By Joseph Ciolli - Aug 8, 2012 12:04 AM GMT+0400
The euro rose to a more than three- week high versus the yen amid speculation that theEuropean Central Bank is taking appropriate measures to quell the region’s debt crisis.
The shared currency gained versus most of its 16 major counterparts as a report showed Italy’s economy shrank less than economists predicted. Euro gains were supported as the European Union said it had received no requests for the region’s rescue fund to buy government bonds. Norway’s krone climbed after manufacturing increased.
“One of the biggest positions out there in the foreign- exchange space has been short euros,” MacNeil Curry, head of foreign-exchange and interest-rates technical strategy in New York at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in a television interview on “Lunch Money” with Sara Eisen and Stephanie Ruhle. “That is starting to come into question as price action trades back to the topside and people are forced to square back some of their positions.” A short position is a bet an asset will decline.
The euro rose 0.4 percent to 97.43 yen at 3:56 p.m. New York time after climbing to 97.82 yen, the strongest level since July 12. The yen fell 0.5 percent to 78.61 per dollar. The 17- nation currency was little changed at $1.2397.
The shared currency gained 0.3 percent in the past week versus nine developed-nation counterparts tracked by the Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The yen led decliners, dropping 1.6 percent, while the greenback fell 0.8 percent.
Draghi’s Plan
ECB President Mario Draghi outlined a plan last week under which the ECB may buy debt of struggling euro-bloc countries in tandem with the region’s bailout fund, while saying the details still need to be worked out over the coming weeks.
Germany is “not worried” by Draghi’s Aug. 2 statement on possible bond purchases, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s deputy spokesman Georg Streiter said in Berlin yesterday.
“The fact that the German spokesperson made an official statement for the first time about the country’s backing of ECB bond purchases is supporting the euro,” said Ken Takahashi, assistant vice president of global markets at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank Ltd. in New York. “The market is reassessing the ECB’s decision and taking a more positive view on it.”
Krone, Pound
Norway’s manufacturing production gained 0.8 percent in June from May, when it rose a revised 0.6 percent, the Oslo- based statistics agency said in a statement today. The median prediction of three economists in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 0.4 percent gain.
The Norwegian krone climbed for a third day against the dollar, rising 0.6 percent to 5.9250. The currency was 0.4 percent stronger against the euro at 7.3470.
Britain’s pound strengthened after a government report showed industrial output fell less in June than economists predicted, suggesting the recession was less pronounced in the second quarter than previously reported. Sterling rose 0.2 percent to $1.5632 and increased 0.2 percent to 79.37 pence per euro.
Swiss Franc
The Swiss franc rose earlier against the dollar and was little changed against the euro after Switzerland’s central bank said foreign-currency reserves surged to a record in July amid the defense of the currency’s ceiling.
The franc was little changed at 96.82 centimes per dollar and was at 1.20140 per euro, from 1.20150 yesterday.
Switzerland’s cash pile swelled 11.3 percent in the month to 406.5 billion Swiss francs, theSwiss National Bank (SNBN) said on its website today. That pushed holdings to a record 71 percent of GDP, according to the government’s forecast for 2012.
Italian gross domestic product declined 0.7 percent in the second quarter, Istat, the Rome-based national statistics institute, said in a preliminary report today. The median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of economists was for a 0.8 percent decline. GDP fell 2.5 percent from a year earlier.
The euro held gains even after Germany’s Economy Ministry in Berlin said factory ordersdropped 1.7 percent from May, when they rose 0.7 percent. Economists projected a 0.8 percent decline.
‘Headed Higher’
“In the very short term, the euro is headed higher,” Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in New York, said in a radio interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Ken Prewitt and Tom Keene. “I’m thinking we get a little pop up in the euro now and sell off next month.”
The euro’s risk-adjusted loss of 0.46 percent against the dollar this year was the largest among major currencies, the Bloomberg Riskless Ranking showed. The Swiss franc was the fifth-best performer, rising 0.35 percent.
The risk-adjusted return, which isn’t annualized, is calculated by dividing total return by volatility, or the degree of daily price variation, giving a measure of income per unit of risk. A higher volatility means the price of an asset can swing dramatically in a short period, increasing the potential for unexpected losses.
Australia’s dollar rose to the strongest since March against the U.S. currency after the Reserve Bank said current policy settings were “appropriate.” RBA Governor Glenn Stevens and his board said in a statement the nation’s growth was close to trend.
Corrective Pullback
The so-called Aussie declined 0.2 percent to $1.0553 after rising to $1.0604, the strongest level since March 20.
A corrective pullback in the currency is likely at these levels, as the area from $1.0639 to $1.0695 includes its mid- March peak versus the greenback, Niall O’Connor, a New York- based technical analyst at JPMorgan, wrote in a note to clients today.
If the Aussie depreciates to the $1.0400 to $1.4035 area, then down to $1.0345, its short-term “bullish spin” would diminish, according to O’Connor.
South Africa’s rand strengthened to its highest level in more than a month. The currency gained as much as 0.6 percent to 8.1189 per dollar, the strongest since July 5, before paring back to 8.1607.
Implied volatility on three-month options for Group-of- Seven currencies fell as low as 8.53, the lowest level since July 20, according to the JPMorgan G7 Volatility Index. It reached 8.32 percent on July 20 and rose to 9.83 percent on July 24. The five-year average is 12.4 percent.
Lower volatility makes investments in currencies of nations with higher benchmark interest rates more attractive because the risk in such trades is that market moves will erase profits. Key rates are 5 percent in South Africa and 3.5 percent in Australia, versus zero to 0.25 percent in the U.S., 0.75 percent in the euro bloc and zero to 0.1 percent in Japan.
To contact the reporter on this story: Joseph Ciolli in New York at jciolli@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net