Monday, February 25, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 1-Moody's downgrade adds to investor swing away from pound

Reuters: US Dollar Report
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-Moody's downgrade adds to investor swing away from pound
Feb 25th 2013, 18:48

Mon Feb 25, 2013 1:48pm EST

  * Sterling hits 2-1/2 year low vs dollar after downgrade      * QE prospects help gilts recover from big initial fall      * Markets see risk of further sterling and gilt weakness          By David Milliken      LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Britain's loss of its top credit  ranking from Moody's added to the pound's weakness on Monday,  helping send it lower against both the dollar and euro, but UK  bonds, underpinned by the central bank, recovered quickly.      The pound only fell moderately, but still hit lows against  the dollar not seen since July 2010. The euro rose   against sterling to its highest since October 2011.      Ten-year British bonds, known as gilts, initially sold off  sharply but later closed flat, attracting interest from  investors worried about the outcome of Italy's elections.  British shares were broadly higher, lifted in many cases by  prospects of stronger exports from a weaker currency.      Moody's became the first major ratings agency to downgrade  British debt late on Friday, surprising some in the markets with  its timing, but reflecting a broad view that a weak economy will  impede British efforts to reduce its deficits.       Nonetheless, the move was an embarrassment for Britain's  finance minister George Osborne, who promised in the past to  protect Britain's AAA credit rating.       "The credit rating is an important benchmark for any country  but this government's economic policy is tested day in and day  out in the market, and it has not been found wanting today,"  Osborne told parliament.      The main spokesman for finance in the opposition Labour  Party, Ed Balls, told Osborne to "get out of denial and get a  new plan that will actually work on growth, jobs and the  deficit. Or else the prime minister will have to get a new  chancellor."      Earlier, a spokesman for Prime Minister David Cameron echoed  Osborne's comments that the government would stick to its plan  to cut the budget deficit and public debt.       The impact of the downgrade was relatively muted in markets  because investors have already been reacting to the conditions  that prompted Moody's to act - particularly an economy teetering  on the brink of a third recession in four years.      The pound came under heavy selling pressure last week after  the Bank of England made clear that the currency could have  further to fall, and that it is prepared to tolerate the impact  this would have on inflation.      Bank of England Governor Mervyn King's support for more bond  buying, or quantitative easing (QE), has also weighed on  sterling because it implies more potential money printing.      "Realistically this is not a sudden smash down but a  continuation of a (market) move that's been under way all year,"  Andy Chaytor, London-based macro strategist at Nomura.      "The stars have aligned in terms of fiscal policy, central  bank policy - being seen by the market to be allowing higher  inflation - and then you get a downgrade as well," he said.      Sterling hit its two-and-a-half year low of $1.5073 during  Asian trading hours, before recovering to $1.515. It fell to a  16-month low against the euro of 88.15 pence and then recovered  as uncertainty about the Italian elections weighed on the euro.       The pound was around 7 percent weaker against both the  dollar and the euro than it was at the start of the year.                GILTS RECOVER LOSSES      In government debt markets, 10-year gilt yields   jumped at the start of trading by 6 basis points to peak at  2.175 percent - their sharpest intraday price fall since Feb.  13. Later they ended the session flat at 2.11 percent.       News last week that King and two other policymakers favoured  more bond purchases has helped gilts, even if the inflation  outlook makes some investors think they offer poor value.      Last week's central bank minutes "gave the market a  life-line," Chaytor said. "If we hadn't had that, things might  have been a bit rockier."      Some investors said Osborne should not draw too much comfort  from the muted initial reaction in markets.      "The government has favourably contrasted (Britain's) low  government bond yields with high yields in a number of euro zone  countries ... But this comparison is disingenuous," said Toby  Nangle, a fund manager at Threadneedle Investments.      "Yields are low because the market believes that (interest)  rates will remain low, and because of the Bank of England's  policy of quantitative easing," he added.      The next test of investor sentiment will come later this  week, and possibly as early as Tuesday, with a sale via  syndication of around 3.8 billion pounds ($5.7 billion) of 2052  index-linked gilts         * March gilt future 116.11 (+0.05)            * March short sterling 99.49 (-0.01)                      * June short sterling 99.50 (-0.01)          * 10-year yield 2.11 percent (UNCH)                        --------------------- KEY MARKET DATA---------------------------  Long Gilt futures Gilt benchmark chain   Short Stg futures Cash market quotes     Deposit rates          Sterling cross rates   UK debt speedguide   --------------------KEY MARKET REPORTS--------------------------  Gilts                  Sterling               Euro Debt          Dollar                 U.S. Treasuries        Debt reports           -------------------- GILT STRIPS DATA --------------------------  Gilt strips data    All gilt strips   Gilt strips IO    Gilt strips PO    A list of all the strippable British gilts  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.