Showing posts with label Investment banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investment banking. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Daily Afternoon Report 27/11/2012 | Forex Trading Analysis


The Europe we saw at the beginning of today’s session was very different than the Europe of yesterday, at least from a trader’s perspective. Euro-zone leaders came to an agreement on Greece that lowered interest rates, returned some of the money made off of previous loans, and setup the release of the next 34.4 billion Euro aid tranche in December. The Euro has now erased all of the gains following the Greece announcement and is trading slight above 1.2950 against the US Dollar in currency markets.
UK gross domestic product for Q3 confirmed 1.0% economic expansion over the quarter, as the Olympics and previous quarter’s Jubilee holiday gave the UK a one-time spike in growth. Office for National Statistics’ release, output in production industries rose by only 0.9%, down from a previously estimated 1.1%. Service industry was confirmed to have seen a 1.3% rise in output.
The US Dollar rose a bit when Fed member Fisher said during a speech in Berlin that he advocates setting limits to QE as soon as the next meeting. Fisher said that the US’s biggest problem is unemployment and that inflation is under control in the US. 

Thursday, 14 June 2012

China Yuan Official Central Parity Rates for Friday


The China Foreign Exchange Trade System published the following official central parity rates for major currencies against the yuan Friday:
 
            Friday    Thursday 
USD/CNY     6.3089     6.3191 
HKD/CNY     0.81312    0.81446 
JPY/CNY*    7.9509     7.9687 
EUR/CNY     7.9596     7.9362 
GBP/CNY     9.8040     9.8016 
AUD/CNY     6.3136     6.2818 
CAD/CNY     6.1628     6.1422 
CNY/MYR     0.50366    0.50200 
CNY/RUB     5.1300     5.1263 
 
*per 100 yen 
 
The daily central parity rate for the yuan versus the U.S. dollar is the weighted average of prices given by market makers. The highest and lowest offers are excluded from the calculation.
In each daily trading session, the central bank allows the dollar/yuan rate to move no more than 1% above or below the central parity rate, and the yuan/ringgit and yuan/ruble to move no more than 5%. It allows other currency pairs to move as much as 3% above or below the central parity rate.

IMF Reiterates No Plans to Fund Financing for Spain, Only Monitoring


WASHINGTON--The International Monetary Fund has no plans to provide any financing for Spain, only to take a monitoring role in a EUR100 billion European bailout for the country's banks, an IMF official reiterated Thursday.
But IMF spokesman Gerry Rice repeated that the fund believes Europe should use its emergency bailout funds to take direct stakes in ailing banks as opposed to lending to governments, which then uses the cash to recapitalize banks. Otherwise, Europe risks boosting governments debt burdens and pushing borrowing costs higher.
The IMF's point has been highlighted in recent days as Germany's opposition to use euro funds for bank bailouts has fueled market concerns that Spain's bailout will mean Madrid will be unable to pay its obligations, pushing its borrowing costs to unsustainable levels.
Asked if Europe it's facing its last chance to fix the crisis at two upcoming euro summits in June--as some economists believe-- Mr. Rice said IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde has repeatedly warned Europe of the urgency of prompt action on a comprehensive crisis plan. The IMF has said the E.U. needs to strengthen the capacity of its bailout funds, spur growth through looser monetary policy and tweaking budget-tightening plans, and creating a banking union.
Mr. Rice also said the IMF would warn world leaders at an upcoming summit of the Group of 20 largest industrialized and developing countries of the downside risks the global economy from a worsening of the euro zone crisis. He said the fund is hoping the G-20 firms up commitments to boost IMF resources, as tentatively promised earlier this year when IMF members pledged to raise more than $430 billion in new lending resources for the fund.
Officials from some key emerging economies, including China and Brazil, have indicated they may delay detailing any possible IMF cash commitments over concerns about the pace of IMF governance reform that would give them greater power within the fund.
Despite those remarks, Mr. Rice said there had been "no backtracking or delay" on new resource commitments, and "it was never expected that the package would be completed with every detail by" the G-20 meeting early next week.
The IMF spokesman also said there had been no request for financial assistance from Cyprus, despite some economist expectations that the country may soon need external financial support. 

Wednesday, 13 June 2012

MARKET TALK: Sell Bunds/Buy Tsys Good Hedge on Greece -Scotia

The best way to ride out of the Greek elections is not to short stocks, but to sell German bunds and buy Treasury bonds, says Charles Comiskey, head of Treasury trading at Bank of Nova Scotia. He argues that bunds would be losers as Germany might need to channel more money to safeguard the monetary union, and the rising fiscal burden is what has fueled worry that bunds could lose their safe-haven status. That concern was underlined after Pimco's Bill Gross indicated on Tuesday he dislikes bunds. A comfort, though: The 10-yr bund auction Wednesday didn't show investors fled in droves. The underperformance of bunds vs Treasurys has narrowed the yield gap sharply. Recently, the benchmark 10-yr Treasury note trades about 15bps above that of 10-yr bund, down from 37bps just a week ago and a recent peak of 50bps in April.

Monday, 11 June 2012

BOE's Posen: Bank of England Should Buy Small Business Loans


  By Jason Douglas 
 
LONDON--The Bank of England should purchase bundles of small business loans in an effort to boost the supply of credit and end an "investors' strike" that is holding back the economy, BOE rate-setter Adam Posen said Monday.

In a reprise of an earlier appeal, Posen said major central banks around the world should engage in a fresh round of stimulus and target their efforts at parts of their economies most in need of official help.
In the U.S., that is the residential mortgage market. In the U.K., it is lending to small businesses, Mr. Posen said, according to a text of his speech.

"The critical gap to be addressed is in lending to small and medium enterprises, and new businesses," he said.
Mr. Posen said risk-aversion among investors is preventing the extra cash pumped into the U.K. economy by the BOE through its asset purchase program from sparking a revival in investment--an investors' strike that monetary policy should seek to bring to an end.

His proposal calls for the BOE to buy small business loans, thereby spurring banks to lend more to small firms in the knowledge the central bank stands ready to snap up those loans.

Mr. Posen first made his proposal in September last year but the idea met resistance from BOE Governor Mervyn King, who argues that only elected lawmakers can risk taxpayers' money on risky loans. The BOE's GBP325 billion asset purchase program has focused almost exclusively on U.K. government bonds, or gilts.
Mr. Posen, who steps down from the Monetary Policy Committee in August to head the Petersen Institute in Washington, a think tank, said those concerns should be assuaged if the government vowed to indemnify the central bank against any losses.

Sunday, 10 June 2012

Interbank Foreign Exchange Rates


Dollar Rates                               Close            High      Low  12/31 
 
 
USD/JPY Japan            79.68-70       79.60-65  +0.08    79.70    79.40  +3.61 
EUR/USD Euro            1.2639-42      1.2638-42  +0.00   1.2668   1.2620  -2.47 
GBP/USD U.K.            1.5554-58      1.5509-15  +0.28   1.5557   1.5506  +0.09 
USD/CHF Switzerland     0.9503-08      0.9501-11  -0.01   0.9518   0.9481  +1.42 
USD/CAD Canada          1.0205-10      1.0219-29  -0.16   1.0229   1.0206  -0.02 
AUD/USD Australia       0.9983-88      0.9984-89  -0.01   1.0007   0.9968  -2.18 
NZD/USD New Zealand     0.7774-80      0.7766-74  +0.09   0.7785   0.7754  +0.01 
 
Euro Rates 
 
EUR/JPY Japan           100.71-76      100.55-69  +0.12   100.90   100.34  +1.18 
EUR/GBP U.K.            0.8125-28      0.8146-50  -0.27   0.8157   0.8124  -3.90 
EUR/CHF Switzerland     1.2012-16      1.2010-20  -0.01   1.2018   1.2008  -1.30 
EUR/CAD Canada          1.2900-08      1.2914-31  -0.14   1.2948   1.2898  -2.48 
EUR/AUD Australia       1.2655-64      1.2653-69  -0.01   1.2681   1.2642  -0.28 
EUR/DKK Denmark         7.4302-48     7.4295-353  +0.00   7.4367   7.4306  -0.04 
EUR/NOK Norway         7.5774-852     7.5724-908   0.00   7.5898   7.5742  -2.12 
EUR/SEK Sweden        8.8948-9028    8.8881-9019  +0.04   8.9104   8.8936  -0.20 
EUR/CZK Czech Rep.     25.285-361     25.264-384  -0.01   25.358   25.317  -1.06 
EUR/HUF Hungary         294.07-50      293.98-05  -0.04   294.18   293.94  -6.60 
EUR/PLN Poland         4.2672-746     4.2755-885  -0.26   4.2775   4.2732  -4.40 
 
Yen Rates 
 
AUD/JPY Australia        79.56-60       79.44-56  +0.10    79.69    79.16  +1.74 
GBP/JPY U.K.          123.93-4.00      123.45-57  +0.37   123.93   123.34  +3.70 
CAD/JPY Canada           78.04-10       77.82-94  +0.25    78.04    77.68  +3.63 
NZD/JPY New Zealand    61.94-2.00       61.83-92  +0.16    61.97    61.58  +3.62 
 
Other Dollar Rates 
 
USD/CZK Czech Rep.      20.003-60      19.984-20  +0.01   20.069   20.000  +1.42 
USD/HUF Hungary         232.66-96      232.61-03  -0.05   233.06   232.38  -4.25 
USD/DKK Denmark        5.8784-810     5.8785-812   0.00   5.8902   5.8678  +2.48 
USD/NOK Norway          5.9947-98      5.9902-06  +0.02   6.0060   5.9850  +0.35 
USD/PLZ Poland         3.3759-812     3.3830-925  -0.27   3.3850   3.3774  -1.99 
USD/RUB Russia         32.093-380      31.846-03  -1.25   32.489   32.188  +0.27 
USD/SEK Sweden         7.0369-420     7.0329-417  +0.03   7.0553   7.0286  +2.32 
USD/ZAR S. Africa      8.3095-184     8.3100-488  -0.19   8.3252   8.3104  +2.80 
 
USD/CNY China           6.3671-92      6.3739-60  -0.11   6.3741   6.3688  +0.78 
USD/HKD Hong Kong       7.7574-80      7.7576-82   0.00   7.7584   7.7576  -0.12 
USD/MYR Malaysia      3.0751-2018    3.0754-2020  -0.01   3.0811   3.1952  -1.23 
USD/INR India           55.418-33      55.418-33   0.00   55.648   54.900  +4.53 
USD/IDR Indonesia          9412-3       9157-525  +0.76     9412     9385  +4.20 
USD/PHP Philippines    43.121-362     43.128-368   0.00   43.155   43.356  -1.37 
USD/SGD Singapore       1.2747-54      1.2740-48  +0.05   1.2775   1.2730  -1.65 
USD/KRW S. Korea     1166.59-7.10  1134.59-82.10  +0.73  1166.89  1165.90  +0.54 
USD/TWD Taiwan         29.849-910     29.889-970  -0.17   29.949   29.900  -1.27 
USD/THB Thailand     30.566-1.834   30.568-1.834   0.00   30.619   31.768  -1.26 
USD/VND Vietnam        20930-1000     20557-1206   0.00    20970    21000  -0.74 
 
USD/BRR Brazil          2.0227-58     2.0031-432  +0.05   2.0253   2.0250  +8.50 
USD/MXN Mexico        13.8383-412    13.8279-820  -0.11  13.8789  13.8410  -0.76 
USD/ARS Argentina     4.3555-4822    4.3559-4826  -0.01   4.3627   4.4730  +2.55 
 

Friday, 8 June 2012

Stronger Dollar May Be Good For Exporters. Really.


The global slowdown is finally hitting U.S. exports.
The Commerce Department reported Friday that exports fell 0.8% in April, the first drop in five months. Shipments to the euro zone plunged 9.8%. A larger fall in imports narrowed the total U.S. trade deficit to $50.06 billion, but the gap is higher than its first-quarter average.

When exports get crimped, a common reaction from politicians and manufacturing groups is to call for a cheaper dollar. A weaker currency makes a country's products cheaper on global markets--a reason why China micromanages the value of the yuan.

A weak currency, however, is not in the cards for the U.S. The dollar is expected to continue to strengthen as investors seek safety amid no solution to the euro-zone crisis and worries about the global slowdown.
But a strong dollar can be a positive to U.S. companies because it will force them to remain competitive in the long run, argues Michael Drury, chief economist of McVean Trading & Investments.

Mr. Drury calls a cheap currency "a sugar high" that gives a temporary price advantage but doesn't correct the underlying problems that are eroding the currency's value in the first place.

"Meanwhile, [a] stronger currency forces the stronger competitor to up their game--while at the same time providing them with the lower borrowing costs to do so," Mr. Drury argues.

The easier financing enables successful nations to become stronger by "allowing them to acquire the best practices and brightest employees of the weaker nations at a discount," explains Mr. Drury.

A nation like the U.S. that is facing long-run debt problems and an aging population should be taking the long view of its economic health. In an era of cheap financing, the economy can make investments to enhance productivity and global reach. That spending will allow for higher income streams in the future.
"Competitive devaluation is not good long-term economic policy--but it is often seen as good politics," Mr. Drury says.

Indeed, it is very easy for politicians to blame the currency markets for a country's competitive shortfall.
But instead of pointing fingers, the U.S. needs to invest in education, technology and infrastructure and to reform regulatory oversight that will give its exporting sectors the long-term edge in global markets.
 
(Kathleen Madigan, a special writer, is the primary author of the Big Picture column. She covered the economy for almost two decades at BusinessWeek and worked in the economics departments at several Wall Street firms. She can be reached at kathleen.madigan@dowjones.com.)
 
(TALK BACK: We invite readers to send us comments on this or other financial news topics. Please email us at TalkbackAmericas@dowjones.com. Readers should include their full names, work or home addresses and telephone numbers for verification purposes. We reserve the right to edit and publish your comments along with your name; we reserve the right not to publish reader comments.)
 

Thursday, 7 June 2012

Japan Opposition Party to Endorse Tax Hike


TOKYO --The opposition Liberal Democratic Party will accept the government's proposed two-step consumption tax increase, aligning itself with the ruling Democratic Party of Japan on the heart of Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's package of tax and social security reforms, the Nikkei reported in its Friday morning edition.

On Thursday, LDP policy committee leaders settled on a party line on the tax issue ahead of three-way talks on revising the proposed reform legislation. The party will agree to raise the consumption tax in two stages: first from 5% to 8% in April 2014, then to 10% in October 2015.

The three biggest parties in the Diet--the DPJ, the LDP and the opposition New Komeito--will begin negotiations Friday, aiming to reach a deal by June 15 and vote on the bills in the lower house by June 21, when the legislative session ends.

They will tackle taxes and social security separately, starting with the latter, an issue on which the DPJ and LDP stand further apart. The LDP wants the DPJ to drop some of its defining social security proposals, such as creating a guaranteed minimum pension and eliminating the separate health insurance bracket for the elderly. Should they fail to reach a compromise there, an agreement on the tax hike may fall through.

On the tax hike, the LDP will call for a provision giving the final say to the sitting government six months before the first stage of the tax increase. At the same time, it seeks to drop economic growth targets linked to the tax hike, arguing they would tie the hands of future governments.

To cushion the impact on low-income Japanese, the government and the DPJ are considering an initial round of cash payments, followed in the longer term by refundable tax credits. The LDP is cool to both proposals and will try to push for more targeted, temporary measures.

Despite their rhetoric, both parties had already seen eye to eye on raising the tax to 10%. The LDP has concluded that agreeing to the basic structure of the DPJ's proposed tax hike offers the fastest way to that end. New Komeito, meanwhile, is more likely to accept the parts of the plan that the other two parties agree on.
06-07-12 1920ET
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 07, 2012 19:45 ET (23:45 GMT)

UK's Osborne Signals Idea of EU Membership Vote


George Osborne, the U.K. chancellor of the exchequer, became the first senior minister to signal the possibility of a referendum on membership in the European Union, U.K. daily The Times reported Friday.
In doing so, the chancellor surprised Downing Street and set himself on a collision course with his Liberal Democrat coalition partners, the Times said.
Mr. Osborne said a plan to rescue the single currency was likely to mean handing more powers to Brussels, The Times said. This would automatically trigger a referendum under a new law introduced by the coalition, The Times said.
"I think what the public are concerned about, the British people would be concerned about, would be if there was any transfer of power," Mr Osborne said, according to the Times. "A reshaped relationship with Europe would imply, would involve, a transfer of sovereignty or powers from the U.K. to Brussels."
His remark appeared to overstep the agreed coalition position, The Times said. The newspaper noted that Prime Minister David Cameron was more cautious on a visit to Berlin for talks with Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, saying that you need a referendum if you "change the rules of the game".
Newspaper Web site: http://thetimes.co.uk

China Yuan Official Central Parity Rates for Friday


The China Foreign Exchange Trade System published the following official central parity rates for major currencies against the yuan Friday:
 
            Friday    Thursday 
USD/CNY     6.3188     6.3170 
HKD/CNY     0.81446    0.81419 
JPY/CNY*    7.9495     7.9757 
EUR/CNY     7.9222     7.9427 
GBP/CNY     9.8005     9.7784 
AUD/CNY     6.2335     6.2554 
CAD/CNY     6.1359     6.1411 
CNY/MYR     0.50055    0.50015 
CNY/RUB     5.1202     5.1012 
 
*per 100 yen 
 
The daily central parity rate for the yuan versus the U.S. dollar is the weighted average of prices given by market makers. The highest and lowest offers are excluded from the calculation.
In each daily trading session, the central bank allows the dollar/yuan rate to move no more than 1% above or below the central parity rate, and the yuan/ringgit and yuan/ruble to move no more than 5%. It allows other currency pairs to move as much as 3% above or below the central parity rate.
 
Source: www.chinamoney.com.cn
 
Write to djnews.shanghai@dowjones.com
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 07, 2012 21:17 ET (01:17 GMT)

Interbank Foreign Exchange Rates At 20:50 EST / 0050 GMT


                           Latest       Previous   %Chg    Daily    Daily   %Chg 
Dollar Rates                               Close            High      Low  12/31 
 
 
USD/JPY Japan            79.64-68       79.61-65  +0.04    79.75    79.58  +3.57 
EUR/USD Euro            1.2539-42      1.2559-63  -0.16   1.2575   1.2530  -3.24 
GBP/USD U.K.            1.5509-14      1.5525-31  -0.11   1.5536   1.5500  -0.20 
USD/CHF Switzerland     0.9574-78      0.9559-64  +0.15   0.9585   0.9552  +2.17 
USD/CAD Canada          1.0293-98      1.0276-81  +0.17   1.0300   1.0240  +0.84 
AUD/USD Australia       0.9870-74      0.9895-98  -0.24   0.9917   0.9858  -3.29 
NZD/USD New Zealand     0.7656-58      0.7669-74  -0.19   0.7688   0.7646  -1.53 
 
Euro Rates 
 
EUR/JPY Japan            99.87-92      99.99-100  -0.12   100.26    99.74  +0.34 
EUR/GBP U.K.            0.8085-88      0.8088-91  -0.04   0.8097   0.8082  -4.38 
EUR/CHF Switzerland     1.2008-12      1.2008-13   0.00   1.2011   1.2010  -1.33 
EUR/CAD Canada          1.2906-14      1.2906-15  -0.01   1.2918   1.2868  -2.43 
EUR/AUD Australia       1.2701-08      1.2689-96  +0.09   1.2713   1.2676  +0.07 
EUR/DKK Denmark         7.4320-58      7.4317-57  +0.00   7.4388   7.4314  -0.02 
EUR/NOK Norway        7.5969-6044     7.5890-988  +0.09   7.6035   7.5868  -1.87 
EUR/SEK Sweden          8.9704-74     8.9688-832  -0.02   8.9868   8.9610  +0.64 
EUR/CZK Czech Rep.     25.259-304      25.313-71  -0.24   25.352   25.292  -1.23 
EUR/HUF Hungary       295.70-6.38    294.88-5.67  +0.26   296.00   295.38  -6.05 
EUR/PLN Poland         4.2666-724     4.2637-716  +0.04   4.2693   4.2642  -4.43 
 
Yen Rates 
 
AUD/JPY Australia        78.60-66       78.77-83  -0.22    79.08    78.50  +0.52 
GBP/JPY U.K.            123.51-62      123.59-68  -0.06   123.82   123.38  +3.36 
CAD/JPY Canada           77.34-41       77.43-50  -0.12    77.82    77.28  +2.71 
NZD/JPY New Zealand    60.97-1.02       61.05-12  -0.15    61.31    60.87  +1.98 
 
Other Dollar Rates 
 
USD/CZK Czech Rep.      20.142-76      20.153-97  -0.08   20.171   20.140  +2.06 
USD/HUF Hungary       235.81-6.32    234.78-5.37  +0.42   236.13   235.16  -2.91 
USD/DKK Denmark         5.9265-86      5.9171-93  +0.16   5.9327   5.9118  +3.32 
USD/NOK Norway         6.0581-632      6.0423-90  +0.25   6.0677   6.0376  +1.41 
USD/PLZ Poland          3.4023-64    3.3947-4005  +0.20   3.4059   3.3930  -1.24 
USD/RUB Russia          32.409-60     32.352-424  +0.14   32.472   32.282  +0.88 
USD/SEK Sweden          7.1533-78     7.1407-512  +0.13   7.1579   7.1328  +4.01 
USD/ZAR S. Africa      8.3868-994     8.3688-832  +0.20   8.4149   8.3768  +3.78 
 
USD/CNY China          6.3693-714      6.3671-92  +0.03   6.3693   6.3690  +0.81 
USD/HKD Hong Kong       7.7580-86      7.7579-85  +0.00   7.7584   7.7580  -0.11 
USD/MYR Malaysia       3.1685-786     3.1575-640  +0.40   3.1750   3.1620  -0.12 
USD/INR India           54.938-53      54.958-73  -0.04   54.958   54.900  +3.62 
USD/IDR Indonesia        9355-405        9340-99  +0.11     9400     9405  +3.84 
USD/PHP Philippines    43.075-276     43.033-272  +0.05   43.075   43.150  -1.54 
USD/SGD Singapore       1.2789-92      1.2770-75  +0.14   1.2805   1.2764  -1.35 
USD/KRW S. Korea     1170.29-2.70   1163.59-6.00  +0.58  1171.39  1165.60  +0.94 
USD/TWD Taiwan         29.799-860     29.779-840  +0.07   29.819   29.860  -1.44 
USD/THB Thailand        31.738-94      31.634-90  +0.33   31.765   31.528  +0.53 
USD/VND Vietnam        20740-1387     20965-1050  +0.27    20740    21387  +0.12 
 
USD/BRR Brazil         2.0295-360      2.0349-80  -0.18   2.0351   2.0348  +8.96 
USD/MXN Mexico        14.0693-862    14.0637-727  +0.07  14.0814  14.0626  +0.94 
USD/ARS Argentina      4.4792-864     4.4792-864   0.00   4.4812   4.4856  +4.04 
 
Source: ICAP Plc. 
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 07, 2012 20:50 ET (00:50 GMT)

Daily Forex Brief London: Thursday 7th June 2012


Rattled by May's market madness, global policy-makers have finally started to show that they get the message, although their words will need to be followed by strong action before too long. Although the ECB was not decisive enough for our liking given the gravity of the situation in Europe (see below), at least Mario Draghi promised to act if the growth outlook worsened. Fed Vice-Chairman Janet Yellen conceded last night that the American economy was 'vulnerable to setbacks' and might require additional stimulus: Fed Chairman Bernanke will likely reinforce this point when he testifies to the Joint Economic Committee later today (see below). China in particular has implemented significant extra stimulus over recent weeks in response to their worsening growth performance; India has vowed to raise infrastructure spending to boost their ailing economy; and the RBA has lowered rates by 75bp over the past six weeks. Also, the BOE could decide to expand their asset purchases program when they meet this morning (see below). In response, the major American and European bourses were up more than 2% yesterday, Brent is back above USD 100 a barrel, and both the yen and the dollar have given back some of their recent gains. The euro suddenly looks a little perkier, notwithstanding ongoing concerns over both Greece and Spain.

Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Daily Forex Brief London: Wednesday 6th June 2012


After weeks of denying the inevitable, Spain's leaders have at last finally accepted that they need European assistance to recapitalise their broken banks. How these banks get access to the capital they so desperately require is the subject of much disagreement between Spain and European policy officials. Fearful of the austerity conditions that would be imposed on them if they apply for a bailout to the EFSF, the Spanish government instead is imploring Germany to allow their banks to get funding directly, a position that has some support in both Brussels and Paris. However, neither the EFSF nor the ESM are allowed to make direct capital injections, and Germany remains inextricably opposed to this course in any event. According to Sueddeutsche Zeitung, one option being considered is permitting the EFSF to lend money to Spain's FROB (the bank rescue fund), under the proviso that problem banks are either closed or merged. This would get around Spain's fear of signing up to additional austerity and reforms. From the perspective of Germany and the rest of northern Europe, recapitalising Spain's banks in this way would definitely be much cheaper than a full bailout of Spain, notwithstanding their reservations. Budget Minister Montoro yesterday claimed that the sum required to recapitalise Spain's banks was relatively modest, at around EUR 40bn. We are not there yet, but it is in both Spain's and Germany's interest, not to mention the rest of Europe, to find a way to recapitalise Spain's banks quickly.

Monday, 4 June 2012

Daily Forex Brief London: Monday 4th June 2012


It's a reasonable question and one which many were asking themselves on Friday in the wake of the disappointing US jobs data. There was also an expectation of some statement from EU and/or G7 leaders over the weekend to offer reassurance to markets. As it was, there was nothing of substance, with the result that Asian equities were down over 2% today, with the fall in Chinese stocks the biggest for two months. The latest PMI data for the services industry showed a further modest slowdown in China. So looking around the world economy, there are currently few signs of decent momentum, either in the emerging or developed world. Still, if the German newspaper Welt-am-Sonntag it to be believed, EU leaders are drawing up a crisis plan to be ready by the end of the month. This reportedly contains many of the measures (integrated budget policy, banking union, and political union) at which many member states, notably Germany, have balked at in the past. But the truth is that we are at the point where bold measures will have to be taken if the euro is to stand a chance of staying intact. Incremental, compromised and late initiatives have failed spectacularly.

Friday, 1 June 2012

Daily Forex Brief London: Friday 1st June 2012


It's gearing up to be a busy Friday. We've already had manufacturing PMI data in China coming in softer than expected, falling to 50.4 (from 53.3). In Europe, markets are understandably nervous, the euro once again having traded at a new low for the year as Asia (at 1.2324), whilst Spain has denied speculation that it is talking to the IMF about possible aid. Meanwhile, there were some fairly critical words for European leaders from the head of the ECB yesterday, saying that it was not the ECB's job to "fill the vacuum left by the lack of action by national governments". The results from the Irish referendum on the fiscal compact are also expected today and whilst a 'yes' vote is pretty much assured, history is scattered with surprise referendum decisions in Europe. Not for the first time, markets will be looking to the US to provide some good news, with the April employment report released this afternoon. Hopes are for a modest recovery from the 115k increase seen in April, the 150k expected gain would take payrolls back to the average of the past 6 months. Meanwhile, yields on German 2 year bonds have touched negative territory this morning, an illustration of the ever more dis-jointed markets we are seeing.

Thursday, 31 May 2012

Interbank Foreign Exchange Rates


                          Latest       Previous   %Chg    Daily    Daily   %Chg 
Dollar Rates                               Close            High      Low  12/31 
 
 
USD/JPY Japan            78.42-46       78.30-33  +0.16    78.65    78.32  +1.98 
EUR/USD Euro            1.2349-52      1.2362-65  -0.11   1.2368   1.2324  -4.70 
GBP/USD U.K.            1.5374-78      1.5402-10  -0.19   1.5409   1.5368  -1.07 
USD/CHF Switzerland     0.9720-24      0.9713-17  +0.07   0.9744   0.9712  +3.73 
USD/CAD Canada          1.0347-52      1.0326-31  +0.20   1.0362   1.0320  +1.37 
AUD/USD Australia       0.9690-94      0.9732-36  -0.43   0.9734   0.9650  -5.06 
NZD/USD New Zealand     0.7516-22      0.7529-34  -0.16   0.7536   0.7486  -3.31 
 
Euro Rates 
 
EUR/JPY Japan            96.85-90       96.81-85  +0.05    97.10    96.80  -2.70 
EUR/GBP U.K.            0.8032-35      0.8024-28  +0.09   0.8033   0.8018  -5.01 
EUR/CHF Switzerland     1.2008-12      1.2009-13  -0.01   1.2013   1.2010  -1.33 
EUR/CAD Canada          1.2780-88      1.2766-73  +0.11   1.2783   1.2754  -3.39 
EUR/AUD Australia       1.2741-48     1.2698-705  +0.34   1.2775   1.2686  +0.38 
EUR/DKK Denmark        7.4287-332     7.4292-333   0.00   7.4335   7.4244  -0.06 
EUR/NOK Norway         7.5572-648      7.5606-72  -0.04   7.5667   7.5534  -2.38 
EUR/SEK Sweden         8.9834-914     8.9835-912  +0.00   8.9928   8.9662  +0.79 
EUR/CZK Czech Rep.      25.707-46     25.681-752  +0.04   25.753   25.606  +0.51 
EUR/HUF Hungary       300.66-1.38    300.46-1.14  +0.07   300.99   300.90  -4.47 
EUR/PLN Poland        4.3886-4040     4.3834-943  +0.17   4.3965   4.3796  -1.59 
 
Yen Rates 
 
AUD/JPY Australia        76.00-06       76.20-27  -0.27    76.47    75.80  -2.80 
GBP/JPY U.K.            120.56-66      120.60-70  -0.03   121.04   120.61  +0.89 
CAD/JPY Canada           75.75-83       75.79-87  -0.05    76.08    75.78  +0.61 
NZD/JPY New Zealand    58.94-9.02     58.95-9.02  -0.01    59.19    58.81  -1.39 
 
Other Dollar Rates 
 
USD/CZK Czech Rep.      20.815-44     20.773-828  +0.14   20.862   20.716  +5.46 
USD/HUF Hungary       243.46-4.00      243.04-55  +0.18   243.97   243.36  +0.24 
USD/DKK Denmark         6.0152-78     6.0095-117  +0.10   6.0296   6.0086  +4.87 
USD/NOK Norway         6.1191-242     6.1157-200  +0.06   6.1359   6.1096  +2.43 
USD/PLZ Poland         3.5536-654     3.5457-541  +0.27   3.5608   3.5452  +3.26 
USD/RUB Russia         33.419-524     33.306-416  +0.33   33.640   33.280  +4.11 
USD/SEK Sweden          7.2741-92     7.2666-717  +0.10   7.2905   7.2616  +5.77 
USD/ZAR S. Africa      8.5073-224     8.5156-272  -0.08   8.5647   8.4964  +5.29 
 
USD/CNY China           6.3667-88     6.3685-706  -0.03   6.3715   6.3684  +0.77 
USD/HKD Hong Kong       7.7610-16      7.7617-27  -0.01   7.7634   7.7612  -0.07 
USD/MYR Malaysia       3.1777-878     3.1682-748  +0.35   3.1880   3.1742  +0.17 
USD/INR India           56.078-93      56.033-48  +0.08   56.078   56.093  +5.77 
USD/IDR Indonesia         9302-63         9400-0  -0.72     9392     9300  +3.32 
USD/PHP Philippines    43.445-646     43.326-570  +0.22   43.605   43.526  -0.69 
USD/SGD Singapore       1.2865-72      1.2882-90  -0.14   1.2906   1.2864  -0.74 
USD/KRW S. Korea    1179.39-80.00  1179.29-81.80  -0.07  1182.99  1180.00  +1.65 
USD/TWD Taiwan         29.839-940      29.829-90  +0.10   29.879   29.870  -1.24 
USD/THB Thailand       31.778-836     31.793-856  -0.05   31.881   31.828  +0.66 
USD/VND Vietnam        20595-1252       20805-70  +0.41    20595    21252  -0.54 
 
USD/BRR Brazil          2.0215-46      2.0219-50  -0.02   2.0255   2.0234  +8.44 
USD/MXN Mexico        14.4206-434    14.3643-731  +0.44  14.4662  14.3320  +3.48 
USD/ARS Argentina      4.4642-716     4.4657-730  -0.03   4.4676   4.4710  +3.69 
 
Source: ICAP Plc. 
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 31, 2012 22:50 ET (02:50 GMT)

-The State Bank of Vietnam Friday set the exchange rate for the U.S


                        Friday                Thursday 
   Official USD/VND rate: VND20,828             VND20,828 
   Vietcombank rate:      VND20,840-VND20,890   VND20,840-VND20,890 
   Gold shop rate:        VND20,870-VND20,890   VND20,860-VND20,890 
 
HANOI (Dow Jones)--The State Bank of Vietnam Friday set the exchange rate for the U.S. dollar at VND20,828, unchanged from Thursday.
Rates offered by major commercial banks led by Vietcombank are steady, while gold shops have slightly raised their selling rate.
"Forex trading activity in the interbank market is lackluster because of weak corporate demand for the greenback as many trading firms still report slow sales of imported materials and goods," said a foreign exchange dealer with a Hanoi-based commercial joint stock bank.
Many domestic firms have reportedly said they faced rising inventories in May because of weak consumption caused by ongoing recession, the dealer said.
Dollar demand from importers of staple items declined after the import value of gasoline fell 13.3% on year to $3.98 billion over January-May, while automobile imports fell 36% to $845 million during the same period, said the dealer, citing government trade data released this week.
Another dealer with Ho Chi Minh City-based ACB Bank said though Vietnam reported a trade deficit of $700 million in May, the deficit was only $632 million for the January-May period compared with a deficit of more than $6.25 billion booked for the same period last year.
"These figures show that Vietnam has faced no immediate dollar shortage, and I expect the exchange rate to be flat in the near term," the dealer said.
Currency dealers with banks and gold shops in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City forecast the free market rate to move in a range of VND20,870 to VND20,900 over the weekend.
 
-By Nguyen Pham Muoi, Dow Jones Newswires; 84-4-35123041; phammuoi.nguyen@dowjones.com
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 31, 2012 22:30 ET (02:30 GMT)

China official May PMI drops sharply to 50.4 from 53.3 in April



-- Currencies in Asia-Pacific region fall on weak data
-- Economists says economy will bottom out in the second quarter
BEIJING -- China's official Purchasing Managers Index fell significantly to 50.4 in May from April's 53.3, showing an accelerated slowdown in the world's second-largest economy that calls for more stimulus policies.
The gauge for nationwide manufacturing activity was also lower than the median forecast of 51.5 from 10 economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires. Nine out of the 10 economists predicted a higher PMI than the real figure.
A PMI reading above 50 indicates an expansion in manufacturing activity, while a reading below 50 indicates contraction.
After the weak data was announced, the Australian dollar fell to 0.9644 against the U.S dollar, its lowest level since Oct. 5, 2011. Other regional currencies including the New Zealand dollar and Singapore dollar were all lower because of the China PMI.
Due to weak overseas demand and domestic investment, China's economic growth will likely bottom out in the second quarter, before Beijing's supportive policies begin to take effect in the second half of the year, economists said.
"As risks of a hard landing have increased, Beijing should issue more policies to stabilize economic growth," said Li Huiyong, an economist at Shenyin & Wanguo Securities.
"The quicker interest rates are cut the better," he said.
Meanwhile, Standard Chartered economist Li Wei expressed some skepticism at the big drop in the PMI. The high April figure is suspect given that other data were weak across the board that month, and flawed seasonal adjustment methods may be the culprit, Li said.
"I think the slowdown is all being reflected in May, so I'm a little bit concerned about some over-correction in the data," he said.
Nonetheless, Li said there is no doubt underlying economic conditions are weak and economic data may not begin to reflect the stimulus until August or September.
-Liu Li and Aaron Back contributed to this article, Dow Jones Newswires; 8610-8400-7713; li.liu@dowjones.com
 
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 31, 2012 21:35 ET (01:35 GMT)

END) Dow Jones Newswires May 31, 2012 22:19 ET (02:19 GMT)

0219 GMT [Dow Jones] Korea government bonds are higher, helped by continued risk aversion amid worries over the euro zone debt crisis, while data tips weaker growth in China and the U.S. "Yields of local bonds, like those on U.S. Treasurys, are already trading at very low levels, but there is no clear momentum yet to revive risk appetite in the market," says Kim Se-hun, a fixed-income analyst at Daishin Securities. "The bullish run for local bonds is expected to continue in June. The three-year yield may fall near the BOK's policy rate of 3.25%" in the near term, he adds. The three-year yield is down 2 bps at 3.30%, the five-year yield is down 3 bps at 3.40% and the one-year yield is down 4 bps at 3.65%. Lead June bond futures are up nine ticks at 104.74. 

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