Posts Tagged ‘pound’

Triple Bottom at 1.3450 on Euro

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Over the past few weeks the Euro has formed a triple bottom at 1.3450 against the Dollar (the lows were on 19 Feb, 25 Feb and 2 Mar 2010).  Triple bottoms are rare in markets because most times a market prints a bottom, bounces off that bottom the first time it is tested but breaks through the support level if it is tested again (hence the old trading adage “Fade the first test but Go With the second test”).

The Euro now appears to have absorbed the selling pressure which has resulted from the problems Greece has been having in refinancing its borrowings.  Whilst the EU has pledged not to abandon Greece it has still not given any firm details on how it plans to offer support to Greece other than to encourage Greece to reduce its budget deficit towards 3% of GDP (as per the euro-zone’s Growth & Stability Pact).  Greece for its part “would like to borrow on the same terms” as other euro-zone members.  However the bond markets will demand a substantial premium to lend money to Greece until it proves it is actually carrying out the deficit-reduction measures it has promised in recent weeks. Yesterday Greece sold a €5 bln 10-year bond with a coupon of 6.25%, yielding roughly 312 bps over Bunds.

It has also become clearer over recent weeks that any support extended to Greece by the EU will not formally involve the ECB printing any money.  Euro-zone member governments have met public opposition to bailing out Greece with taxpayers’ money and the German press in particular has run stories opposing bailing out Greece if it means Greek public sector workers can still retire earlier than their German equivalents or even suggesting Greece sell off some of its uninhabited islands to raise some money.  Greece has in turn demanded the Germans return Greek gold which the Nazis allegedly stole during World War II…

Back to reality.  The receding prospect of the ECB printing money has helped the Euro to find support over recent weeks.  There is a subtle difference between the ECB printing money in order to buy Greek bonds and other euro-zone banks buying Greek bonds yielding circa 6% (with a strong nudge and guarantees from their respective governments) which they then use as collateral to borrow money from the ECB (at 1%).  The latter is simply good banking even if the net effect either way is the ECB finances loaning Greece money.  In the latter case the ECB can correctly claim that the risk lies not with it but with the banks.

Now that the Euro has found support at 1.3450 (until the market proves us wrong), the forex market can switch its attention to giving the Pound Sterling a good kicking in the run up to the May General Election.

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  • Euro-zone banks have left €198 bln on deposit of the net €213 bln they borrowed from the ECB last week. Play "follow the money" in 2012. 2011-12-29
  • The ECB is going to stop the rot by bailing out euro-zone banks with its 3-year Longer-Term Refinancing Operations, starting on 20th Dec 11. 2011-12-13
  • Now that every Euro-zone country's debt is widening against Bunds, the ECB is going to be forced to act to save the banks from insolvency. 2011-11-17
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Disclaimer
These are my own thoughts and opinions. They are based on considerable experience but in no way constitute investment advice and should not be taken as such, ever. This content is intended solely for the diversion of the reader, and me.