Tuesday, December 8, 2009

European Central bank to unwind support for Banks

Ecb to unwind support for banks-

by Ralph Atkin in Frankfurt Dec-3-2009 The European Central bank's emerging financial market support measures are set to be unword from this month after Jean Claude Trichet,Ecb president rebuffed IMF calls to err on the side of delaying 'exit strategies'.

The Ecb moved on thursday to limit demand for one year liquidity in an operation that will take place later this month and told eurozone bank that other,short term liquidity- boosting operation would be scale back in 2010.The ECb took account of the continuing weakness of some euro zone banks.

Measures, however were bolder than financial markets expected,highlighting Ecb fear that some banks have become overdependent on the liquidity.

Currently some 670bn euro in Ecb liquidity is outstanding compared with typical pre- crisis level of about 450bn euro. The Ecb's financial package action are intended to store up the eurozone financial system after the collapse of Lehman brothers last year.

Euro boosted by ECB liquidity The ECB left euro interest rate on hold at a record low of 1% after policy meeting. John Hardy at Saxo bank said "this was a clear signal in the Ecb's exit strategy from its emerging liquidity provisions for this cycle- a far clearer signal than any that the Federal reserve bank of England had come up with". He said "If equities remain supportive, we should see new hights for the euro against the dollar. The euro rose to 0.3%to 1.5089 against the dollar striking distance of 16 month high of $1.5144 it hit last week. The euro also rose to 0.7% to pound 0.9108 against the pound and climbed 1.3% to Y133.10 against the yen.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Euro zone joblessness hits pleatau

Euro zone unemployent levelled off at a 10 year high in October, according to data released on Tuesday, with a seperate figure from Germany even indicating a small fall in the jobless figures last month.The uninterrupted rise in joblessness in the 16 nation bloc since Feb-2008 pushed unemployment rate to 9.8%on a seasonally adjusted basis.The rise in unemployment in the Euro zone has been much muted in the euro zone than in the US thanks to the Govt.sponsored short-time working schemes that encouraged employers to hold on workers. The headline eurozones hides consid- erable divergence between member states.Unemploment rate in Amsterdam remain below 4% where as in spain 1 in 5workers seeking work.Countries in eurozone have 15.6million unemployed, since the most European Commission began compiling data in the mid 1980's Unemployment rate in Germany surprised the economists as naational statistics brought it to 8.2% to 8.1%.,the first rate drop in three months.In spite of the steepest downturn in Germany the crisis has has little impact on labour market so far vindi- cating the Govt.efforts to expand its short-term subsidiary scheme which covered 1 million workers.In spite of return to growth, in eurozone in 3rd quarter, econo- mists unemployment rate 2 digit in 1st half of 2010.According to details of latest eurozone purchasing manager indices also published report saying that Spain and Greece -national output diminishing faster than in October. Diverging economic performance across eurozone complicates the task of ECB as it prepares to withdraw the exceptional measure taken to support the financial system.
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Risk appetite pulls yen from peak

Yen- Last week yen upto the 14th year high of Y84.81 to the dollar on Nove-27.But as risk appetite improved from Dubai's debt problem,this week investors re-entered carry trades and pushed the yen lower. The move was given impetus by Friday's US employment.

The bank of japan as many people believed has come under pressure from the govt., undermined the Yen on tuesday by announcing measure to pump more liquidity into banking system.

The yen fell more sharply against Australlian dollar sliding5.6% to Y82.85 on the week as the Reserve Bank of Ausralia delivered a 3rd consecutive rise in interest rate lifting its main lending rate by 25basis points to 3.75%.

Over the week yen fell 4.6% to Y90.54 against dollar lost 3.7% to Y134.43 against the euro and dropped 4.4% to Y149.01 against the pound.

Over the week the dollar rose 0.9% to $1.4872 against the euro, climbed 1%to Sfr 1.0140 against the swiss frank and gained 0.1% to $1.6499 against the pound.


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Sunday, December 6, 2009

US -employment figures provide recovery optimism

US jobs figures provide recovery optimism


By Dave Shellock Published: December 4 2009 22:42 | Last updated: December 4 2009 22:42 Financial markets might have started the week beset by worries about Dubai’s debt problems but they ended it full of optimism that the US economic recovery was gathering pace.

The crucial turning point came, as it frequently has, from the US monthly employment report. This showed that 11,000 jobs were lost last month, far less than the expected 125,000, while the unemployment rate fell from 10.2 per cent to 10 per cent. Rob Carnell, economist at ING, described the improvement in the report as “remarkable”.

“So remarkable, in fact, that we may take another month or two to fully believe it, if backed up by other data,” he said. “But, for now, markets cannot be blamed for switching fully back to ‘risk on’.”

Indeed, riskier assets such as equities, credit and commodities initially enjoyed strong gains on Friday as investors turned away from the perceived safety of government bonds.

Notably, the dollar also rallied – counter to its recent trend, following encouraging US economic releases – as interest rate expectations underwent a dramatic shift.

Ashraf Laidi, chief strategist at CMC Markets, said the last time a simultaneous rally in stocks and the dollar had occurred was in July – when the employment report showed the first drop in the jobless rate since April 2008. “The dual improvement in unemployment and payrolls is exactly what the doctor must order for the consumer-led US economy in order for the Federal Reserve to take any meaningful steps into an exit strategy,” Mr Laidi said.

The Fed funds futures market brought forward its estimate of the likely timing of a US rate rise by a month, analysts said.

That added fuel to an intensifying debate over the outlook for global policy as divergent moves by several leading central banks took over from Dubai as the issue uppermost in investors’ minds.

“Recent newsflow has continued to support the view that policymakers are fully aware of the medium-term problems potentially brewing from lax monetary, and fiscal, policies, but are yet loath to advocate an alternative course of action given that securing growth remains their number one priority,” said Neil Mellor, of Bank of New York Mellon.

The Bank of Japan triggered much excitement after it said it was holding an unscheduled meeting, although its announcement that it would inject a further Y10,000bn into the banking system via short-term loans initially left many observers disappointed.

However, the yen subsequently retreated against the dollar, easing the pressure on exporters and triggering a strong rally in Japanese equities.

The European Central Bank, in stark contrast to its Japanese counterpart, set the stage for a gradual exit from its unconventional policies.

The ECB left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 1 per cent but said it would phase out its six-month and one-year refinancing facilities and move to an index-based rate for future operations.“With these steps, the ECB is light years ahead of the Fed when it comes to an unwinding of the extraordinary support programmes,” said Axel Merk, of Merk Investments.

Underlining the divergence in global policy was the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decision to raise interest rates, for a third successive month, by 25bp to 3.75 per cent.The underlying improvement in investor confidence this week was signalled by a drop in the Vix volatility index – a key gauge of risk aversion – to close to its 2009 low.

Equity markets, meanwhile, enjoyed a broadly stronger week. Asia set the pace with the Nikkei 225 in Tokyo jumping 10.4 per cent – its first advance in five weeks – and Shanghai climbing 7.1 per cent. Broad emerging market equity indices were heading for their best week since July.

In Europe, the FTSE Eurofirst 300 index rose 2.6 per cent while the S&P 500 gained 1.3 per cent over the week.In currencies, the dollar rebounded from a recent 14-month low against the yen and Friday’s gain of 2.5 per cent above Y90, was its best one-day rally in a year. The euro dipped below the $1.49 level.

Government bond prices dropped sharply, particularly after Friday’s US jobs numbers. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury rose a hefty 27 basis points to 3.48 per cent. The 10-year Japanese government bond yield touched an 11-month low before recovering to end the week 3bp higher at 1.25 per cent.

Gold hogged the headlines in commodity markets as it reached a record high of $1,226 a troy ounce before falling to $1,170 on Friday. Oil had a choppy week, ending little changed as it traded around $76 a barrel.