Friday, June 1, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS WEEKAHEAD-Central Banks to hold fire ... for now.

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS WEEKAHEAD-Central Banks to hold fire ... for now.
Jun 1st 2012, 15:03

Fri Jun 1, 2012 11:03am EDT

  By Richard Hubbard       LONDON, May 31 (Reuters) - The intensifying euro zone crisis  and uncertain global growth outlook have raised hopes for a  policy response from major central banks but, while it could be  a close call, they are likely to resist pressure to act in the  coming week.          The European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the  Reserve Bank of Australia are all due to meet as data emerges on  the euro zone's service sector, and the manufacturing and trade  performances of the big German and U.S. economies.            The main focus will be Wednesday's ECB meeting, and whether  dramatic selling of peripheral European government debt by  investors in May and a flight into safe-haven U.S. Treasuries  and German government bonds will prompt it to act.            One reason to doubt a major shift in policy is that, even  after U.S. Treasury 10-year notes hit yields not seen in more  than two centuries of record keeping, and investors began paying  the German government for the right to hold its debt, the move  across all markets may not warrant it.        "The stresses appear not yet to be big enough across all  asset classes for the policymakers to react," said Richard  Batty, global investment strategist at Standard Life  Investments.          "It all seems to be playing out in investor's appetite for  triple-A government bonds and for the dollar, but there doesn't  seem to be the volatility or sharp falls in equity markets or  other stresses in the system, such as the funding market."            In Europe, the spread between three-month Libor rates and  overnight rates, seen as a measure of health of the banking  system, has been stable throughout May - mainly due to the more  than one trillion euros of cheap funds injected into the system  by the ECB in December and February.          And while May was a bad month for equity markets everywhere  and Spain and Italy in particular, the widely watched Dow Jones   and S&P 500 indexes remain in positive territory  for the year to date.         Those gains were under threat on Friday, however, as  disappointing May U.S. jobs data sparked heavy selling, sending  the MSCI world equity index back to where it  started the year.             The VIX index, often referred to as the market's fear  gauge stood at 25 points, in line with its levels of last  December but well below the 48 points seen at the height of last  year's market turmoil in August and September.                                      POLITICAL MOVES           A heavy calendar of events throughout June which could help  determine how the euro zone crisis unfolds may also encourage  Europe's key monetary policymakers to hold fire.              Greek elections are due on June 17, following a first round  of French parliamentary elections on June 10. The heads of the  G20 group of nations will hold a summit on June 18 and 19, while  Europe's leaders gather at the end of the month to decide their  next response to the crisis.          But pressure is growing for action from the ECB to calm  acute nervousness about a potential Greek exit from the currency  bloc, and fears that the cost to Spain of saving its fragile  banks will mean the country itself has to be rescued.                 "The ECB is currently the only institution that can credibly  counter a collective loss of confidence on the scale we're now  witnessing," said Nicholas Spiro, Managing Director at debt  consultancy Spiro Sovereign Strategy.         Spanish bond yields have surged in the past  week to near their highest level since the launch of the euro,  raising questions about the country's ability to fund itself  over the longer term without outside help.            Spain will provide a big test of investor sentiment when it  auctions more government bonds on Thursday as its 10-year bond  yields hover around 6.5 percent - close to the 7 percent level  at which other indebted countries have been forced to seek aid.       The latest Reuters poll of economists found most still  expected the ECB to resist pressure to cut interest rates before  the end of next year, but that majority has shrunk from previous  polls as gloomy economic data rolls in. Just 11 of the 73  respondents expected the bank to cut rates on June 6.         The Bank of England is also expected to resist calls to   pump more money into the depressed UK economy when it meets on  June 7, according to a separate Reuters poll, although it found  there was an even chance the central bank would restart the  printing presses at some point in future.             A slim majority of economists expect Australia's central  bank to keep interest rates unchanged on Tuesday, but this is an  even closer call as a growing number of banks, including the  nation's top four, are calling for a cut.             Meanwhile, the U.S. Federal Reserve Board's mid-month policy  meeting and the end of its current easing policy, known as  'Operation Twist', could also bring changes.          "With dark clouds gathering over the global economy and the  euro area crisis intensifying, the 'Great Monetary Easing Part  2' looks set to accelerate again as many major central banks  around the globe are gearing up for more action in the next  month or two," said Manoj Pradhan of Morgan Stanley.  
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