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

Volatility Within Ranges

Most investors will likely be happy to see the tail end of May given the sharp losses in many asset classes over the month. At least over the last few days there was a sense of some healing, particularly in risk assets though it is questionable how long this can continue given the still many and varied uncertainties afflicting markets. A reminder of this came late on Friday, with Fitch downgrading Spain’s sovereign credit ratings despite the passage of austerity measures.

The Fitch decision highlights that Spain is rapidly becoming the new epicenter of the crisis; focus on the savings banks or Cajas is intensifying ahead of the June 30 deadline for mergers to qualify for government money, the minority government’s popularity is in further decline, whilst unions are threatening more strikes across the country. Unions in Greece and Italy are also pushing for coordinated strikes, highlighting the difficulties in pushing through austerity measures.

At least economic data is providing some solace to markets. Releases last week in the US highlighted the fact that consensus expectations are underestimating the pace of recovery; consumer confidence, durable goods orders and new home sales all came in above expectations. The same story is likely this week, but there is really only one piece of data that attention will focus on and that’s the May jobs report. The consensus is for a strong 508k increase in non-farm payrolls following a 290k increase in April, though around three-quarters of this will be related to census hiring. The unemployment rate is likely to dip slightly to 9.8%.

Markets are likely to be in limbo, with volatility in ranges likely this week. USD sentiment remains strong as reflected in the CFTC IMM data where net aggregate positioning is at an all time high, but further USD gains may be harder to come by ahead of the US jobs report and G20 meeting this weekend. Stretched USD positioning has proven no barrier to USD strength over recent weeks but the fact that markets are very long USDs could at the least result in a slower pace of further appreciation.

EUR speculative sentiment remains close to all time lows although there are signs of some relative stability over recent weeks. EUR/USD is likely to range between 1.2134 and 1.2475 this week. There was a sharp drop in net short JPY positions over the week (ie short-covering) though this appears at odds with the fall in the JPY. GBP speculative positions showed little improvement, languishing close to all time lows, whilst net longs in commodity currencies were pared back sharply, especially in AUD where net longs were cut by around half though sharp declines in positioning were also registered for NZD and CAD.

GBP could suffer due to worries about the UK government’s plans to reduce its burgeoning budget deficit following the resignation of Treasury Minister David Laws, following an expense scandal. The resignation hits the coalition just three weeks before the emergency budget and could result in complications on the negotiations between the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives on the substance of the deficit cutting measures. GBP/USD is likely to find support around 1.4260 and resistance around 1.4612 this week.

Greek Aid Boosts Euro

Greece is never far from the headlines and the big news over the weekend was once again centred on this small (in terms of economy size) eurozone Country, with the agreement by Eurozone members to provide up to EUR 30 billion in loans to Greece. This will be supplemented by additional contributions from the IMF to the tune of around EUR 15 billion. The rate of around 5% for the three-year fixed loan is well below that yielding on Greek debt but above the International Monetary Fund (IMF) standard lending rate. In other words, the terms of the loan are far more favourable than they would currently face in the market.

After weeks of haggling the decision to detail the amount and terms of a loan for Greece will help reassure markets and likely result in a narrowing in Greek spreads over the near term. Further details will be finalised early in the week including conditions imposed on Greece as well as the exact amount of the IMF contribution but the real test of confidence will be the reception to Greece’s EUR 1.2 billion sale of 3 and 6-month paper at the beginning of the week.

Markets were already embarking on a short covering exercise in EUR/USD early last week according to the latest CFTC IMM report which showed a reduction in net EUR short speculative positions. As a result of the weekend’s agreement the EUR looks set to consolidate its gains into the beginning of this week. Further out, there are still plenty of risks ahead and sellers are likely to emerge around EUR/USD resistance at 1.3696.


Data releases this week will be conducive to maintaining further support for risk appetite whilst shoring up recovery expectations. In particular US March retail sales are set to jump on the back of strong autos spending (consensus 1.2% monthly gain). March industrial production is also likely to record a healthy reading (consensus 0.7% month-on-month), whilst gains in both manufacturing (Empire manufacturing and Philadelphia Fed) and consumer confidence (Michigan confidence) for April are likely.

There will also be plenty of attention on Chinese data this week with a plethora of releases over coming days including FX reserves, GDP, loans data, inflation, retail sales and industrial production. In short, the data will continue to reveal a robust economic performance, which will be good for risk appetite and Asian currencies, but will also add to the pressure to revalue the Chinese currency, CNY, soon.

The USD impact will depend on whether the market reacts to firmer risk appetite or signs of stronger US growth. I suspect the former will apply for now, likely keeping the USD on the back foot early in the week. The main beneficiaries include risk currencies such as AUD, NZD and CAD as well as most Asian currencies. AUD/USD is set to target technical resistance around 0.9407 whilst NZD/USD will set its sights on resistance around 0.7252 over the next few days.