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Central Bank Decision Time

Tyler Durden's picture




 

After months of posturing, promising, prevaricating, and proclaiming; the time is rapidly upon us where the central planner of the world will have to actually make actions rather than words. As SocGen notes, Central Bank decisions at the BoJ, ECB and BoE will take centre stage tonight/tomorrow but it is the BoJ announcement that is most highly anticipated after the epic jawboning. SocGen’s Sebastien Galy: "Only the truly brave can feel confident trading into the BoJ event"; adds, "It is not completely clear what economic consensus is expecting in terms of BoJ decision apart from broad outlines."

 

Via SocGen,

BoJ

The appointment of governor Kuroda and two new deputy governors has aligned the BoJ more closely to the government in pursuing a pro-inflation and growth agenda and tonight brings the first occasion for the new BoJ governor to make his mark. Hence expectations for a strong commitment to the new 2% inflation target and the policy demarche of an expanded asset purchase programme vs the existing 2013 year-end target of Y101trn.

In order to achieve the new inflation target, the BoJ looks set to expand its asset purchases substantially. Our base case is that the open-ended purchasing method will be brought forward from January 2014 to now. Moreover, we expect the rate of these open-ended asset purchases to be faster than currently planned, and not just for the year target for the size of the overall Asset Purchase Program at the end of this year would be raised from the current ¥101 trillion, which implied net growth of ¥36 trillion over the course of 2013. The likely magnitude of the increase in the APP by year-end 2013 would be in the order of ¥10 trillion.

 

Far more important, however, would be the impact on planned asset purchases in 2014. The current 'open-ended' purchases planned for 2014 were set at a rate of about ¥13 trillion per month (¥10 trillion of which would be T-Bills), but because of securities in the BoJ’s portfolio maturing, the planned expansion of the APP in 2014 is foreseen to be only ¥10 trillion, which would represent a sharp slowdown from the ¥36 trillion planned for 2013. At the time we described this as timid. The new BoJ leadership clearly wants to dispel all impressions of timidity, and is aiming for 'bold' policy action. Increasing the scale of asset purchases in the order of five-fold would certainly go a long way towards that.

FX markets have aggressively adopted short JPY positions since the election and government transition late last year and this has translated into a marked JPY/G10 depreciation. In relative terms however, compared to the IMM series history, the percentile of USD longs vs the JPY has stabilised around 95%. In other words, the risk of disappointment and short JPY covering cannot be underestimated should Kuroda underdeliver. With the latest Tankan business survey showing firms pencilling in an average USD/JPY rate of 85.00 for FY13, the BoJ clearly still has more work to do.

 

From a carry perspective, AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY are up respectively 10.9% and 9.8% this year and are expected to continue outperforming if the BoJ breaks with the piecemeal approach that has characterised recent policy history.

ECB

Expectations for the ECB and BoE are low key in comparison to Japan but risks of a policy upset are not totally negligible. Last month the ECB discussed lowering rates and the BoE governor has now been outvoted at two meetings in succession, vouching for an immediate £25bn increase in asset purchases to £400bn. With Eonias out to 1y effectively priced for further easing anyway, the message conveyed by president Draghi on Cyprus and his view on the EU Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) will be crucial for EUR/G10. Confirmation of reports that the ECB is establishing a program to reduce borrowing costs and boost lending to SMEs could trigger EUR short covering with 1.2890 a first obvious ST target for EUR/USD.

The governing council discussed cutting rates at the last meeting so the possibility of this happening tomorrow should not be entirely dismissed especially given the ongoing tightness in credit conditions. Over the inter-meeting period, periphery spreads over bunds have widened, leading indicators like the PMIs and EC indices have worsened, unemployment has risen and inflation slowed. But are the changes serious enough to convince the governing council that it should not wait to provide further stimulus?

The press conference could well be hijacked completely by the Cyprus rescue, the issue of capital controls, the lessons for future recovery and resolution, and the responsibility therein of bondholders and depositors. EU officials have spared no effort to emphasise that Cyprus was a unique case, but Moody’s has warned that default remains a risk and therefore the implications for other eurozone sovereigns are credit negative.

BoE

A split MPC vote in February and March suggests more QE is possible in the near-term, but could an increase come tomorrow? The BoE Q2 credit conditions survey released this morning revealed further improvement is expected in the availability of credit to households but not to SMEs. Demand is expected to pick up across ‘all firm sizes’ in Q2 after the decrease by SMEs in Q1. So even as spreads on lending are tightening thanks to competition and the Funding for Lending  scheme, lending volumes are not picking up. Though governor King has now been outvoted at successive meetings, the rest of the committee may still prefer to bide its time until the Q1 GDP data are published later this month. Based on revised inflation and growth projections in the May Inflation Report will then lead the Bank to decide if another expansion of the asset purchase target is warranted.

 

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Wed, 04/03/2013 - 19:56 | 3406175 fonzannoon
fonzannoon's picture

All this going on and our man Ben is the only one who is the real deal. 85 bil a month open ended and the poor guy's currency is strong. Everyone else talks shit and he walks the walk.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:01 | 3406186 Alpo for Granny
Alpo for Granny's picture

Print bitchez, print.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:03 | 3406196 Troll Magnet
Troll Magnet's picture

Shalom, bitchez!

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:11 | 3406212 xtop23
xtop23's picture

Must.....Push..... Accelerator...... Through......Floorboards....

BANZAI !!!!!

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:06 | 3406200 IndicaTive
IndicaTive's picture

I must really be this easy....http://www.wikihow.com/Bluff-in-Poker

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:03 | 3406187 Alpo for Granny
Alpo for Granny's picture

Sorry for double post.
Granny's faculties ain't what they used to be.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:06 | 3406202 bank guy in Brussels
bank guy in Brussels's picture

Japan is outdoing Ben Bernanke, big-time, and the yen is holding strong as well.

From today's great piece by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard:

« ... Western analysts have been strangely slow to understand the breathtaking scale of what is under way. The Bank of Japan is already committed to bond purchases of $140bn a month in 2014. This is almost double the US Federal Reserve's net purchases (around $75bn a month), and five times as much as a share of GDP. »

'Helicopter QE will never be reversed'

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/997029...

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:11 | 3406205 Croesus
Croesus's picture

MOAR Paper!

BGIB:

In Gold-related news, ABN Amro had a Fail-to-deliver event:

"ABN AMRO, the largest Dutch bank in the Eurozone, issued a letter to their gold contract customers of failure of delivery, and instead will pay account holders in a paper currency equivalent to the current spot value of the metal."

http://www.examiner.com/article/largest-dutch-bank-defaults-on-physical-...



 

 

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:31 | 3406270 Al Huxley
Al Huxley's picture

Those customers must be so relieved.  With the drop in the gold price, they can take their cash payout from ABN and buy the physical from some other bullion bank.  I would think there must be loads of it littering the vaults of London, given the price action of the past couple of days.  Seems odd that poor old ABN couldn't round some up though, given how keen the market supposedly is to dump it.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:49 | 3406315 fonzannoon
fonzannoon's picture

Al you seemed beat yesterday. Hang in there man. This is a war of attrition. We are going to win man. I don't know what the fuck win means anymore but we will find a way through this maze of shit and come out the other side. If we don't no one will.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:34 | 3406278 Urban Redneck
Urban Redneck's picture

I think Anschutz needs some better staff writers.  FTD implies that a valid claim was presented and the counter-party (ABN) could NOT meet contractual terms, whereas ABN appeared to be modifying contract terms with a finite window for acceptance or rejection of the new terms by current account holders.

If a current account holder made a request for delivery prior to the April 1 deadline, then that is a different issue, but that is not what the article alleges.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 19:57 | 3406176 bnbdnb
bnbdnb's picture

Just mark lines through the liabilities. Finished!

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:04 | 3406198 ISEEIT
ISEEIT's picture

What would Krugman do?

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:14 | 3406226 Major Major Major
Major Major Major's picture

Buy gold / silver and short JPY?  Oh, nevermind, you said Krugman... just Ctrl + P

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:47 | 3406305 FieldingMellish
FieldingMellish's picture

So many dollar longs.... PM's in the doghouse and miners... well.... now unless everyone has actually got it right this time, I'm taking this trade. Cash4Gold, indeed.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:54 | 3406330 Whatta
Whatta's picture

and gold and silver go down.

yet bank-raids-on-savers precedents are now set...and gold and silver go down.

yet unfundable new entitlements are granted...and gold and silver go down.

yet cities and states are going bankrupt...and gold and silver go down.

WTF

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 22:33 | 3406633 W74
W74's picture

I don't understand it myself friend.  I bought 2.8K worth late last month (one gold, 25 silver maples) and have watched it go down since.  Was my purchase wasted?  No.  I'll just continue to buy into the dip.  The only thing I'm doing is trading in my fiats for someting tangible.  It's not like I was using them anyway.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 23:39 | 3406788 DeadFred
DeadFred's picture

We may be on the edge of that precipice that all true ZHers have been expecting. I suspect gold 1525 may not hold it the fan truly start flinging stuff. You may for a period get a strongly discounted price.  Copper is well below support with only air below. How often has copper nose-dived without the stock market following? Margin calls could make things ugly. Hope that there is still physical available when you see those nice prices.

Of course the traditional stick save could be in the works. My crystal ball is somewhat obscured tonight.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 20:57 | 3406344 eddiebe
eddiebe's picture

In light of the article the reasoning behind the take-down of the PM's becomes pretty clear.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 21:02 | 3406356 Croesus
Croesus's picture

Exactly:

The metals have to be taken down, in order to maintain the illusion that "All is well"......which is going to make the pain that much worse, when the clock strikes midnight, and it's time for the masks to come off.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 22:07 | 3406552 ForWhomTheTollBuilds
ForWhomTheTollBuilds's picture

My concern is that the "sudden revaluation" event seems more likely now than ever before.  I had always hoped to see gold go from say $4K to $5k overnight as part of a remonetization rather than $1.5K to $5 because there will be a 99% "you dont deserve it speculator scum" tax on the difference at the moment of revaluation.

 

Jim Sinclair thinks this is a paranoid fantasy, but if they think there is money to be taken from us they will take it. 

 

Yeah, I know posesson is 90% of the law and I don;t have a tax util I sell and I can sell on the black market or smuggle it away, but I was hoping to hold onto a portion of my wealth without committing felonies.

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 22:58 | 3406683 autofixer
autofixer's picture

Don't worry.  Give me a name and I will find a crime (German accent).

Wed, 04/03/2013 - 22:25 | 3406606 Mine Is Bigger
Mine Is Bigger's picture

13 trillion yen comes to about $1,000 dollars for each and every Japanese.  If they pay that much to everyone every month for a copule of years, I am sure they will get yen weakness and inflation, which the government and the BOJ are afetr.  Idiots.

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