Category Archives: Central Bank

History : 6 September 2011 : Swiss National Bank acts to weaken strong franc

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) has set a minimum exchange rate of 1.20 francs to the euro, saying the current value of the franc is a threat to the economy.

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-14801324

“The Japanese example with yen intervention teaches us that intervention can work in the very short term but changing long-term global currency flows is near impossible – a lesson that the UK learned from George Soros,” Cooper said.

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2011/sep/06/switzerland-pegs-swiss-franc-euro

The long rumored Swiss Franc peg has arrived…

The Swiss National Bank is tired of the surging Franc, and is taking intervention to the next level.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/wow-swiss-national-bank-takes-intervention-to-a-new-level-franc-plunges-2011-9#ixzz3CjnOQLC7

Exploiting the franc peg

We already are seeing some market parallels with the early signs of the great financial crisis of 2007-08: Peaking global inflation rates, topping formations in G10/emerging market equities and tightening bank liquidity. As European banks rush to raise funds and borrow U.S. dollars, their borrowing cost on USD funding has risen to its highest since 2008. But one thing is different — the Swiss franc.

The Swiss currency is no longer rallying the way it did during market distress on Eurozone debt concerns. It all changed when the Swiss National Bank (SNB) announcement pegging its currency against the euro at the EUR/CHF rate of 1.20, aimed at preventing excessive franc acceleration against the debt-ridden euro. As credit rating agencies rushed to downgrade the sovereign debt of Southern Europe in late 2009, investors rushed their savings out of the single currency and into safe-haven francs. The exodus took the form of cash flight, property sales and bank transfers as “default” became a recurring theme in Greece, Spain, Portugal Greece, Ireland and Italy.

Consequently, the franc soared 35% and 40% against the euro and the USD respectively from 2009 to September 2011.

http://www.futuresmag.com/2012/01/01/exploiting-the-franc-peg

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Swiss National Bank’s foreign exchange reserves inched higher in August. That may change soon

The Swiss National Bank’s foreign exchange reserves inched higher in August, data showed on Friday.

The SNB held 453.799 billion Swiss francs in foreign currency at the end of August, compared with 453.353 in July, revised from an originally reported 453.391 billion, preliminary data calculated according to the standards of the International Monetary Fund showed.

The SNB capped the soaring franc in September 2011 to help stave off recession and the threat of deflation and was forced to intervene heavily in 2012 as the euro zone crisis flared, swelling its already large foreign currency reserves.

But with low EurChf we may see a big change soon 

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THINGS TO WATCH IN FRIDAY’S JOBS REPORT

The Labor Department’s initial estimate of August job growth on Friday is expected to show another solid month of hiring. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal forecast the economy added 225,000 jobs, which is roughly in between the 12-month average of 214,000 and the 3-month average of 245,000. The unemployment rate is expected to drop to 6.1% after ticking up to 6.2% in July. Beyond those headline figures, here are five things to watch on Friday.

Read the 5 things to watch here :  http://blogs.wsj.com/briefly/2014/09/04/5-things-to-watch-in-fridays-jobs-report-2/

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ECB’s latest actions will be felt around the world

In announcing a new round of extraordinary measures to support the euro-area recovery, the European Central Bank is sending three loud and unambiguous messages. Their implications extend well beyond Europe.

First, it is committed to experimenting even more with its use of unconventional monetary policy, including by taking the deposit rate even more negative and starting a program to purchase asset-backed securities.

Second, it is positioning itself for full-scale quantitative easing — but on the condition that European governments show more flexibility on fiscal policy and put into place the structural reforms needed to support healthy growth.

Third, it isn’t too worried about a multitrack world of central banking, in which its policy loosening contrasts with moves by the U.S. Federal Reserve, the other systemically important central bank, to remove monetary stimulus.

http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-09-04/what-the-ecb-s-moves-mean-for-the-world

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Webcast of the press conference 4 September 2014

Press conference following the meeting of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank on 4 September 2014 at its premises in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, starting at 2:30 p.m. CET:

  • Introductory statement by Mario Draghi, President of the ECB.
  • Question and answer session. Registered journalists pose questions to Mario Draghi, President of the ECB, and to Vítor Constâncio, Vice-President of the ECB.

https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/tvservices/webcast/html/webcast_140904.en.html

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Reminder :: Quantitative easing alone will not do the trick

Very low inflation poses a mounting threat to the economic stability of the eurozone. The rate of consumer price inflation has been below 1 per cent since October, and hence far below the European Central Bank’s (ECB) target of just below 2 per cent. This highlights the degree of weakness in the eurozone economy – and reinforces it – notwithstanding the optimism generated by a return to modest growth. And it further increases doubts over debt sustainability across the currency union: without a healthy dose of inflation, it is much harder for households, firms and governments to reduce their debt burdens.  To make things worse, in the most indebted countries, such as Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy, inflation is even lower than the eurozone average. In response, many observers argue that the ECB should employ unconventional tools like quantitative easing (QE) to boost inflation. The problem is that QE alone is unlikely to be effective without a significant change in the ECB’s approach to monetary policy. The ECB needs to manage people’s expectations about the future path of demand, income and inflation more forcefully if it is to generate a proper economic recovery across the Eurozone. 

 

See more at: http://www.cer.org.uk/insights/quantitative-easing-alone-will-not-do-trick#sthash.00rBSkSf.dpuf

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Markets will now most likely sit on their hands until Friday’s economic summit

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Jackson Hole Guide: Investors Seek Yellen Job-Market View

Here’s what to look for from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole,Wyoming, which runs Aug. 21-23.

— Yellen’s keynote: The highlight will be Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s speech Aug. 22 on labor markets at 10 a.m. New York time. She’ll probably reiterate the Fed’s view that there is plenty of room for improvement in the labor market, according to Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Plc in New York.

— In July, the Federal Open Market Committee changed the language of its policy statement to highlight “significant underutilization of labor resources” as a justification for continued easy-money policies, even though the unemployment rate has fallen faster than Fed officials had forecast. The Fed chief will probably “point to measures like the elevated number of workers that are employed part time for economic reasons as evidence” of continued slack, Maki said.

— Yellen “would like to move away from this being a market-moving policy speech and get it back to being more of an academic exercise,” said Michelle Girard, chief U.S. economist at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford,Connecticut. “I don’t think that she will use this as a tool to signal anything in terms of the Fed’s thinking, or certainly any meaningful change in the Fed’s thinking.”

— Wage focus: Tepid growth in wages is one area Yellen could choose to explore in more detail if she wants to advance the conversation, said Ethan Harris, co-head of global economics research at Bank of America Corp. in New York.

Stagnant Wages

— Average hourly earnings rose 2 percent in July from the year before, matching the mean increase over the past five years and down from 3.1 percent in the year ended December 2007, Labor Department data showed in the latest employment report. Separately, the employment cost index, a measure of labor cost changes, advanced 2 percent in June from the previous year.

— “A more careful look at wages would be a good place for her to plow some new ground,” Harris said. “They are way too weak, no sign of improvement, and if you’re going to defend why the Fed is going so slowly here, that’s your exhibit A: slow wage growth.”

— Conference participants will be mostly academics and central bankers; economists from major Wall Street banks weren’t invited this year.

— Draghi’s outlook: European Central Bank President Mario Draghi will follow Yellen with the keynote luncheon address. Investors will be seeking further insights into how weak his 18-nation economy is and whether he’s more likely to deploy Fed-style quantitative easing that the ECB has resisted.

Europe Stalls

— The euro area unexpectedly stalled in the second quarter as its three biggest economies failed to grow, adding to the region’s deflation risks. Draghi already committed this month to intensifying the unprecedented stimulus he unveiled in June if the outlook deteriorates.

— Draghi’s challenge may be compounded if Yellen remains focused on boosting the U.S. labor market, according to Alberto Gallo, head of macro credit research at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. That’s because her bias toward continued stimulus will keep the dollar weak against the euro.

— Draghi “has tried to push down the euro and has so far won little ground against the dollar,” Gallo said. “The ECB is under even more pressure to do more.”

— Structural woes: Panel discussions on labor-market research presented at the conference may reveal “a growing awareness that underutilized labor resources may be a more permanent fixture,” rather than a cyclical shift, said Eric Green, global head of foreign exchange and rates at TD Securities USA LLC in New York.

‘Hawkish’ Tone

More here : http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-08-20/jackson-hole-guide-investors-seek-yellen-job-market-view.html

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FOMC not so important this month

The Federal Open Market Committee releases minutes from its last meeting on Wednesday afternoon, but Wall Street is already downplaying the event as a sideshow in comparison to an annual symposium on monetary policy in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, two days later.

“The FOMC minutes are telling us about what happened three weeks ago, and Jackson Hole, given its precedent for signaling meaningful policy shifts, has taken on this very elevated status; it gets that extra attention even if it is just an academic conference,” said Jeff Greenberg, senior economist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank.

While investors will parse Wednesday’s minutes for clues as to when the Fed will start hiking interest rates, “the real look ahead for any hints as to monetary policy is Jackson Hole,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities.

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Secular stagnation :: Is there something seriously wrong with the economy?

Is there something seriously wrong with the economy?

It’s a scary prospect, and a concern that’s gotten louder and louder over the past year. In economic circles, it goes by the alliterative name of “secular stagnation.” And it’s a phrase that Fed watchers are likely to hear more and more in the months ahead.

Recent comments by the vice chairman of the Federal Reserve, Stanley Fischer, indicate questions within the central bank about whether the slow growth that has followed the recent recession could reflect, or at least could potentially morph into, longer-term issues within the economy. And while Fischer avoided the phrase “secular stagnation” in his Monday speech, Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota is planning to host a November symposium that directly addresses the issue of secular stagnation by name, CNBC has learned.

“I think there’s a lot of concern about how long this will last, and I think that’s certainly high on the agenda right now. At least people are entertaining that possibility now that it could drag on for longer,” said Brown University associate professor of economics Gauti Eggertsson, who authored (along with fellow Brown economist Neil Mehrotra) the landmark paper “A Model of Secular Stagnation,” which provides an in-depth explanation of how a long period of low growth could come about.

The theory of secular stagnation was first developed by Alvin Hansen, who wondered in the midst of the Great Depression whether diminishing investment opportunities in a maturing economy would stunt economic growth and permanently prevent full employment—at least in the absence of robust government intervention, which soon came in the form of the second world war.

These theories have found a new life in the aftermath of the so-called Great Recession, as the U.S. is experiencing (albeit to a much less dramatic degree) slow growth over a relatively long time period.

In November 2013, noted economist Larry Summers (who was considered, alongside current Chair Janet Yellen, a leading candidate to head the Fed) began to invoke the same phrase in arguing that the interest rate that the economy requires has fallen below zero.

The problem is that it is very difficult for nominal interest rates to fall below zero due to a constraint known as the zero lower bound. The upshot? Even with the Fed keeping short-term rates just above zero, market interest rates cannot possibly create adequate demand for loans, and thus the economy stagnates.

Without embracing the secular stagnation thesis, in Sweden on Monday, second highest-ranking Fed official Fischer gestured toward those concerns.

Noting slow growth in “labor supply, capital investment and productivity,” Fischer warned that “This may well reflect factors related to or predating the recession that are also holding down growth” and noted: “How much of this weakness on the supply side will turn out to be structural—perhaps contributing to a secular slowdown—and how much is temporary but longer than usual lasting remains a crucial and open question.”

“There was a level of concern on that point that I don’t think we generally hear,” said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx, referring to Fischer’s speech.

The stagnation debate will also be addressed by a new eBook entitled “Secular Decline,” which is due to be published on Aug. 18, and hosts contributions from Paul Krugman and Nomura’s Richard Koo, in addition to Summers, Eggertsson and Mehotra, and others.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/101914044

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