Ladies and Gentlemen, may we introduce the new (old) star of the G7 currency show: the Euromark. Ultimately, while currencies are driven by a multitude of factors, from Current Accounts to rate spreads to geopolitical events, over the long term, divergences from the Real Exchange Rate are largely explained by Real Interest Rate spreads, something TMM highlighted in their 2011 Non-Predictions with respect to their strongly held view that USDJPY is going nowhere fast despite the best efforts of punters to try and rally the USD (thus far, unsuccessfully). And it is in that respect that HMS TMM are viewing the U-ECB torpedo that sank them yesterday after heavy gun fire throughout the week from other quarters. While TMM and many market participants view an early hiking cycle from the A-Team as something of a policy mistake (more on this below) in terms of the Eurozone as a whole, it also demonstrates that unlike many central banks around the world (for example, the Fed, the Bank of England and most of the EM world) that their only two priorities are monetary stability and preserving the value of the currency in terms of inflation. While some have argued that this is more about trying to impress the Germans after Darth Weber's exit, stage left, it seems to us that Club Med are being sacrificed on the altar of the Bundeathstar. That is very bad for the periphery, however, it is very good for a Euro that is increasingly looking like The Deutschemark under ERM as higher rates are entirely appropriate for the German powerhouse.
The below chart shows the EUR (orange line), the nominal 2yr swap spread (green line) and the 2yr real rate spread (white line). While obviously not a perfect fit (certainly amongst the noise in late 2008), from 2004 until early 2010, in broad terms, the real rate spread did a much better job of explaining the Euro's valuation than the nominal spread did, and from July 2010 onwards, similarly so. TMM were originally going to throw the statistical toolkit at the below in order to strip out the credit-induced risk premia applied to the Euro in the first half of 2010, but after a heavy night's drinking this suddenly seemed like too much of a task given that the pounding of their portfolios has extended to their heads. So that will have to wait for another day. but if we accept the view that about 10% risk premia was added into the currency back then, it's not too much of a stretch of the imagination to imagine that the risk premia-adjusted EUR would have a 1.50-handle on it. But it would still be "undervalued" relative to the real rate spread. Given that the ECB is forcing real rates higher in Europe at a time that the Fed is unlikely to budge for at least another year or more, as headline inflation prints drift higher with Oil, TMM find it very difficult not to own the EUR when the real rate spread is pushing its highest since mid-2008 and prior to that, the mid-1990s. And it's not just the spread that is important in this respect, in the US, the absolute value is -1.39%, while the European equivalent is +0.21% - small, but positive, nonetheless.
For completeness, TMM's EURUSD model that includes the VIX & Spanish CDS is also pointing north:

So that's the Euromark, what about those Club Med countries pegged to it?
As TMM noted earlier this week, an increase in the ECB's Refinancing Rate is not materially different for the PIGS than a rise in their bond yields, and in keeping the yield curve steep, the ECB have in some respects been helping banks rebuild their capital. But clearly they have decided "enough is enough" and put the bank capitalisation problem squarely in the court of the fiscal authorities. Under the prism of this policy, the ECB is forcing the politicians that have, erstwhile, been dragging their feet with respect to recapitalising their banking systems properly and tightening the Stability & Growth Pact to act such that the Euro is no longer "soft" in terms of monetarism, and also in terms of fiscal prudence. Should politicians still reject further moves towards a North European fiscal policy, it is likely that Ireland, Greece & Portugal restructure, but given Spain's fiscal sustainability, this is not particularly bad for the Euro whether these countries stay or leave. In fact, it looks a lot to TMM like the Deutschemark under ERM. In terms of growth impact, obviously rates moving higher is a firm negative for those countries undergoing internal devaluation and can only mean an underperformance of their equity markets. And while TMM think that the easy money in the long DAX/short IBEX trades has been made and that - ultimately - as per their 2011 Non-Predictions, that the IBEX will outperform this year, in the short-term, at least, TMM believe markets will focus on the additional pain that the periphery will be forced to bear.
TMM were going to write a completely different post today answering the question "Is this February 1994?", but decided that that will have to wait until next week given their pounding heads. But the crux of the issue is whether or not yesterday's surprise pre-announcement of a rate hike will push the focus towards bringing forward expectations about a G7 rate hiking cycle. TMM are undecided on this, except for their view of the Fed on hold for a long time, but that does not necessarily mean that markets cannot price in such an event. And thus, in the short-term at least, the bias towards a more protracted front-end sell-off seems likely. As has been argued elsewhere, the Nikkei tends to outperform in rising yield environments so TMM pick this particular graveyard as their long, against which to sell Eurostoxx.
And with that, TMM wish all their readers the very best of luck with this afternoon's lottery.


0 comments:
Post a Comment