The Euro-zone economy will remain under pressure with a sharp downturn in the industrial sector. There will be the risk of increased tensions within the ECB and demands for additional policy action by the bank. The issue of quantitative easing will be very important and there will be currency support if the bank resists such a move. The Euro will also gain some support if fears surrounding European banks subside, especially if wider risk appetite improves. The depth of the downturn will make it difficult for the Euro to make strong headway.
The Euro generally had a firmer tone, primarily benefiting by default. A lack of confidence in the Euro area was offset by severe difficulties in other major currencies and an improvement in risk appetite with a move above 1.29 against the dollar.
The Euro-zone economic data was generally weaker than expected with the Sentix confidence index, for example, dipping to a fresh record low of -42.7 for February.
The German trade surplus weaker than expected at EUR8.3bn for January from a revised EUR10bn previously with a 4.4% monthly decline in exports. The industrial data was extremely weak with a further 8.0% decline in factory orders for January after a revised 7.6% decline for December while output fell by 7.5% over the month.
There were generally downbeat comments from some ECB officials. Orphanides, for example, stated that the recent data indicated a worsening outlook and the economy may not even recover in 2010. In contrast, Mersch stated that he was sceptical about excessively low interest rates while Weber suggested that 1.0% would be a floor for rates. The net tone of comments suggested that interest rates would be cut again.
The Swiss National Bank policy move increased speculation that the ECB would also move to non-standard policy measures and direct measures to boost credit.
Yen:
The Japanese economy will remain in severe difficulties in the short-term with production set to decline further. There will be additional speculation of more aggressive Bank of Japan moves to stem deflation, especially after the Swiss central bank move to intervene. The Japanese currency will continue to gain some support from capital repatriation before the end of March, but overall yen sentiment is liable to remain weak and the currency will lose ground if there is a sustained improvement in risk appetite.
The Japanese currency found support weaker than the 99 level against the dollar and then strengthened sharply to beyond 96 while the yen also regained some ground on the crosses. There was additional speculation over heavy capital repatriation ahead of the fiscal year-end which, allied with renewed stock market falls triggered yen gains.
Confidence remained weak and it quickly lost ground with three-month lows against the Euro. Following the Swiss move, there was speculation that the Bank of Japan could intervene to weaken the yen. The Japanese economic data continued to illustrate the sharp deterioration with a headline current account deficit for the first time in 13 years for January, although there was a small seasonally-adjusted surplus.
Revised GDP data for the fourth quarter recorded a revised 3.2% decline compared with the original 3.3%, but the improvement reflected a further increase in inventories which reinforced fears over a further downturn in production. The Bank of Japan stated that it would consider increasing government-bonds buying if the crisis deepens
Wholesale prices fell 1.1% in the year to February, the weakest figure for six years. Core machinery orders also fell 3.2% in January, although this was slightly better than expected. Sentiment towards the regional economy weakened following much weaker than expected Chinese trade data with February exports falling over 25%.
The evidence suggests that the US Treasury may take a less aggressive stance on the Chinese yuan, dropping references to currency manipulation. An easing of underlying tensions would lessen the risk of destabilising dollar decline against Asian currencies. |