29 August 2011
MBMG Internatianal - Paul's Blog - August 2011
For both strategic and opportunistic investors the current environment brings unbridled possibilities and dangers. The best way to find out more about these is to hear it straight from the horses’ (as opposed to the apocalyptic horsemen’s) mouths. DU readers are invited to join us at our 15th anniversary symposium on September 1st, which is being held to also raise proceeds for 5 Thai charitable causes. The agenda for this event can be found at http://www.mbmg-international.com/mbmg-groups-th-anniversary-economic-symposium-tid411.aspx
A glittering array of leading economic, political and investment experts will explain the historic context, the current background and the future outlook focusing on what strategies should be deployed at the onset of the next and final stages of the crisis and what opportunities can be exploited. Please let me know if you'd like to reserve one of the strictly limited seats available.
Is Fiscal Union Important for Europe?
It was good to chat again recently with John Noonan, Senior FX Analyst at Thomson Reuters. Like us, John sees the Swiss Franc as overvalued although I don't share his faith in Europe's ability to move towards fiscal consolidation as an immediate factor in generating an Euro-Swiss franc cross rally. John even broached the recent rumours of the SNB setting a peg against the Euro for the Swiss Franc at 110 even though this brought to mind the disastrous Sterling peg against the Euro's predecessor, the ECU, which fell apart dramatically and saw George Soros famously make billions on the trade as desperate attempts to raise UK interest rates to the best part of 20% during a single dramatic day failed ignominiously. Goldman Sachs apparently claimed that the ChF is even more over-valued than the Brazilian Real, by one reckoning more than 70% over.
But if a peg is nonsense then what is the alternative for an economy reliant on both currency stability and exports?
Equally trapped is the Yen - although the Japanese central bank's strategy of stepping in and out of the markets in 'stealth mode' seems to be doing little to weaken the Yen in any meaningful way, although John sees this as more pragmatic -
"Rather than drawing a line in the sand which gives the market a target, I think what they're doing now which makes a lot more sense is keeping the markets off balance. Working out when the markets are over-doing it and panicking and buying the Yen as a safe haven form of security and coming in at the right time when the markets are positioned would be far more effective, but we also know that any kind of interventional loan without the co-operation of other central banks is always going to be difficult; you're fighting a losing battle, but certainly this would be more effective than just saying at 76.25 we're not going to let the Yen strengthen any more. It makes sense that they're doing it this way.”
John has yet to come round to our certainty of major weakness in the Australian Dollar, seeing a more benign economic outlook than my view - It's long appeared to us that there's really only one currency trade right now - US Dollar versus everything else. Everything seems to have been inversely correlated to the Greenback and we've not yet seen significant breakdown in those correlations despite Japanese intervention and Swiss talk. The level of equity correction has generally not seen the expected extent of US$ strength in all cross rates, with Sterling certainly holding up very well. The Australian Dollar seems to have been the most risk-on currency. Just as whenever US Dollar has weakened over the past couple of years it's been the Australian Dollar that has strengthened the most, the AUD was the biggest victim of recent USD strength. I still see AUD rivalling Real and Swiss Franc as the most inflated currency, supported by carry trade monies. To my mind the Australian Dollar is a good candidate as perhaps being the single most vulnerable currency in the world to correction right now. Any economic weakness and consequent strengthening in the US$ is terrible news for the Australian Dollar. We see carry trade contributing around 15 cents to the current value to Australian Dollar.
In short we see the AUD being susceptible to retesting previous intermediate lows of US$ 0.60 whereas John sees that as less likely than his basecase of moderate weakness -
"All those instruments for carry, playing the emerging market story and the good times, with the investor fright that we saw last week that would take it off. As far as the Australian Dollar in concerned, I would agree that if we had a major systemic event, a systemic failure somewhere around the world and investors were pricing that in, as we saw in 2008, the Australian Dollar would be targeted. Back then it went from 98.50 40% down to 60 cents. I don't think it will go down that far. I'm more in the 10% camp, but I think we would need an event like that because not only is the Australian Dollar a beneficiary of the pure carry trade on yield, it's also a way to play the China story, and the China story still looks strong. The numbers that we're seeing coming out of Asia on the trade data is all suggesting that they're coping quite well with this pronounced slowdown in the US and Europe. So I think there's momentum in those economies, so while that's the case and we don't see a systemic event, the Australian Dollar will probably hold around these levels, but I agree that if we see the markets roil up again and they start fearing a Lehman-like event then the Australian Dollar will be extremely vulnerable.”
To watch our chat in full please check out http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000038947