AUD/USD: Australian Retail Sales Data Benefits Greenback Trades

The US dollar continues its winning streak opposite its Australian counterpart as the drop in the pair’s valuation extends today. Traders veer away from the Aussie as a report on the Australian nation’s retail sales fell unexpectedly. Corporate earnings from the US are perceived to affect the trades of the Greenback today.

Katy Barnato of CNBC reports that the lack of economic data from both sides of the Atlantic is likely to leave major indices feeling directionless during the course of the session. “Corporate earnings in that case are likely to be the main focus for investors searching for catalysts,” Ishaq Siddiqi, a market strategist at ETX Capital said in a morning note.

Earlier today, Australian retail sales was reported to have fallen for a third straight month in December. Data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed that consumer spending dipped by 0.2 percent in December to A$21.42 Billion, upsetting forecasts of a 0.3 percent increase. Based on historical figures, this is an extremely rare run of weakness which strengthens the case for a further cut in interest rates. The last time that sales fell for three consecutive months was in late 1999 to early 2000. Further, the annual growth in sales slowed to just 2.3 percent, less than half the pace that used to be considered normal, and came despite rate cuts in both October and December.

Analysts are of the perception that “the RBA is sitting ready to ease,” as per Sue Trinh, a senior currency strategist at Royal Bank of Canada. “Aussie selling pressure stems from the comments that the RBA made that inflation outlook gives scope for further easing.”

The adverse market perception on the Aussie has prospects on the Australian dollar weakening, suggesting a sell bias for the AUDUSD. Still, it would be wise to look out for probable technical corrections on the currency pair.

For more news, analysis, technical charts and candlestick analysis, visit AlgosysFx Forex Trading Solutions.

 

Stock Market Strength “Taking the Shine Off Gold”, But Futures Positioning “Could Create Conditions for Gold to Rally”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Wednesday 6 February 2013, 07:30 EST

WHOLESALE PRICES for gold bullion hovered above $1670 per ounce Wednesday morning, broadly in line with where it started the week, while stocks and commodities were also little changed and the Euro eased against the Dollar ahead of tomorrow’s European Central Bank interest rate decision.

Gold has failed to break through the $1700 an ounce barrier since falling through the level in December. Over the same period, most stock markets have rallied. The S&P 500 had its best January since 1997, touching a new five-year high, while the FTSE 100 had its best start to a year since 1989.

“The stronger performance of more conventional assets, certainly equity markets, has taken the shine off gold,” reckons Daniel Brebner, head of metals research at Deutsche Bank.

“Safe-haven assets have performed fairly poorly as expectations of growth have improved…in that kind of environment, there is no significant motivation for gold prices to rise.

“Bullion’s correlation to the broader equity market has weakened significantly in the past month,” agree analysts at VTB Capital.

The so-called speculative net long position of gold futures traders, a closely-watched measure of futures market sentiment, fell to levels not reported since August during the week ended last Tuesday, suggesting traders have become less bullish about gold.

BullionVault’s Gold Investor Index meantime, a measure of western investor sentiment towards gold, fell in January following five months of gains.

“There is probably some [downside] room to go if a negative catalyst were to emerge in the coming weeks,” says a note from UBS.

“But the scope is becoming more limited. Back in May 2012, short-selling weighed heavily on gold for most of the month. As a result of the extreme reduction in net spec length, though, it became easier for gold to bounce back in June and, after a period of consolidation, the market found itself in good shape positioning-wise for the rally in August and September. Gold could find itself in a similar scenario – if it manages to extend the resilience displayed thus far.”

Silver meantime climbed above £31.70 an ounce, though like gold was trading broadly in line with where it started the week by lunchtime in London.

The European Central Bank is unlikely to cut its main policy interest rate from its record low of 0.75% when it makes its latest policy decision tomorrow, and is not expected to change rates until July 2014 at the earliest, according to a survey of economists by newswire Reuters.

From its 2012 low in July last year, the Euro has gained more than 10% against the Dollar, prompting fears that a stronger Euro could harm Eurozone exports and thus the prospects for economic recovery.

“In terms of the pain threshold for the Eurozone as a whole, we’re right on it,” says Deutsche Bank economist Gilles Moec.

“A much stronger Euro could challenge the positive market vis-a-vis the [Eurozone] periphery, and structural improvements in competitiveness seen there” adds Elga Bartsch, economist at Morgan Stanley in London.

Since hitting an all-time high last September, Euro gold prices have fallen 11%.

Over in India, traditionally the world’s biggest gold buying nation, the central bank said Wednesday it would consider limiting the amount of gold banks can import in “extreme circumstances”.

“Large gold imports are adversely impacting the current account deficit,” said a draft report from the Reserve Bank of India last month, which proposed various policies for reducing bullion imports into India.

Recommendations in the full report published today include setting up a bank to monetize “idle gold” and promoting gold-linked financial instruments as an alternative to actually owning gold bullion.

The report also considers revisiting “fiscal measures” to reduce gold imports. Last month, India’s government increased import duty on gold from 4% to 6%.

India’s “anti-gold” policy could lead to a rise in gold smuggling, Philip Klapwijk, global head of metal analytics at metals consultancy Thomson Reuters GFMS said this week.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2013

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

Poland cuts rates by 25 bps, fourth cut in a row

By www.CentralBankNews.info      Poland’s central bank cut its key reference rate by another 25 basis points to 3.75 percent, its fourth rate cut in a row.
    The National Bank of Poland (NBP), which cut rates by 50 basis points in 2012, also cut its other rates by 25 basis points, pushing the lombard rate to 5.25 percent, the deposit rate to 2.25 percent and the rediscount rate to 4.0 percent.
    The central bank will release further details about its decision later today.
    Earlier today, the leader of Poland’s junior coalition partner, the Polish Peasant’s Party, told broadcaster TVN CNBC that the central bank had been too cautious in cutting interest rates, a criticism that has often been leveled against the bank.
    Last year the NBP surprised financial markets when it raised rates in May despite the deepening economic slowdown in Europe from the sovereign debt crises. It finally reversed the rate rise in November when it started its current easing cycle.
    In the third quarter of last year, Poland’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by only 0.4 percent from the second quarter’s 0.2 percent quarterly rise, for annual growth of 1.4 percent, down from the second quarter’s 2.3 percent and the first quarter’s 3.6 percent.

    Economists are predicting that growth decelerated to just over 2 percent in 2012 and will slow further to some 1.5 percent in 2013, below the government’s 2.2 percent forecast.
   This is sharply below 2011’s 4.3 percent and the International Monetary Fund’s forecast of 2.4 percent growth for 2012 and 2.1 percent this year.
    Poland’s inflation rate eased further to 2.4 percent in December, the lowest rate of the year, and down from November’s 2.8 percent.
    The central bank targets inflation of 2.5 percent, plus/minus one percentage point, and expects the target to be reached this year. In 2014 inflation is forecast to drop further to 1.5 percent.
    Last month the central bank said it did not rule out further rate cuts if the economic slowdown is protracted and there are limited risks of higher inflationary pressures.




Poland does not rule out more rate cuts if economy slows

    Poland’s central bank, which earlier today cut its policy rate for the third time in a row, said it did not rule out further rate cuts if the economic slowdown is protracted and there are limited risks of higher inflationary pressures.
      The National Bank of Poland’s (NBP) warning is slightly less hawkish than its statements from November and December when it said it “will” ease policy if data confirmed a protracted economic slowdown.
    The NBP’s Monetary Policy Council said new data had confirmed a “considerable slowdown” and this was limiting wage and inflationary pressures.
    The central bank expects economic growth to remain moderate in coming quarters and this poses the risk of inflation falling below the bank’s target. But today’s rate cut should help support economic activity and limit this risk.
    “The Council does not rule out further monetary policy easing should the incoming data confirm a protracted economic slowdown and should the risk of increase in inflationary pressure remain limited,” the NBP said.
    Earlier today the central bank cut its reference rate by 25 basis points to 4.0 percent. Its other interest rates were also cut by 25 basis points. Last year the central bank reduced rates by a net 50 basis points, cutting both in November and December.

     The bank said data showed that global economic activity was still weak in the fourth quarter of last year and this weak activity was conducive to reducing inflation in many countries.
    Although financial market sentiment had improved recently, Poland’s economic activity remains weak, with industrial and construction output down in November and annual growth in retail sales in real terms was only just slightly above zero.
     Poland’s third quarter Gross Domestic Product rose by only 0.4 percent from the second quarter with the annual growth rate falling to 1.4 percent from 2.5 percent in the third quarter and 3.5 percent in the first quarter. In 2011 Poland’s economy expanded by 4.3 percent.
    The central bank said both household and corporate lending growth had continued to weaken and unemployment is continuing to rise.
  

Euro Recovers Following Spanish Data

Source: ForexYard

The euro was able to stage an upward correction against most of its main currency rivals yesterday, following the release of a better than expected Spanish Services PMI which renewed confidence in the strength of the euro-zone economic recovery. Still, analysts were quick to warn that the bullish trend may be temporary before tomorrow’s ECB press conference. Today, the main piece of economic news is likely to be the German Factory Orders figure, set to be released at 11:00 GMT. A better than expected result could lead to additional euro gains.

Economic News

USD – Dollar Renews Bullish Trend vs. Yen

Risk taking in the marketplace following positive euro-zone news caused the USD/JPY to renew its bullish movement during the European session yesterday. The pair gained more than 100 pips during morning trading, eventually reaching as high as 93.50 before dropping back to the 93.20 level at the beginning of the afternoon session. Against the Swiss franc, the dollar lost close to 40 pips during the first part of the day, eventually trading as low as 0.9072, before bouncing back to 0.9090 later in the day.

Today, dollar traders will want to pay attention to economic news out of the euro-zone and its impact on risk taking in the marketplace. While any better than expected news could drive the USD/JPY higher, it could also result in the dollar taking losses against its higher-yielding currency rivals. Later in the week, investors will be watching the US Trade Balance figure for clues as to the current state of the US economic recovery, with a positive result likely to boost the greenback.

EUR – Euro Turns Bullish Once Again

The euro turned bullish against several of its main currency rivals during the European session yesterday, following the release of a better than expected Spanish Services PMI which renewed confidence in the strength of the euro-zone economic recovery. Against the US dollar, the common-currency gained more than 100 pips during morning trading to eventually reach as high as 1.3566 before dropping back to the 1.3520 level. The EUR/JPY advanced more than 250 pips before peaking at 126.71 and dropping back to 125.95.

Today, the main piece of euro-zone news is likely to be the German Factory Orders figure, set to be released at 11:00 GMT. With analysts expecting the indicator to come in at 0.8%, significantly higher than last month’s, the euro may be able to extend its bullish trend today. Tomorrow, traders will not want to forget to pay attention to the ECB press conference, scheduled to take place at 13:30 GMT. Any positive signs out of the press conference regarding the economic recovery in the euro-zone are likely to boost the currency further.

Gold – Gold Stages Bullish Recovery

The price of gold was able to stage an upward recovery during European trading yesterday, following positive euro-zone news which boosted riskier assets. The precious metal advanced more than $11 an ounce during morning trading, eventually reaching as high as $1684.70 before dropping back to $1680.50 during afternoon trading.

Today, euro-zone news is once again likely to have the biggest impact on gold prices. If the German factory orders figure comes in above the expected 0.8%, the precious metal is likely to extend yesterday’s bullish momentum.

Crude Oil – Risk Taking Boosts Oil Prices

Crude oil advanced more than $1 an ounce during European trading yesterday, after a better than expected Spanish Services PMI encouraged investors to shift their funds to riskier assets. The commodity traded as high as $97.04 before dropping back to the $96.75 level during afternoon trading.

Turning to today, the US Crude Oil Inventories figure is likely to have the biggest impact on crude oil prices. If the indicator comes in at or above last week’s 5.9M, investors are likely to interpret the news as a sign that US demand for oil is dropping, which would likely result in the oil prices turning bearish.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The weekly chart’s Slow Stochastic is close to forming a bearish cross, indicating that a downward correction could occur in the near future. Additionally, the same chart’s Relative Strength Index has crossed into overbought territory. Opening long positions may be the smart choice for this pair.

GBP/USD

The Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart has fallen into oversold territory, indicating that an upward correction could occur in the near future. Furthermore, the MACD/OsMA on the daily chart appears close to forming a bullish cross. Traders may want to open long positions.

USD/JPY

The Relative Strength Index on the weekly chart has cross into overbought territory, indicating that a downward correction could occur in the coming days. This theory is supported by the Slow Stochastic on the same chart, which has formed a bearish cross. Opening short positions may be the smart choice for this pair.

USD/CHF

While the weekly chart’s Williams Percent Range has crossed over into oversold territory, most other long-term technical indicators place this pair in neutral territory. Traders may want to take a wait and see approach, as a clearer picture is likely to present itself in the near future.

The Wild Card

USD/ZAR

The Slow Stochastic on the daily chart is close to forming a bullish cross, indicating that an upward correction could take place in the near future. This theory is supported by the Williams Percent Range on the same chart, which has fallen into oversold territory. Opening long positions may be the best choice for forex traders today.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

Iceland holds rate, new moves depend on inflation, wages

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Iceland’s central bank left its benchmark seven-day lending rate steady at 6.0 percent, saying its accommodative policy stance had helped support economic recovery but as the economy’s spare capacity disappears “it is necessary that monetary policy slack should disappear as well.”
    The Central Bank of Iceland said last year’s rate increases – the bank raised rates by 125 basis points –  had withdrawn a considerable amount of the previous accommodation.

    “The degree to which such normalisation takes place through higher nominal Central Bank rates will depend on future inflation developments, which in turn will depend on exchange rate movements and wage-setting decisions in the near future,” the central bank said in a statement.
     The central bank said recent data showed that output growth last year was weaker than previously anticipated and the outlook for growth this year is more modest than forecast in November.

    But the outlook for inflation next year is largely unchanged as a weaker krona will tend to push up the inflation forecast but this will be countered by lower pressure from slower growth, the bank said.

    Iceland’s inflation was steady in January at 4.2 percent from December, while Gross Domestic Product expanded by 3.5 percent in the third quarter of 2012 from the second for annual growth of 2.1 percent, up from 0.5 percent in the second quarter.
    The central bank said it had suspending its programme of regular foreign currency purchases and would support the krona through foreign exchange intervention instead.
    The central bank targets inflation of 2.5 percent.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

Central Bank News Link List – Feb.6, 2013: Aggressive BOJ sooner than you think

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

How the Australian Government is Using the Car Industry to Rob You Blind

By MoneyMorning.com.au

In today’s Money Morning I’m going to discuss one of my pet hates.

The Australian government’s constant pandering and protection of the Australian car industry.

I realise I may put a nose or two out of joint but hear me out.


The news today on the front page of the Australian Financial Review is that the government, via the Department of Industry and Innovation, has blocked the AFR’s request for ‘a single dollar figure’ of the assistance paid to each of the car makers.

I’m sorry but that’s completely outrageous.

The AFR says that over ten years each company ‘could have received $1 Billion’. That’s billions of dollars of your money handed out on a platter to each company. But they won’t tell you how much of your money is being given to the car companies to sustain their uneconomic business models.

Ridiculous.

But not only that, each and every car you buy has taxes added to them in order to protect the uncompetitive car industry

An old article on the Drive.com.au website states that:


‘”The luxury tax in particular is far higher than any similar tax anywhere in the world,” he says.

‘The differences are most notable in luxury imports. For example, a Porsche 911 that costs more than $200,000 in Australia sells for less than $75,000 in the United States. Holden’s own Commodore SS, which sells for $45,290 here, costs roughly $32,000 in the States.

‘Australian motorists can potentially pay up to five taxes or duties when they buy a new car.

‘Import duty is charged when a vehicle arrives on Australian shores, then GST and luxury car taxes are levied, before stamp duty and registration fees take another slice of the pie.

‘”The tax burden on motorists is already substantial and the increase in luxury tax is simply a punitive measure on top of that,” he says.

‘He says the tax regime now hits luxury buyers three times during the sale process. Apart from the luxury tax, they also pay more GST by virtue of their car’s higher purchase price.’

So the true cost to each and every Australian to keep the flailing car industry alive is far higher than the amount given by the government to the car companies.

I realise the argument for protecting the Aussie car industry is that the collapse of the car industry would affect many more people than just those employed at the car manufacturers.

A recent article on theconversation.edu.au website says that:


‘What is often overlooked is the downstream automotive components industry, which hosts both local and international firms. As the Federation of Automotive Product Manufacturers notes, this sector provides 45,000 jobs, some 5% of national manufacturing employment, with almost $49 billion in turnover. Indirectly, the job head count this industry supports is even higher. The multiplier effect of this sector’s investment and turnover upon Australia’s economy is significant.

‘Dandenong, Victoria, has long been the centre of this manufacturing belt; almost half the components industry jobs are located in Victoria. If Australia’s domestic car industry downsizes markedly, Dandenong, together with Elizabeth (SA), Altona, Broadmeadows, Fishermans Bend and Geelong (Victoria) would become ghost towns.

‘Just as Homebush (until resuscitated by the 2000 Olympics) and Acacia Ridge became rustbelt monuments to industry failure, plants in Victoria and South Australia face similar dangers. Nissan has gone. Mitsubishi has gone. Ford may be next.’

This may all be true. And the upheaval in the Australian economy could be substantial, but the point I keep returning to is that the Aussie car industry can’t stand on its own feet.

A company is by definition a self-sustaining entity. It makes products the market wants and receives money in return. People are employed, profits are made and the market is satisfied. It’s self-sustaining.

But what about if the Australian government handed out money to every business that can’t stand on its own feet? Just because the government has allowed an unsustainable industry to survive for this long, thus giving the false impression that it is thriving, doesn’t mean the government should do this for every industry.

Perhaps the Australian government is happy to keep the status quo because the amount of tax dollars they reap from protecting the industry far outweighs the amount they pay out. But that’s unlikely. The Australian car industry is happy to keep things the way they are because they receive a return on their investment with little risk because the government is backstopping them.

The people who really lose out are the general public and the taxpayer.

If you could save $10,000-20,000 every time you bought a car would you feel a bit richer than you do now? What would you spend that extra $20,000 on? A holiday perhaps? A new bathroom?
If you could spend $75,000 on a Porsche instead of the $200,000 it currently costs, would that increase your ‘standard of living’? Yes, I think it would.

There are many costs involved in the current policy of keeping a dead patient on life support. As always, the economically illiterate just point in one direction without looking at all of the costs involved. The broken window fallacy strikes again.

What’s even worse is that for every dollar the Australian government forces you to pay for subsidised goods, there’s one less dollar you can use to invest or trade and save for the future.

Murray Dawes
Editor, Slipstream Trader

Join me on Google Plus

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: How to Hunt Down 2013′s Biggest Stock Market Winners

Daily Reckoning: Market Migrations: The Hunt for Capital Gains

Money Morning: How to Pick Stocks at a Fair Price

Pursuit of Happiness: It’s Time to Set Your Retirement Gameplan

Don’t be Long and Wrong on this Stock Market Rally

By MoneyMorning.com.au

In today’s Money Morning I’ll show you why late-comers to the recent stock market rally shouldn’t panic. As I’ll explain, the market is at a key point that will likely catch a lot of investors and traders off guard.

Don’t Chase This Stock Market Higher

As the All Ordinaries continues to rally I’m sure there are plenty of people with itchy trigger fingers wanting to join in the fun. All I can say is step back and look at the big picture.

I may not have seen this stock market rally coming but I do have enough experience to know when a market has become an accident waiting to happen.

This weekly chart shows you that the S&P/ASX 200 is now nudging up against the 4950-5000 region where it has failed five times in the past three and a half years. It is also approaching this area with its Relative Strength Index (RSI) the most overbought it has been since mid-2007 just prior to the crash.

ASX 200 Weekly Chart

ASX 200 Weekly Chart
Click here to enlarge

Source: Slipstream Trader

Even if we’re heading higher in the long run, there is a strong technical case that this market should at the very least have a substantial correction from here. It’s still early days and the momentum is still firmly up but the music can stop very quickly at major resistance levels such as this.

So if you’re panicking that you need to buy high yielding stocks now or be left for dead, don’t panic. Just be patient and you’ll get an opportunity to buy stocks at a cheaper level than here. Just remember that we’re heading into earnings season and a dose of reality may stop this stock market rally in its tracks.

In fact, I sat down with Kris Sayce the other day to chat about the current state of the stock market and what the charts were showing me in a strategy session which is reserved for paying subscribers.

(Ed note: you can get access to Murray’s latest Strategy Session plus gain access to the Strategy Sessions archives by taking out an obligation-free subscription to our best value investment advisory, Nick Hubble’s Money for Life Letter. Click here for details…)

Source: Port Phillip Publishing

During our chat I showed Kris that one of Australia’s biggest stocks has hit a key inflection point. It’s key because eight of the past 10 times that this set-up has occurred, the stock has fallen. In one case by 25% in four months.

That’s a big drop, and with the odds in favour of it happening again (my share trading is based on the balance of probabilities) a lot of traders and investors will be caught out.

As I like to say, they’ll be ‘long and wrong’ and they’ll pay for it with big losses.

So if you’re feeling that you’ve missed the stock market rally, don’t panic; another investment opportunity to buy at a better price isn’t far away.

Murray Dawes
Editor, Slipstream Trader

Join me on Google Plus

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: How to Hunt Down 2013′s Biggest Stock Market Winners

Daily Reckoning: Market Migrations: The Hunt for Capital Gains

Money Morning: How to Pick Stocks at a Fair Price

Pursuit of Happiness: It’s Time to Set Your Retirement Gameplan

Why Little Cyprus Will Become the Eurozone’s Biggest Headache

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Remember last summer in the eurozone?

It was chaos. Investors were pulling cash out of Europe’s banks; Italian and Spanish yields were spiking; emergency meetings of European leaders were taking place every other day. Some sort of crack-up seemed inevitable.

Then Mario Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank (ECB) , uttered his three magic words: ‘whatever it takes‘.

Investors believed him. The promise of unlimited intervention to keep Spain, Italy and other high-debt countries afloat calmed markets. In short, there would be no repeat of Greece, where many private lenders to the country ended up getting back just cents on the euro.

Bond yields fell. The exodus of money stopped. In fact, Dutch bank ING now thinks that, since September, nearly €100bn has come back into the peripheral countries.

And because Draghi didn’t need to print a ton of money in the end, the euro has gone up. It’s now near a 14-month high against the US dollar.

But the problem with promises is that you may end up having to stand by them. And now one tiny eurozone country could see Draghi’s best-laid plans unravel.

Cyprus

Cyprus is Greece (With Even Dodgier Banks)

You might think that with all the woes afflicting the euro area – such as recent revelations over Spanish corruption, and the return of Italy’s Silvio Berlusconi – Cyprus would be the last of its worries.

This tiny nation joined the European Union less than eight years ago. It accounts for just 0.2% of the eurozone’s GDP. How can it be important?

Here’s why. The one key thing pinning the eurozone together at the moment is Mario Draghi’s credibility. Cyprus could stretch that credibility to breaking point. It’s a vital test of whether the ECB means what it says.

Like the other ‘peripheral’ economies, Cyprus has high levels of state debt and a collapsing economy. As a result, it has been shut out of the bond markets for over two years, and so cannot refinance its debts – in other words, it can’t renew its existing loans.

But with the economy expected to shrink by 3.5% this year, it won’t be able to repay its loans either. A large number are due to mature in the next three years, starting with €1.5bn in June.

On its own, this isn’t a big problem. Indeed, last year the Troika (the eurozone bail-out committee) agreed to give Cyprus a €7bn loan that would allow it to meet its debt obligations.

However, this loan was dependent on Cyprus bailing out its banking system. Unfortunately, Cyprus is a bit like Iceland in that its banking system is far larger than the underlying economy.

Indeed, it’s about eight times the size. This means that Cyprus needs a total of €17bn in support.

This might not be a problem either, in itself. The trouble is that Cyprus has a fairly shady reputation as being a haven for crooks looking to hide their ill-gotten gains. While this may be unfair, up to a third of deposits come from Russia.

Because of this, the idea of recapitalising the banks with European money – effectively a bail-out for criminals – is very unpopular in Germany. And Germany has the power to veto the second part of the loan – and therefore the whole package.

The ECB has been applying a lot of pressure, arguing that if Cyprus is allowed to go bust, there could be large knock-on effects. For instance, the two largest Cypriot banks control a sizable share of the Greek banking market.

And there are signs that German leader Angela Merkel may have accepted its arguments in private. However, she still has to sell it to the German people – and with an election this year, the opposition are not going to do her any favours.

Could a Bailout of Cyprus Even Work?

However, even if Germany allows the loans to go through, the problems don’t end there.

Fiona Mullen of Sapienta Economics estimates that, with the full loan, Cyprus’ state debt will hit 136% of GDP by 2016. This is clearly unsustainable, and far more than the International Monetary Fund (which forms part of the Troika) is prepared to allow. She thinks that Cyprus will need to find at least €3bn in savings.

In theory, there are many ways that these savings could be found. For instance, Cyprus could sell the rights to gas fields and state assets. But this would only be a partial solution.

If an agreement can’t be reached, then the only real option left that would put Cypriot debt on a sound footing, is for private holders of government debt to take a ‘haircut’.

In other words, to be repaid less than the face value of the bond. This is usually in the form of a lower interest rate or a longer term. Indeed, the Cypriot finance minister has explicitly talked about this possibility.

Since Cypriot banks hold a large amount of Cyprus’ debt, most of the pain will have to be pushed onto foreign bondholders. This is exactly what happened to Greece, and it’s exactly what investors had hoped the ECB would never allow to happen again.

So if holders of Cypriot debt do take a haircut, it will damage the credibility of Draghi’s promise to holders of Spanish and Italian debt. In turn, they will start to pull out of European debt markets again, leading to capital flight and higher yields – once again.

The ECB will then be forced to choose between printing money or letting some of the weaker countries leave. While either solution will be good for output in the euro area (a weaker currency would boost exports across the region), they will both hit the value of the euro.

Matthew Partridge
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in MoneyWeek

From the Archives…

Make Sure You’ve Updated Your ‘Stock Insurance’ Policy
1-02-2013 – Kris Sayce

Here’s Why We’re Still Buying This Stock Market
31-01-2013 – Kris Sayce

Revealed: Inside the Mind of a Share Trader
30-01-2013 – Murray Dawes

Buy Silver – the War Against the China Bears Begins
29-01-2013 – Dr. Alex Cowie

China’s Economy: Enter or Exit the Dragon?
26-01-2013 – Callum Newman

GBPUSD stays within a downward price channel

GBPUSD stays within a downward price channel on 4-hour chart, and remains in downtrend from 1.6339, and the fall extends to as low as 1.5630. Further decline is still possible, and next target would be at 1.5550 area. Resistance is located at the upper line of the price channel, only a clear break above the channel resistance will indicate that the downtrend from 1.6339 has completed, then the following upward movement could bring price back to 1.6500 zone.

gbpusd

Daily Forex Forecast