The spread of the coronavirus and the extreme measures taken to control the pandemic have wreaked havoc in financial markets worldwide.
In currency markets, the reaction has been a headlong flight into the supposed safety of the US dollar. Every major currency worldwide fell sharply against the greenback last week, even the Japanese yen. The worst punishment was meted out to oil-dependent currencies, as the crash in oil prices was added to the general atmosphere of fear.
Economic data out this week should begin to reflect the enormous damage wreaked by the pandemic. Eurozone and UK PMIs of business activity out on Tuesday, and US weekly jobless claims on Thursday will likely post the worst numbers in history by some distance. More important for currency markets will be the evolution of the infection in the various countries either already in lockdown or those considering it. The durability of the dollar rally may come into question in the face of far worsening contagion numbers in the US, particularly if the Italian and Spanish numbers cease to worsen.
An unprecedented economic crisis is now upon us. There is reason for hope, however. Monetary and fiscal authorities worldwide are preparing an unprecedented response. Fiscal spending, credit guarantees and liquidity injections on a massive scale are being announced daily. With governments ready to do whatever it takes, the goal of returning to an almost intact economic structure as soon as the epidemic is brought under control may be a reasonable one.
GBP
Sterling was hit harder than the euro last week, in part due to the sudden turnaround of Boris Johnson’s government in admitting that lockdowns may be necessary to contain the virus. The UK currency fell to its weakest position versus the US dollar since 1985 at one stage, with measures of implied volatility in the pair hitting just shy of the levels witnessed following the Brexit vote. We attribute the extent of the sell-off to investors unwinding their long GBP positions put in place following the UK election in December, and the pound’s higher risk premium due to Brexit and the country’s large external deficit.
The Bank of England cut interest rates again, and announced £200 billion of extra quantitative easing, as well as programs to provide direct funding to small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). While the PMI numbers on Tuesday will reflect the worst of the crisis, more important will be the announcements during the BoE’s monetary policy meeting on Thursday, which remains on the agenda in spite of last week's dramatic measures. In its statement last week, the bank noted that it will issue further guidance ‘in due course’. This to us suggests that even more stimulus is on the way on, or before, the next scheduled meeting on 26th March.
EUR
With Spain and Italy on full lockdown and other Eurozone economies subject to increasing restraints, there is no doubt that a sharp recession is coming. However, the aggressive ECB announcement of 750 billion euros to support sovereign debt means that the affected countries will be able to finance enormous fiscal deficits without fear of the markets. Indeed, the collapse in spreads over the last three days is one ray of hope amid the bleak news.
For now, we will be paying close attention to the epidemic numbers out of the different countries and hope that the drastic measures begin to "bend the curve" and ease the pressures on domestic healthcare systems as soon as possible.
USD
The most basic instinct among currency traders in a global crisis is to flee to the safety of the US dollar, and this pandemic has been no exception thus far. This has seen the US Dollar Index rally to its highest level in three years (Figure 1). The US rally has been fueled by the fact that Europe has been the worst hit so far, but this may be related to the very limited testing that the US has conducted. In fact, as this is written the US has now become the country with the largest number of new daily cases, ahead of Italy.
As testing ramps up, the numbers will get worse, limiting dollar upside from these levels. More immediately, we await an announcement of the US fiscal stimulus package in response to the crisis, and expect to see the worst number ever of weekly claims for unemployment on Thursday.
CHF
EUR/CHF spent much of last week close to the 1.055 level, ending slightly higher against the euro. The franc was once again one of the best performers in the G10, although still sold-off heavily against the dollar.
As expected, the Swiss National Bank did not cut rates last week. The bank didn’t offer too much, although it did increase its exemption threshold factor from 25 to 30 as of next month, which should limit the effect of negative rates on commercial bank profitability. The bank lowered its conditional inflation forecast and now expects price growth to fall into negative territory in H1 2020 and remain there throughout 2020. The SNB also suggested that growth this year will likely turn negative, although could rebound strongly next year. Importantly, in its statement, the bank said that ‘the SNB is intervening more strongly in the foreign exchange market to contribute to the stabilisation of the situation’. This, alongside the reference to the franc as ‘even more highly valued’, tells us that the SNB will do whatever it can to allay buying pressure on the Swiss currency, which should limit the scale of its potential appreciation against the euro.
Most recent data of on sight deposits seem to confirm that the SNB is not all words, but indeed action. Total sight deposits rose by 5.8 bln CHF in the past week compared to 4.4 bln and 2.8 bln respectively in the previous two weeks. This was its biggest weekly rise since mid-2016, suggesting that the central bank stepped-up its market interventions.
AUD
The quite remarkable move lower that we’ve witnessed in the Australian dollar since the beginning of the crisis ramped up a notch or two last week. AUD went into freefall during the middle of the week, plummeting to its weakest position in almost two-decades. The currency did, at one stage, extend its losses for the week to almost 10% as investors flocked to the safe-havens and fled those currencies deemed as high-risk. While the currency recovered some of its losses on Thursday and Friday, it is still trading around 6.5% lower than this time last week.
The main headline out last week was the Reserve Bank of Australia’s decision to slash interest rates by another 25 basis points to a fresh record low 0.25%. As expected, the RBA also unveiled details of its first-ever quantitative easing programme and a three-year funding facility to provide cheap loans to banks. Somewhat paradoxically, investors are now treating central bank easing as a positive development for currencies, on hopes that their proactiveness can allay some of the negative economic impact. This was, however, unable to save AUD last week, particularly after the imposition of Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s stricter containment measures on Australian nationals.
CAD
The sell-off in CAD last week was not quite as severe as some of its major peers, perhaps due the panic selling in the currency that has already seen it tumble to near its weakest position since the early-1990s. That being said, the currency did still shed over 3% versus the dollar as oil prices continued to tumble to multi-year lows.
The lack of a more pronounced sell-off in the currency in light of the dramatic oil price collapse can, at least in part, be attributed to the relatively low levels of contagion witnessed in Canada thus far. According to Worldometers, 1,470 cases of the virus have been confirmed in Canada, leading to 20 deaths. While this number is unfortunately set to accelerate, so far Canada has the lowest infections per 100 people of any of the top 20 worst affected countries, with the exception of Brazil. While this may be due to a lack of thorough testing, it is at least providing investors with some reason to favour CAD over other currencies whose infection rates are much higher.
Please Like, Comment & Share if you found this article insightful.