Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Europe. Show all posts

Dec 1, 2008

Several Countries Are Rethinking the Euro

COPENHAGEN — The deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression has prompted countries that had snubbed the euro to take a fresh look at the virtues of the common European currency.

After turmoil in the currency markets nearly destroyed the Icelandic krona and undermined the Polish zloty, those two countries are rethinking their opposition to the euro. More surprisingly, Denmark — a nearly picture-perfect model of economic management — looks more likely to embrace the euro, after rejecting it twice in the past.

Denmark was forced to use high interest rates to defend its currency, the krone, against speculative attack. The effects of those higher rates are now rippling through the Danish economy, contributing to achange in attitudes.

“Denmark is so extremely sound by all macroeconomic standards,” said Thomas Mirow, president of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Its changing stance on the euro “says a lot about stand-alone options in difficult times.”

After 10 central and eastern European countries joined the European Union in 2004, the political will to control budget deficits and inflation — the two key criteria for adopting the euro — melted away.

As a result, only four small countries — Slovenia, Cyprus, Malta and Slovakia — have qualified for the euro. But the financial crisis has changed the situation in a few furious months, as the newly visible costs of not using the euro recast the politics of independent currencies.

At its core, the convulsions in financial markets encompass a “flight to quality,” the term investors use to describe a sudden shift of money out of potentially risky assets into the safest possible assets, one of which has been the euro, and investments denominated in euros.

This dynamic has played out quickly.

In late October, the Polish zloty fell sharply in value against the euro as markets fretted that the economic crisis gripping Hungary would spread to neighboring Poland.

That focused minds within Law and Justice, the rightist nationalist party to which the Polish president, Lech Kaczynski, belongs. The party has long demanded that Poland hold a referendum on the euro, believing it would fail.

But the zloty’s depreciation suddenly threatened a swath of the party’s voters who had taken out euro-denominated loans, analysts said. While these loans came at attractive interest rates, a weaker zloty threatened Polish borrowers with higher mortgage payments.

Within a few days, Mr. Kaczynski agreed to a plan for adopting the euro by 2012, and quietly dropped demands for a plebiscite. A few weeks later, Poland reached an agreement with the European Central Bank on a currency swap line of 10 billion euros to tide it over during the crisis. The zloty stabilized.

“ ‘When there’s a threat, find God,’ goes the proverb in Poland,” said Rafal Antczak, an economist at Warsaw University. “And that is what has happened.”

Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, which also joined the European Union in 2004, have never needed convincing about the euro’s merits, but they are redoubling their efforts to ensure that they can join within a few years. Hungary, which got its own assistance from the European Central Bank, is also shifting toward the euro. And Sweden, which also belongs to the European Union but voted down the euro in 2003, has seen a shift in public sentiment.

Iceland, an island nation of 300,000, teetered on a national bankruptcy before securing a lifeline from the International Monetary Fund. The Icelandic krona’s free-fall of nearly 80 percent against the euro made the country’s banks, which had heavy liabilities in other currencies, insolvent almost overnight. Iceland has long rejected membership in the European Union, a prerequisite for adopting the euro, because it feared the bloc’s common fisheries policy would strip it of control over a vital natural resource.

Now facing a painful recession, polls show that 60 to 70 percent of Icelanders favor joining the European Union and abandoning the krona. The governing party is reconsidering its opposition.

Major companies in Iceland are already moving to make the euro a reality. Alfesca, a seafood company, and Straumur-Burdaras, an investment bank, now plan to list their shares in euros, eliminating the risk to foreign investors of owning a krona-denominated asset.

“When you have a crisis like this — both a banking and currency crisis — that can only strengthen the call for changes,” said Finnur Oddson, managing director of the Iceland Chamber of Commerce. ”There is a general agreement that our current monetary policy does not work, to put it very politely.”

Denmark will be the acid test for the euro’s appeal, analysts agree, if only because the country has already rejected the common currency in two referendums, the most recent in 2000. Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen has seized the moment to announce plans for a third referendum, near the end of his center-right government’s term in 2011.

The main obstacle to joining the euro zone, however, is still very much political. The Socialist People’s Party, the main opposition group, has long opposed adopting the euro, saying that the European Union needs to pay more attention to popular causes like curbing speculation and making agricultural policies more environmentally friendly.

The party’s continued opposition would probably sink the referendum, since the margin of support is thin. In November, a poll taken by the Danish statistical agency showed that proponents of the euro had a 49 to 45 percent lead over opponents after a long period of lagging behind.

But Villy Soevndal, chairman of the Socialist People’s Party, has dangled the possibility that it might support the euro if Mr. Rasmussen can get the European Union to take action on the issues it holds dear. Soevndal may be simply bleeding his political opponent, many people in Denmark say, but for the first time since the euro was created, a Danish yes looks tantalizingly possible.

“We get to decide whether Danes vote yes or no,” Mr. Soevndal said. ”We don’t want to play our cards without getting anything.” In order to stabilize trade with the 15-nation euro zone, which is Denmark’s largest trading partner, the Danish central bank keeps the kroner fluctuating in a narrow band against the euro. Since the euro was created in 1999, that has meant adjusting interest rates in lockstep with the European Central Bank.

As the Danish debate over the euro has gathered steam, supporters of the common currency have come to believe that they can bank on a new set of voters: the young Danes who have traveled widely and experienced the benefits of the euro. At the time of the last referendum, euro cash and coins had not yet been introduced.

Marie Petersen, a student and part-time waitress, said her year studying in Spain convinced her that she would rather have euros in her pocket than Danish kroner.

“You can see how it works in other countries,” Ms. Petersen, 21, said. “That’s a big difference from last time.”

source: nytimes.com

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Several Countries Are Rethinking the Euro


Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://waterfrontlife.blogspot.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net


Nov 29, 2008

Yen Advances Fourth Month Against Euro as Carry Trades Unwind

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The yen gained for a fourth straight month against the euro, the longest wining streak since 1999, as the deepening global economic slump prompted investors to sell high-yielding assets and pay back loans made in Japan.

The euro weakened against the dollar for a fifth month as investors added to bets the European Central Bank will cut interest rates next week after inflation in the region slowed by the most since at least 1991. Russia’s ruble declined against the dollar to the weakest level since March 2006 as the central bank let the currency depreciate and raised interest rates to halt an exodus of foreign capital.

“The yen is still our favorite currency,” said Derek Halpenny, head of global currency research at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi Ltd. in London in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “The interest-rate differential argument is still very, very powerful for the Japanese yen as yields around the world continue to plunge. Past performance tells you that the Japanese yen is going to be the currency that outperforms.”

The yen gained 3.4 percent to 121.22 per euro, from 125.30 at the end of October. The currency advanced 3.1 percent this month to 95.52 per dollar, from 98.46. The euro dropped 0.3 percent to $1.2691, from $1.2726 on Oct. 31.

The ruble slumped as low as 27.99 per dollar yesterday, the weakest since March 2006, as the 63 percent drop in crude oil prices from a July peak erodes the country’s export revenue. The currency declined 3 percent against the dollar and the euro this month.

Russia, India

Bank Rossii widened the ruble’s trading band yesterday for the second time this week by about 30 kopeks (1 U.S. cent), or 1 percent, on each side, according to Mikhail Galkin, head of fixed income and credit research at MDM Bank in Moscow. The central bank said yesterday it will raise its benchmark refinancing rate to 13 percent from 12 percent to help stem currency losses.

India’s rupee fell yesterday the most in two weeks, losing 1.4 percent to 50.1075 per dollar, after terrorist attacks across Mumbai left at least 124 people dead. The rupee lost 1.3 percent this month.

The Thai baht dropped to 35.56 per dollar yesterday, the lowest level since February 2007, after the government declared a state of emergency at airports in Bangkok, which were seized and shut by anti-government protesters this week. It lost 1.2 percent this month on concern political unrest will slow growth in Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy.

Banks Rate Cuts

Japan’s currency strengthened 9.4 percent against the New Zealand dollar this month, 7.8 percent versus the British pound, and 5 percent against the Australian dollar as investors pared carry trades in which they buy higher-yielding assets with funds borrowed in low-interest-rate countries. The Bank of Japan’s 0.3 percent benchmark rate is the lowest among developed nations.

The Reserve Bank of Australia will lower its main interest rate three quarters of a percentage point to 4.5 percent on Dec. 1, and the New Zealand central bank will cut its key borrowing costs to 5 percent from 6.5 percent two days later, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Bank of England will reduce its benchmark lending rate one- percentage point to 2 percent on Dec. 4, according to a separate forecast.

The euro fell 1.5 percent to 82.52 pence yesterday, the biggest drop since June 3, 2001, after the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said inflation in the region slowed to 2.1 percent in November from 3.2 percent in October. A separate report showed unemployment in the region rose to 7.7 percent in October from 7.6 percent in September, the highest level since January 2007.

‘Least Resistance’

Investors added to bets the ECB will cut its main refinancing rate about 75 basis points by March from 3.25 percent. The implied yield on three-month Euribor futures contracts expiring in March fell to 2.67 percent yesterday, from 3.15 percent at the end of October. The yield averaged 16 basis points above the ECB’s benchmark over the past year.

The ECB will cut its benchmark lending rate by half a percentage point to 2.75 percent on Dec. 4, according to the median of 56 economist forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

“The ECB has to come to the party, and they have to be aggressive cutting rates,” said Lane Newman, a director of currency trading at ING Financial Markets LLC in New York. “To buy the dollar is the path of least resistance. You’d better be prepared for a worse-than-expected time ahead.”

‘Addition Downside’

The ICE’s Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the euro, the yen, the pound, the Canadian dollar, the Swiss franc and Sweden’s krona, climbed to 88.463 on Nov. 21, the highest since April 2006. Investors sought refuge in Treasuries from a global recession, sending the yield on two-year notes below 1 percent on Nov. 20, the lowest since regular sales began in 1975.

The Federal Reserve said on Nov. 25 it will assign $800 billion in new funding to bolster credit flows to homebuyers, consumers and small businesses and will take on credit risk by buying debt.


Investors should buy the euro versus the greenback because repatriation of U.S. investments abroad and demand for dollar funding is waning, according to Bank of America Corp.

The Fed’s support of financial markets will flood the economy with excessive dollars, creating “additional downside risks” for the U.S. currency, strategists David Powell and Robert Sinche wrote in a research note yesterday.

“The recent advance of the dollar rests on a weak foundation,” Powell and Sinche wrote. “The rapid expansion of a country’s monetary base should prove to be inconsistent with a strengthening of its currency.”

The dollar may weaken to $1.4180 per euro, a 50 percent retracement of its rally from a record low of $1.6038 in July to a 2 1/2-year high of $1.233 in October, they wrote.

source: bloomberg.com

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Fort Lauderdale Blog and Real Estate News
Rory Vanucchi
RoryVanucchi@gmail.com

http://waterfrontlife.blogspot.com
www.FortLauderdaleLiving.net