Wednesday, September 12, 2012

FOREX-Euro advances to 4-mth highs vs dollar on German ruling

* Dollar index falls to new four-month low * German court verdict underpins demand for riskier assets
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More gains expected in anticipation of further Fed easing

The euro climbed to a four-month peak against the dollar on Wednesday after Germany's Constitutional Court approved the euro zone's new rescue fund and budget pact, mitigating concerns about the region's three-year-old debt crisis.

While the court approval was made under certain conditions, it was enough to lift market sentiment, boosting global stocks and reducing borrowing costs for Spain and Italy.

The euro climbed to $1.2936, its highest since mid-May, blowing past reported option barriers at $1.2900. The single euro zone currency has risen more than 7 percent since it hit a two-year low of around $1.2040 in July, boosted after the European Central Bank's pledge to do whatever it takes to preserve the currency.

More gains are expected if the Federal Reserve opts to implement further monetary easing on Thursday, leaving the euro with the potential to test the $1.30 level.

"The euro continues to be in steady favor as a series of events have proven to be supportive, including today's ruling by Germany's top constitutional court," said Samarjit Shankar, managing director of global strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.

Germany's Constitutional court said on Wednesday the European Stability Mechanism could go ahead but with the condition that any German contribution above 190 billion euros would require prior approval by the lower house of parliament.

Positive momentum continued for the euro as well as higher-yielding currencies following the European Central Bank's unveiling of plans last week to lower the borrowing costs of indebted euro zone countries via bond purchases.

But analysts and traders still worried that the depth of the euro zone's debt problems could temper the euro's rise.

"It is now time to take stock. How much further can the Euro rally?," asked Jens Nordvig, head of G10 FX strategy at Nomura Securities in New York.

He believed that there would be fewer positive European catalysts from here on and said "the short-squeeze on the euro is now in its final phase, and we will be looking for fresh short opportunities."

Traders reported another options barrier at $1.2950 and cited chart resistance at the May 11 high of $1.2958. The euro traded well above a low of $1.2815 hit on caution just ahead of the court decision.

The euro was last up 0.4 percent versus the dollar at $1.2904.

It also rose to its highest in more than two months against the Japanese yen of 100.64 yen. In midday New York trading, it was at 100.44, yen, up 0.5 percent.

Currency markets showed little reaction to the killing of the U.S. ambassador to Libya and three other embassy staff on Wednesday, which pressured crude oil futures.

A potential source of disruption for the euro, however, is a general election in the Netherlands on Wednesday, though polls indicate radical anti-euro parties have lost the momentum they had just a month ago.

DOLLAR FALLS BEFORE FED The dollar fell to a four-month low against a basket of currencies before Thursday's Federal Reserve decision, with the dollar index dropping to 79.522.

BNY Mellon's flows data showed that the dollar was the most sold sold currency across the board on Wednesday, with sterling and the Canadian and New Zealand dollars the most bought.

The Fed looks set to launch a third round of bond purchases this week to try to drive borrowing costs lower and boost a flagging economy, especially after weak jobs data last week.

However, analysts said expectations for more QE were already high which may limit the currency's drop.

The dollar extended losses following a warning from Moody's on Tuesday that the United States could lose its triple-A debt rating if next year's government budget talks do not produce policies that gradually cut the country's debt.

The dollar also fell to a four-month low against the Swiss franc of 0.9337 franc, while the higher-yielding Australian dollar hit a three-week high of US$1.0507.

The Swiss National Bank is expected to keep its target range for the Swiss franc LIBOR unchanged and retain its cap on the euro/Swiss franc currency pair at 1.20 francs when it announces its monetary policy decision on Thursday.

The yen held near a 3-1/2-month high against the broadly weak dollar, trading at 77.88 per dollar. Focus on potential Fed action this week compared to a Bank of Japan viewed to be on the sidelines should keep pressure on the dollar for now.

MONEY MARKETS-European dlr funding costs cheapest in 15 months

A barometer of dollar funding risk reached its best levels in more than a year helped by the prospect of European Central Bank intervention but was seen stabilising from current levels.

The ECB's promise to buy bonds of struggling euro zone states, as well as expectations the Federal Reserve may soon embark in a third round of quantitative easing, has improved sentiment towards riskier assets generally, underpinning European stock markets and Italian and Spanish sovereign debt.

That backdrop has driven the STOXX Europe 600 banking index to its highest in nearly 6 months, reduced the perceived risk attached to owning debt issued by certain European banks and made it less costly for euro zone banks to access dollar funding.

The three-month euro/dollar currency basis swap , which shows the rate charged when swapping euro interest payments on an underlying asset into dollars, was at its tightest since June 2011.

"That is a proxy of European risk appetite and the narrowing in basis is a reflection of decreased tail risks following the ECB's new support measures " Simon Peck, rate strategist at RBS said.

"Today we have seen three-month euro/dollar cross currency basis move a further two basis points tighter as we have successfully navigated the German constitutional court vote on the legality of the ESM and ... another tail risk."

Spanish and Italian bonds rallied and German debt prices fell on Wednesday after Germany's top court gave the green light to the euro zone's new bailout fund, prompting relief the bloc's rescue plans remained on track..
The three-month euro/dollar currency basis swap narrowed to minus 25 basis points from minus 27 bps the day prior, having reached minus 160 bps in November last year when the euro zone debt crisis escalated.
RBS's Peck said there was limited scope for further tightening.

"The narrow levels at the moment are really (based) on happy outcomes for the likes of Spain and Greece but there remain very sizeable risks that we will not see such good outcomes," Ciaran O'Hagan, strategist at Societe Generale said.

Analysts say intervention will not provide a quick fix and some flag the inherent contradictions in the ECB's strategy.

For the central bank to intervene in the market, countries have to ask for a bailout first. But for Spain to seek financial help, it would have to be losing access to financial markets, meaning its borrowing costs would have to be at prohibitive levels, analysts say.

Spain's Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy suggested as much when he earlier said his government continues to study the price of seeking assistance but improved market conditions may make aid unnecessary.

The one-year euro/dollar currency basis swap was also at its narrowest since July 2011 at minus 29 bps, but one money market trader said he expected it to stabilise at around -25 bps given potential risks ahead.

"The whole feel-good factor has come back to markets," the trader said. "How long it will last, I am not 100 percent sure."