Foreign Exchange - UK Daily Update - Written by on Thursday, December 8, 2011 8:44 - 0 Comments

World First Morning Update 8th December: Rumour mill goes mental before EU Summit

The financial market rumour mill is currently running overdrive
in the lead-up to Friday’s EU summit with the “developments” becoming even more
strange and unlikely. Tuesday night’s rumour was of a dual bailout fund effort
in the Eurozone which was rebuffed out of hand by an unnamed senior German
official yesterday morning. Last night’s cracker was that the IMF was likely to
extend $600bn in assistance to pay for a new rescue fund. That 2 days ago we
heard that the IMF itself may have to raise more money from its contributing
governments was by-the-by apparently. The rumour was quashed in a record 11
minutes and the world went back to waiting for Friday’s summit.

 

The summit has been given an extra dimension by the Standard
& Poor’s rating actions seen on Monday night. Last night they went a step
further and downgraded the outlook for several European banks including BNP,
Barclays, Commerzbank, Rabobank, Credit Agricole, Deutsche Bank, Intesa
Sanpaolo, SocGen, Ulster and UniCredit. Asian shares have traded lower on the
news however Europe is expected to open positively on the back of hopes that
the ECB may ride to the rescue in some form at its meeting today.

 

We expect the European Central Bank will cut rates by 0.25% at
their meeting although there is a risk that they cut by more. The more
important measures will be based around helping banks remain funded. We hope
that it extends the timeframe of its loans to banks from 13 months to the
maximum of 3 years and this should allow banks to become more confident in
lending to each other with investors also becoming more satisfied that the
banks’ balance sheets are stronger. While these, once again, do not deal with
the fundamental core issues that have hamstrung the Eurozone it does further
prevent further panic through bank runs and should keep business credit markets
away from completely freezing up. Obviously they are unable to launch
full-scale intervention on Eurozone sovereign debt yet, Draghi will keep the
nuclear option in his pocket until politicians have finally proved themselves
to be incapable of solving this problem.

 

The Bank of England decision is slightly more clear cut and
obviously does not include the prospects of a post-decision press conference.
We really want to say that the Bank of England will extend quantitative easing
but we think that they will wait for February, depending on the outcome of
tomorrow’s summit. A vote to extend today would be seen as a real lack of
confidence in the European response to the debt situation and as such, a hold
is likely.

 

There has been some good news from the Eurozone this morning
after LCH Clearnet, the main clearer for bond trade in Europe announced that it
was cutting the margin requirement on trading of Italian debt. This is a
reversal of an earlier increase when Italian yields were going stratospheric
and shows that some confidence is returning.

 

For instant reaction to the Bank of England and ECB meeting’s
tune in to our webinar this afternoon at 2pm. You can register here

 

Good luck

 

 

Latest
exchange rates at time of writing

 

Indicative Rates

Sell

Buy

GBPEUR

1.1690

1.1717

GBPUSD

1.5700

1.5723

EURUSD

1.3413

1.3436

GBPJPY

121.78

122.05

GBPAUD

1.5254

1.5282

GBPNZD

2.0090

2.0117

GBPCAD

1.5832

1.5861

NZDUSD

0.7804

0.7825

GBPZAR

12.62

12.67

USDZAR

8.0342

8.0689

GBPPLN

5.2152

5.2451

EURJPY

104.03

104.29

 

Rates are dependent on amount transacted.  Please call
020 7801 9080 for a live rate quote



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