade. This is good news for Greece.

The combination of the fact that Greece will have to borrow money only at market rates, ongoing worries about other EU countries fiscal problems and European Central Bank (ECB) President Trichet putting somewhat of a dampener on sentiment by criticizing IMF involvement in the deal, will keep the EUR under pressure. Although Trichet later reversed his comments, the damage was already done and any relief to EUR/USD will be short-lived. The currency pair is increasingly poised for a further downside move, with the next target at 1.3213 on the path towards an eventual test of 1.3000.

What to watch

US February non-farm payrolls released at the end of last week put the finishing touches to a week that saw risk appetite continue to improve each day. There were no big surprises from the various central bank decisions including the RBA, BoE and ECB last week though Malaysia’s central bank did surprise by hiking 25bps. The RBA’s 25bps hike was a close call but in the event the Bank delivered a 25bps hike too.

Sentiment towards Greece has improved in the wake of the announcement of fresh austerity measures by the Greek government, which provoked a short covering EUR/USD rally from around 1.3435 lows though the EUR never really showed signs of embarking on the sort of rebound the massive short EUR speculative position had suggested.

US jobs report revealed that non-farm payrolls dropped by 36k and was all the more remarkable given the potentially very negative impact of severe weather distortions to the data. The data provides the setting for a firm start to the week in terms of risk appetite which will likely put the USD under a bit of pressure into the week.

This week’s events include central bank decisions in New Zealand and Switzerland. The RBNZ has already indicated that it sees no reason to raise interest rates in H1 and an unchanged decision will come as no surprise to the market. The NZD offers better potential for appreciation than the AUD in the short term and I suspect that a “risk on” tone at least early in the week will keep the Kiwi supported.

The SNB in Switzerland is also unlikely to offer any surprises in its rate decision with an unchanged outcome likely. It appears that the Bank has take a somewhat more relaxed tone to the strength of the CHF and any comments on the currency will be scrtunised for hints of intervention.

It probably isn’t much of a shock to expect Greece to remain in the spotlight this week as markets continue to deliberate whether Greece needs financial aid and if so, whether it will be provided by EU countries such as Germany and/or France, at least in terms of some form of debt guarantee.

Further tensions within Greece, with more strikes in the pipeline will test the resolve of the government to carry through austerity measures while likely acting as a cap on any EUR upside over coming days. I still think EUR/USD 1.3789 is a tough nut to crack.

Meanwhile, GBP/USD looks like it will find it tough going to gain much traction above 1.50 with political uncertainties in the form of a likely hung parliament as well as what looks like various efforts by the BoE officials to talk GBP down, likely to prevent an real recovery.

The Ball Is In the EU’s Court

A run of data and events have continued this week’s theme of improving risk appetite. Greece lived up to expectations, with the government announcing a EUR 4.8 billion package of austerity measures amounting to around 2% of GDP. The US ADP jobs data was in line with expectations, with employment dropping by 20k in February, whilst ISM non-manufacturing index delivered an upside surprise to 53.0 in February, contrasting with a weaker eurozone Purchasing Managers Index (PMI).

Greece now believes it has lived up to its part of the bargain and the ball is now in the court of EU countries. However the issue of aid from the EU remains highly sensitive with little sign of any aid forthcoming from EU partners. Moreover, Germany dealt a blow to Greek hopes by stating that financial aid would not be discussed when the Greek Prime Minister visits tomorrow. Failure to provide such assistance could see Greece turn to the IMF. The key test will be the roll over of around EUR 22 billion of debt in April/May.

Markets have reacted positively to recent events, with Greek debt rallying and the EUR strengthening to a high of 1.3727 overnight amidst reports that regulators are investigating hedge fund trades shorting the EUR. The 17 February high of 1.3789 will provide strong resistance to further EUR/USD upside but the currency looks vulnerable to selling on rallies above its 20-day moving average around 1.3631. The EUR will be driven by news about any aid to Greece rather than data whilst the medium term outlook remains bearish.

In the US the steady but gradual recovery in the economy is continuing to take shape. The Fed’s Beige Book revealed that economic activity “continued to expand” but severe snowstorms restrained activity in several districts. Overall, the report revealed little new information following so soon after Fed Chairman Bernanke’s testimony. Today’s US releases are second tier, with a likely upward revision to Q4 non-farm productivity to around 6.5% and a 1.5% increase in January factory orders.

As has been the case recently the weekly jobless claims data will garner more attention than usual given that it has recently signaled deterioration in job conditions. One factor that could have distorted the claims as well as the payrolls data is harsh weather conditions in parts of the US. Indeed, this has led us to cuts in forecasts for February non-farm payrolls scheduled to be released tomorrow, with the real consensus likely to be much weaker than the -65k shown in the Bloomberg survey.

There are four central bank decisions of interest today no change is likely from all of them. Indonesia and Malaysia are both edging towards raising interest rates but are likely to wait until Q2 2010 before hiking. There will be no surprises if the Bank of England (BoE) and European Central Bank (ECB) leave policy unchanged too, but there will be particular interest in the ECB’s announcement on changes in liquidity provision and the BoE’s signals on the potential for further expansion in quantitative easing. A dovish signal from the BoE will deliver GBP a blow, leaving GBP/USD vulnerable to a drop back below 1.50.