One Around Two
We are near the edge on a few situations in the FX markets. I'm watching the EURCHF and the USDYEN.
The market traded EURCHF to a low of 1.2032 today. It closed at a (slightly) safer 1.2044. I would not be surprised to see this cross trade very close to the official peg of 1.20 in the not too distant future.
There is no doubt in my mind that the Swiss National Bank (SNB) will be involved when and if the EURCHF hits the 1.2000 mark. My guess is that 99% of everyone else who “votes” in this market believes the same. This begs a question.
“If everyone knows the cross can’t go below 1.20, then why in hell is it sitting 44 lousy pips away from the peg?”
The EURCHF is a very good funding currency for a carry trade. Yields on French and Italian bonds make it attractive, given that Swiss money can be had through the swaps with a negative Vig. It seems like the market wants to trade the EURCHF very close to the peg for the time being. That’s odd, given that it’s a “100% sure thing” that the SNB will protect the downside.
The Dollar is a sideshow for the Swissie. I doubt many are trading USDCHF these days. It’s worth noting that the Dollar got beat up for five big figures against the Euro the past week or so. Normally when you see Euro strength versus the dollar, you also see it in the EURCHF cross. Not this time around. It does make me go Hmmmm.
I think there are scenarios where the EURCHF could trade to the peg. If, by surprise… the Greek deal fell apart, money would move into the Franc. It could be something subtler. A reminder of just how fragile the Euro system is these days might do it. For example, this headline from the WSJ that came out after the NY close may scare the crap out of many people with bank accounts in the EU.
If the EURCHF does test the peg, it will probably happen during European trading hours. I expect the SNB’s new boss, Thomas Jordan, will stand up and bid 1.1999 for all the Euros the market has on offer.
A side story to this is what happens if the cross breaks the peg outside of Euro trading hours. What if some hedge-fund types lean on it at 3 PM on a Friday in NYC? The same question arises during Asian hours. If Monday morning, in Australia, the cross is offered at 1.1997, without a bid, it will create a big splash. That "100% sure thing" will immediately come into question. Mr. Jordan doesn’t want that.
There are only two possibilities for intervention outside of the Euro time zone:
1) The SNB can rely on the Central Banks of Australia, Japan and the USA. Those CB’s would act on behalf of the SNB during their respective market hours.
But, realistically, there is no chance in hell for this. The US Fed can’t play in this sandbox. For the Fed to participate in an effort to weaken the Franc would make it (and Tim Geithner) look silly. The USA has been threatening China with all manner of sanctions over China’s policy of maintaining an artificially weak currency. The Fed simply can’t help Switzerland do the same thing.
2) The SNB will give “resting” orders to commercial banks. The most likely name for this would be UBS. It would not surprise me if one of the other big banks had a turn at doing the SNB’s calling. JPM and Bank of Tokyo are likely candidates, Barclays may get put on the list if persistent intervention was required.
The resting order might be:
To: Bank of Tokyo, Tokyo - FX Department
Firm order, good till cancelled. SNB offers to purchase up to Euro 200 million versus CHF at 1.1999. Call Hans -immediately- if the first E50mm is executed.
With this, we get the EURCHF trading “one-around-two” (one pip around 1.200 or, 1.1999 – 1.2001).
A few thoughts about resting orders from CBs.
*The information always leaks.
*The bank operating for the SNB will be named.
*A bank that has a large resting order from a CB has a huge tactical advantage against other market players. (I know, I played this game.)
*A move into the intervention zone will rile other markets, most notably in the Euro funding markets.
.
A Yen for a Yen Trade
The USDYEN is dangerously close to becoming an issue (again). The NYC low was 76.08. Anything under 76.00 might bring in the Bank of Japan (BOJ). The last time we were here was on 10/27. The chart:
Japan desperately needs a stimulus. It has gone to the cupboard for more ZIRP and deficit spending too many times. At 220% debt-to-GDP, its credit card is maxed out. My reading of the Japanese press is that more debt as a stimulus is not a viable alternative. (They are talking about doubling the VAT to 10%, to cover a portion of the deficits. Given that painful effort, they are not going to turn around and borrow more.)
The only option left is to fiddle with the FX rate. It would make a very big difference if the USDYEN was 85. The Japanese Finance Ministry folks must be looking at the SNB's actions with envy. A 15% devaluation off the low, coupled with a future exchange rate that was (somehow) pegged to the USD, or a basket of currencies, would be just the ticket.
Here again, I don’t think this will happen. The boys at the BOJ know that they would have to absorb a trillion in additional reserves if they drew a line in the sand with a currency peg. That doesn’t mean that they are not thinking about it. Some “Peg Talk” by some MITI types might get the ball rolling.
I think we'll see a break of 76.00 soon. The sparks will fly somewhere around 75.60. Given the deteriorating conditions in Japan since the October intervention, I do wonder if the BOJ might be somewhat more aggressive this time around.





He'd be called Urs. Hans is a German.
ReplyDeleteI had an Aunt and an Uncle. They lived in Aarau. They were Hans and Heidi. No Urs.
Deletebk
Interesting article. A few questions. How long can the Swiss National Bank keep this up? How screwed is Japan? Do you think that the Plaza Accord is to blame for the situation that Japan found itself in, with the bubble in the late 80s, and the subsequent bust leading to QE, huge government debt and two lost decades?
ReplyDeleteThe Swiss can keep this up for a long time. It depends on how much reserves they build up. If the increase is gradual there is little pain. It they were to get E100b in a month, that would change everything. As of now, no problem, a year? I wouldn't count on it.
DeleteI think Japan is screwed big time. I think the currency is a short.
The Plaza Accord is not the root of today's problems. An aging population is the problem.
He'd me called Mine...
ReplyDeletenice company, krasting
ReplyDeletehttp://dailycaller.com/2012/01/30/general-electric-paid-2-67-billion-not-zero-in-2010-income-taxes/
I'd like to see that tax return. It says that GE paid US taxes in 2011. Okay, who did they pay these taxes to? My bet is that most of it went to state coffers for property tax and not the IRS for income tax.
DeleteBut, we won't know, will we? I still hate GE.
bk
It might take you a while and still be impenetrable. I know it was stated GE's return was 54k pages, but when I worked for an equivalent size telecom company I was told their return was a tractor trailer load+. I can't imagine GE's is any different. I'm not sure even GE knows what they pay. Maybe an argument for simplified tax?
DeleteBTW, good story on the two currencies.
Rich
Bruse, today USD/CHF is exactly inverted mirror of EUR/USD, but you have to look at 1h or 4h because day chart shows too much back and may make it look different.
ReplyDeleteBtw its not Schizer but scheisse ;)
That said, I hope those bags at SNB wake up soon, am at freaking -30 pips loss!!! ;)))
scheisse. I'll remember that.
DeleteApparently CH banks are advising their private punters that any stop loss orders on EURCHF @ 1.2000 risk being executed 5 figures lower.
ReplyDeleteMkt chatter is that there would be something like 20-30 bln (billion aka miliarden) hitting the mkt.
A 200mm buy order prob. wouldn't do much to shore up a tanking Euro.
Moreover SVP (the Swiss right party) would veementely oppose any new pro-euro intervention.
Looks like a dangerous (on interesting) market condition is developing!
Once again we come around to the dilemna--how come a country like Japan can't (or doesn't) weaken its currency simply by creating it recklessly? Why doesn't the government of Japan stop issuing bonds and simply issue yen? Why not hand out yen in the streets until such time as the currency has weakened sufficiently--or just declare a tax holiday for one year?
ReplyDeleteBecause it would end the power of the central bank--and erode the power of the monied class.
In other words, TPTB do not want helicopter drops of money (figuratively and literally).
Exactly. The central bank wanks a weaker currency, but not a worthless one. Hyperinflation ends the game, so the JCB won't do helicopter drops.
DeleteThanks--nicely put. Is there a possibility of a Prisoner's Dilemma here?
DeleteWhat kind of Prisoner's dilemma do you envision here?
DeleteEveryone is better off if they just keep their mouths shut, but the incentive for the first guy to squeal makes all of them do it. Sort of like the saying, if you're going to panic, be the first one to do so.
DeleteBruce, note also that the Dept of Treasury attacked the last MoF intervention in its Dec report. And that was when things looked really ugly! This may mean that the next MoF intervention level is a bit lower, maybe more than a figure away.
ReplyDeleteRe: EURCHF, did you see that how bad the Swiss PMI print was yesterday, in contrast to the other countries' PMIs? If this continues, I'm not sure how the SNB can justify NOT increasing the peg, especially when this round of pro-cyclical data fades in the EU.
I have also been watching the USD/YEN very closely as well. Japan is already sqauwking about intervention within the last couple of days. On a happy note, the Japannese are ready to hit 1 quadrillion YEN, so they win the prize for being first with the stragglers doing their best to catch up as quickly as possible.
ReplyDeleteOn the other hand, according to recent data collected by David Rodriguez, Quantitative Strategist at DailyFX, retail traders would be positioned on a net long euro against the Swiss franc as never before have, indicating that most aggressively speculating intervention Swiss National Bank with EUR / CHF approaching the fixed exchange rate 1.20. The ratio would be 24 to 1
ReplyDeletehttp://www.fxstreet.es/noticias/noticias-forex/articulo.aspx?storyid=86412500-21a0-4aa0-a2d2-4f6ad5d218e3
I can't let this go without a celebratory mention cause the whole world is doing so well that the BDI just broke the low established at the end of 2008. Where's our prize? Listen, don't worry about it because Benny and FED say it's just too much supply. SARC. off.
ReplyDeleteOil doesn't seem to be able to get out of it's own way even with all the monopoly money floating around in a sea of green ink. We have rattled the war sabre as hard as we can, and Iran has been helpful in that regard as well, but even with all this it sits at 96 and change. Between this and the BDI, I can see there seems to be a transmission problem with the propaganda machine.
ReplyDeleteThe Japanese should borrow money and invest it in the stock market. Then they could use the profits to pay down their debt.
ReplyDeleteI assume you mean they should invest in the US stock market :)
DeleteYes. Or really practically any market except their own (as someone pointed out below). Let the dip buying begin.
Deleteeh, except that their stock market is down 75% from it's high in 1989. That hasn't been such a good trade even when goosed by money printing...for decades.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteLeave my GE alone.
ReplyDeleteDS
Mark Carney and the Bank of Canada(they might need clearance from Flaherty and Finance Canada although this would certainly be given) could step in during North American trading hours. Plus Carney was pretty close to Hildebrand. I think if you wanted to test the peg 3PM Eastern time on a Friday would be a pretty good time at least to see who is acting on the SNB's behalf on the other side of the trade.
ReplyDeleteExceptional! Typically We never ever read total content articles however the method anyone authored this information is simply remarkable and this retained my personal interest in looking at i enjoyed this.
ReplyDelete