From trough to peak, the Euro has risen 9% over a period of only two
months. You wouldn’t ordinarily expect to see this kind of appreciation
from a G4 currency, especially not one whose member states are on the
brink of insolvency and which itself faces threats to its very
existence. In this case, the Euro is benefiting from expectations that
the European Central Bank (ECB) will be among the first and most
aggressive in hiking interest rates. As I warned in my previous post,
however, those that focus solely on interest rate differentials and
ignore the Euro’s lingering Sovereign debt crisis do so at their own
peril.
Indications that the ECB will hike interest rates came out of nowhere. Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the ECB, announced last week
that it would be particularly aggressive in taking steps to deal with
inflation. This caught the markets by surprise, since Eurozone inflation
is still below 2% and GDP growth is similarly low. Later, Governing
Council members Mario Draghi and Axel Weber
(both of whom are potential candidates to replace Trichet when he steps
down later this year), issued similar statements, and the question of
rate hikes was suddenly changed from If to When/How much.
Futures markets are currently pricing in 3 interest rate hikes, which
would bring the Eurozone benchmark rate to 1.75% by year end. According
to economist Nouriel Roubini’s (who gained fame by predicting the
financial crisis) think tank: “Jean-Claude Trichet has been careful
not to commit to a series of hikes, but we believe that is what it will
be. The ECB is bluffing. We think the ECB will hike by a total of 75
basis points, probably by August.” Axel Weber, himself, coyly echoed
this sentiment: “I see no reason at this stage to signal any dissent with how markets priced future policies.”
On the one hand, the recent rise in oil prices strengthens the case
for rate hikes. On the other hand, the EU does not consume energy at the
same intensity as the US, which means that its impact on inflation is
likely to be muted. In addition, while the ECB’s mandate is indeed
titled towards price stability (rather than boosting employment or
spurring economic growth), to hike rates now would risk endangering the
still-fragile Eurozone economic recovery. Unwinding its quantitative
easing would similarly add to the risk of another financial crisis,
since banks still make heavy use of its emergency lending facilities.
Speaking of which, it’s still way too early to say that the the EU
sovereign debt crisis is behind us. Despite the loans and pledges and
bailouts, interest rates for all four PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece,
Spain) countries continue to rise,
and or nearing unsustainable levels. At the moment, currency investors
have chosen to ignore this, since the EU has basically guaranteed them
funding until 2013. What will happen then, or as the date draw near, is
anyone’s guess.
In the end, one or more defaults seems inevitable. There is only so much
that financial engineering can do to conceal and restructure debt which
exceeds 100% of GDP in the cases of Greece and Ireland. If that were to
happen, significant losses would be incurred by EU banks, which lent
heavily to at-risk countries during the boom years. In order to minimize
this situation, I think the ECB will probably continue to subsidize the
banks via low interest rates.
Even if the ECB does hike rates, it will be extremely gradual.
Furthermore, By the time Eurozone interest rates reach attractive
levels, the other G4 Central Banks (with the exception of Japan) will
probably already have started to close the gap. That means that interest
rate differentials probably won’t soon be wide enough to lure more than
a modicum of risk-averse investors. (Besides, if you assume a 5% chance
of default, risk-adjusted rates are probably still negative).
In short, I think that the ongoing Euro rally is really just a short
squeeze in disguise. Basically, speculators are conceding that shorting
the Euro is both risky and unprofitable. (According to one hedge fund manager,
“It was a very popular trade,” the portfolio manager says. A lot of us
stuck with it, and it went wrong in January.”) In anticipating of higher
future interest rates, they are preemptively moving to liquidate their
short positions. However, not being short is not the same thing as going long.
And until the EU sorts through the fiscal issues in a convincing way, I
think it would be foolish to start making long-term bets on the Euro.
Euro Buoyed by Rate Hike Expectations, Despite Unresolved Debt Issues
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Labels:
Central Banks
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