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by Ashraf Laidi
Posted: Feb 20, 2010 5:00
Comments: 30765
Forum Topic:

EUR

Discuss EUR in this thread
 
Ashraf Laidi
London, UK
Posts: 0
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 11:37
the fact that markets have gone from allowing for possibility of US rate HIKES to allowing possibility of further EASING (via QE) is enough to reverse the GE US yield spread and help the euro.

but not expecting anything above 1.32 and 1.17 remains viable in Q4


Ashraf
yojing22
Singapore
Posts: 4
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 11:08
how do you see 1.17 happen ashraf? 2 months ago, there was no bad news from US. however, now, the expectations for rate hikes in US is really dashed, just wondering if there will be trend change?
nido
karachi, Pakistan
Posts: 23
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 10:31
i recommend to sell at 2845 i dont think abt 2930
market already made 3067 high
so i think its hold 3080 and 3120
i hope we will see good downside move from now
Ashraf Laidi
London, UK
Posts: 0
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 9:56
Letisha, still see 1.17 in late Q3 but for NOW taregtting 1.3120. today looks well retest 1.2930.

i said this many times on this forum and my twitter in past 5 days

Ashraf
orange_trad
New York, New York, United States
Posts: 20
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 8:41
Passion Trader: Hungary is blown out of proportion. Its a debate about the bank-tax that the Hungarian gov. wants, not closing down public transport and hospitals that the IMF wants, and little things like reducing the salary of the HNB's director which is currently twice the salary of the Fed's director... Now why would the IMF oppose that? Hm...

Anyways, I'm happy to short EUR/HUF from 290, and 230 USD/HUF, every time the media has something to say about Hun.

The only remorse I have is that there is no Spanish currency, so I could long that too...
Stationdealer
London, UK
Posts: 715
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 8:01
for now it looks like a buy!
Letisha
St. Catherine, Jamaica
Posts: 156
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 5:24
Ashraf, is it that your long term view for a fall in the Euro to 1.16 has changed?
Qiman
United States
Posts: 237
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 2:35
Passion Trader--Very good post! Here is a bit more on the stress tests:

Europes largest banks may give breakdowns of their sovereign-debt holdings when they release stress-test results, according to a document from the Committee of European Banking Supervisors.

European regulators asked the regions biggest banks to publish a list of each lenders gross and net exposure to central and local governments in 30 countries in the region, including Greece, Spain, Ireland, Italy and Portugal, according to a confidential draft template obtained by Bloomberg News.

The stress tests wont include the possibility of sovereign defaults, Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager said last week.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-07-21/eu-banks-may-disclose-holdings-of-sovereign-debt-with-stress-test-results.html
Passion Trader
Singapore, Singapore
Posts: 52
14 years ago
Jul 22, 2010 2:13
EURO SOVEREIGN DEBT CRISIS POISED TO GO VIRAL: The European authorities "bank stress test" perception management campaign succeeded in lulling the markets in the last 2-3 weeks, but this lull is about to end, undone by a string of real-life developments as follows:

Spain: The Spanish Senate, in a preliminary budget vote, rejected today by 217-117 the government's proposed spending ceiling for the 2011 budget. Earlier, the lower chamber of the legislature had barely passed the proposal by an unsustainable plurality of a single vote and then only because the pivotal Catalan nationalists decided to abstain for tactical reasons - with a warning that their final vote on the budget will be negative if their demands for increased Catalan autonomy (already rejected by the Constitutional Court) are not met. The Catalan autonomy issue is big. Spain is being forced to choose between a major constitutional crisis and a renewed major fiscal crisis.

Hungary: The new government over the weekend told the IMF/EU that it will not continue the IMF-prescribed austerity program in 2011, placing a huge question mark on the country's $150 billion foreign bank debt. Almost all of that debt is owed to European banks ($38 billion to Austrian banks). Hungary's move was dictated by domestic political realities that have crystallized after 2 years of IMF austerity. The IMF cannot afford to back down and continue lending to Hungary without austerity conditionalities because doing so would collapse the IMF's negotiating posture vis--vis Greece and the rest of the European South. But without continued IMF lending, the position of European banks - especially Austrian banks - that own Hungarian debt becomes untenable.

Ireland: The stabilization package begins to unravel, posing new threats to the country's $867 billion foreign bank debt (of which $634 billion to European banks). Echoing arguments made by the Hungarian government, one of the governing coalition parties said in parliament that it is not "politically feasible" to continue the levels of austerity demanded by the European Central Bank. On cue, Moody's downgraded Irish government debt to Aa2 from Aa1. Moody's explained that "today's downgrade is primarily driven by the Irish government's gradual but significant loss of financial strength, as reflected by its deteriorating debt affordability."

AN UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCE OF THE FINANCIAL REFORM BILL: It seems that the financial reform bill that President Obama is about to sign contains a liability clause aimed at the rating agencies that would allow investors to sue them for failure to conduct adequate investigations into the assets that they rate. If so, expect the ratings of European sovereign debt to take further hits going forward.
fxr
derry, UK
Posts: 4
14 years ago
Jul 21, 2010 22:14
so Ben amongst his muddling. 'unusually uncertain' outlook (has to be most absurd comment i have seen from him, yet. unusual as compared to what?) anyways, he said no new stimulus imminent, public debt needs to be cut, monetary policy already very accommodative, he even mentioned the inflation word explicitly.. thats hawkish. Back comes the USD bull?