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Posts by "djellal"
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Posts by Anonymous "djellal":
SHORT FORT BIG CORRECTION USDJPY (BELOW 105.50) EURJPY GBPJPY
if the figure is above 250k long $USD accross the board and short S&P and DOW. If just above 200k long USDJPY USDCHF
IF NFP is below 150k short all indexes and buy the chf and xauusd. if we are just below 200k short usdchf
In previous meetings the Fed had indicated that they were focused on the US economy attaining full employment, and that an unemployment rate of 6.5% was being used as an employment goal. Unemployment is now 6.7% and there was some question about what the Fed would do if they hit their employment goal, but we’re not yet seeing broad economic growth they were hoping for. To address this, the Fed indicated it would focus on a range of statistics including labor market measures, inflation, and other financial developments. This will give the Fed more flexibility in assessing the overall health of the economy and taking appropriate action.
Indeed ECB put pressure on eurusd.
But Draghi sees an improvement to come on inflation in april.
HOWEVER CAUTION ON nfp TOMORROW WHICH SHOULD OR NOT CONFIRM THE TAPERING.
THIS TIME WEATHER ISN'T AN EXPLANATION
DRAGHI : INFLATION SHOULD BE WELL ABOVE IN APRIL
By Pierre Briancon APRIL 2, 2014
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ECB | EURO ZONE | EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK | INFLATION | INTEREST RATES
By Pierre Briançon
The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.
There is only one question worth asking Mario Draghi right now: what does he intend to do to boost inflation? The European Central Bank of which he is president is failing at its only mandate – maintaining price stability in the euro zone, defined as a rate of inflation “below but close” to 2 percent. The most recent numbers – inflation last month was at an annual rate of 0.5 percent, and prices have risen 1.2 percent in the last 12 months – is nowhere near the target. And judging by the ECB’s own forecast, the rate won’t get much nearer by 2016. Real deflation remains, so far, a low-risk scenario. But economies like Spain or Greece are suffering from the ECB’s inaction. And is even a small risk of dangerous deflation worth taking? Acting now could spare the ECB more aggressive policies later. What’s the upside of playing with fire?
After the ECB chose not to do anything in March, members of the governing council rushed to insist that many options remain on the table. The main interest rate can still be cut, although not by much as it now stands at 0.25 percent. That may have to come with a negative deposit rate, with the risk of unintended adverse consequences.
Another long-term refinancing operation (LTRO) would offer banks liquidity that they aren’t really seeking. But an idea doing the rounds is that locking in a low, fixed interest rate on it would signal a long-term commitment to dovish policies. Previous LTROs had a variable rate, calculated ex-post.
Finally, the purchase of private assets is openly contemplated. This “credit easing,” as Credit Agricole analysts call it, is legally and politically easier than the “quantitative easing” of direct government bond purchases.
None of these options is ideal, but their flaws are not great enough to justify the ECB’s benign neglect. The central bank’s official line is that the asset quality review of euro zone banks, expected later this year, is its main instrument to ease credit conditions. Even if that’s true, the central bank can do more, sooner to help Europe’s most challenged economies. It is yet to answer the question: why wait?