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Thursday, 30 April, 2009 Credit spreads tighten, yen-crosses rally on improved market sentiment Credit spreads narrow marginally on improving investor confidence. Credit spreads narrowed marginally this week on increased market optimism that the global recession is nearing it trough. US Q1 GDP contracted by a higher than expected 6.1%qoq annualized, but surprisingly robust consumer spending and a record drop in inventories were widely seen as pointing to a improved growth outlook in the coming months. Separately, Japan’s industrial output rose in March for the first time in six months, South Korea’s output recorded the third monthly consecutive increase while Eurozone economic sentiment improved in April for the first time since May 2007. FOMC’s acknowledgement in the April statement that “the pace of economic contraction appears to be somewhat slower”, also helped lift market sentiment. A bulk of US Q1 earnings results which came in less-weak-than expected, added to improved market sentiment. Long-dated maturities underperform on lingering supply. Bond supply-related concerns- in view of the US government’s need to fund massive bailout-out packagescontinue to keep long-dated US Treasury securities under pressure. The bond market this week had to digest a new $101bn flow of bond issuance in 2-yr, 5-yr and 7-yr notes, just a part of the enormous pending $2 trillion total worth of government debt issuance expected this year. JPY-crosses bounce on increased risk appetite. Following the conclusion of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, the FOMC decided unanimously to hold the Fed Funds target rate stable within 0.0-0.25%, as expected. In the accompanying statement, the FOMC said that the economic outlook has improved modestly since the March meeting and, though the economy continued to shrink, the pace of contraction appears to be somewhat slower. Coming on the heels of a recent bulk of less direthan-expected US macro data and Q1 corporate earnings results, the FOMC statement helped market participants look though swine-flu related concerns that were prevailing in the early part of this week. Improved market sentiment saw JPY-crosses recovering from recent losses. INDEX Credit .............................................................. ................... 2 Foreign Exchange ........................ ............... 3 Bonds ..................................................... ............................4 GLOBAL RISK MONITOR Credit spreads narrow marginally on improving investor confidence Meanwhile, the cost of protecting many European bank bonds moved slightly lower over the last few sessions on somewhat eased concerns about the state of the global financial sector. Indicatively, Deutsche Bank’s 5-yr CDS stood at around 146bps late this week, some 5bps narrowed compared to levels seen early last week, following a larger-than-expected Q1 net profit. The Fed’s Treasury debt purchase plan and other US liquidityboosting measures helped the 3-month US Libor-Overnight Indexed Swap spread remain in a downward trend for the sixth week in a row. The corresponding spread narrowed to 83.25 on Wednesday, the lowest level since September 9, 2008, just ahead of Lehman Brothers’ collapse. The 3-month EUR Libor-EONIA closed at 65.02bp, not far from year-to-day lows of 56.2vps recorded a few sessions ago with the 3-month EUR Libor plunging to fresh record lows of 1.371%. 250 150 100 50 Jan-09 Apr-09 Oct-08 Oct-08 Apr-09 Jul-08 Jul-08 Jan-09 Apr-08 Apr-08 Jan-08 Oct-07 Jul-07 Apr-07 Jan-07 Oct-06 Jul-06 Apr-06 Jan-06 US 3M Libor - OIS (in bps) 400 300 200 100 Jan-08 Oct-07 Jul-07 Apr-07 Jan-07 Oct-06 Jul-06 0 Risk-Metrics Credit 30-Apr-09 1Wk Net Chg high (y-t-d ) iTraxx Europe 145 iTraxx Crossover 823 Money (LIBOR - OIS in bps) 01-Jan-09 -9 209 177 -30 1150 1024 30-Apr-09 1Wk Ago high (y-t-d ) 01-Jan-09 USD 82 89 123 122 EUR 64 60 114 110 104 107 165 Swap spreads (gvnt bond yield - swap rate) in bps 162 GBP 30-Apr-09 1Wk Ago high (y-t-d ) 01-Jan-09 USD 10yr -8 -14 -11 -35 USD 2yr -56 -64 -52 -80 EUR 10yr -26 -27 -11 -79 EUR 2yr -46 -50 -48 -100 01-Jan-09 Equity markets 30-Apr-09 1Wk Chg high (y-t-d ) VIX 35 -2 57 39 FX 30-Apr-09 1Wk Chg high (y-t-d) 01-Jan-09 EUR/CHF 1.51 0.20 1.54 1.49 USD/CHF 1.14 0.92 1.19 1.06 1Wk Ago high (y-t-d) 30-Apr-09 3-mth implied Vol. 14 13 23 (EUR/USD) 3-mth implied Vol. 14 14 21 (USD/JPY) Emerging Markets 29-Apr-09 1Wk Net Chg high (y-t-d) EMBI+ (spread in bp 537 -21 698 iTraxx Europe Index (Investment grade credits ) 200 iTraxx Crossover (Junk - rated) Apr-06 In the European credit derivates market, the iTraxx Crossover index (composed of 45 mostly ‘junk’-rated bonds) eased to yearto-date lows of 815bps on Thursday, some 40bps narrower compared to levels a week earlier. Similarly, the ITraxx Europe index fell to 140bps on Thursday, the lowest level since midNovember, after revisiting levels near 155bps a few sessions ago. Elsewhere, the US main investment-grade credit default swap index CDX closed to a nearly three-month low of 205bps on Wednesday compared to levels slightly above 220bps recorded last week. Elsewhere, the VIX index dropped to a fresh year-to-date low of 38.08 on Wednesday after rising temporarily to 40bps early last week. 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 Jan-06 Credit spreads narrowed marginally this week on increased market optimism that the global recession is nearing it trough. US Q1 GDP contracted by a higher than expected 6.1%qoq annualized, but surprisingly robust consumer spending and a record drop in inventories were widely seen as pointing to a improved growth outlook in the coming months. Separately, Japan’s industrial output rose in March for the first time in six months, South Korea’s output recorded the third monthly consecutive increase while Eurozone economic sentiment improved in April for the first time since May 2007. FOMC’s acknowledgement in the April statement that “the pace of economic contraction appears to be somewhat slower”, also helped lift market sentiment. A bulk of US Q1 earnings results which came in less-weak-than expected, added to improved market sentiment. 01-Jan-09 23 18 01-Jan-09 665 Selective 5-year Credit Default Swap Spreads Apr-09 Jan-09 Oct-08 Jul-08 Apr-08 Jan-08 Oct-07 Jul-07 Apr-07 Jan-07 Oct-06 Jul-06 Apr-06 Jan-06 0 US & European fin 30-Apr-09 Citigroup (US$) 589 1Wk Ago high (y-t-d ) low (y-t-d ) 595 666 169 Merrill Lynch (US$) 453 398 562 114 Morgan Stanley (US$ 373 367 446 312 Credit Suisse (EUR) 164 166 263 135 Deutsche Bank (EUR UBS (EUR) 145 189 145 194 167 362 95 189 2 GOVERNMENT BONDS Long-dated maturities underperform on lingering supply concerns Bunds outperformed US Treasuries this week with the corresponding 10-yr yield spread hovering around -7.5bps on Thursday vs. levels close to -20bps a week earlier, following the FOMC´s less negative-than-expected economic assessment earlier this week. Expectations that the ECB might follow suit in launching quantitative easing measures at the May meeting, also had an impact. Bunds also outperformed UK gilts with the corresponding spread widening to two-month highs near 38.5bps from levels close to 29.5bps a week earlier as market participants continue to digest the UK government’s recent announcement of a record GBP 220bn of gilts issuance in the 2009/10 fiscal year. Elsewhere, the 10yr GGB/Bund yield spread widened close to 218bps on Thursday from levels around 210bps a week earlier, with Finance Minister Papathanassiou announcing that Greece will borrow a total of EUR 50bn ($65 billion) this year, more than a previous target of EUR 43.7bn.. 7.5 10YR Government Bond Yields 6.5 5.5 2/10 yield spreads 220 US GERMANY 120 20 350 Jan-09 Jan-08 Jan-07 Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 -80 10YR yield spread vs Germany (in bps) 300 250 200 Italy 150 Greece 100 50 Jan-09 Jan-08 Jan-07 Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 0 Jan-01 In Eurozone, the 2/10-year Bund yield curve undertook some bullish steepening this week with the short-end outperforming on expectations of some further ECB rate easing ahead. Comments by ECB member Nowotny that euro zone rates will stay low for some time, also favored taking the yield on the 2yr Swatch to one-month lows near 1.315bps at some point this week vs. levels close to 1.46bps just a few sessions ago. The corresponding spread was trading close to 185.0bps at the time of writing vs. levels around 175bps a week earlier. Meanwhile, supply concerns linger. Eurozone sovereign issuers have issued some €250bn year-to-date in government paper and markets expect full-year supply to reach €800bn in 2009. This compares to €640bn last year and €550bn in 2007. 320 Jan-00 Bond supply-related concerns- in view of the US government’s need to fund massive bailout-out packages- continue to keep long-dated US Treasury securities under pressure. The bond market this week had to digest a new $101bn flow of bond issuance in 2-yr, 5-yr and 7-yr notes, just a part of the enormous pending $2 trillion total worth of government debt issuance expected this year. With long-dated Treasuries underperforming on lingering worries over burgeoning supply, the US 2/10-yr bond yield differential retained its steepening bias this week, with the spread trading close to 218bps at the time of writing on Thursday, its widest since late November, vs. levels near 198bps a week earlier. The yield on the 10-yr US benchmark hit five-month highs of 3.13% on Thursday compared to levels near 2.90% early last week, giving back all of its gains recorded in the aftermath of the March 18 FOMC, where the US central bank announcement its plan to purchase up to $300bn in longer-term Treasury securities. In fact, the sharp increase in the 10-yr US Treasury yield raises questions about the effectiveness of the Fed’s quantitative easing policy at a time when supply concerns linger. The US Treasury announced that it will auction a total of $71bn in 3-, 10- and 30-yr securities next week while the Fed will be active twice purchasing US Treasuries with maturities from March 2011 though February 2019. Government Bonds Yields & Swap Rates Bund 2yr yield 5yr yield 10yr yield 30-Apr-09 1.35 2.36 3.18 1Wk Ago 1.45 2.44 3.22 1-Jan-09 1.76 2.32 2.95 Slope (2/10yr spread in bps) 2yr swap spread (bps) 5yr swap spread (bps) 182 -46 -34 178 -50 -37 120 -100 -93 10yr swap spread (bps) -26 -27 -79 US Treasuries 2yr yield 5yr yield 10yr yield Slope (2/10yr spread in bps) 2yr swap spread (bps) 5yr swap spread (bps) 0.93 2.03 3.12 219 -56 -53 0.92 1.88 2.92 200 -64 -59 0.76 1.55 2.21 145 -72 -56 10yr swap spread (bps) -8 -14 -35 GGB (Greece) 2yr yield 5yr yield 10yr yield Slope (2/10yr spread in bps) 2yr swap spread (bps) 5yr swap spread (bps) 2.52 4.53 5.33 281 70 184 2.66 4.65 5.33 267 71 184 4.16 4.96 5.23 107 140 171 10yr swap spread (bps) 189 184 149 Periphery spreads 10yr Italy vs. Germany 5yr Italy vs. Germany 10yr Greece vs. Germany 110 81 215 109 80 211 143 132 228 5yr Greece vs. Germany 217 221 264 30-Apr-09 Market implied (endH1, 2009) 0.125 1.25 0.10 0.50 0.25 0.125 0.75 0.10 0.50 0.25 Central Bank Monitor 4.5 3.5 US Germany 2.5 Sep-08 Jan-08 May-07 Sep-06 Jan-06 May-05 Sep-04 Jan-04 May-03 Sep-02 Jan-02 May-01 Sep-00 Jan-00 1.5 FED ECB BoJ BoE SNB EFG Eurobank (end-H1, 2009) 0.125 1.00 0.10 0.50 0.25 3 CURRENCIES JPY-crosses bounce on increased risk appetite Spot as of April.30, 2009 GMT 14:00 Direction (1-week view) 1.3225 98.41 130.11 0.7294 0.5659 1.1943 0.8981 10.6513 8.7180 1.5086 Ù Ù Ù Ü Ù Ü Ù Ü Ù Ù EUR/USD USD/JPY EUR/JPY AUD/USD NZD/USD USD/CAD EUR/GBP EUR/SEK** EUR/NOK** EUR/CHF Consens. Consens. 1-mth* 3-mth* 1.3180 98.0 129.4 0.68 N/A 1.250 0.923 10.62 9.00 1.520 1.3000 99.3 129.9 0.67 0.53 1.270 0.907 10.43 8.90 1.529 * Reuters March 2009 FX Poll **Survey for SEK, NOK conducted in February 2009 1.7 1.6 1.5 1.4 1.3 EUR/USD Rate Jan-09 Feb-09 Mar-09 Apr-09 Feb-09 Mar-09 Apr-09 Dec-08 Jan-09 Dec-08 Oct-08 Nov-08 Sep-08 Jul-08 Aug-08 Nov-08 120 Jun-08 Apr-08 May-08 Mar-08 1.2 1.1 Jan-08 USD/JPY Rate 110 100 90 Oct-08 Sep-08 Aug-08 Jul-08 Jun-08 May-08 Apr-08 Mar-08 80 Feb-08 After coming under renewed pressure on dire UK 2009 Budget news, the GBP gained some composure this week assisted by the improved market sentiment and some tentative signs of stabilization in the domestic economic activity (i.e April’s Land Registry house prices, CBI Distributive Trades survey). Although a lot of bad UK news appears to be already in the prices, GBP downside risks remain. UK fundamentals still look bleak with the IMF expecting UK growth to shrink in both 2009 and 2010 (-4.1% and -0.4% respectively) and Managing Director Strauss-Hahn suggesting that Chancellor Darling’s forecast for a recovery towards the end of this year seems too optimistic. Heightened worries over the country’s dire public finances after Mr. Darling upped his forecast last week for government borrowing to a record GBP 175bn in fiscal year 2009/2010 (12.4% of GDP), add to GBP-negatives especially in view of a possible downgrade of UK’s sovereign credit rating if fiscal deficits were to rise beyond the government’s central projection. UK 5-yr sovereign CDS spread resumed its uptrend climbing above 100 this week after easing near 85bps earlier this month ahead of the presentation of the 2009 Budget statement and the announcement of a much higher than expected sovereign bond issuance program The outbreak of swine flu – which bodes well for Swiss pharmaceutical companies’ outlook - and the increased likelihood that Switzerland and the US will reach an agreement on tax evasion, saw the EUR/CHF declining to 1.5015 this week, the lowest level since the SNB intervention on March 12. With the pair approaching the psychologically important 1.5000 threshold, risks of a new SNB intervention are certainly on the rise with SNB Vice President Hildebrand warning just a few sessions ago that the CB will continue to pursue intervention for as long as the risk of deflation remains. In this respect, the release of Switzerland’s April CPI data next week (May 7) will be closely watched after the March headline CPI fell into negative territory for the first time in over 50 years. Feb-08 Coming on the heels of a recent bulk of less dire-thanexpected US macro data and Q1 corporate earnings results, Paraskevi Petropoulou the FOMC statement helped market participants look though G10 Markets Analyst swine-flu related concerns that were prevailing in the early part of this week. Improved market sentiment saw JPY-crosses [email protected] recovering from recent losses with the EUR/JPY bouncing close to the 131.00 level on Thursday after plunging to seven-week lows near 124.30 earlier this week. Positioning re-adjustments ahead of Phoka a long local holiday in Japan also had some impact. Galatia The EUR’s gains against the Japanese currency spread to the Emerging Markets Analyst EUR/USD which advanced to three-week highs of 1.3380 at [email protected] the same day, recovering from multi-session lows close to 1.2950 seen just two sessions ago. With market participants taking some comfort from the recently tentative signs of stabilization in economic activity from both side of the Atlantic, the EUR/USD is likely to enjoy some near-term support. However, with the market eagerly awaiting the official results of the US stress tests and the outcome of the forthcoming ECB meeting on May 7 - especially as various board members have lately expressed differing opinions on the future course of monetary policy- it is questionable whether the pair’s latest up move can extend much further (the pair was trading close to 1.3310/12 at the time of writing). Technically, a sustainable break above the 1.3380/13410 resistance zone could shift market’s focus back towards 1.3580 (April 6 high) ahead of the post-FOMC high of 1.3740 recorded on March 19. On the flip side, a sustained move below 1.2960 recent lows (April 28) could provide momentum from further weakness towards 1.2880 or even lower levels especially if the US stress tests deliver negative surprises. (GBP 200bn in FY 2009/10). Moody’s reported early this week that the UK’s triple-A rating is assured. However, the rating agency made clear that it will continue to scrutinize closely the UK finances. Against this background, there is little to suggest that the GBP/USD is poised for a more sustained upward move (e.g. say levels past 1.5300 from ca 1.4820/25 at the time of writing). Jan-08 Following the conclusion of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, the FOMC decided unanimously to hold the Fed Funds target rate stable within 0.0-0.25%, as expected. In the Platon Monokroussos accompanying statement, the FOMC said that the economic Head ofhas Financial Markets outlook improved modestly since the March meeting and, Research though the economy continued to shrink, the pace of [email protected] contraction appears to be somewhat slower. Moreover, the FOMC acknowledged that inflation could be too low for some time and reiterated its determination to support domestic economic activity. 4 Research Team: Gikas Hardouvelis, Chief Economist and Director of Research Platon Monokroussos, Head of Financial Markets Research Paraskevi Petropoulou, Economist Galatia Phoka, Economist Sales Team: Fokion Karavias, Treasurer Nikos Laios, Danai Manoussaki, Kostas Karanastasis EFG Eurobank Ergasias, 8 Othonos Str,GR 105 57, Athens,Tel:(30210) 3718 906, 3718 999, Fax:(30210) 3337 190, Reuters Page: EMBA,Internet Address: http://www.eurobank.gr Disclaimer: This report has been issued by EFG Eurobank – Ergasias S.A and may not be reproduced or publicized in any manner. The information contained and the opinions expressed herein are for informative purposes only and they do not constitute a solicitation to buy or sell any securities or effect any other investment. EFG Eurobank – Ergasias S.A., as well as its directors, officers and employees may perform for their own account, for clients or third party persons, investments concurrent or opposed to the opinions expressed in the report. This report is based on information obtained from sources believed to be reliable and all due diligence has been taken for its process. However, the data have not been verified by EFG Eurobank – Ergasias S.A. and no warranty expressed or implicit is made as to their accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. All opinions and estimates are valid as of the date of the report and remain subject to change without notice. Investment decisions must be made upon investor’s individual judgement and based on own information and evaluation of undertaken risk. The investments mentioned or suggested in the report may not be suitable for certain investors depending on their investment objectives and financial condition. The aforesaid brief statements do not describe comprehensively the risks and other significant aspects relating to an investment choice. EFG Eurobank – Ergasias S.A., as well as its directors, officers and employees accept no liability for any loss or damage, direct or indirect, that may occur from the use of this report. 5