Asia Helps The Euro Again

Following the pressure on markets over recent days there is some relief filtering through markets today although sentiment remains fickle. Weaker than expected US April durable goods orders data failed to dent confidence with equity markets ending in positive territory overnight even though the data added to a plethora of global data disappointments over recent weeks.

Once again the EUR has been saved by Asian demand, this time not directly for the EUR itself but by reports that China and other Asian investors will purchases EFSF bailout bonds, with China apparently reported to be “clearly interested” in the mid June sales of Portuguese bailout bonds, with Asian investors representing a “strong proportion” of the buyers.

Despite the reassuring news about Asian official interest in eurozone debt, problems in the periphery remain a major drag on the EUR. Developments at the two day G8 heads of governments meeting in Deauville and various speeches by officials from the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), European Union (EU) and European Central Bank (ECB) regarding Greece’s travails will be particularly important for EUR direction.

The various speakers are likely to maintain the pressure on peripheral countries to continue their austerity programmes in order to gain external support. Nonetheless, there still appears to be conflicting comments about what Greece will do with regard to its debt burden. Whilst some EU officials have espoused the benefits of extending Greek debt maturities on a voluntary basis, the ECB has steadfastly stood against any form of restructuring.

Other than the events above, in the US the second reading of Q1 GDP will be released. The consensus looks for an upward revision to a 2.1% annual rate from an initial estimate of 1.8% due mainly to an upward revision to inventories. US weekly jobless claims will also be of interest especially as the recent increase in the 4-week average for jobless claims has provoked renewed fears about the jobs market recovery.

Talking about currencies

It’s always the same story.  Ahead of the G7 (or G8 and now more important G20) meetings speculation of decisive action on currencies intensifies.  Traders and investors become cautious on the off chance that something significant will happen but the majority of times nothing of note emerges.

There was no difference this time around.  The G7 Finance Ministers meeting in Istanbul failed to deliver anything substantive on currencies, repeating the usual mantra about the adverse impact of “excess volatility and disorderly movements”.  Although the group pledged to monitor FX markets there was no indication of imminent action. 

The lack of action is perhaps surprising in one respect as there were plenty of central bankers and finance officials talking about currencies in the run up to the G7 meeting, most of which were attempting to talk the dollar higher against their respective currencies.  Given the increase in rhetoric ahead of the meeting, the relatively weak statement now leaves the door open to further dollar weakness.

The strongest indication of any FX action or intervention came from the country that was supposedly the least concerned about currency strength; Japanese Finance Minister Fujii warned that Japan “will take action” if “currencies show some excessive moves”.  The shift in stance from Japan since the new government took power has been stark (considering that the new government was supposedly in favour of a stronger yen).  Markets will likely continue to test the resolve of the Japanese authorities and buy yen anyway.

Although the G7 statement said little to support the dollar and the overall tone to the dollar likely remains negative over coming months, the softer tone to equity markets and run of weaker economic data in the US – the latest data to disappoint was the September US jobs report – may give some risk aversion related relief to the dollar this week. 

Weaker data and equities alongside the impact of official rhetoric is being reflected in CFTC Commitment of Traders’ data (a good gauge of speculative market positioning) which revealed a sharp drop in short dollar positions, by around a quarter, highlighting for a change, an improvement in dollar sentiment over the last week. 

The biggest losers in terms of speculative positioning were the British pound, where the net short position reached its most extreme since mid September 2008, and Canadian dollar where the net long position was cut by almost half.  Again this may reflect official views on currencies, with Canadian officials expressing concern about the strength of the Canadian dollar in contrast to the perception that UK officials favour a weaker pound.
Central bank meetings (BoE, ECB, RBA) will dominate the calendar this week and more comments on currencies are likely even if interest rates are left unchanged.  Meanwhile FX markets will continue to watch equities, and the start of the US Q3 earnings season will give important signals to determine the sustainability of the recent equity market rally.  Recent weak economic data has already cast doubt about a speedy recovery and if earnings disappoint risk aversion could once again be back on the table.