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Renaissance of battered currencies The combination of non-conventional monetary policy involving central bank bond buying and persistent low/weak global nominal growth has left investors searching even more desperately for a satisfactory yield. Global long bond interest rates have continued to fall with those in many countries nearing the levels of Japan. The FX market has always evaluated carefully the likely central bank policy outlook and relative interest rate differentials. With G10 rate differentials now very limited, currency market drivers are found to be historically uncertain. However, counterintuitively - as rates are low in most places - the FX market now regards carry as a strong theme. Relatedly, while higher yielding EM currencies began 2016 undervalued, their strong performances have boosted both carry and valuation strategies. Currently, there are clearly fewer attractive valuation cases making us less inclined to search out such prospects. Still, growing protectionism and increasing financial market regulation support suggestions that FX markets will remain range-bound with lower implied volatilities, leaving players in carry mode. Certainly, we regard the Swedish krona – which now suffers from record-low interest rates - as a funding currency vulnerable to further depreciation despite its favorable fundamentals and valuation. Within the G5 we believe concerns regarding the economic implications of Brexit were exaggerated, meaning Sterling to perform satisfactorily in coming months. However, we are more skeptical towards further outperformance in 2017 as real negotiations with the EU start up. EUR/USD has range traded for 18 months with no end in sight: most investors would clearly be surprised by a more substantial US slowdown, no Fed hikes and EUR/USD above 1.15. Before year-end we expect the BoJ to have flirted with the introduction of helicopter money, causing the JPY to suffer if we are correct. Finally, we remain bullish towards the NOK: underlying appreciation pressure is strong and the economy has troughed. Only Norges Bank stands in its way; it cannot tolerate EUR/NOK below 9.00. WEDNESDAY 14 SEPTEMBER 2016 EDITOR Carl Hammer + 46 8 506 231 28 BUY THE CS BASKET We propose the following currency basket: long NOK (35%), GBP (35%), CAD (18%), NZD (12%) vs short JPY (35%), EUR (24%), CHF (15%). USD (14%), SEK (10%) and AUD (2%). BUY USD/JPY We expect the BoJ to cut its policy rate further and to signal it is considering monetizing state debt relatively soon. In combination with a Fed hike in dec-16 it will serve to weaken the JPY significantly (110 end-Q1 2017). SELL EUR/NOK With an oil price forecast to trade around USD 50/brl, continued NOK purchases by the central bank, an appreciable yield and an attractive valuation, we expect a stronger NOK. Only one factor weakens the case: Norges Bank is unlikely to accept EUR/NOK below 9.00 BUY GBP VS EUR AND USD. Sterling has fallen by 12% in trade-weighted terms so far this year. While Brexit will have the gravest implications for the UK (rather than its trading partners), this process will take time. Consequently, expectations are very dovish and we expect a rebound shortterm. You can also find our research materials at our website: www.mb.seb.se. This report is produced by Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB (publ) for institutional investors only. Information and opinions contained within this document are given in good faith and are based on sources believed to be reliable, we do not represent that they are accurate or complete. No liability is accepted for any direct or consequential loss resulting from reliance on this document. Changes may be made to opinions or information contained herein without notice. Currency Strategy Forecasts and FX Scorecard FX forecasts EUR/USD EUR/JPY EUR/GBP EUR/CHF EUR/SEK EUR/NOK EUR/DKK USD/RUB SEB Consensus* Contents Forecasts 13-Sep 1m Q4 16 Q1 17 Q4 16 Q1 17 1.12 114 0.84 1.09 9.53 9.25 7.44 64.6 1.15 118 0.85 1.10 9.60 9.20 7.44 63.0 1.12 119 0.81 1.09 9.45 9.10 7.44 61.0 1.10 121 0.79 1.09 9.30 9.05 7.44 60.0 1.09 113 0.85 1.09 9.30 9.20 7.45 65.0 1.09 114 0.85 1.09 9.20 9.10 7.46 64.5 102 1.33 1.31 0.97 0.75 0.73 8.49 11.31 8.33 8.73 1.03 8.24 6.68 103 1.35 1.28 0.96 0.77 0.75 8.35 11.27 8.10 8.73 1.04 8.00 6.70 106 1.38 1.26 0.97 0.77 0.75 8.44 11.64 7.96 8.67 1.04 8.13 6.80 110 1.40 1.25 0.99 0.75 0.75 8.45 11.84 7.69 8.53 1.03 8.23 6.80 104 1.28 1.32 1.00 0.74 0.70 8.53 10.92 8.20 8.53 1.01 8.44 6.75 105 1.28 1.32 1.00 0.73 0.69 8.44 10.80 8.04 8.44 1.01 8.35 6.79 The big picture USD EUR JPY GBP CAD AUD NZD CHF SEK NOK RUB CNY Contacts Disclaimer Cross rates USD/JPY GBP/USD USD/CAD USD/CHF AUD/USD NZD/USD USD/SEK GBP/SEK JPY/SEK CHF/SEK NOK/SEK USD/NOK USD/CNY 2 5 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 *Bloomberg survey FX forecasts. , SEB FX G10 Scorecard, Medium Term Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Event risk Risk appetite Total weighted score Weights USD EUR JPY GBP CAD AUD NZD CHF SEK NOK 15.0% 25.0% 15.0% 15.0% 12.5% 10.0% 0.0% 7.5% 0.0% 0.0% -1 0 0 0 -1 -1 +4 -1 0 -1 -0.4 -1 -1 -1 0 +1 0 +2 -2 0 +1 -0.6 0 0 -3 +1 -1 -3 +3 -2 0 +1 -0.8 +1 0 0 -2 +3 +3 +2 -2 0 0 +0.3 +1 0 0 -1 +1 0 -1 -1 0 -2 +0.1 +1 +1 -1 0 -2 -1 -3 -2 0 -2 -0.3 +2 +1 -2 -1 -3 0 -3 +3 0 -2 -0.1 0 -2 -1 +2 -1 +1 +2 -1 0 +1 -0.4 +1 -2 -1 0 +2 0 -3 -1 0 +1 -0.4 0 0 0 +1 +3 0 -4 -2 0 -1 +0.4 G10 FX Scorecard - Contributions to total score 2 Currency Strategy 3 Currency Strategy SEB FX EM Scorecard, Medium Term Fundamentals Carry Monetary policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Event risk Global cycle Total weighted score Weights 15.0% 20.0% 7.5% 15.0% 10.0% 7.5% 0.0% 5.0% 5.0% 15.0% RUB -1 +4 -1 0 +3 0 0 0 -1 +1 +1.0 CNY -1 -2 -1 -1 -3 -3 0 -1 0 +1 -1.2 4 Currency Strategy Big Picture: From Carry and Trump to Helicopters Since our latest Currency Strategy report in Jan 2016 several major, interesting and unexpected events have occurred that have affected global markets generally and the FX market in particular. The BOJ introduced negative rates in January, while the JPY has subsequently rallied by almost 20% in trade-weighted terms clearly indicating the limits to which current global QE policies are subject. In February, the G20 meeting in Shanghai concluded (implicitly) that central banks should abstain from influencing the FX market through the use of nonconventional monetary policies. Further, the Federal Reserve most likely faced pressure from stressed emerging market economies (EM) at that meeting to proceed only very carefully with future interest rate hikes. The oil price bottomed just a few weeks before the G20 meeting, making life somewhat easier for EM commodity exporters and helping undervalued EM equity markets and currencies to recover strongly ever since. Decreased upward pressure on the dollar may also explain why outflows from China have at least temporarily ceased. Further, the Riksbank has finally gained FX credibility causing investors to stop chasing the SEK higher and leaving the outlook for the currency more uncertain with the FX market in carry mode. SECULAR STAGNATION AND FX Currently, global macroeconomic policy discussions focus on the concept of secular stagnation initiated (in modern times) by Larry Summers. Latest developments involving persistently weak growth and falling interest rates “validate” this theory, which stipulates that the world is saving too much and spending too little. The Federal Reserve is signaling that potential growth has fallen in recent years and that the neutral real interest rate maybe as low as zero percent currently. Therefore, few central banks including the Fed feel able to raise interest rates much above their present record lows. During 2016, bond market developments have seen most G10 countries move down to Japanese levels. Hence, it is becoming harder to identify FX market drivers as there are few if any interest rate differentials left for the G10. At the beginning of September 2016, the BIS published a new Triennial FX Report on global FX turnover, which hardly surprisingly showed a declining global number compared to 2013 (table above). With global trade still weak and with various pressures on globalization factors set to reverse, FX turnover is being adversely affected. In addition, we might also include tougher financial regulations, poor hedge fund performances, proprietary desk closures and the rise of algorithmic trading, all of which makes for some fairly irrational market movements. Collectively, these factors lessen risk appetite amongst investors trading FX. Nor do we expect the situation to improve anytime soon. But falling turnover and lower volatilities facilitate the return of carry strategies, despite events such as Brexit which had only a very brief impact on overall market sentiment. Tiny interest rate differentials make this strategy vulnerable in times of falling risk appetite. We also think it affects the Swedish krona given record low (negative) yields in Sweden. Most events have one thing in common; that today’s global economy remains fragile and capital flows face few boundaries with regulators still operating only at nation state level. It is therefore perhaps not surprising to hear calls for greater protectionism from Donald Trump, the US Republican presidential candidate, from the UK through its decision to abandon the European Union and from resurgent extreme nationalist parties throughout Europe. In this article we revisit several key events and consider how they may affect our future expectations for G10/G20 FX market developments. Global FX market turnover (BIS) Percentage shares of average daily turnover in April 2016 Currency 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016 USD 89.9 88.0 85.6 84.9 87.0 87.6 Euro 37.9 37.4 37.0 39.1 33.4 31.3 JPY 23.5 20.8 17.2 19.0 23.0 21.6 GBP 13.0 16.5 14.9 12.9 11.8 12.8 AUD 4.3 6.0 6.6 7.6 8.6 6.9 CAD 4.5 4.2 4.3 5.3 4.6 5.1 CHF 6.0 6.0 6.8 6.4 5.2 4.8 CNY³ 0.0 0.1 0.5 0.9 2.2 4.0 SEK 2.5 2.2 2.7 2.2 1.7 2.2 MXN³ 0.8 1.1 1.3 1.3 2.5 2.2 NZD³ 0.6 1.1 1.9 1.6 2.0 2.1 SGD 1.1 0.9 1.2 1.4 1.4 1.8 HKD³ 2.2 1.8 2.7 2.4 1.4 1.7 NOK³ 1.5 1.4 2.1 1.3 1.4 1.7 KRW 0.8 1.1 1.2 1.5 1.2 1.6 TRY³ 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.7 1.3 1.4 INR³ 0.2 0.3 0.7 1.0 1.0 1.1 RUB³ 0.3 0.6 0.7 0.9 1.6 1.1 BRL³ 0.5 0.3 0.4 0.7 1.1 1.0 Total (USD bn) CAGR 1 239 N/A 1 934 17,2% 3 324 19,6% 3 971 5,9% 5 345 10,4% Below we highlight in different sections some of the more interesting themes we find on the FX market including: 1) the outlook for Carry as a FX theme; 2) the shift in Global 5 088 -2,2% 5 FX Ringside FX reserves and the USD flow outlook; 3) stronger USD if Trump wins the US Presidential election; 4) weaker JPY as BoJ approaches the use of Helicopter money; 5) the EM rally has further to run and; 6) the new SEB FX Scorecard. driven by carry trades rather than “safe-haven” status (like the JPY or CHF). CARRY PERFORMING AGAIN For a long period the FX G10 carry strategy did not perform well. However, that situation has changed since October 2015 with a positive post-Brexit run having brought carry to the attention of investors once more. Chart: Positive performance once again attracts carry flows SHIFT IN GLOBAL FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVE HOLDINGS. For the past two years, the US dollar exchange rate and the value of Chinese foreign exchange reserves have been closely related. Large capital inflows to China from foreign direct investments (FDI) and trade that cause the value of Chinese FX reserves to increase have tended to coincide with a generally weaker dollar, while a fall in the value of Chinese FX reserves have usually signalled a stronger outlook for the greenback. From mid-2014 growth in Chinese FX reserves at first decelerated and eventually began to decline as the dollar appreciated against most other currencies. Also, positioning data support the suggestion that speculative players are adopting carry positions. Our carry investment style (mimicking carry strategies) is always long the two G10 currencies with the highest interest rate and short the two with the lowest. Currently the model is: Long AUD and NZD / Short CHF and SEK. Considering other systematic G10 carry strategies reveals a similar picture with long AUD/short SEK positions. Using the CFTC Commitment of Traders report on positioning it becomes clear that the AUD has attracted an inflow over the summer. While the CFTC does not provide positioning on SEK, our own proxy for speculative positions clearly shows speculative accounts adding to short SEK positions during the summer. As the rate spread towards EM currencies is greater than within the G10, many carry positions have also probably sought longs in EM currencies. This is confirmed by the fact that EM exchange-traded funds (ETFs) were the biggest buyers in July while European ETFs saw the largest outflows. In both 2015 and 2016, there have been substantial outflows from Chinese reserves as domestic investors have targeted alternative investments abroad. Moreover we suspect that the change in Chinese Yuan policy in Aug 2015, which suddenly threatened possible depreciation of the Chinese currency against the dollar, has likely resulted in hedge-related currency flows to protect the value of foreign investments in China against weakening of the Yuan. CARRY DEPENDENT ON BENIGN RISK APPETITE Carry is well known to thrive when risk appetite is high (and stable). Regarding carry performance and our risk appetite index clearly illustrates this tight relationship. SEK is hence vulnerable in an environment with rising risk appetite. This is consistent with the behaviour of the usual funding currencies JPY and CHF, although the krona is 6 FX Ringside inflow of almost USD 200bn from global reserve managers was reported, as the valued of allocated global reserves (excluding China) generally increased. The fall in China’s FX reserves is probably the reason why Chinese authorities had to reduce their holdings in US treasury securities. According to US capital flow data Chinese officials have net sold approximately USD 130bn in US treasury securities over the last 12 months, mostly we suspect during the first half of this year. This would suggest downward pressure on the USD and not the other way around. While clearly the euro also attracted substantial inflows in Q1, in recent years the dollar proportion of allocated FX reserves has increased substantially while the euro’s share has decreased. Overall therefore, it is difficult to argue that the dollar would suffer from large outflows connected with foreign official holdings. More likely, holdings seem to have shifted between global reserve managers, with a few (oil exporters and China) decreasing their reserves while others have been forced to invest their growing foreign exchange reserves. The net effect therefore seems to be dollar neutral. Although it may be difficult to explain the fact that the dollar tend to gain when the value of Chinese FX reserves fall the importance of reserve manger flows from a few particular countries clearly should not be overstated. STRONGER DOLLAR IF TRUMP WINS. In November, the US Presidential election will take place. Since the 1980’s, its predecessors have shown there is little evidence to suggest the dollar will behave in any particular way around them. Usually pre-election USD trends tend also to continue afterwards. Moreover there are no common USD developments around elections – the currency has depreciated around some and appreciated around others. Moreover, China is not the only country to be a net seller of US treasury securities. Over the last 12 months foreign official accounts have net sold treasury securities totalling around USD 300bn. Some of these investors are probably oil exporters that must use part of their treasury holdings to fund a shortfall in the government budget as a result of lower oil revenues. Most oil producing countries have suffered severely following the sharp fall in the oil price during 2014 and 2015. This time it may be different, particularly if Trump against the odds were to win. Although surveys still indicate that a Clinton victory is the most likely outcome, the Brexit vote has demonstrated that the outcome of elections and referendums may be very unpredictable. We have considered Trump’s economic policy and there are several different issues that may have positive or negative effects on the currency. Most observers would probably argue that it would be overall USD-negative if these outflows continued. However, conversely, it appears as if the USD share of allocated foreign exchange reserves has actually risen in recent years. Certainly, this may be explained partly by an increase in the value of dollar-denominated holdings due to a stronger USD exchange rate. A more detailed examination of changes in allocated FX reserves suggests global reserve managers have actually been buying dollar-denominated assets fairly aggressively. Most recent data concerns Q1 this year when a net dollar 7 - Substantial income tax cuts: Trump argues for reduced taxes on both household and corporate income. He proposes to lower the highest income tax rate for households to 33% and to cut the corporate tax rate to 15%. These suggested tax decreases are far from fully funded and would increase the budget deficit. As a result, they are likely to substantially boost growth, making the Fed more likely to tighten monetary policy faster than has otherwise been expected. This would be USD-positive. - Homeland Investment Act II: Trump has suggested that US multinationals that repatriate foreign earnings retained abroad would only have to pay 10% tax on them. Although this would be less attractive than the HIA of 2004, which entailed an effective tax rate of only 5.25% (compared to 35%), it would suggest increased capital inflows to the US. In 2004-2005, US multinationals repatriated USD 312bn, all of which was eligible for the reduced tax rate. This was actually seen in current account data FX Ringside In the longer term, this may cause the USD to suffer second round effects, although their size is difficult to estimate. where US acquisitions of FDI were negative in Q3 and Q4 2005. While it is difficult to isolate historical effects on the USD, these corporate inflows probably contributed to the appreciation of the USD which took place in 2005 and saw EUR/USD move from 1.35 to just below 1.20. Although the tax rebate will be substantially smaller this time and there are still not details regarding the proposal it is still likely to be USD-supportive. Seemingly, we should expect a stronger dollar if Trump were to win the presidential election in November, due to a combination of lower global risk appetite, risks associated with the outlook for world trade and global growth, capital inflows connected with a new HIA and increased US fiscal spending. BANK OF JAPAN IS APPROACHING HELICOPTER MONEY – BACK TO A WEAKER JPY The Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) current policy of “Quantitative and Qualitative Monetary Easing (QQE) with a Negative Interest Rate (NIRP)” eases policy through three channels: 1) Quantity - increasing the amount of asset purchases and the monetary base; 2) Quality – purchasing riskier assets such as ETFs vs. government bonds; and 3) NIRP - cutting interest rates to negative. In his Jackson Hole speech on Aug 27, Governor Kuroda singled out NIRP as working as intended and still far from its limit. He stated that NIRP had reduced mortgage rates and that companies were issuing longer tenured bonds. With his seal of approval, the next most likely action is to reduce the policy rate to -20bps from -10bps at the Nov 1 or Dec 20 policy meetings. At the upcoming Sep 21 policy meeting, the BoJ will also conduct a “comprehensive assessment of the developments… under QQE and NIRP as well as these policy effects”. We thought this would pave the way for use of a wider range of easing measures than “QQE with NIRP”. However, Kuroda’s recent speeches have been full of praise for the current framework such that new measures seem unlikely. So why does Japan constantly disappoint market expectations? We believe the answer lies in changing the deflationary mindset that has become entrenched over the past 20 years. The government and the BoJ need to set expectations very high. No one will listen if the bar is set low. Consequently, dynamic policies such as “Abenomics” and “2% inflation in 2 years, 2x monetary base” are needed to jolt the economy out of deflation. Therefore, on a meeting-bymeeting basis, Kuroda will tend to disappoint the high expectations set by the BoJ. Global trade: In terms of global trade Trump favours a stricter policy with increased protectionism. In particular he supports a more aggressive policy with tariffs on imports from countries that are deemed currency manipulators or use illegal trade subsidies. Full implementation of this policy will have several consequences for the USD. Global trade relations will suffer and most likely countries such as China, which would face new sanctions, would be likely to take counter-measures. In a worst case scenario Trump trade policy may trigger a global trade war in which trade-oriented countries would suffer most. As usually the US economy would be least hurt and the combination of lower risk appetite and the direct impact on trade would therefore benefit the USD. However, the US still relies on capital inflows from the rest of the world to fund its current account and budget deficits. Moreover, several countries including China also own substantial quantities of US securities, which makes the US economy vulnerable. What difference can 10bps or 20bps make in exiting 20 years of deflation? The BoJ understands that a backup plan to “QQE with NIRP” is needed. This view was also supported by Kuroda’s speech at Jackson Hole, which signaled that in Japan inflation expectations are not anchored as they are in the US, and that adverse temporary shocks such as Brexit and lower oil prices may reduce inflation expectations. More needs to be done to raise Japan’s inflation expectations permanently. Still, the country does have one major card up its sleeve – monetizing government debt, a form of helicopter money (for details on debt monetization please see Nordic 8 FX Ringside a further rally higher before the market starts to worry about the upcoming UK political negotiations with the EU in 2017. Outlook August 2016, pg. 14-15). The constant rise in government debt is the main problem with the current strategy of increasing monetary and fiscal policy. Households and businesses are not consuming or increasing investments because any good news will be matched by a future rise in taxes (remember “Ricardian equivalence”?). Direct monetization of government debt solves this problem either by keeping government debt stable or by reducing it. Monetizing debt exerts direct pressure on BoJ equity turning it negative, weakening the currency and steepening the yield curve. Households and businesses pay regardless but through higher inflation rather than higher taxes. This allows Japan to exit deflation. DIVERGING SCANDIES? As regards Sweden and Norway, there is probably more upside in NOK/SEK in coming months. Since late May we have gradually lowered our forecasts for the SEK. The Riksbank has gained credibility with the FX market while the macro community is not chasing the currency higher despite its favorable valuation and strong fundamentals. In the carry market the SEK is a strong candidate for use as a funding currency with rates at record low (negative) levels. Only when the Riksbank starts to change its strategy and begins deviating from ECB policy will the krona benefit from all these positive underlying factors apart from negative carry. The NOK does not yet suffer from such low rates and the strong flow outlook is not about to change as Norges Bank keeps buying its own currency. Growth has bottomed, house prices are recovering and inflation is well above target. With the oil price at USD 50/brl, Norges Bank may be cautious about cutting rates further. However, the central bank needs a weak currency as the economy continues to rebalance away from the petroleum sector. So EUR/NOK is unlikely to be “tolerated” below 9.00. We favor selling EUR/NOK with a target down to a low 9. Towards the year end, Japan will be driven by the Fed more than the BoJ. The combination of a Fed hike (which SEB expects in December) and a 10bps rate cut by the BoJ may push the Yen towards 110 by the end of this year. The BoJ will likely disappoint at its Sep 21 meeting, which we believe will provide good entry points for Yen shorts. We do not think “debt monetization” policy will be introduced in 2016, though any talk of or exploration of this tool may move markets dramatically as this represents a more drastic measure. It comprises an effective threat that the BoJ can communicate even if it decides not to carry it into effect. Furthermore, if Japan ever does implement such a policy, it will have effects worldwide as it opens the door for other central banks to take similar action. A central bank writing down government debt sounds like an alien and unrealistic policy. However, we probably thought the same about negative interest rates and asset purchase programs 10 years ago. SIDEWAYS EUR/USD: LOOK AT STERLING INSTEAD EUR/USD has been range-bound for a unusually long time. Reviewing our FX Scorecard we conclude there is little to suggest a rapid break out from the range. Judging by leading indicators (ISM etc.) the Fed faces potentially weaker growth in the US. The country’s central bank also complains of low potential growth in the US and lack of scope to hike rates without tightening monetary policy. Flows are also weaker after reserve managers sold US assets (see our sections on the USD and Trump). On the other hand, the ECB seems content with its current stance. Although most expect more QE for longer, it is not entirely clear the central bank will deliver. Next year will be very crucial for European politics with French and German elections. Until the ECB amends its QE program (by easing) or political risks increase substantially again, we find it hard to see EUR/USD breach 1.05/1.15. If anything risks lie on the upside with consensus expectations positioned still for a stronger USD. WHITHER THE EM RALLY? A key market theme in 2016 has been the recovery in EM assets. With low global inflation and loose monetary policies in most advanced economies, and with continued stimulus in China, conditions are in place for global risk appetite to remain strong and for the EM rally to continue. THE EM RALLY HAS FURTHER TO RUN Our EM FX index has risen by 9.1% since bottoming on Jan 20 this year, while the MCSI EM equity index is up by 32%. EM bonds have also rallied, with spreads against US Treasuries narrowing from more than 500bps in January On Sterling we have a firm view: expectations are too bearish and data are unlikely to deteriorate soon the way sentiment stands at present. We therefore see scope for 9 FX Ringside driven construction) to fiscal policy and its effect on commodity prices. Nevertheless, we believe that the bottom reached in January will last for at least another year and that a potential correction lower from current levels should be temporary. Beijing will not risk market volatility by tightening monetary conditions too fast, suggesting that the construction and real estate sectors will continue to grow and provide a floor under commodity prices. Additionally, while the Bank of Japan may not add to its quantitative easing program, it is still considering ways to loosen monetary policy. Similarly, the ECB is a long way from tightening its monetary policy. With the US Fed unlikely to hike before December, we believe present conditions will ensure capital continues to flow to EM and the rally to continue to the end of the year. Nevertheless, the single most significant threat to EM is a sudden jump in US inflation, prompting the FOMC to take a considerably more hawkish stance. to around 340bps in September. The rally mainly reflects reduced fears of a hard landing in China, an unexpectedly dovish US Fed, and depressed EM asset valuations. The improvement in sentiment towards China is partly due to reduced exchange rate volatility (following the introduction of capital controls) and partly to stronger growth. Although restrictions on financial account convertibility represent a setback for China in its quest for a more market-based economy, they have helped restore confidence for now. Signs of continued strong growth in China on the back of significant monetary and fiscal stimulus have impacted other EM economies. The Institute of International Finance’s (IIF) coincident indicator suggests that EM growth bottomed out in January and February reaching a level consistent with real GDP growth of 4.7% in August. Increasing confidence in China’s growth outlook has also boosted commodity prices, which, in turn, has helped stimulate demand for EM assets, especially equities and currencies. After hiking in December 2015, the US Fed became more dovish in January, causing capital flows to favour EM, almost three years after the 2013 “Taper Tantrum”. The hunt for yield has resumed. After EM currencies depreciated by 27% (against a basket comprising the USD, EUR, JPY, CHF and GBP) and EM equities fell by 37%, valuation levels became very attractive. FX SCORECARD PERFORMANCE SINCE MAY The last update and rebalancing of the Scorecard occurred in May, just weeks before the Brexit vote, and was based on the following assumptions: (1) We expected relative monetary policy to remain the key driver for the FX market; (2) We also believed valuation, positioning and carry would be important for the FX market; (3) We assumed the UK would vote to remain in the EU; and (4) We anticipated further support for risk appetite based on accelerating growth. In this kind of environment we forecast that the SEK, NOK and USD would outperform other currencies, particularly the CHF, JPY and NZD. Several indices may now be approaching resistance levels. Technical analysis of the MSCI EM equity index suggests it is only 2–3 percentage points away from a key resistance level. Similarly, some EM currencies, for example the BRL, are no longer cheap in real effective terms. However, just as markets became oversold, a rally above fair value should be expected. Looking back, almost none of these assumptions were correct following the UK’s unexpected vote to leave the EU. Indeed, instead of focusing on valuation and relative monetary policy expectations, the FX market has since the end of June concentrated solely on carry. Under these market conditions the JPY and NZD have outperformed all other currencies appreciating against the krona by 9% and 12% respectively since May 24. This is the main explanation for the weak performance of the FX CHINA AND US FED RISKS STILL LURK Worries about a hard landing in China have not disappeared, but simply been deferred. The country’s credit-fuelled stimulus risks exacerbating overcapacity and indebtedness among state-owned companies in the medium-to-long term. Another worry is Beijing’s desired shift away from the use of monetary policy (which has 10 FX Ringside Traditionally fundamentals and valuation have also received relatively high weights but not this time. There are several examples of currencies with strong fundamentals and attractive valuation that remain weak, causing these factors to appear secondary for FX investors. Instead we have an unusually high weight for rate differentials between currencies captured by the carry score at 25%, making it the most important driver in our updated Scorecard. The high weight for carry is particularly attractive for the AUD and NZD, while it lowers total scores for the krona. Scorecard basket, which has fallen by 6.1% since our last update in May. Based on individual scores for each currency and the new set of category weights capturing the importance of different FX drivers, the NOK and GBP receive the highest scores with each weighted 35% in our new Scorecard portfolio. Next, we have a fairly positive view on the CAD (18%) and NZD (12%). Currencies with the largest short exposures include the JPY (35%), EUR (24%), CHF (15%) and USD (14%). Finally, the FX basket is basically neutral in AUD and SEK. The performance of the Scorecard approach is very much related to long-term trends based on one or several specific market drivers just like the dollar trend in 2014/15, which reflected expectations on relative monetary policy divergence. In this sense present market conditions are particularly ill-suited to this particular methodology as it is very difficult to determine current drivers for currencies and to observe trends in currencies that seem long-term sustainable. The following portfolio represents the FX Scorecard Currency Strategy update: THE UPDATED FX SCORECARD The FX Scorecard takes into account the relative importance of various categories reflected by the weight we attach to each category. For a long time monetary policy has been the key driver for exchange rates. One reason that monetary policy now receives a slightly lower weight than it has for several years is that most central banks have likely stretched policy to its outer bound (ECB, BOJ and Riksbank) and that further policy easing by these institutions is unlikely to have a significant impact on either currencies or the real economy. Instead, actual interest rate differentials seem to have become more importantly. Consequently, we have reduced the weighting for monetary policy expectations to 15%, its lowest weight since we began ranking currencies using the Scorecard. 11 Currency Strategy US dollar The dollar continues to trade with monetary policy expectations. The story has been that further tightening by the Fed this year and next while other central banks move in the opposite direction s should support the greenback. However, the Sep rate decision by the ECB and weaker than expected growth indicators in the US have reduced the case for monetary policy divergence, which makes the outlook for the USD less positive. Large capital outflows as foreign investor cut back on treasury holdings could be one risk to the USD if it continues. Historically the dollar has not reacted on the outcome of US elections. However, an unexpected victory by Trump would reduce global risk appetite and be positive for the dollar, at least initially. ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS T After a weak start to the year with disappointing growth in both Q1 and Q2 there were signs that the US economy started to pick up speed into the second half of the year. The positive tone in US data changed in Aug when the composite ISM was a lot weaker than expected. In Q2 most growth was related to private consumption. To sustain our positive growth outlook other parts of the economy have to catch up. Expansive financial conditions should be supportive for investments. However, declining sentiment indicators has increased uncertainty. Despite some temporary weakness in Q2 the labour market has been strong over summer although Aug was a disappointment. -1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY US inflation has remained muted with the PCE core inflation (Fed’s favourite measure) still being below the 2% target and it is not expected to pick up much over the coming year. Moreover, market based measures for inflation expectations remain well below the 2% inflation target. In contrast there are signs of accelerating wage growth as labour market conditions tightens. Although the correlation between wage growth and inflation has been rather poor faster wage growth should eventually lead to rising cost pressure in the economy, which is likely to spur further tightening by the Fed. Our assessment is one more rate hike this year at the Dec. meeting. 0 FLOWS Despite attractive US bond yields compared to most other developed markets foreign investors have scaled back substantially on their holdings of US long-term securities. In particular it seems like foreign official accounts have been net sellers of large amounts of US treasury securities with the net outflow over the last 12 months until June amounting to USD 335bn. One obvious reason for this outflow is that holdings of long-term securities have partly been needed in public funding as a consequence of falling commodity and energy prices. The US current account balance has stabilized at 2-3% of GDP. It is divided between surpluses on services and net income and a deficit in goods trading, where non-petroleum goods nowadays account for most of it. Historically a current account deficit of present size has been manageable as the US economy tends to attract sizable capital inflows. However, would capital outflows continue a current account deficit even at today size could be a challenge. 0 12 Currency Strategy US dollar VALUATION Real and nominal trade weighted indexes for the dollar would suggest the greenback has moved into overvalued territory. Our internal long-term fair value model, SEBEER, indicates that long-term valuation has moved in the same direction as the spot exchange rate, which would suggest the USD trades roughly around its long-term fair value in trade weighted terms. Stronger US growth and expectations of widening rate differentials caused a recovery for the USD since May 2014, which also feeds into the valuation model. Although the dollar approaches stretched territory according to some models it is too early to argue for a weaker dollar just because of its valuation. Based on the real effective exchange rate the dollar is still below valuations in previous dollar peaks in 1985 and 2002. -1 POSITIONING Speculative accounts have mostly been long USD since May 2014. However, after the rate hike in December last year the net long position was unwound and even switched to a small net short position in May. Since then speculators have gone long USD again but to a far less extent compared to before the rate hike: current positioning is 1.1 standard deviations below the three year average position. However, the reason for the current positioning score of -1 is the sharp trend lower lately, representing a negative USD sentiment. -1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE With its superior liquidity the USD has traditionally been seen as a typical safe haven currency, which is negatively correlated with risk appetite. However, in recent years it has actually behaved the other way around with the USD being positively correlated with risk appetite. Instead currencies like the EUR and the JPY, which obviously could be seen more as funding currencies with their low interest rates tend to gain whenever there are increased stress on financial markets. One obvious reason could be that the outlook for the USD is closely related to expectations on Fed monetary policy and the timing and pace of coming rate hikes, which makes it more closely related to the growth outlook. We have moreover observed that the classical relationship between the oil price and the dollar seems to remain intact. Finally it seems like the dollar is correlated to changes in the Chinese currency reserves. Going forwards we expect China FX reserves to continue to fall, albeit at a slower rate, which should prevent the USD from weakening too much. 13 Currency Strategy The euro EUR Weighted score: -0.6 The euro remains stable. With ECB monetary policy options almost exhausted, monetary policy itself is no longer the most important driver of the currency. Instead, a high current account surplus, falling budget deficits and a lower inflation rate than in most other industrialized countries all support the euro. But the institutional framework of the euro area remains weak and is therefore a threat to the currency. Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS Latest readings of the composite purchasing managers index (PMI) and the European Commission’s Economic Sentiment Indicator (ESI) indicate that the economy remains resilient to the Brexit vote. The moderate recovery in the euro area continued at the start of H2 2016. Domestic demand is driving the expansion while exports are suffering from weak foreign demand. We expect real GDP to grow by 1.6% in 2016 and 1.7% in 2017, allowing the budget deficit to decline by 0.3 percentage points to 1.6% of GDP in 2017. Negatively, growth remains uneven across the region, while politically further progress towards increased integration appears to have been side-lined. National interests dominate all discussions. Moreover, reform momentum has slowed in most vulnerable countries, which is of major concern, preventing as it does stronger growth momentum within the union. Following the EU’s decision not to fine member states that perpetually break deficit rules, the Stability and Growth Pact is now dead in the water. Consequently, the euro area remains vulnerable to external shocks. -1 Ec. Surprise Event risk Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY The ECB is in ‘wait-and–see’ mode. The Brexit vote has created a new downside risk to growth. As it remains wholly unclear to what extent economic recovery in the euro area will be affected, the ECB is awaiting more hard data to form the basis for further policy decisions. Latest economic indicators suggest there is no urgent need to act. Inflation rates are slowly increasing. In recent months the annual CPI rate has become positive once again, and is expected to move above 1.0% by the year-end. Consequently, real ECB policy rates will become more negative, making monetary conditions even more favorable. ECB staff left the bank’s GDP growth projections largely unchanged in September. Inflation forecasts will continue to indicate a slow upward trend in CPI rates. ECB will extend the QE-program in dec16 making monetary policy still euro-negative. -1 FLOWS In the 12 months ending in June 2016 the cumulated current account surplus rose to EUR 347.8bn or 3.3% of GDP, compared with a surplus of EUR 302.1bn for the 12 months to June 2015. In coming months we expect the current account to remain solidly positive, thereby continuing as the most important supportive factor for the euro. During the same period, combined direct and portfolio investments by euro area-based investors reached EUR 937bn, surpassing investments by foreigners in the euro area by EUR 628bn. Going forward, net capital outflows are expected to remain very high. 0 14 Currency Strategy The Euro VALUATION When the euro began to depreciate in 2014 it was clearly overvalued in trade weighted terms according to most valuation measures including the SEBEER long-term fair value model. The common currency began to weaken after the ECB had announced further policy easing including rate cuts and eventually an extensive asset purchase program, while the oil price fell sharply and the dollar benefited on expectations of Fed tightening. Today, the valuation of the euro is quite close to its estimated long-term fair value in trade weighted terms. The SEBEER long-term fair value estimate against the dollar fell to 1.10 after the latest update. The euro appears slightly undervalued according to other valuation measures as the real effective exchange rate or the nominal trade weighted index. Altogether valuation should be slightly positive for the euro going forward. +1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 POSITIONING Speculators are net short EUR vs. USD and has so been since May 2014. Current positioning is right at its three year average. Judging by the less severe short peaks April 2015, December 2015 and most recently July 2016 the long term bearish EUR sentiment is losing ground. For now, the lack of an extreme positioning or sharp trend in positioning renders a neutral score for EUR. 0 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISKS, GLOBAL CYCLE Although underlying economic structural problems are still much present, ECB QE has certainly made bond markets forget about these issues. The economic outlook is reasonably ok with economic growth at/just above trend. Risks are instead building in the political area where the coming 12 months holds crucial political elections/referendums in the euro-zone. Should Marie le Pen stage a major surprise and be elected French president, the euro will suffer as the market starts to fret about Frexit. From an event risk perspective it is still reasonable to add a risk premia to the euro outlook. 15 Currency Strategy Japanese yen JPY Weighted score: -0.8 The JPY strengthened over 16% from 120 to slightly above 100 in the first eight months. The main driver for JPY strength was the combination of BoJ under-delivering on further easing and the Fed under-delivering on rate hikes. Due to the strong currency, its stock market also tumbled over 15%. Going forward, we expect JPY weakness to 110 in 6 months as BoJ starts conversation on helicopter money via writing off future debt issuance or debt that BoJ has already purchased. Fundamentals ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS The economic recovery post the VAT tax hike in April 2014 has been disappointing. The economy has only recovered to 0.4% y/y average growth in H1 2016. Growth has been weighed down on all sides with exports low from weak global demand (including China), low investment as businesses remain cautious and consumers expecting future tax hikes. Going forward at least consumption should stabilize since the VAT hike has been delayed from April 2017 to October 2019. Also, fiscal stimulus of 6% of GDP should increase leading up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and counter the lackluster growth in exports. Hence, growth should trickle higher to 0.5% for 2016. 0 Event risk Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY BoJ is facing difficulties in reaching its “2% inflation in 2 years” promise and running out of tools. The asset purchase programs are reaching a limit as BoJ has been dominating transactions in both the bond and equity market. Negative interest rates are facing major push back from the banking sector. We think Bank of Japan will start discussing a form of helicopter money where BoJ automatically monetizes future debt issuances from Ministry of Finance or go one step further and write-off parts of JGBs the BoJ owns. Another possible direction is to add a nominal GDP target in addition to the 2% inflation target. These discussions alone will get the markets moving on BoJ easing expectations and will be negative JPY. -3 FLOWS Flows have been neutral. The capital flow is clearly pointing outwards where corporates are investing and buying overseas as there is plenty of liquidity domestically and returns are higher abroad. Portfolio managers are also going abroad in hunt for yield. Typically, this leads to JPY weakness but this time, it’s been offset by rising current account surplus. The current account has grown from the trade surplus as energy prices have reduced imports. Also, Japan has restarted nuclear power plants and has further reduced imports. +1 16 Currency Strategy Japanese yen VALUATION Different long-term valuation measures for the JPY give different messages concerning its valuation. Real trade weighted indices suggest the JPY is fairly cheap. With a long-term fair value at 114 against the dollar the SEBEER-model, however, proposes the yen actually is somewhat overvalued after its recovery since the beginning of 2016. Altogether it therefore seems appropriate to take the middle way and go with the nominal trade weighted index which says the JPY not trades too far from its long-term valuation. -1 POSITIONING Speculative accounts have built a large net long JPY position in 2016 which has been supported JPY. Current positioning is 1.9 standard deviations above the three year average which tends to be an unsustainably large deviation. The positioning score is -3, reflecting the high probability of a normalization of positioning which would weigh on the Japanese currency. -3 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE There are several risks to Japan in this category. First, JPY still retains its safe haven status and global risk off events will make the JPY strengthen just as we saw with Brexit. Events such as Trump victory in the US will be seen as a risk-off event and can strengthen JPY. Second, if BoJ embarks on writing off JGB debt that can be a game changer for JPY’s perception as a safe haven currency. BoJ writing down government debt means BoJ goes into negative equity. That is a clear sign of BoJ weakness, loss of independence and becoming much more of a dovish central bank. The action alone will weaken JPY but since these adjustments are permanent (until inflation target is reached), BoJ’s credibility will be hit and JPY can easily lose its safe haven status. Lastly, BoJ intervention will remain a possibility. In the past when BoJ has intervened, even unilaterally, it has been successful and marked the end to JPY strength. 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. 17 Currency Strategy British pound sterling GBP Weighted score: 0.3 Since the Brexit vote was indicated in Q4 last year the GBP has weakened substantially against almost all currencies. At its extreme the exchange rate discounted a virtual disaster for the UK economy. However, data so far have been stronger than most expected and suggest more “business as usual” than a crisis. With the speculative market net short the GBP and absent a significant deterioration we expect a sterling recovery in coming months. Long-term risks related to Brexit negotiations remain. The outcome might well harm the economy which is why we don’t expect the GBP to recover fully. Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Event risk Risk appetite ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS The Brexit vote was unexpected leaving most people still struggling to understand its political and economic consequences. Studies prior to the referendum warned there would be serious negative effects on the economy and that was also what most people feared in July when all sentiment indicators slumped to recession levels. However, this initial reaction was excessive. Instead, the impact on the economy is unlikely to be as bad as many had feared, not least because the UK will remain an EU member until new conditions have been negotiated. Moreover, financial conditions have eased substantially since the referendum was announced with falling interest rates, a weak sterling, bond purchases and liquidity provision by the central bank all bolstering the economy. Indeed, while post-Brexit data are still incomplete and uncertainty remains high, we are quite confident the gloomiest forecasts are unlikely to materialize. Longterm the objective is to make the UK a “supercompetitive economy”. +1 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY The Brexit vote forced an immediate response from the BOE, which moved quickly to prevent any liquidity shortages and maintain the credibility of the financial system. After assessing the situation it proceeded to cut its policy rate by 0.25pp to 0.25% in August and restart its bond purchase programme including Gilts and Corporate bonds. Going forward the bank stands ready to support the economy if necessary. Currently we expect a further bank rate cut at the November meeting to the lower bound of 0.05%. However, this reduction is far from certain. Indeed, if economic indicators show that the economy has shrugged off the Brexit vote the bank would not hesitate to leave its present policy rate unchanged. 0 FLOWS The UK current account deficit has widened to around 7% of GDP in the last two quarters. Much of this is attributable to a shift in the income balance as a previous surplus has turned into a widening deficit. However, the trade-related deficit has also increased in recent quarters. The trade related deficit is likely to improve though, given present pound weakness. A deficit of the current size is unsustainable, as it requires massive capital inflows to finance the shortage in domestic savings, which makes the GBP vulnerable given present political uncertainty. -2 18 Currency Strategy British pound sterling VALUATION The GBP has depreciated substantially since the referendum on the EU-membership was initiated in November last year. The sell-off in the GBP accelerated after it was clear the UK had voted to leave. Prior to this Brexit-related depreciation the sterling was slightly overvalued in trade weighted terms, although the updated SEBEER long-term valuation model indicated it was roughly around fair value. However, following the depreciation there is no doubt – the GBP is substantially undervalued today, which makes it an interesting longterm valuation case. Clearly current valuation is unsustainable unless the economy suffers badly from the vote. So far indicators, however, show only a limited impact on the economy. Current valuation reflects a more negative development. +3 POSITIONING Speculators are sitting on a close to record net short GBP position which was quickly established after the Brexit vote. Deviation from the three year average is a whopping -2.5 standard deviations which is stretched and the positive positioning score of +3 reflects the fact that a downscaling of this unusually large net short position will support GBP. +3 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. EVENT RISK, LIQUIDITY AND GLOBAL CYCLE Traditionally the outlook for the GBP has been closely related to the outlook for UK growth and BOE monetary policy. After the Brexit vote in June this is indeed still the case. The GBP is long-term undervalued against most other currencies after the EU-vote due to political uncertainties and potential consequences on the economy. The obvious topic for discussion is whether the expected negative impact on the British economy has been exaggerated. Currently it seems to be the case. Would the UK economy continue to improve in line with sentiment indicators, which are back well above the 50level, the GBP looks like an attractive buy at current levels. The GBP was also punished after the August rate cut from BOE and the restart of bond purchases. These decisions have clearly lowered UK bond yields in a GBPnegative way. Would the tight correlation between the GBP and relative bond yields persist this could limit the upside potential for the GBP. a 19 Currency Strategy Canadian dollar CAD Weighted score: 0.1 The CAD was appreciating fast against the USD in the first quarter, but has basically trended sideways since April thus moving more or less in lockstep with oil prices. After the huge depreciation in 2015-2016, the bigger picture is that the loonie is still supercharged thus helping the Canadian economy growing above its potential growth rate. If anything, we expect CAD to outperform its peers due to its current valuation, gradually increasing oil prices and extensive connections to the US economy which is returning to more robust growth. Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Event risk ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS In the second quarter, the economy took a hit from the Alberta wildfires and real GDP growth contracted 1.6% at an annual rate. In all likelihood the plunge is temporary and we are expecting a growth rebound to well above the potential growth rate in H2 and beyond. A pickup in the US economy and federal infrastructure spending are important drivers while easy financial conditions, in part reflecting the past depreciation of the Canadian dollar, are supporting growth too. The cheap CAD is boosting competiveness and is helping the economy adjust to lower commodity prices; a reallocation of investment and employment from the resource sector to the non-resource sector is underway. Despite the generally slow growth backdrop in recent quarters, the unemployment rate has been drifting down and is currently sitting below the NAIRU. While this is suggesting less slack in the economy, wage growth is decreasing and the output gap is not expected to close until the end of 2017. +1 Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY After keeping its policy rate at 1% for over four years, BOC cut rates twice last year to 0.50% where the target for the overnight rate is sitting today. Sluggish growth in recent quarters, the difficult adjustments in the resource sector and the output gap all suggest that a rate hike is off the table for at least a year in our view. According to market pricing, the probability of a cut is actually higher than the probability of a hike for as long as the eye can see. So why not cut rates again in order to provide an extra boost to the economy? In our view, the infrastructure spending projects mean less pressure on the Bank to do the heavy-lifting. Moreover, against the backdrop of rapidly increasing house prices and the real estate market close to overheating, a rate cut may not be the best medicine. 0 FLOWS Recent data on goods exports have been on the weak side, in part reflecting the temporary slowdown in US investment earlier this year. As such, the current account deficit has increased but we expect a turnaround as export growth picks up again. Meanwhile the trends in the basic balance and the broad basic balance are showing signs of turning around. -1 20 Currency Strategy Canadian dollar VALUATION The Canadian dollar traded at rich levels for a long time after the financial crisis, which indisputably has been negative for Canadian competitiveness. The sharp decline in commodity prices, and in particular lower prices on oil, have weakened the currency significantly in trade weighted terms since 2014. In nominal terms the CAD seems undervalued compared to its long-term average. Our model gives a slightly different message as the its long-term fair value estimate has been falling in recent years. Valuation probably is a fairly neutral factor for the CAD. However, would Canadian terms-of-trade deteriorate further on the back of a lower oil price there is probably more downside risk for the CAD from current levels. +1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions POSITIONING Speculative accounts are net short CAD as has been the norm since 2014. Currently the net short is far larger than normal; to be exact it is 1.2 standard deviations below the three year average, which is the second most extreme position in this report. However, the net short is not large enough to render positive CAD score that would indicate high probability of a correction. The trend with speculators adding to their net short position, which began in November 2015, has corrected slightly but is not strong enough yet to render a negative slope score. All in all the positioning score for CAD is neutral/cautiously negative in this report. 0 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. EVENT RISK, LIQUIDITY AND GLOBAL CYCLE Historically the Canadian dollar has correlated positively with general risk appetite and the performance of the US equity market. Lately however it is foremost the oil price that dictates the development of CAD. RBA’s favoured fair value model seems to work well for the CAD and is based on terms of trade and the real interest rate spread versus US, Europe and Japan. Terms of trade have been under pressure since 2011 but the decline increased greatly from mid-2014 when oil prices tumbled. From March to May 2016 oil prices corrected higher and the USD generally weakened giving a bounce in the model again. CAD also responded positively to this development. Our near-term forecast for oil and relative interest rates (sideways) also produce a range bound environment for the loonie. The Bank of Canada’s inflation-control target must be renewed every five year and the current period ends 31 December 2016. While not our base scenario, there are speculations that its current target could change. We think that the details of the renewal will be presented in November. 21 Currency Strategy Australian dollar USD Weighted score: -0.4 The economy is hampered by a large decline in business investment, although other sources of domestic demand are growing at or above trend. Evidence suggests the country’s transformation from a resource-based economy to a service economy is gaining speed. Both the recovery in commodity prices and the stabilisation of Chinese economic activity have provided support for the Australian dollar, although terms of trade remain much lower than they have been in recent years. The RBA cut the cash rate in February and August. Inflation is below target and provides an argument - along with the central bank’s wish to avoid an appreciating exchange rate - for further monetary easing. Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Event risk Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS The economy continues to suffer from falls in mining-related investments while spending on non-mining activities, except for housing, has so far failed to pick up. However, low interest rates support domestic demand while the weaker exchange rate helps the export sector, which we expect will contribute positively to growth. Although labour market indicators are mixed, employment is forecast to continue growing. Prospects for households have improved, as shown by rising consumer confidence, which is likely to result in higher household spending going forward. Significantly, indicators suggest that economic activity is switching more rapidly to the non-resources sector. Overall, GDP growth remains healthy, having accelerated for four consecutive quarters so far to 3.3% y/y in Q2. Further more rapid increases are expected towards 3.5% y/y in 2017-2018, above potential growth. +1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY Headline inflation decelerated further in Q2 to 1.0% y/y; well below the target range of 2-3%. Core inflation is also below the lower part of the target range, while wage growth remains slow. Recent appreciation by the AUD has renewed the downward pressure from import prices in recent years and may drive inflation even lower in the near-term, although we forecast inflation will accelerate to 1.5-2.5% by the end of 2018. This is because we expect an improving labour market to result in gradually rising labour costs. The RBA reduced the cash rate by 25 basis points in May and August but left it unchanged in September. Currently the cash rate is 1.50%. A more stable situation in China and a recovery in commodities prices have made further RBA easing less likely in the short term. However, low inflation provides an argument for looser monetary policy while the RBA is also keen to avoid an appreciating exchange rate. Future Fed policy is important. -1 FLOWS The current account deficit has deteriorated dramatically in recent quarters to currently almost 5% of GDP. The trade deficit is partly offset by net portfolio inflows involving equity securities and direct investments. Compared to other developed economies, Australian yields are relatively high, providing scope for carry trade inflows. 0 22 Currency Strategy Australian dollar VALUATION Falling commodity prices have resulted in a significant deterioration in terms of trade from highs back in 2014, supporting a lower valuation. They were also the reason for the RBA’s statements that it regarded the Australian currency as overvalued. In trade weighted terms, both real and nominal, the AUD trades very close to its long-term average after being overvalued since 2010. According to our model, however, the currency’s long-term valuation continues to fall making it look expensive despite the depreciation in recent years. Altogether the AUD appears overvalued, but remains far from previous extremes. Although the currency’s valuation may not be a driver in itself, its present value is unlikely to slow down further depreciation going forward. -2 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions POSITIONING Speculative accounts have built a large net long AUD position during the summer. This coincides with the increasing popularity of carry trades with standard G10 strategies generally using the AUD as the major long currency. Current positioning is 1.7 standard deviations above the three-year average, which is generally unsustainable and likely to be followed by a correction that would weigh on the AUD. Positioning therefore scores -1. With carry trades at least partly responsible for long positioning in AUD, we would remain wary on risk appetite, as an especially sharp deterioration may cause a short squeeze when carry positions are unwound. -1 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. EVENT RISK, LIQUIDITY AND GLOBAL CYCLE Previously, considerable support for the AUD was attributable to high commodity prices, which attracted foreign capital inflows to the mining sector. Consequently, falling commodity prices have proved particularly disadvantageous for the AUD. However, in the current low yield environment Australian interest rates contribute to preventing capital outflows. The recovery in commodity prices and yields - both of which are relatively high compared to other developed economies - has helped the AUD to appreciate during 2016. However, a sustained rise in commodity prices is unlikely, limiting AUD upside from current levels. The RBA has already cut the rate twice in 2016, while a more stable situation in China and higher commodity prices have made further easing in the short-term less likely. But the Chinese growth slowdown is expected to resume in 2017 and may exert downward pressure on the AUD. Inflation well below target provides another argument for monetary easing. 23 Currency Strategy New Zealand dollar NZD Weighted score: -0.1 The New Zealand economy continues to perform well compared to most other developed countries. While GDP growth is hampered by weak dairy prices and exports, robust domestic demand has ensured it remains above 2%. Low inflation has forced the RBNZ to cut the OCR twice so far this year to currently 2.0%. More easing is expected. The NZD has appreciated recently contributing to negative inflation in the tradables sector. As a result, the inflation objective has become more difficult to meet, which exerts pressure on the RBNZ to try to weaken the exchange rate. Fundamentals Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS The divergence between New Zealand’s external and domestic environments continues. Low prices for export goods are a drag on growth. Although activity in the Chinese economy has stabilised recently, its slowdown is expected to continue in 2017. Australian growth is being maintained at a modest rate. However, New Zealand’s domestic economy is performing well, with GDP growth accelerating to 2.8% y/y in Q1. Migration, construction activity, strong tourist spending and looser monetary policy will continue to support growth. The labour market is solid with unemployment edging downward in Q1 and associated forecasts revised lower. Employment is increasing while net immigration will continue to add to labour supply. Low interest rates will continue to support household spending; retail sales accelerated in Q2. +2 Event risk Risk appetite 125 E U R /U S D 1 .35 0 100 1 .30 0 75 50 1 .25 0 25 1 .20 0 1 .15 0 0 S p ecu lative po sitions 04 05 06 -2 5 Contracts (thousands) -0.8 E-0.6 -0.2tive 0.0position 0.2 0.4 U R -0.4 specula s 0.6 0.8 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced MONETARY POLICY The RBNZ cut its OCR in March and in August to currently 2.00%. Since the present monetary policy cycle began in June 2015, rates have been eased by 150 basis points. Inflation remained at 0.4% in Q2, well below the 1-3% target. CPI inflation is being squeezed by negative tradable inflation, and is expected to weaken further in Q3 according to the RBNZ, due to the recent fall in fuel prices. The NZD has appreciated in recent months and is substantially stronger than assumed in the central bank’s June statement, weighing further on tradables inflation. The RBNZ has stated that more monetary policy easing is required and argues that 35 bps of additional OCR cuts are necessary to move inflation back within the target band. -2 FLOWS The terms of trade have declined significantly in recent years. Weak global demand and strong supply in some markets will continue to weigh on New Zealand’s commodity exports. The RBNZ forecasts that the terms of trade will improve slowly from 2017. The current account deficit is expected to remain around 3% of GDP. A positive balance on external goods and services is outweighed by an investment income deficit. Compared to other developed economies yields are relatively high, providing some scope for carry trade inflows. -1 24 Currency Strategy New Zealand dollar VALUATION Lower commodity prices and inflation well below the target finally changed the monetary policy stance of RBNZ previously being one of few central banks tightening policy. This was the trigger for a normalization of the NZD-valuation from stretched levels. At most the NZD weakened by roughly 17% in trade weighted terms. However, this year the NZD has recovered around half of it, which once again makes it look a bit expensive. At the same time as the currency has depreciated its long-term fair value according to our SEBEER long-term fair value model has moved in the opposite direction making the valuation stretch according to this model smaller. Altogether a high valuation is still a risk to the NZD in the longer terms, although we doubt it will weigh on the currency as long as it benefits from higher bond yields attracting inflows. -3 125 E U R /U S D 1 .35 0 POSITIONING: Speculators are almost squarely positioned in NZD and as there has not been any specific trend lately the positioning score is neutral. Interestingly NZD/USD has headed higher in 2016 but speculators seem to have had little interest in the currency as positioning has been light and shifted between net long and net short many times. 0 100 1 .30 0 75 50 1 .25 0 25 1 .20 0 1 .15 0 0 S p ecu lative po sitions 04 05 06 -2 5 Contracts (thousands) E U R specula tive position s 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE Global growth remains below trend. Moreover, while in China it has stabilised recently, the economy is expected to decelerate further in 2017 as the effects of previous monetary easing diminish. A larger Chinese slowdown would not only have direct negative effects on the NZ economy but also indirect consequences including potentially weaker Australian growth. The housing market boom is still a major risk to the NZ economy. Macroprudential measures introduced in November 2015 (tighter loan-to-value restrictions) initially reduced house price inflation. However, since March this year, Auckland price pressures have re-emerged, spreading to nearby regions, to produce a more generalised resurgence in housing prices nationwide. With banks heavily exposed to the sector, the RBNZ is clearly concerned about financial stability risks. A house price correction could push a NZ risk premium higher or even tighten liquidity due to the country’s high dependence on overseas refinancing. Currently, the RBNZ is considering additional macroprudential policy options that may be introduced before the end of this year. 25 Currency Strategy CHF Weighted score: -0.4 Swiss franc Fundamentals The Swiss franc probably remains cautiously overvalued. On a trade weighted basis the currency is still around 9.0% higher than it was before the EUR/CHF floor at 1.20 was abandoned. So far the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has successfully stabilized the CHF but has failed to weaken it. We believe the central bank will continue to resist any upward pressure on the currency. With CPI inflation becoming positive in coming months, we expect the franc to weaken slightly. Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS GDP growth slowed to 0.1% in Q1 2016, from 0.4% during Q4 2015. Subsequently, the KOF economic leading indicator has signalled some acceleration in growth. In the six months to August 2016 it averaged 102.2 points, up from 99.6 points during the preceding six months. Therefore, the Swiss economy appears set to post real GDP growth of between 1.0% and 1.5%, in line with the SNB’s expectations. Regarding inflation, Switzerland reported a negative annual CPI rate of only 0.2% in July 2016, a significantly higher reading than back in December 2015 when it declined by -1.3%. The rate is expected to become positive once again before the year-end. 0 Event risk Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY The SNB has kept a steady hand in recent months and we expect it to continue to do so going forward. FX reserves are increasing meaning the SNB will not tolerate EUR/CHF to decline below 1.07-1.08 anytime soon. With the dampening effects of low energy prices further abating in coming months, the annual CPI rate will soon become positive for the first time since August 2014, i.e. consistent with the central bank’s definition of price stability of “below two percent but positive”. Price trends suggest there is no need for additional rate cuts at present. Therefore, the SNB will keep its policy rates stable and concentrate on fighting any upward pressure on the franc. Its GDP growth projection for 2016 will remain stable at “between 1 and 1.5 percent” in September. In its conditional inflation forecast the bank will continue to expect the annual inflation rate to turn positive in Q4 2016. -1 FLOWS Sight deposits by Swiss commercial banks with the central bank are a reliable indicator of SNB interventions in currency markets. Since the end of 2015, these have grown by CHF 46.2bn. In the two weeks following the Brexit vote a larger increase of around CHF 10bn indicated rising capital inflows, which the SNB was compelled to absorb. Since then, the flow situation shows there has been no permanent increase in demand for safe-haven currencies. +2 26 Currency Strategy Swiss Franc VALUATION Strong trends in valuation measures like nominal and real trade weighted currency indexes for the CHF make it difficult to judge what its appropriate longterm valuation is. The historical averages against the euro and the dollar suggest it would be substantially overvalued after its appreciation since 2008. In contrast the CHF trades spot on the SEBEER long-term fair values against the euro and the dollar suggesting it would rather be fairly close to a more sustainable valuation. The combined approaches therefore indicate the CHF probably is somewhat overvalued although its valuation is too close to its long-term sustainable level for valuation to be a driver for the CHF. -1 POSITIONING Speculators are currently net long CHF vs USD. After the peg broke early 2015 positioning has been gyrating between small short and long positions. Lately speculators added quite largely to their net long position which renders a small positive positioning score as the trend is expected to continue and support CHF. +1 LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISKS AND GLOBAL CYCLE The SNB continues to intervene in the FX market in order to prevent EUR/CHF moving down towards parity again. Although market reactions to Brexit have been fairly muted it is a reminder of the uncertain European political landscape. In the coming 12 months there are several European events potentially increasing political risk premia including the Italian constitutional referendum (Oct 2016), French Presidential- (May 2017) and German elections (Sept 2017). All these will be a recap to nervous investors of the fragile state the euro zone is in making a case for more capital flows seeking shelter in the Swiss franc. The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. 27 Currency Strategy Swedish krona E one SEK Weighted score: -0.4 Riksbank monetary policy - which indirectly aims to keep the SEK artificially weak - has won credibility with market participants. As such, despite strong fundamentals and an attractive valuation, the market lacks a credible trigger to realise the currency’s potential. This catalyst remains connected with relative monetary policy differences between Sweden and Euro-land. SEK risks include weaker than anticipated global growth and the use of the krona as a funding currency. The outlook is neutral now, but positive going into 2017. Fundamentals ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS Sweden has outperformed most peers: the economy grew by 5-6% q/q AR by late 2015/early 2016. As the result of record-fast population growth, housing starts and residential investments are contributing strongly to GDP, as are public consumption and investments. Recently, economic growth appears to have slowed partly due to surprisingly weak exports, we expect GDP to rise by around 2.5% next year. While employment growth is very strong, unemployment is falling only very slowly as more immigrants enter the labour market. There are no signs of underlying wage pressure despite several indicators showing neutral to firm resource utilisation. In relative terms, the Swedish economy remains strong although several policy areas (e.g. housing, immigration/integration etc.) raise longer term concerns. +1 Event risk Carry Mon. policy Flows Valuation Positioning Liquidity Ec. Surprise Risk appetite -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY Having prolonged the QE program yet again in April, the Riksbank appears finally to have won credibility for its hard stance on the exchange rate. Inflation remains stubbornly low and the effect on CPIF from previous krona depreciation is fading. Despite few near-term triggers for a much stronger SEK, the Riksbank can hardly lower its guard short-term. We therefore expect a fresh round of QE (albeit modest) in December. Currently, the FX market is trading on a carry theme, so monetary policy is contributing to a very weak SEK outlook. This will change in due course with the nearest potential trigger being a potential change in the Riksbank mandate (the possible adoption of an inflation interval could be seen as hawkish). -1 FLOWS The current account surplus remains relatively high (5%/GDP) despite growth being driven by strong domestic demand. Foreign real money investors have lowered their ownership rate for Swedish government bonds fairly drastically (from 50% to 31%). Also, speculative investors have finally heeded repeated warnings from the Riksbank not to chase the currency any higher. Consequently, positioning is currently neutral/short SEK for the first time in a long while. As Swedish FX hedge ratios remain low, further SEK positive flows from domestic accounts are possible also including financial institutions. To unlock the potential for a stronger flow outlook Riksbank is the ultimate trigger when policy diverges from ECB. 0 28 Currency Strategy Swedish krona 70% POSITIONING Our speculative proxy position for SEK versus USD indicates that speculators just switched into a small short SEK position. Meanwhile our positioning analysis of speculators positioning in SEK versus EUR which is based on client flows has shown a negative SEK sentiment during summer with mostly net SEK selling. However, lately the interest has been waning and last week the sentiment was basically neutral indicating a possible shift in sentiment. However, the positioning score in this report is zero as the overall position is not excessive compared to historical levels and the recent less SEK negative trend is not large enough. 0 xe 50% d in t 30% n e 10% m ti n se ‐10% yl ke‐30% e W‐50% ‐70% SEK flows versus EUR/SEK Main risks for the krona are: 1) Inflation to remain well below target meaning Riksbank has to extend QE. 2) Adverse developments on the Swedish housing market which could trigger a foreign exodus of portfolio investments. However, we still attach a low probability to this event happening; 3) Squeeze on money market especially shortage of USD liquidity making SEK even more of a funding currency. 29 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 07 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 The lack of significant upside progress in 9.7 0 7 4 the 8 5 3 0 8 5 net 7 4 1 9 substantial 2 2 0 7 5 2makes 2 9 current 5EUR/USD 0 . 1 . 1 . 2 . 1 . 2 . 1 . 2 . 2 . 2 . 2 . 2 . 2 . 0 . 2 . 0 . 3 . 0 . 0 . . 0 . 0 . 1 3 4 5 6 Should 4 5 6 7 8 9 position 2 3 3speculative 0 1 2 1 2a 2burden. 1long 7 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 6 5 5 5 5 1 6 1 5 1 6 1 5 1 speculative 1 5 1 6 1 5 1 6 1 5 1 6 1 5 1 6 1 5 1revisited, 1 sub-1.29-area 1 5 1 5 1 1 be 1the 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2reduced. 2 2 2to2 be 2 2 have 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 will 2longs Buy high volume Sell high volume EUR/SEK reversed LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE Liquidity remains poor at times and Riksbank government bond purchases (SEK 215 bn) have worsened this liquidity premia. SEK correlations to risk appetite has changed during 2016, we think SEK should have relatively low correlation to risk appetite longer-term. 8.9 E U R speculative positions Contracts (thousands) VALUATION The trade weighted krona remains undervalued compared to our long-term fair value model (SEBEER). It appears to be roughly 5-6% undervalued in trade weighted terms based on the SEBEER-estimate. Hence valuation is not severely stretched. As SEK has continued to slide a weaker exchange rate now contributes to a pick-up in imported prices. This is important for Riksbank as it fights to reach for the 2% inflation target. Nevertheless maintaining a weak SEK is desired by the central bank as it will support competitiveness and support higher inflation. In real trade weighted terms the krona seems still cheap, which makes it complicated to argue Sweden would need an even weaker krona. +2 Buy avg volume Sell avg volume Buy low volume Sell low volume ) d ser ev er ( K ES / R U E Currency Strategy Norwegian krone The krone has been hurt by plunging oil prices, which has spurred fears of a Norwegian recession and unconventional monetary policy. Such risks have now been significantly reduced, but the krone still trades cheap relative to its longterm fair value. With the NOK still closely tied to oil prices, our $55/b average forecast for next year is supportive. Moreover, as growth momentum picks up further, Norges Bank will switch to a more neutral policy stance and relaxed attitude against the krone. In the near-term, however, Norges Bank is likely to watch the 9-handle in EUR/NOK carefully. We favour to sell EUR/NOK on rallies towards 9.40. ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS Extensive cutbacks in the oil sector has slowed growth over the past years. Fears of even more severe negative secondary effects have lingered but various sentiment indicators and economic data have recently confirmed that the low point was passed last winter. To wit, sequential growth in mainland GDP firmed in spring by rising 0.4%. The composition of growth was favourable with stronger non-oil domestic demand on back of resilient private consumption and rebounding mainland investment. However, the recovery will be modest due to still sharply falling petroleum investment and high inflation squeezing households’ spending power. We expect belowtrend growth in mainland GDP of 0.9% in 2016 and 1.8% in 2017. 0 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY Norges Bank has noted that downside risks to growth have eased although it expects the economy to remain weak in the coming period. The “certain” September cut in the bank’s June path was thus a bit surprising and signals the bank remains on guard against a too rapid and speculation-driven appreciation of the NOK. Monetary policy going forward will be a trade-off between positive economic data and stronger krone. EUR/NOK above 9.10 would give the bank room to adopt a wait-andsee approach. Hence, we expect Norges Bank to remain on hold while keeping a clear dovish bias in its rate path. A further pick-up in growth next year will render a more neutral policy and allow for EUR/NOK to trade below the 9handle. A repricing of market’s expectations has already occurred, but long-term rate prospects remain very subdued. 0 FLOWS Expansionary fiscal policy generates positive NOK flows as the government is using an increasing share of its oil revenues to cover the non-oil budget deficit. Norges Bank will carry on purchasing 900-1000m NOK per day against FX in 2016, upholding the positive NOK flow. Despite OBX being heavily energy-related, foreigners’ ownership ratio has been surprisingly stable over the past years and is expected to remain around 36-37% in coming months. As investors’ search for yield continues, Norwegian bonds should become increasingly attractive on a relative basis. Such flows have not been sufficient to have a material impact on the krone so far and we expect fast money to continue dominating flows. +1 30 Currency Strategy Norwegian krone VALUATION Lower oil price and a recoupling of NB monetary policy with other central banks have been extremely harmful to the NOK. The krone reached extreme levels of more than two standard deviations from long-term averages against both the EUR and the USD at the beginning of this year, which rarely is sustainable. Our long-term fair value model (SEBEER) also suggests that the NOK is undervalued in trade weighted terms with fair value in EUR/NOK at 8.25. However, when considering the rapid growth in labour compensation for more than two decades, the NOK depreciation has so far only neutralized part of the sharp increase in Norwegian labour costs. Basically all valuation measures indicate the NOK has reached undervalued levels. With a more stable oil price, signs that the economy starts to recover and a long-term NOK-positive flow outlook current stretch in valuation is unlikely to persist. +3 POSITIONING Our proxy for speculative positioning in NOK versus USD indicates that speculative accounts are somewhat long NOK. Current positioning is 1.0 standard deviation above the three year average as the strong USD trend is still in the calculation. The past two weeks the long NOK position has been scaled back marginally but both the level of the position and the recent change are too small to generate anything but a neutral positioning score. 0 LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE Performance of the krone remains closely tied to developments in oil prices. The correlation between NOK and oil increased substantially when oil prices plunged in late 2014 and remains high. We expect the correlation to be maintained as long as oil prices impact the outlook for growth outlook and Norges Bank. We believe that the oil market is rebalancing with crude stocks sliding as demand is healthy and supply side is contracting in 2016. We thus expect the oil price to recover estimating Brent crude to average $55/b in 2017. Given the correlation the outlook supports our positive view on the krone. However, one cannot exclude a renewed downturn in oil prices. There are signs of increased activity in the US with the number of active oil rigs having jumped by ~30% since late May. Should this trend continue the oil market will remain in surplus next year, depressing the outlook for the oil price. Such a scenario risks fuel NOK-negative speculative flows as 1) market would re-focus on rate cuts, and 2) Norges Bank would maintain a currency/growth-oriented policy. eric 31 Currency Strategy Russian rouble The correlation between the RUB and the price of oil has weakened, due to rising global risk appetite driving capital to high-yield Emerging Markets. Nevertheless, the RUB’s fortunes remain highly dependent on energy prices. With Brent set to average $50/b in H2 16 and the Russian central banks (CBR) rebuilding reserves, we see USD/RUB hovering around 64.00 for the remainder of the year. We see the risk as being evenly distributed between an unexpected strengthening and a weakening. ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS The price of oil in RUB terms is now close to the 2016 budget assumption of RUB 3,150/b. The price recovery has eased fears of a further slowdown in economic activity and reduced the pressure on the RUB exchange rate. Nevertheless, due to high inflation undermining the purchasing power of the RUB, the government will still have to cut expenditure sharply. It will delay some budget cuts by tapping into the reserve fund, but it cannot avoid the inevitable. As a result, economic recovery will be slow. Real GDP looks set to fall by 0.4% in 2016 and grow by only 1.0% in 2017. At the same time, inflation will remain elevated at 7.3% this year and 6.0% in 2017, above the 4.0% target. While the recession appears to be bottoming out, consumption has been hit hard by a fall in household real income, which will remain a drag on overall growth. 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. Due to a strong dependence of public finances on oil (roughly 50% of federal government revenue come from the hydrocarbon industry), the central bank will not let the RUB appreciate unless oil also rallies. Another reason for resisting an appreciation of the RUB is that it would hurt fledgling non-oil exports. -1 MONETARY POLICY The CBR resumed its rate-cutting cycle in June after having been on hold since August 2015. With confidence returning and inflation edging down, the CBR will cut interest rates by 50bps to 10.00% on September 16 and by another 100 bps before the end of 2016. CBR governor Elvira Nabiullina enjoys a good relationship with President Putin, who has avoided criticising the bank. The CBR has been quite hawkish, staying committed to bringing down inflation to 4% by 2017, despite pressure from lower-level politicians to loosen policy. We do not expect the CBR fully to succeed to bring down inflation to the target, which will limit the downside potential to rates. If high interest rates attract capital inflows, the CBR will respond by accumulating reserves rather than cutting rates. -1 FLOWS The current account surplus has narrowed in H1 2016 compared to the same period in 2015 due to lower exports. Yet, it will continue to generate a surplus. The pace of capital outflows has slowed, even turning into a surplus in Q2. Reserves have risen by almost 8% since January. With a strong global risk appetite, reduced political uncertainty, including talks of easing sanctions, and high yields in Russia, capital flows will be supportive for the RUB. 0 32 Currency Strategy Russian rouble VALUATION The RUB remains severely undervalued in real, standing more than 20% below its detrended average. However, the appreciation impetus from the undervaluation of the REER is currently offset by the low value of oil in RUB terms. Assuming that oil remains close to the current level around $48/barrel (±$3.0), in order to bring the price of oil in RUB to the inflation-adjusted mean since July 1994, the RUB would need to depreciate by some 10% against the USD. However, fearing an inflationary impact, we expect the CBR to keep interest rates attractive enough to avoid a selloff in the RUB. While the REER is not a reliable guide in terms of the valuation of the RUB, it suggests that the RUB is unlikely to depreciate much further, leaving the currency as an interesting carry target. +3 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 POSITIONING Speculators in the RUB have become increasingly bullish and have added to their net long RUB positions since the begging of 2016 very much in line with the recovery in oil prices. Net longs reached a 5-year high on August 30, but the jump was not large to generate a positive positioning score. 0 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 04 EVENT RISK, LIQUIDITY AND GLOBAL CYCLE The rouble is facing two key risks: 1) a renewed fall in the price of oil; and 2) increasing tensions in relations with the EU and US. 0 S peculative positions 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. The relative stability in the oil market in 2016 suggests that it has found, if not an equilibrium point, at least an equilibrium range close to $45–$50 per barrel. If Brent goes below that range US production starts to shut down, sapping supply, and vice versa if prices rise above the range. Regarding relations with the “West”, they have deteriorated to the point of a new cold war. However, the current cold war is not as tense as the one during the Soviet era. Russia is highly unlikely to increase tensions much further permanently. Intervening militarily in a Nato country, for example the Baltics, would risk much more severe sanctions than did the annexation of Crimea and involvement in eastern Ukraine. It could even include a military confrontation with Nato. The long-term cost would be too high and the benefits would be dubious. Event risk is nevertheless high, but should be followed by periods of fence building. We are currently in a calmer period in relations with the West, but an easing of sanctions is unlikely before 2H 2017. 33 Currency Strategy Chinese yuan We expect USD/CNY to end this year at 6.80. China will continue to slowdown and more strict tightening measures will be implemented in late 2016 and into 2017 to control the rising debt and property market. The slowdown will weigh on the currency. We don’t expect large depreciation on the currency because we are entering a sensitive political season heading into Q4 2017 when the top members of the communist party change every 5 years. President Xi would want to keep economic and politics as stable as possible going into this meeting to make sure he can appoint his people. That would pave the way for potential more reforms in the following 5 years. Also, President Xi won’t become a target of investigation once he leaves office in 2022. ECONOMIC FUNDAMENTALS China had a healthy growth of 6.7% in the first half led by monetary and fiscal support. However, the outlook is to decelerate to 6.6% by year end further to 6.3% in 2017. The slowdown should come from the construction and housing sector that has performed too well. Property prices in major cities like Shanghai and Beijing are rising over 30% y/y and that has reignited construction activity and commodity demand. However, now the government has started to implement austerity measures to cool down the housing market. In addition, capex from businesses should slow as Chinese companies look abroad to acquire new technologies and export excess capacity. -1 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 0 S peculative positions 04 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. MONETARY POLICY Monetary policy stance has shifted to neutral from an easing bias. Interest rates and reserve requirement ratios (last cut in March) have been stable but other forms of lending using local government bond issuances have added as monetary stimulus in late 2015 and early 2016. We expect this to slow, policy to shift to neutral and dampen economic growth into 2017. Government officials are commenting that growing by debt is the same economic model as the past that has gotten them into trouble and will slowly move away from debt driven growth. Inflation may rise temporarily in Q4 due to floods increasing food prices but that should come down in 2017 and hence, inflation risks remain low. +1 FLOWS The mass outflows have abated with a more stable currency and some capital controls. However, going forward the pressure is for outflows to restart. Generally, households want to diversify from holding 100% of their assets denominated in RMB and demand for buying foreign assets will only increase. Corporates also want to invest abroad as China’s economy slows. Corporates also want to buy foreign companies to acquire technology and move up the value chain. We think the combination of outward flows and keeping the currency stable into 2017 political shift will lead to more depletion in FX reserves. China’s central bank will continue to sell foreign assets. -1 E one 34 Currency Strategy Chinese Yuan VALUATION China’s government and IMF both stated in 2015 that CNY has reached fair value. Since then, CNY has become undervalued by almost 10%. The RMB index published by the government continues to weaken and many investors are worried that government policy is to weaken CNY on a trade weighted basis. We don’t think the government wants to weaken CNY on a long term basis and this is one step in creating two-way volatility. The CNY will again strengthen on NEER and REER basis in the next 6 months to prevent one-way bets. +1 POSITIONING This is difficult to gauge but we estimate based on long term and short term. Long term, we still think most domestics are long CNY. These positions were accumulated over 10 years post the depeg and domestic corporates still have not learned to hedge FX exposure and still need to liquidate long CNY positions. Short term, we look at how spot is trading relative to daily fixing and the band of +/- 2%. Spot is now swinging around the fixing, meaning markets are neither long nor short CNY. 0 1 25 E U R /U S D 1 .3 50 1 00 1 .3 00 75 50 1 .2 50 25 1 .2 00 1 .1 50 04 LIQUIDITY, EVENT RISK AND GLOBAL CYCLE Even CNY has succumbed to the mighty USD and the global cycle. CNY and CNH will weaken mildly on one or two Fed hikes. The risk is if US enters a regular tightening cycle. You can see the risk when the CNY and CNH spread widens. The CNY market is still controlled by a closed capital account but the “more open” CNH market shows stress on the currency and the CNY and CNH spread starts to widen in times of stress. Another risk we see is on FX policy. The central bank is not letting the currency weaken according to fundamentals for political reasons. That means pressures are rising for CNY to weaken. We think there is a risk of another one-off devaluation post the next transition in the communist party in 4Q 2017. -1 0 S peculative positions 05 06 -25 Contracts (thousands) E U R speculative positions 07 The lack of significant upside progress in EUR/USD makes the current substantial net long speculative position a burden. Should the sub-1.29-area be revisited, speculative longs will have to be reduced. 35 Currency Strategy Contacts STOCKHOLM Carl Hammer (editor) +46 8 506 231 28 [email protected] Richard Falkenhäll +46 8 506 231 33 [email protected] Mattias Bruer +46 8 506 232 94 [email protected] Per Hammarlund +46 8 506 231 77 [email protected] FRANKFURT Thomas Köbel +49 69 97 27 12 45 [email protected] OSLO Erica Blomgren +47 22 82 72 77 [email protected] SINGAPORE Sean Yokota +65 6505 0500 [email protected] Andreas Johnson +46 8 506 232 95 [email protected] Karl Steiner +46 8 506 231 04 [email protected] 36 Currency Strategy Notes This page has been left blank on purpose 37 Currency Strategy Disclaimer Important: This statement affects your rights By pressing the accept button below you accept the disclaimer. 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