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Euro's Reversal of Fortune & Outlook

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By Dian L. Chu, EconForecast

The Euro closed up Friday`s session at 136.13, and looks poised to make a run up to test the 140 level in February. I, among many, was thinking the Euro would next test the 125 level, and things started heading well in that direction with the Euro moving down to 129, and appearing on a downward slope.

So what happened? Well, there have been quite a few new developments that prompted this reversal of the euro fortune.    

PIIGS Bond Sale Surprise 

First, Portugal and Spain had those long anticipated bond auctions, and they went well with a healthy dose of participation, and at lower than anticipated rates priced into the auctions. In other words, the bond vigilantes bid up expectations for a catastrophic auction, and the buyers stepped in and said thank you very much for these fabulous terms.

Furthermore, China and Japan had both publicly stated that they would be buyers of these risky European Country Bonds. So any shorts expecting a European collapse because of these much anticipated bond auctions failing miserably had to cover fast when the opposite occurred.

A Hawkish ECB

The second major turning point was Trichet who made some hawkish comments regarding inflation at his press conference after the ECB`s rate decision.  That really caught a bunch of shorts off guard, and sent the Euro up 2 full points in one day.

This really illustrated the difference between ECB and the U.S. Fed--ECB`s sole mandate being to ward off inflationary pressures, versus the FED`s dual mandates of monetary policy being governed by unemployment levels and inflation concerns. 

.....And A Dovish Fed

As such, the Fed will be able to begin raising the Fed Funds Rate in 2011 as the unemployment rate most likely will not be under 8%, which is the starting point for even considering rate hike according to Bernanke`s remarks on the subject.

If you listen to all the language coming out of the Fed Minutes, they have always stated that rates are going to be left extraordinarily low for an extended period of time. This type of phrasing has left many analysts with the opinion that the unemployment level would have to get somewhere near the 6.5% levels before Bernanke would even consider raising rates.

With a major election coming up in 2012, the focus of the Obama administration and everybody else trying to get re-elected will be lowering the unemployment rate at all costs, even if we have to stomach a little inflation along the way.

So, about as hawkish as the Fed will be in 2011 towards inflation concerns is not initiating a QE3 campaign.  So it is quite logical that between the two central banks, ECB will most likely be the first to raise rates, and by far the more hawkish when it comes to monetary policy over the next two years.

Hot Money Flowing To Europe

The third major driver behind the resurgence of the Euro is an investment sea change by fund managers at the beginning of the year. In other words, where are the capital flows going in 2011?

After emerging markets had stellar returns in 2010 with the likes of Singapore and South Korea, it appears that the fund managers are moving some of their money into Europe with the belief that because of the over-hyped debt concerns of 2010, that European assets are currently undervalued and at a discount to emerging market assets.

Hot money coming into Europe is extremely bullish for the Euro.

Germany’s Really Kicking

The fourth factor affecting investor sentiment regarding the Euro are the strong economic reports coming out of Europe. At the forefront is Germany which is really firing on all cylinders, and looks strong enough to more than offset any budgetary shortfalls of the PIIGS, which actually make up a small percentage of the combined European GDP output.

Spain Cleaning The Banking House

The fifth reason the Euro bulls can point to is last week`s news that the Spanish government is shoring up some of the weakest banks with capital infusions which alleviates some of the concerns regarding Spain`s potential to be the next bond vigilante target.

This is the type of proactive governmental response that was lacking in 2010, which was always behind the curve, and only pushed into action by market forces. The fact that European leaders are learning their lesson and trying to get ahead of the bond vigilantes in 2011, which manifests itself in lower financing rates, is very encouraging and bullish for the Euro as well.

Euro United Bonds We Stand

Finally, there is the news that Germany is finally on board for supporting a unified European Bond, which would provide continuity, stability, and lower financing costs for the union as a whole (See Graph).  Financial Times reported that a multi-billion-euro bond was launched in early January to raise money for the Ireland bailout.  The triple-A rated bonds are expected to price at yields of about 2.5%, about 70 bps over German Bunds and well below those of Italian and Spanish debt.  Asian and Middle Eastern investors could buy about 30% of the paper.  ???

Graph Source: BraveNewsFinance

???

So, it appears that a common eurozone bond will finally occur sometime in the next few months, probably by March of 2011 at the latest, as the final terms are being worked out and negotiated behind the scenes, as well as the financing benefits that this accord will bring to the European Union.

Regain the Reserve Currency Status

More importantly will be the psychological benefits achieved that are supportive of the original concept for creating the European Union in the first place --as a conceptual structure with sound cohesive benefits realized and shared by all members of the common currency.  

This notion was seriously questioned by many pundits and analysts alike during the height of the 2010 debt crisis.  Many believe the entire notion of the European Union was flawed because they could never act as a cohesive body, and implement structural reform measures to address individual weaker member countries financing needs.

This euro bond solution appears to be meeting this criticism head on, and will go a long way in reinstating the Euro as the second reserve currency. This bullish is very bullish for the Euro, and will ultimately push it well beyond the 140 level once this confidence in the Euro is solidified and sustained for a period of time.

This is why we are experiencing a trade out of gold in terms of the Euro, as investors who were worried that the Euro was going to collapse went into Gold as a safe haven trade. This trade reversal is also bullish for the Euro, and has really only begun. ?

Stronger Euro = Weaker Dollar

If the Euro is going to get stronger...guess what?...the Dollar is going to get weaker. So you can expect more investors and hedgers to pile into the Euro. And this fact should further reinforce the idea originated in 2007 that the Euro was a strong second reserve currency to the Dollar, and even had many in the middle east clamoring for transactions to be conducted in Euro as opposed to the depreciating US Dollar.

From Parity To 160 in Six Months?

Expect these same sentiments to reappear as the Euro gains strength against the US Dollar over the next two years. Moreover, as the US starts to address some of its own debt issues, which the European Union finally faced up to in 2010, the 160 level is not that far fetched.

In fact, the 160 may come much sooner than was ever envisioned back in the summer of 2010 when all the experts were calling anything from complete dissolution of the currency, to parity, or at best the 115 level to the US Dollar. (See Technical Chart)

It is amazing how financial perspectives can change in as little as six months in the investment marketplace.  Nonetheless, here are some ETF ideas for individual investors to go with the new euro trend - WisdomTree Dreyfus Euro (EU), CurrencyShares Euro Trust (FXE), Market Vectors Double Long Euro ETN (URR), Ultra Euro ProShares (ULE).

Dian L. Chu, Jan. 23, 2011

 

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Mon, 01/24/2011 - 23:17 | 901437 chump666
chump666's picture

US will be the next bond/debt/currency short.   Could be a Asia play against US...y'know creditor saying get your S*** in order.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 22:53 | 901369 chump666
chump666's picture

Asian sovereigns buying EUR now....

 

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:38 | 901099 chinaboy
chinaboy's picture

Looks like EUR will have a melting up like stock market.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:29 | 901064 edotabin
edotabin's picture

Bad news and debt designed to finally bolster all European nations.

I said it before and will repeat it again: Debt was used as a weapon.

Now that the money supply is out of the hands of local governments, the future for Europe will brighten significantly. Between the ascent of China, the drop of the US and the emergence of a United Europe, things will balance out into a 2-3, perhaps 4 polar world.  The US may have to drop more or a surprise unification of South America will emerge. Something has to happen to justify the creation of 3-4 blocks and eventually one.  This may need to be done intergenerationally. Over and out.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:29 | 901063 TeresaE
TeresaE's picture

"...With a major election coming up in 2012, the focus of the Obama administration and everybody else trying to get re-elected will be lowering the unemployment rate at all costs, even if we have to stomach a little inflation along the way...."

I wish how someone could show me how a company buckling under rampant inflation on the buy side and deflation on the sell side is going to hire anyone.

My expenses are WAY up (already) this year and I'll share with you all, what I just shared with two of my former full-time workers (whom have been back part-time since last June).

"Well, yes, sales are up. So is the price of steel, freight, health insurance, unemployment insurance, workers comp, the lights, heat, heat-treating, grinding, the cost of the dumpster, the cost of uniforms and everything else.  So, instead of the we need $X in sales to bring you back full time, we now need $X PLUS about 35%.  Sorry."

Damn, that inflation is an awesome incentive to take on more expenses.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:20 | 901022 margaris
margaris's picture

I will watch EUR/CHF veeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeery closely.

Dont care so much about EUR/USD because USD is such a disaster on so many levels.

Tue, 01/25/2011 - 00:58 | 901665 Orly
Orly's picture

I would hate to tell you my downside target on EuroSwiss.  Suffice it to say it's not in this neighborhood.  I'm already short on it.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:09 | 900982 alien-IQ
alien-IQ's picture

Euro @1.60 would put the USD at about...what?...below 70? oh yeah...that'll go well with the 10%+ unemployment. should be just what the Bernank hoped for to get the DOW to 20K before he's lynched by an angry mob.

just color us all one big happy land of serfs.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:19 | 901021 El Hosel
El Hosel's picture

  We are going to find out pretty quick what the fuck is really going on. The metals,oil and materials are about to get croaked from the looks of it.....  That does not go with a "strong Euro"..... unless its different this time.

  

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:53 | 901156 alien-IQ
alien-IQ's picture

if the $DXY doesn't reverse this 10 day nose drop quickly, we're gonna be testing the November lows of 75.60 pretty damn soon.

also...gold and silver falling along with the dollar does not strike me as...typical. the market just gets weirder and weirder.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 21:02 | 900937 dearth vader
dearth vader's picture

"Finally, there is the news that Germany is finally on board for supporting a unified European Bond, ..."
This is anything but sure, yet. I wouldn't bank on it.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,741325,00.html

Maybe, Changela Merkel is caving, her FDP coalition partners are making a stand against further bailouts. Also, public opinion in Germany is not in favor either.

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 20:58 | 900918 gorillaonyourback
gorillaonyourback's picture

yes play the game. but dont you hear the fat lady singin in the background.  it will be interesting if the irish say fuck you to the banksters on feb 25.  the currency pairs wont mean much in ireland after that.  i hope the irish start printing their own money soon

Mon, 01/24/2011 - 20:42 | 900860 El Hosel
El Hosel's picture

I say Bullshit to the "new" Euro trend... The trend is down until its not, it is in a downtrend.

  http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=6E&p=w1

Tue, 01/25/2011 - 00:53 | 901660 Orly
Orly's picture

Hear here!

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!