Teetering Technical Recession
Canada may be teetering on the brink of a technical recession as business investment plunged in response to slumping crude-oil prices. Last Tuesday, Statistics Canada released the April GDP report and it showed that Canadian real GDP contracted for a fourth consecutive month, with real GDP down by 0.1% in the month. Market expectations were for a 0.1% increase in April. The data is raising concerns in the economy’s ability to post growth of 1.8% in the second quarter, which is what the Bank of Canada is expecting. This is raising speculation that the BOC could cut rates as soon as its next meeting on July 15th, which would weigh heavily on the CAD.
The BOC cut rates in January as an “insurance policy” for the economic fallout in the plunge in the price of crude oil. Crude oil was under pressure last week due to the increase in drilling rig counts and the possibility of a near term deal between Iran and the USA which would put more supply into the market. As you can see from the chart, the price of oil has stabilized over the last couple of months but it is in danger of slipping below its lowest level since mid-April. If it breaches that level the next support would be around the $52 level. The BOC will be watching the chart below very closely and may be tempted to take out another insurance policy by way of a rate cut.
The CAD fell through the green trend line on the daily chart on the negative GDP news of last week. The downside stalled near the mid-April low around the 0.79 level. However, increase speculation on another BOC rate cut and continued pressure on crude could put the mid-May low of 0.7780 in play. There is plenty of Canadian data this week - Ivey Purchasing Managers index, Business Outlook Survey, Building Permits, Housing Starts, and Friday’s employment data.
The Japanese yen finished at the top of the leader board last week as the yen did what it always does in a risk off environment – it races to the top as it benefits from safe haven flows. Interestingly, the commodity currencies of Australia, Canada, and New Zealand were the worst performers, and they all under-performed for the same reasons – risk off, lower prices of key commodities, and potential monetary policy moves. Greece and the Chinese stock market selloff have pushed safe haven flows to the yen and USD. The AUD was weighed down by declines in the price of copper and iron ore; the CAD suffered due to the down draft in the price of crude oil; and the NZD continued to suffer from the ongoing decline in milk as the GlobalDairy Trade index declined for the eighth consecutive week. The commodity price and economic backdrop for all three of these countries is putting pressure on their respective central bank to make some near term policy moves.
Over the weekend China demonstrated that it is very nervous about the 30% decline in its stock market since June 12. The week before the Chinese central bank lowered its key one-year lending and deposit rates and cut reserve requirements. These moves failed to arrest the fall in the stock market so on Friday more measures were announced by various group – 25 mutual funds companies stated that they would actively buy stocks and hold them for at least a year, 21 brokerage firms said they would invest 15% of their net assets (about $20 bln) in the ETFs of high capitalization stocks, and finally no new IPOs were being issued for the time being. These moves reek of desperation. The other big news over the weekend is that Greece voted “no” in their referendum. What this means precisely is unknown and it will probably play out over the following week, but we’ll go into further detail below.
Greece: The Unknown Abyss
In a previous blog post "More Cowbell?", we talked about possibly scenarios that might play out with a “no” vote. Well, we’re here, and frankly speaking, absolutely nobody knows what’s going to happen in the near- and long-term. However, everyone does agree that something must happen very quickly. Allianz’s Mohamed El-Erian offered a brief preview of what will happen next as a function of three main things:
Whether Greece and its creditors can work together to reconcile what were two very different interpretations in the run-up to today as to what a “no” outcome means, and do so very quickly and effectively;
Whether already horrid conditions on the ground, including the high likelihood of further delays in re-opening the banks and significant difficulties getting fresh money into ATMs, provide enough time for the politicians to get their act together; and
Whether the ECB rolls out new measures to contain contagion.
The fallout from the “no” vote has already begun as the embattled Greek Finance Minister, Yanis Varoufakis resigned. In a blog post, Varoufakis stated, “"I was made aware of a certain preference by some Eurogroup participants, and assorted 'partners', for my ... 'absence' from its meetings; an idea that the Prime Minister judged to be potentially helpful to him in reaching an agreement. For this reason, I am leaving the Ministry of Finance today." He continued, "I shall wear the creditors' loathing with pride."
Speaking of creditors, no discussion on Greek debt is complete without identifying who is owed. Currently, Greece’s public debt stands at €323 billion, which is nearly 175% of the country’s GDP. You don’t need us to tell you that this is completely unsustainable.
There are simply too many unknowns to get into a deep analysis of what might happen in the coming days and months. As we said earlier, the process must start very quickly and openly so that the markets find some stability. In addition, the last thing we want to do is misguide you as you make decisions on your personal or corporate exposure to FX, particularly the EUR. That said, we love an informed customer, so please call us at 604-685-1016, or email us at info@vbce.ca. We would be more than happy to give you up-to-the-minute information on what’s going on in the markets.
The FX Roundup
We did not see this coming. I’m not referring to the “ohi” (otherwise known as “no”) vote delivered by the Greek people (for you students of Modern Greek “ohi” is pronounced “o-hee” with a guttural “hee”). I am referring to the mandate delivered; a clear margin of victory for those rejecting the proposed austerity measures. While the market waxes and wanes some minor details need to be worked out, such as “Is the referendum binding?”, and “If so, how?” Maybe this whole matter needs to be kicked upstairs. As Axel Schaefer, a deputy head of the Social Democrats in Germany suggested: “EU leaders must get together immediately, even on Monday. The situation is too serious to leave to finance ministers”. This quote is so funny on so many levels we don’t even know where to start. We will say that we're calmed by the fact that it appears that someone important in Europe will be taking a look at this problem in the next 24 hours.
We will be bombarded with lots of news and commentary from all corners of Europe over the next few days so we think it’s better to keep our own powder dry with respect to addressing where we go from here. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras tweeted out “Today's referendum doesn't have winners or losers. It is a great victory, in and of itself…. The mandate you've given me does not call for a break with Europe, but rather gives me greater negotiating strength.” We will see about that in 6 months if after rejecting the bailout terms Greece teeters on the brink of total collapse before capitulating to something far more draconian than the deal on the table today.
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