March, 2008
Foreign Exchange - UK Weekly Update - Tuesday, March 25, 2008 16:16 - 0 Comments
Market Jitters Hurt Sterling
The title of last week’s report was ‘There may be trouble ahead’; little did we know that
sterling would feel the effects so quickly. Much like the commodity currencies’
propensity to whipsaw violently due to sometimes small movements in the gold and oil
markets, sterling has become the currency world’s punch bag for financial sector
concerns due to the UK economy’s exposure to the financial services arena. Figures
published at the beginning of the year show that this sector contributes 9.4% of UK
GDP alone.
Bear Stearns’ capitulation was the obvious drag however we nearly had another UK
casualty or some would have us believe. Wednesday morning saw the city wires alight
with rumour, suggestion and intrigue that a UK bank was due to go to the Bank of
England and use it as a lender of last resort with further digging suggesting that it was
HBOS, the parent company of Halifax and the UK’s largest mortgage lender. This
however eventually turned out to a load of rubbish and the FSA Is currently
investigating suspicious activity in the trading of the bank’s shares. In the ensuing panic
most High St. banks’ shares tumbled. Even though this turned out to be the act of a few
unscrupulous individuals, it served as a warning for all sterling watchers.
Last week was an example of style over substance; a market influenced by rumour and
fear more than the underlying fundamentals. If this had been the opposite we could
have seen sterling higher. The data that garnered the most headlines was the rise in
retail sales which posted a 1.0% increase against a forecasted -0.2% fall. This,
combined with CPI rising to 2.5% on the back of increased food prices, falls in the
unemployment rate and the CBI announcing export order levels at the highest level
since 1996, paints a picture of an economy moving itself away from a recessionary
problem.
The Bank of England also released the minutes from its March meeting showing a
voting record of 7-2. Perennial dove David Blanchflower as expected voted for a 25bps
loosening but was joined by the Deputy Governor John Gieve which surprised the
markets and weakened GBP momentarily.
The pick of the data will be Friday’s current account release which given the recent
drop in the value of sterling should see a healthy strengthening from-£20bn.
The week ahead
Much of this week’s US data is focused on consumers and the labour market. Today
we have a consumer confidence figure due to fall as this is the first reading since Bear
Stearns’ catastrophic fall from grace and the ensuing scramble for liquidity. Friday’s
Michigan Consumer confidence figure is due to follow the same path.
Most European data this week is from its largest economy, Germany. Tomorrow
German IFO business climate data is due followed by consumer confidence figures on
Thursday. These are expected to the upside and may solidify the single currency’s
strength given the lack of intervention from Jean-Claude Trichet.
Economic Research
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j.cook@worldfirst.com
Currency Rates Low High Current
GBPEUR 1.2664 1.2883 1.2811
The euro continues to exert considerable pressure on sterling and dollar although
weakness has been seen against ‘safe haven’ currencies and JPY and CHF. The only
piece of definitive data last week were the ‘flash’ PMI figures which although were
published above the 50.0 expansionary figure were lower than market forecasts,
solidifying thoughts that the Eurozone economy is due a slowdown with exporters
bearing the brunt especially.
Central Bank committee members once again expressed concern over the sharp rise
and continued elevation of the euro in particular against the dollar however this may be
all talk and no trousers as intervention seems ways off.
GBPUSD “Cable” 1.9734 2.0270 1.9937
The dollar continues to ricochet between relapse and recovery as it again moved lower
against the euro but strengthened against GBP last week.
As we expected the Fed thought a 75bps cut was the right option to reinvigorate the
ailing US economy. This takes the rate to 2.25%, some analysts believed that a cut of
100 or even 125bps was needed however Ben Bernanke and other policy makers
shied away from this due to inflationary concerns.
Ben Bernanke has been very active in loosening money markets stateside in order to
increase liquidity and counteract the recent reticence lenders have been experiencing.
One such measure saw the iconic Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, both US government
sponsored enterprises, to take on close to $200bn worth of distressed mortgages and
pump funds back into the system.
Wall Street has contributed a fair share to the dollar’s woes but impressed last week as
both Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers posted profits that were both above
analysts estimates but still a lot lower than last year’s figures. With news that JP
Morgan has increased its offer fivefold for Bear Stearns the greenback has gained a
portion of respectability.
Commodity currencies
Low High Current
GBPAUD 2.1324 2.2130 2.1782
As with all the commodity currencies AUD suffered last week as the recent commodity
bubble did not burst but instead let out some air. The main data release last week was
the publication of the minutes from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s March meeting. As
reported last week consumer demand has begun to fall and a slowdown in growth is
forecast; as such further rate hikes seem unlikely.
Low High Current
GBPNZD 2.4406 2.5246 2.4783
Kiwi has continued to be at the behest of carry trade participants as higher equity
markets and lower commodity prices saw NZD move violently over the week. Lower
gold and oil prices and a pick up in the fortunes of the USD towards the end of the
week saw NZD’s recent rally stall. Next week both fourth quarter balance of payments
and gross domestic product data, on Thursday and Friday respectively.
GBPCAD 1.9784 2.0406 2.0239
Everything seemed to go against the Canadian Dollar last week as it weakened to the
lowest levels against sterling since mid December 07. Primarily the falls in the price of
gold and oil hurt the loonie given their large proportion of Canadian exports with the
financial turmoil radiating from across the border not helping either. CAD will also not
be helped by expectations that although inflation rose in February by 0.1% the Bank of
Canada is expected cut rates in the short term.
GBPZAR 15.837 16.555 16.029
The SARB’s Quarterly Report was published on Wednesday and held few surprises.
The overall picture showed that the South African economy is continuing to grow at a
healthy pace and is moving from sales-led growth to a more sustainable investment-led
growth pattern. Looking forward tomorrow’s consumer and producer price index figures
are expected higher which will continue the inflationary pressures being felt by Africa’s
largest economy.
Produced by Jeremy Cook (j.cook@worldfirst.com) Please feel free to contact me at
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Notes:
The above comments are only our views and should not be construed as advice. You should
act using your own information and judgement. Although information has been obtained from
and is based upon multiple sources the author believes to be reliable, we do not guarantee its
accuracy and it may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute the
authors own judgement as of the date of the briefing and are subject to change without notice.
Any rates given are interbank and therefore for amounts of £5million and so are not indicative of
rates offered by World First for smaller amounts.
Definitions
Bull/Bullish: one who thinks a market, currency or asset will appreciate
Bear/Bearish: one who thinks a market, currency or asset will depreciate
Pip: the fifth significant figure of a currency price: 1.2345
Big figure: the third significant figure of a currency price: 1.2345
Basis point: a 0.01% unit
Tightening (Interest Rates): raising interest rates (loosening is opposite)
Hawkish: comments that suggest interest rate tightening i.e. moving higher
Dovish: comments that suggest interest rate loosening i.e. moving lower
MPC: Monetary Policy Committee, the body that sets UK interest rates
ECB: European Central Bank, the body that sets the Eurozone interest rate
RBA: Reserve Bank of Australia: the central bank of Australia.
Cross-Currency Pair Flow: Where a set of three interlinked rates, e.g. GBPEUR, EURUSD and
GBPUSD, move as any combination of two of these rates must produce the third in order to satisfy a
condition known as No Arbitrage. If there are movements in two markets, then the third must move
deterministically. Also knows as triangulation.
Carry Trade: Simply put, is the borrowing of money in a low interest economy (Japan) and investing it in a
higher yield economy (Australia). This yields a certain profit unless the interest rate differential narrows or
the exchange rate moves such that it costs more to buy the currency back.
Fair Value- Also called financial fair value: A measure of the theoretical exchange rate using certain
Macroeconomic models (such as eCIP).
Underlying Inflation: A somewhat academic measure of long-term inflation- removing all the’ interesting’
elements like energy and luxury consumption leaving the ‘boring’ elements like utility bills and food.
[Quotes from BoE governor Mervyn King]
Interest Rate Traction: Although there is a group of people who announce an interest rate, it has to feed
through the economy through some very complex and poorly understood channels. Once rate hikes are
having an effect on inflation and long term yields it is said that they are finding traction with the economy.
Unemployment rate: The percentage of people who are able and ‘willing’ to work (i.e. in the labour force)
who are not employed.
Participation rate: The percentage of the population of working age in the labour force