Tomorrow is a big day in the Currency Wars!

michael

Casual Member
Saw this interesting article...

• Tomorrow is a big day in the currency wars (i.e. Thurs 4th April 2013)


The heads of three of the world's most important central banks are squaring up to see who can wreak most damage on the currencies in their care.

The euro, the yen, and sterling are all at the mercy of the latest monetary policy decisions from Europe, Japan and the UK.

So who will win? And what does it mean for your money?


It’s decision time for the Bank of Japan

Tomorrow, we learn the results of the latest central bank meetings in Europe, Britain and Japan. Each of these decisions has the potential to cause a fair few ripples in global markets. Let’s take each in turn, and then talk about what it means for your money.

First, we’ve got the Japanese central bank’s big meeting. This is probably the most eagerly awaited of tomorrow’s releases.

As you’ll likely know by now, Japan has been on something of a roll recently. That’s because new prime minister Shinzo Abe has effectively promised to do what it takes to kick the Japanese economy out of its multi-decade slump.

Investors in Japan have been disappointed in the past, but Abe has made some very convincing threats so far. He’s installed his own man at the Japanese central bank. He’s set a formal inflation target. And he’s warned the Bank of Japan that he’ll take away its independence if it doesn’t get its finger out.

So the markets are expecting great things from new central bank chief Haruhiko Kuroda. They expect him to pump more money into the economy, and to buy longer-term Japanese government debt.

The big risk with high expectations, of course, is that Kuroda disappoints. As David Scutt of Arab Bank tells the FT, “given near-constant chatter about the need for bold policy action to achieve their 2% inflation target, any underwhelming policy response, something they’re notorious for, will see the yen strengthen to the detriment of the Nikkei.”

The UK – it’s all about the pound

Next we have the midday announcement from the Bank of England. The thing to watch for here is whether more quantitative easing (QE) is announced or not.

The BoE has plenty of excuses to do more. Yesterday’s manufacturing data was disappointing. Meanwhile, lending to companies and consumers is falling too. The threat of a headline grabbing, if somewhat irrelevant, ‘triple-dip’ recession hangs over the economy.

However, following a brief post-Budget bounce, the pound has been on the slide again. And this is after Sir Mervyn King’s fit of the jitters a few weeks ago, when he said that he thought that sterling had fallen far enough.

I suspect that in the longer run, King would be more than happy to see the pound slide further. But there’s a question of pacing. A long, slow devaluation with gradually rising inflation is manageable, and won’t scare the horses. A run on the pound is not, and risks spreading into the gilts market.

More QE from the BoE tomorrow would almost certainly hammer the pound. That may not be a risk that policymakers want to take right now.

How to weaken the euro without annoying the Germans

European Central Bank governor Mario Draghi has a tougher job than King or Kuroda. His counterparts might be dealing with struggling economies – but at least they don’t have to worry about their currencies being torn apart.

So never mind inflation or growth – Draghi’s key goal is simply to hold the euro together. What’s the best way to do that?

The countries that are struggling, such as Italy, Spain and Greece, all need a weaker currency. The big risk for Draghi is that one of them will choose to get it by ditching the euro and going back to their former currency. So his best hope of achieving his prime directive lies with having a weaker euro.

He is unlikely to do anything as radical as actually cutting interest rates. That would irritate the Germans, and he’s got to keep them on side. There’s also a danger to allowing the euro to weaken too fast. You don’t want to give the impression that people are scared it might disintegrate after all.

So I’d expect him to talk the euro down at the press conference following the decision.
 

TheForexGuy

Forex Mentor
Excellent post michael, thanks for the heads up.

Hopefully this will kick off some market movement on some of these stale charts.
 
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