PIIGS fears fuelling risk aversion

Risk aversion has come back with a vengeance over the last 10 days driven by a host of concerns that continue to damage market sentiment. As has been evident over the past year the USD and JPY remain the best currency plays against the background of rising risk aversion and both currencies look well supported.

Market concerns are not going away quickly but some of the fears plaguing markets have at least receded especially on the US political front, with Obama’s State of the Union address, Geithner’s testimony on AIG and Bernanke’s reappointment all passing without too much incident, at least from a market perspective. I still believe that market fears are overblown but it is clearly evident that the market is not in the mood to concur. More pain is likely in the weeks ahead.

Euro-sovereign spreads continue to suffer from the ongoing Greek saga whilst the other major fear remains further monetary tightening in China. Rumours that China is about to imminently revalue the CNY are also running rife. The bigger than expected hike in the reserve ratio in India reflects the fact that Asia is on a faster track to tighten policy than Western economies.

As regular readers probably noticed, my articles on econometer.org have been sporadic recently. This is due to the fact that I have been on the road for the last two weeks giving client seminars across several countries in Asia. Without giving too much away it is evident that pessimism is pervasive and most investors I polled are looking for a “W” or “double dip” profile for economic growth in the G7 economies over coming months. Hardly anyone looked for a “V”.

The other casualty emanating from Greece’s woes, as well as worries that other European PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, Spain) face ratings downgrades, is the EUR. EUR/USD slipped below the psychologically important level of 1.40 this week and is showing no sign of turning around. Warnings by S&P ratings that Portugal faces challenges on the fiscal front show that these sovereign concerns will be with us for a long while yet.

After letting investors believe that the European Commission would offer no support for Greece, there appears to be a growing realization that Greece is not simply a local problem but a Euro wide problem, as noted by European Commission President Barroso. Whilst this may be good for Greek debt the path to recovery is still likely to be a massively painful one, and the EUR may gain little support from this news.

The UK has not escaped the clutches of ratings agencies and warnings by S&P that UK banks are no longer among the “most stable and low-risk” in the world highlights the headwinds faced by GBP at present. The weaker than expected out-turn for Q4 GDP (0.1%) highlights the fact that UK economic recovery is fragile, which in turn plays negatively for the banking sector. This news has put a break on GBP but there appears to be plenty of demand for GBP above 1.600 vs USD.

High yield / commodity currencies take the lead

Although equity markets continue to tread water the appetite for risk looks untarnished. So far into the new-year the winners are commodity / high yield plays as well as emerging market assets. The AUD, NOK, NZD and CAD have been the stars on the major currency front, with only GBP registering losses against the USD so far this year. The move in these currencies has been well supported by resurgent commodity prices; the CRB commodities index is up close to 10% since its low on 9 December.

There is little reason to go against this trend and the USD index is set to continue to lose ground as risk appetite improves further. I highlighted the upside potential in high yield / commodity currencies in a post titled “FX Prospects for 2010” and stick with the view that there is much further upside. I still prefer to play long positions in these currencies versus JPY which I believe will come under growing pressure as the year progresses.

Economic data has also been supportive, especially in Australia, supporting the AUD’s yield advantage. Although comments from the central bank towards the end of last year downplayed expectations of much further tightening, data releases support the case for another rate hike at the 2 February RBA meeting, with a fourth consecutive hike of 25bps to 4.00% likely at the meeting.

There will be some important clues from next week’s jobs data in Australia but judging by the solid gain in November retail sales, which rose 1.4% versus consensus expectations of 0.3%, and 5.9% jump in building approvals, the case for a rate hike has strengthened.  AUD/USD will now set its sights on technical resistance around 0.9326. 

AUD/USD has the highest sensitivity with relative interest rate differentials – correlation of 0.85 with Australia/US interest rate futures differentials over the past month – and so unsurprisingly the AUD rallied further as markets reacted to the strong retail sales data. I believe Australian interest rates will eventually get back up to 6% – pointing to more upside for AUD/USD as this is more than is priced in by the market.

It is fortunate for the USD that the correlation between the USD index and interest rate expectations remains low but nonetheless the December 15 FOMC minutes may have provided another excuse to sell the currency. The minutes were interpreted as slightly dovish by the market, with many latching on to the comments that some members of the FOMC debated the potential to expand the scale of asset purchases and continuing them beyond the first quarter.

Speculative data points to USD struggle

The latest CFTC Commitment of Traders (IMM) data shows just how massive the shift in speculative USD positioning has been over recent weeks.  Net aggregate USD short positions (vs. EUR, JPY, GBP, AUD, NZD, CAD, CHF) have shifted from -172k at the beginning of December to -11k in the week ending Dec 22nd.   This corresponds with the sharp rally in the USD versus various currencies over the same period.  

The net speculative USD position is now at its highest since May 2009 and at this pace of improvement the market will be net long USD very quickly.  However, the data also suggests that there should be a degree of cautiousness in buying the USD from here.  The USD may simply be repeating the pattern seen in 2006 and 2007 when the USD strengthened into year end only to drop sharply in the weeks after. 

If the rally in the USD has largely been due to short covering into year end then this source of support for the USD is looking exhausted. Indeed it is difficult to argue that interest rate moves have helped the USD as correlations are still low between the USD index and US rate futures. The shift in USD speculative positioning may explain the inability of the USD to make much further headway over recent days and suggests difficulty for the USD in the days ahead, with the USD index likely to struggle to get above last week’s high o 78.449.

Risk appetite firms

Risk appetite is slightly firmer at the end of the week.  US data failed to deliver much guidance on Thursday following a better than forecast trade deficit but disappointment on jobless claims. US retail sales came in better than expected on Friday, rising 1.3% and 1.2% ex-autos, likely helping the firmer tone to risk appetite.  This followed the release of a set of positive data releases in China on Friday revealing that the recovery in the country remains strong.

Fiscal concerns, especially in Europe continue to linger like a bad smell maintaining a degree of caution for markets and capping the EUR, with strong technical resistance seen around the November 20 low of 1.4794.   On this note GBP could struggle given the growing criticism of the pre-budget report on Wednesday.   However, worries about a ratings  downgrade have eased somewhat following comments from Moody’s that there was no threat to UK or US ratings for now, which has given GBP some likely short-lived breathing room.

I still favour AUD and NZD and out of the two NZD looks the better, especially given further likely unwinding of long AUD/NZD positions into year-end.  Markets will continue to ignore jawboning by RBNZ governor attempting to talk down the kiwi and focus on the shift in rhetoric following the RBNZ meeting pointing to an earlier rate hike than previously indicated.    However, the sharp drop in AUD/NZD over recent days has brought the currency cross back in line with my regression model estimates, which suggests that much of the pull back has already taken place.  The JPY is the main casualty of the improving trend in risk appetite edging back towards the 90.0 level.

Ratings Concerns Hit Euro

Post payrolls euphoria has faded quickly this week. Fed Chairman Bernanke’s cautious comments about growth had weighed on US markets earlier but it is now eurozone concerns that have come to the forefront. Markets were faced with a further reality check following a sharp drop in German industrial production and news that S&P put Greece on watch for a downgrade, with Fitch going a step further and downgrading Greece’s ratings to BBB+ with a negative outlook.

Greece with a budget deficit of 12.7% of GDP was picked on by the ratings agencies but sovereign debt / fiscal concerns apply to several countries across the eurozone. Indeed, since the recent Dubai shock, which continues to weigh on markets following a report today about an accelerated payment clause on $2 billion debt issued by the Emirates utilities provider, concerns have moved quickly to the health of government balance sheets. The potential for more European ratings cuts will keep sentiment towards eurozone markets cautious.

The UK should not be ignored in this respect and attention will turn to the UK pre-budget report though it’s difficult to see what Chancellor Darling can say that will help GBP. Other economic news has been disappointing with Australia registering a bigger than expected trade deficit in October and Japan recording a sharp downward revision to Q3 GDP, all of which will act to contribute to the “risk off” tone to markets today.

Although the direct brunt of the ratings downgrade was felt on Greek bonds the EUR has come under strong selling pressure registering a further sharp move lower from the 1.5141 high printed last week. Capitulation at the failure to break above recent highs led to some selling and this was exacerbated by the negative data and ratings news. EUR/USD is likely to have further to go on the downside but sovereign interest and bargain hunting will likely prevent a more severe decline. EUR/USD technical support is seen around 1.4623.