QE2 Has Passed And Now The European Debt Crisis Will Take Center Stage

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杂谈 |
QE2已经尘埃落定,现在欧洲债务危机将走入舞台中央成为关注中心
文章分析了欧洲的几个国家特别是PIIGS国家的债务危机将重新成为关注中心,特别是德国总理默克尔表明债务投资者将为债务违约国家买单以后,这些国家的国债利差快速上升。除了希腊以外,爱尔兰和葡萄牙的问题最严重。所以欧元在接下来的日子里不会风光了,不是因为美元有多好,而是因为在投资者眼中欧元更差。
QE2 Has Passed And Now The European Debt Crisis Will Take Center Stage
Over the past month or so, world`s focus,
currency markets in particular, has been centered mainly on the
U.S. over QE2, the November elections, and the Job`s Report. As
such, there have been some interesting headlines coming out of
Europe that went quietly under the radar as Wall Street became
infatuated with their own bullish sentiment.
Now, with QE2 and mid-term election pretty much behind us,
guess where the market’s attention will shift to
next?
The euro, which has been
strengthening across the board for a while, was noticeably weaker
last week considering the bullish sentiment, which really bolsters
the European currency during ebullient US and world market breakout
moves to the upside.
Trichet’s Telegraph
There were also telltale clues from the press conference of
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet last Thursday after ECB’s
decision to leave interest rates unchanged. The press conference
was filled with numerous questions regarding the record high Irish
bond spread, and the ever widening bond spread of the other highly
indebted EU members--Greece, Spain and Portugal.
That basically telegraphed the European debt crisis will
start to take center stage once again.
Spread at Euro Life Time
High
Sure enough, on Monday, the
Portuguese and Irish government bond spread hit their highest in
the euro's lifetime with Irish 10-year bond and the German Bund
widened to 557 basis points while the Portuguese 10-year versus the
Bund expanded to 450 bps. (see Bond Yield Chart)
http://s6/middle/69e715d2g949f5a7895b5&690Has
In fact, the
bond interest rate of Ireland, Portugal and Spain, have been rising
ever since German Chancellor Angela Merkel said any future EU
bailouts is expected to come with new rules requiring bondholders
to absorb some losses, which was further elaborated by German
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble in a an interview with Der
Spiegel.
Ireland
& Portugal - The New Center of
Crisis
Meanwhile, Greek bond had a
little rally after the election poll, but that does not alter its
ominous overall debt picture. Nevertheless, Greece is pretty much
old news, and now it’s Ireland's and Portugal's turn to take a
beating from the widespread investors skepticism.
Market players expect Portugal to issue up to 1.25 billion
euros of five and ten-year bonds this week, while Ireland says it
has sufficient cash until mid-2011 (such reassurance to bond
buyers) and plans to resume bond auctions in January.
But with ECB seemingly the
only major buyer of European bonds in recent weeks, and at such
high yield levels, investors pretty much bet on both countries will
eventually join Greece for a bailout by the EU and International
Monetary Fund (IMF).
Head of the Debt Class
Of course, fresh deficit figures from Eurostat last month
only add to the pessimism. According to Eurostat, Ireland’s budget
deficit was the highest among EU members at 14.4 percent of GDP
last year, ahead of Spain at 11.1 percent and Portugal at 9.3
percent. (By the way, the UK came in second to Ireland with a
deficit of 11.4 percent of GDP.)
Debt Projection – Bad
The more eye-popping news is that Irish deficit is set to
rise to an unprecedented 32 percent this year—a modern European
record-- due to the one-off costs associated with the bank
bailout.
The situation seems so dire
that in an article in the Irish Times, the "Dr. Doom" or
Ireland--University College Dublin economics Professor Morgan
Kelly--concluded that
"We [Ireland] are no longer a sovereign nation in any
meaningful sense of that term. From here on, for better or worse,
we can only rely on the kindness of strangers."
The debt projection is even more depressing for Portugal
and other EU peripheries (See Debt Projectio Chart), whereas the UK
debt outlook is not that rosy either.
http://s1/middle/69e715d2g949f642f17c0&690Has
Growth
Forecast - Worse
While the US is depressed over its 9.6% unemployment rate,
just imagine Spain`s 20.5% unemployment rate, not to mention the
slower growth prospects (see Growth Forecast Chart) due to the
implementation of numerous Austerity programs throughout European
Union member states.
http://s15/middle/69e715d2g949f65db5b0e&690Has
Something Bullish About The
Dollar
In short, analysts may be
inclined to be bearish on the US dollar due to Mr. Bernanke`s QE2
campaign. However, the European Union and namely the Euro currency
may be much worse off than the US dollar, considering the US can
actually still finance its debt at much lower rates right
now.
http://s4/middle/69e715d2g949f67838953&690Has
Furthermore, the
US only has ONE country to manage, whereas the European Union has
27 member states with 16 utilizing the Euro as a single currency,
with the high powered Germany at one end of the fiscally
responsible spectrum, and lowly Greece and Ireland at the other
end. The GDP comparison chart here also bears a similar
message.
Euro To
Retrace
After the initial reaction
regarding QE2 where the euro approached 1.43 on the Euro/Dollar
currency cross, it is now hovering just above 1.38. It seems very
likely that euro could break through the 1.38 level this or next
week, and head much lower to around 1.35 over the next month on
European debt concerns, which will be back on the front burner as
markets focus away from the US and back on Europe.
http://s6/middle/69e715d2g949f6a45bdd5&690Has
The comparison
is not a favorable one from a currency evaluation standpoint. What
you have is a contest where you are trying to find the proverbial
dog with the least flees on it, and at these levels, I am not sure
the euro is the winner in this currency contest.
Remember, just this summer the euro was trading at 1.18
against the dollar, it has come a long way in a short time, and is
probably due for a correction lower to the 1.30-1.35 range over the
next 6 months. (See Euro Technical Chart)