Author Topic: FX Ringgit 25 June 2010  (Read 198 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online HIDDENTopic starter

  • Administrator
  • Group3
  • Posts: 4438
  • Gender: Male
FX Ringgit 25 June 2010
« on: June 26, 2010, 02:13:41 PM »
hi,

FX ringgit news for the week ending Friday, 25th June 2010 :


June 26, 2010 : FOREX: Ringgit Expected To Remain Volatile Next Week
KUALA LUMPUR, June 26 (Bernama) -- Persistent worries about the global economy are likely to keep the ringgit volatile next week, dealers said. "The global economy is roiling the market, prompting investors to sell down on risky assets like stocks while loading up on safe haven investments like treasuries," one of them said. Lingering concerns about Greece also weighed on sentiment as cost of protecting its government debt against default hit a record high, said another dealer.

This week, the ringgit eased to 3.2510/2550 against the US dollar compared with 3.2490/2530 previously. A dealer said the greenback was boosted by US data that underpinned confidence in the economic recovery, including a surge in new home sales in March and gains in new orders for long-lasting manufactured goods excluding transportation. "We expect the US dollar to remain firm as investor optimism levels off," he said.

Against the Singapore dollar, the ringgit rose to 2.3275/3320 from 2.3423/3474 but fell against the Japanese yen to 3.6271/6320 from 3.5813/5862. It also closed lower against the pound sterling to 4.8407/8483 from 4.8313/879 but was higher against the euro to 3.9958/9017 from 4.0258/0318.
End of Article
BERNAMA



June 26, 2010 : Treasure Pulse Global Foreign Exchange Market
THE revaluation of the Chinese yuan finally arrived after the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced its shift to a flexible exchange rate system, ending the currency’s 23-month peg to the US dollar. The existing allowable trading band of +/-0.5% will be maintained to prevent excessive volatility. PBoC says a stronger yuan is in line with the nation’s financial reform towards a market-economy system, enabling flexible adjustment of relative price levels. The announcement, which came a week before the G-20 Summit, is widely seen as a move to dampen the rhetoric from US and raises China’s negotiating power during the meeting. Yuan appreciated by 0.6% against the dollar during the week, precipitating other Asian currencies to follow suit. At press time, the Bloomberg-JP Morgan Asian Dollar Index rose 0.1% for the week.

The improvement in risk appetite following the new yuan policy did not last long. Sentiments reversed at mid-week after ratings agency, S&P, warned that Spanish banks might face difficulties in 2010 and 2011 as credit losses escalate. Fitch Ratings downgraded the long-term issuer default rating of BNP Paribas by one notch to AA- from AA, fuelling concerns that sovereign debt crisis in the eurozone has now spilled over to its banking system. The ensuing market reaction witnessed EUR/USD tumbling to 1.2200-levels before recovering back to 1.2300-levels at the end of the week.

Economic data out of the US remained weak with new home sales tumbling to an all-time low of 300,000 in May from 446,000 in April while durable goods orders declined 1.1% in May, reversing the increase of 3% in April. Against an optimistic outlook two months ago, the US Federal Reserve warned that the US economy remained plagued by elevated unemployment rates and tight financial conditions following Europe’s debt crisis. The Fed said short-term borrowing rates could remain at its record low between 0% to 0.25% for an extended period. Continued uncertainties precipitated investors to flock to the safety of gold, prompting the bullion to rise to a new record high of US$1,263 an ounce.

In the UK, the emergency budget witnessed an aggressive proposal to trim expenditure by £185bil. This includes average reductions of 25% for most government departments over the next five years, while VAT sales tax would be raised to 20% next year from 17.5% currently. Fitch Ratings which endorsed UK’s fiscal austerity proposal indicated that its implementation would keep UK’s AAA sovereign rating. This prompted a rally in the pound to a six-week high against the dollar, close to 1.5000-handle.

Asia maintained its resilience with Thai exports rising at its fastest pace since July 2008 as shipments rose 42.1% in May from a year earlier. Moody’s raised Indonesia’s Ba2 credit rating outlook to “positive” from “stable” indicating that Indonesia’s domestic-driven growth is “appropriately managed by a well-tested economic framework”.

Ringgit appreciated to 3.1800-levels against the dollar but declined to 3.2400-levels towards the end of the week. As of Friday noon, USD/MYR traded at 3.2406. Bank Negara highlighted that the ringgit’s rise reflected improvements in the economy and the central bank did not expect heavy interventions in the currency market. While the yuan’s gradual appreciation and Malaysia’s economic fundamentals are expected to underpin ringgit’s trajectory in the medium term, near-term concerns emanating from uncertainties in Europe and fears of sagging recovery in the US would likely drive flows into the safety of the US dollars. We project USD/MYR to trade in a range of 3.2000 to 3.2600 next week with limited downside.
End of Article
Starbizweek



scott.yes
   


Online HIDDENTopic starter

  • Administrator
  • Group3
  • Posts: 4438
  • Gender: Male
FX Currencies Forecast Bloomberg
« Reply #1 on: June 28, 2010, 12:08:28 PM »
hi,

For folks like me fascinated with crystal-balling currencies for 2010 here's the latest predictions on currencies from Bloomberg :

27 June 2010 : Dollar's Biggest Rally Since '05 Buckles as Strategists Draw Line at $1.20 :
John Taylor who heads the world’s largest hedge fund dedicated to currencies, predicted in March that the dollar would appreciate to $1.20 per euro from about $1.35 at the time. He was proven right two months later.

The chairman of FX Concepts LLC in New York now says the greenback may be due for a respite after the trade-weighted Dollar Index gained 9.57 percent from the end of 2009, its best start to a year since 2005. Taylor is one of a growing number of traders waiting for evidence that the European Union’s almost $1 trillion bailout plan isn’t working before pushing America’s currency higher. “We are scary, scary owners of euros,” said Taylor, whose firm manages $7.5 billion. “We are keeping our fingers crossed that maybe the euro’s appreciation lasts through July and into August. But then the euro is just going to get crushed as it’s an impossible situation in Europe.”

Taylor has plenty of company. The median year-end estimate of 27 strategists and economists surveyed by Bloomberg has held at $1.20 since June 2, the longest stretch without an increase this year. At the start of January, they predicted the dollar would end 2010 at $1.45 to the euro.  The Dollar Index, which measures the currency against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, is down 3.5 percent since June 7 as concern eases that Europe’s fiscal crisis will cause a nation to default.

Status Quo

“We will see a couple weeks to a few months of status quo with not much happening,” said Peter Jacobson, managing director in Singapore at Rhicon Currency Management Ltd., which oversees $400 million. “Typically, the status quo is good for risk, and if that’s the case we should see the rally in the dollar that we saw for the first half of the year subside a bit.”

Futures traders are unwinding record bets that the dollar will rally. The number of contracts hedge funds and other large speculators hold betting on a rise in the dollar versus a fall against currencies traded at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange declined by 70 percent to 49,335 in the week ended June 22 from the peak of 163,085 on June 8, according to Washington-based Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.  The dollar traded at $1.2379 per euro today and at 89.38 yen. The greenback has weakened after strengthening to $1.1877 per euro on June 7 from $1.4321 at the end of December. Of the most-traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg, the only ones the dollar hasn’t risen against this year are those of Japan, Mexico, Canada and Singapore.

Fair Value

“The euro at $1.20 is fair value, so we’ve taken away one of the big arguments for why the euro will fall against the dollar,” said Richard Benson, who oversees $14 billion of currency funds as an executive director of Millennium Asset Management in London. “The other is that the U.S. economy will do a lot better, but it hasn’t done much better. People are worried about a double dip in the U.S.”

While Millennium has trades that would benefit from a decline in the dollar, it reduced the size of those positions “quite a lot,” Benson said in a telephone interview.

The Commerce Department in Washington said June 25 that the U.S. economy grew at a 2.7 percent annual rate in the first quarter, less than its 3 percent estimate last month, reflecting a smaller gain in consumer spending and a bigger trade gap.

Federal Reserve policy makers led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said June 23 that the labor market is “improving gradually,” while consumer spending “remains constrained” by joblessness and “tight credit.” The recovery is “likely to be moderate for a time,” the Fed said.

Growth Estimates

A successful bond sale by Spain and an agreement by EU leaders to disclose how banks perform on stress tests have tempered concern that nations will have trouble financing themselves. Spain sold 3 billion euros ($3.7 billion) of 10-year debt on June 17 to yield of 4.864 percent, below the 5.04 percent that the bonds traded at before the sale. Investors bid for 1.89 times the amount offered.

The European Central Bank raised its euro-region growth forecast for this year on June 10 to 1 percent, from a previous estimate of 0.8 percent. It will grow about 1.2 percent in 2011, the ECB predicted.

“If the data flow improves or just stabilizes, funds will shift back into higher-yield and cyclical currencies,” said John Normand, head of global-currency strategy at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London.

JPMorgan Forecasts

JPMorgan forecasts the dollar will end the year at $1.20 per euro, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It will depreciate to 92 U.S. cents versus Australia’s currency and to 95 cents against the Canadian dollar, according to JPMorgan estimates on Bloomberg.

The bank released the results of their second-quarter survey of clients on June 25 showing that companies in the U.S., Europe and Japan expect the euro will remain depressed versus the dollar for the remainder of 2010.

More than 90 percent of the 141 respondents, which have a total market capitalization of $2 trillion, say the euro will remain below $1.30 by the end of the year. The average forecast, weighted by the size of the companies, fell to $1.22, from $1.34 in the March survey.

“The period we are in now is the euro’s swan song,” said FX’s Taylor. The EU’s bailout package is making “people think things are OK and maybe all will be alright. When the reality hits us in September it will be miserable. I expect the euro to go to $1 by the end of the year,” he said.

ECB Program

This week an ECB program to flood Europe’s financial system with long-term funding to encourage lending and fight the worst economic crisis since World War II ends. The central bank lent 442 billion euros in a June 2009 auction of one-year funds at a fixed rate of 1 percent in its Long Term Refinancing Operation. The ECB is still offering loans with a three-month program.

Billionaire investor George Soros said continental European banks haven’t been “properly cleansed” after the credit crisis because they haven’t marked the value of their holdings to market prices.

“The current crisis is more a banking crisis than a fiscal one,” Soros, 79, said in remarks prepared for a speech in Berlin on June 23. “Bad assets haven’t been marked to market, but are being held to maturity. When markets started to doubt the creditworthiness of sovereign debt it was really the solvency of the banking system that was brought into question because banks were loaded with the bonds of the weaker countries and these are now selling below par.”

Heavy Lifting

At this time in both 2008 and 2009, forecasters were predicting average second-half gains of 1.4 percent for the dollar versus 46 currencies tracked by Bloomberg. This year, they see a 0.5 percent gain, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“Risk is coming back into the market and the U.S. has to do the heavy lifting with regard to economic growth,” said Axel Merk, who oversees $500 million as president and chief investment officer of Merk Investments LLC in Palo Alto, California. “In that context, the commodity currencies do well as do the European currencies.”

Canada’s dollar may appreciate to C$1 by year-end from C$1.0343 today, while Australia’s will likely rise to 89 U.S. cents, from 87.60 U.S. cents, separate surveys show.

The yen has been the biggest winner among the most-traded currencies this year, strengthening 4.1 percent against the dollar, followed by a 3.4 percent rise in the Mexican peso and 1.8 percent gain in Canada’s currency. The median estimate of strategists surveyed by Bloomberg is for the yen to weaken to 97 by year-end.

The only currency to do worse than the euro is the Danish krone, which is pegged to Europe’s common currency. It has depreciated 13.6 percent. Norway’s krone is down 1 percent, while Sweden’s krona has lost 7.2 percent.
End of Article
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-27/dollar-s-biggest-rally-since-91-buckles-as-strategists-draw-line-at-1-20.html


scott.thumb

Online HIDDENTopic starter

  • Administrator
  • Group3
  • Posts: 4438
  • Gender: Male
Strongest Yuan in Years
« Reply #2 on: June 30, 2010, 11:34:20 AM »
hi,

Yesterday the Sun newspaper carried an article with a headline "Strongst Yuan in Years" and the sub-head was "China sets currency rate at highest level since 2005 after G20 pressure."

What the article actually said was that the yuan had moved from 6.7896 per USD to 6.7890. That's 0.0006 appreciation. I'm sure the G20 folks are ecstatic. Isn't China facing increased wage demands - to stop workers topping themselves - and strikes.

Does the yuan really matter that much. It seems like it's presented by the G20 as the key to world economic growth. With European countries having austerity packages to pay for the previous stimulus packages I'd imagine that no-one is going to have much cash to buy anything - made in China, the USA, or anywhere else.

scott.thumb

 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
0 Replies
175 Views
Last post March 13, 2010, 11:24:26 AM
by scott
0 Replies
208 Views
Last post May 01, 2010, 12:17:25 PM
by scott
0 Replies
173 Views
Last post June 05, 2010, 12:26:40 PM
by scott
0 Replies
171 Views
Last post June 12, 2010, 11:19:26 AM
by scott
0 Replies
133 Views
Last post June 19, 2010, 09:57:09 AM
by scott