Euro Rally To Fade

It is not an easy time to forecast currencies. Just as many forecasters fought for the accolade of being the most bearish on the EUR and many others were forced to capitulate or risk falling behind the curve, EUR/USD has started to perk up. Similarly, commodity currencies and many emerging market currencies have bounced.

Perhaps the explanation of these moves is merely position adjustments as traders and investors square positions as they keep one eye on the World Cup or maybe its just fatigue after weeks of selling pressure. Either way, the fact that speculative USD market positioning is at a very high level, suggests there is plenty of scope to take profits on long USD positions.

There are various reasons to expect the calm to give way to renewed tensions, however. Public opposition to austerity plans in Europe, added to the prospects for slowing growth as the plans are implemented, in addition to banking sector concerns, suggest that the outlook for the EUR remains downbeat. These factors also point to the prospects of risk aversion rising over the coming weeks, reversing the recent rally in risk currencies.

Further out, the EUR’s travails will not be over quickly and in the wake of the implementation of austerity plans the EUR will struggle from the impact of relatively slower growth in the eurozone compared to the US and other countries. The EUR will continue to remain under pressure even as risk appetite improves and many risk currencies appreciate.

The interruption of risk as an FX determinant is likely to fade towards the end of the year and investors will then go back to differentiating on the basis of relative growth and interest rate dynamics, which will play well for the USD as US growth strengthens.

Relative growth differentials will also bode well for commodity currencies and there will be scope for plenty of upside in the AUD and NZD as growth strengthens. Both countries have benefited from firm demand in Asia and China in particular and this source of support will likely continue to be beneficial.

Funding currencies including JPY and CHF will likely weaken this year against the USD based on the likely improvement in risk appetite later this year. The outlook for the JPY will be particularly interesting in the wake of the change in Prime Minister in Japan, especially given the new PM’s preference for a weaker JPY and reflationary policies. USD/JPY will likely reach 100 by the end of the year.

GBP should not be seen in the same context as the EUR. Although the UK has got its own share of fiscal problems the new government appears to be moving quickly to mollify both investor and ratings agency concerns. The test will come with the reaction of the emergency budget on June 22nd but I suspect that the downside risk to GBP will be limited.

Unlike the EUR which is trading around “fair value”, GBP is highly undervalued. Arguably past GBP weakness puts the UK economy on a stronger recovery footing. Moreover, problems that Europe will face in implementing multi country austerity plans and widening growth divergence, will not be repeated in the UK. Overall, there is likely to be significant outperformance of GBP versus EUR over coming months

Euro Has That Sinking Feeling

The reaction to the US May jobs report shows that markets are particularly susceptible to negative US news at a time when growth fragilities in Europe are becoming increasingly apparent. Coupled with worries about Hungary, risk aversion has jumped.

Unsurprisingly the EUR took the brunt of pressure. Rhetoric over the weekend may help to assuage some fears but I suspect it is too late now that the cat is out of the bag. Hungary’s government maintained that it will meet this year’s budget deficit target of 3.8% of GDP. European Union officials also attempted to calm market concerns, downplaying any comparison of Hungary to Greece.

The overall EUR/USD downtrend remains intact. Renewed doubts about German participation in the EU/IMF rescue package, with the German constitutional court potentially blocking its contribution, will add to pressure as well as a UK press report titled EUR ‘will be dead in five years’ . The January 1999 EUR/USD introduction level around 1.1830 has now moved squarely into sight.

It is unlikely that data and events this week will do much to reverse the market’s bearish tone. Highlights include the ECB, BoE and RBNZ meetings in Europe, UK and New Zealand, respectively. The ECB (Thursday) is highly unlikely to shift its monetary policy stance. Given some opposition to bond purchases from within the ECB council the comments in the accompanying statement will be closely monitored. The BoE will also leave policy unchanged on the same day but the RBNZ is set to begin its hiking cycle with a 25bps move.

On the data front the US slate includes the Fed’s Beige Book, April trade data, May retail sales and June Michigan confidence. The Beige Book is likely to reveal some improvement in activity with little sign of inflation, whilst the trade deficit is set to widen further due to a higher oil import bill. Retail sales will reveal an autos led increase in the headline reading but more subdued core sales, whilst consumer confidence is set to rise for a second straight month.

There will be more attention on rhetoric from EU officials rather than eurozone data, with the Eurogroup of Finance Minister’s and Ecofin meetings garnering more interest. In Japan, politics will take centre stage, with the new cabinet line up in focus following the confirmation of Naoto Kan as Prime Minister. Comments by the new PM himself will be of interest, especially with regard to combating deflation and in particular any elaboration on his penchant for a weaker JPY.

All-in-all, the week is unlikely to see a let up in pressure on risk trades and will start much as the last week ended. Although the market’s attention is on the EUR, it should be noted that the AUD has lost even more ground so far this month although the EUR remains the biggest loser in terms of major currencies so far this year (vs USD). In the case of the AUD the move reflects a massive unwinding of long positioning (as reflected in the latest CFTC IMM data which shows that speculative AUD positioning has dropped to its lowest since March 2009).

In contrast in the case of the EUR where positioning is already very negative, the move simply reflects deteriorating fundamentals. The fact that European officials are showing little concern about the decline in the EUR (why should they given that the currency is now trading around fair value) and in some cases encouraging it, suggests that there is little to stop EUR/USD from dropping much further and parity is looming a lot closer.