An element of doubt came back into the mind of market
participants Monday as (in particular, German) officials began to raise
the possibility that the much vaunted ‘grand plan’ (which the rhetoric
and inference by eurozone leaders commentary has
been since the initial formulation by Merkel and Sarkozy on the 9th October) may not be the all-encompassing solution to the woes of the eurozone.
German Government spokesman Seibert stated “Dreams of a swift Euro solution won’t materialise”. In conjunction with the German Finance Minister’s statement that the “upcoming EU summit will not present [a] final solution for [the] eurozone debt crisis.” Both comments added to the weigh of an already seemingly faltering EUR.
Broader risk assets also struggled yesterday as concerns filtered through into the banking sector, despite the significantly better than expected Q3 earnings figures from Citigroup. With little in the way of top tier data this week, headlines will continue to dominate sentiment. A clear example of this was seen yesterday when a Der Spiegel online article suggested that “top German economists are warning that France’s AAA rating could be in danger should additional measures become necessary to prop up indebted eurozone members of to save ailing banks.” This is not a new concept and, indeed, it is one which I have discussed on this page a number of times. But the timing of the story into a market already feeling vulnerable top bad news exacerbated the impact.
This morning the spread between French and German 10 year yields has hit another new record at 100bps and despite Finance Minister Baroin’s protestations that France will do “everything” to maintain its debt ratings, we have reached a pinnacle. We have reached the point at which the rousing, determined words of officials are no longer enough; a point where action is needed. Schaeuble’s words yesterday, that seem to have undone all the calming work of the G20, could well see the EUR decline back to the lows, seen before the irrationally exuberant, Merkozy-inspired rally, over the next week.
In China overnight data came in better than broad expectations as Industrial Production and Retail Sales data picked up again in September after a decline in August. Fixed Asset investment was broadly stable yet GDP for Q3 slowed to 9.1% (its slowest pace since 2009). Whilst GDP growth is the envy of the developed world it is widely believed that the structure of the Chinese Economy requires it to maintain growth above 8% to maintain stable unemployment. The current easing of growth saw interest rate swaps fall as, in addition to a marked slowdown in money supply and an easing in inflation, the market has begun to price in a halt to monetary tightening in order to support growth.
In the UK today we get CPI data for September, where the market is expecting a print close to the 5%, up from 4.5% in August. In the eurozone we await the ZEW economic sentiment index but as I suggested yesterday the current market is not driven by the data but predominantly by the politics and that will continue until we get a resolution in the eurozone.
For the rest of the week I would anticipate that the EUR, in particular, but broad risk assets (including the AUD) will underperform, and after the capitulative deleveraging rally of last week, the support on the downside is likely more fragile than before. I still favour EURGBP throughout this week, but risk off sentiment is likely to pick up as we approach the weekend.
German Government spokesman Seibert stated “Dreams of a swift Euro solution won’t materialise”. In conjunction with the German Finance Minister’s statement that the “upcoming EU summit will not present [a] final solution for [the] eurozone debt crisis.” Both comments added to the weigh of an already seemingly faltering EUR.
Broader risk assets also struggled yesterday as concerns filtered through into the banking sector, despite the significantly better than expected Q3 earnings figures from Citigroup. With little in the way of top tier data this week, headlines will continue to dominate sentiment. A clear example of this was seen yesterday when a Der Spiegel online article suggested that “top German economists are warning that France’s AAA rating could be in danger should additional measures become necessary to prop up indebted eurozone members of to save ailing banks.” This is not a new concept and, indeed, it is one which I have discussed on this page a number of times. But the timing of the story into a market already feeling vulnerable top bad news exacerbated the impact.
This morning the spread between French and German 10 year yields has hit another new record at 100bps and despite Finance Minister Baroin’s protestations that France will do “everything” to maintain its debt ratings, we have reached a pinnacle. We have reached the point at which the rousing, determined words of officials are no longer enough; a point where action is needed. Schaeuble’s words yesterday, that seem to have undone all the calming work of the G20, could well see the EUR decline back to the lows, seen before the irrationally exuberant, Merkozy-inspired rally, over the next week.
In China overnight data came in better than broad expectations as Industrial Production and Retail Sales data picked up again in September after a decline in August. Fixed Asset investment was broadly stable yet GDP for Q3 slowed to 9.1% (its slowest pace since 2009). Whilst GDP growth is the envy of the developed world it is widely believed that the structure of the Chinese Economy requires it to maintain growth above 8% to maintain stable unemployment. The current easing of growth saw interest rate swaps fall as, in addition to a marked slowdown in money supply and an easing in inflation, the market has begun to price in a halt to monetary tightening in order to support growth.
In the UK today we get CPI data for September, where the market is expecting a print close to the 5%, up from 4.5% in August. In the eurozone we await the ZEW economic sentiment index but as I suggested yesterday the current market is not driven by the data but predominantly by the politics and that will continue until we get a resolution in the eurozone.
For the rest of the week I would anticipate that the EUR, in particular, but broad risk assets (including the AUD) will underperform, and after the capitulative deleveraging rally of last week, the support on the downside is likely more fragile than before. I still favour EURGBP throughout this week, but risk off sentiment is likely to pick up as we approach the weekend.
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