CAD The Only G10 Currency To Gain Against USD

 | Oct 22, 2014 05:29AM ET

ECB to move closer to QE: EUR/USD plunged during the European trading session Tuesday on a newswire report that the ECB may expand its stimulus program in December to include the purchase of corporate bonds. This would more than double the assets that the ECB could buy, as there are some EUR 1.5tn in high-quality corporate bonds outstanding, excluding those issued by financial institutions. This compares with some EUR 1tn in eligible asset-backed securities (ABS) and covered bonds. The addition of corporate bonds could allow ECB President Draghi to achieve his goal of returning the ECB’s balance sheet to its early-2012 level (approximately EUR 1tn more than it is now) while circumventing the legal objections to buying sovereign bonds. The news is thus significantly EUR-negative in that the ECB will be expanding the supply of euros just as the Fed is ending its QE program and embarking on a tightening cycle. The divergence in monetary policy is alive and well.

US existing home sales surged in September to their highest level in a year, indicating that the housing sector activity is getting back on track. The rise in the figure was in line with data last week showing an increase in housing starts and building permits for September. The robust data show that housing market has regained its strength after a stalled activity in the summer. US 10-year yields edged up marginally (2 bps) and Fed funds rate expectations were unchanged, but the stock market came roaring back and the S & P 500 was up 2%.

The reports about the ECB, coupled with yet another strong US indicator, sent the dollar up against almost all its G10 counterparts. SEK was the weakest, perhaps looking forward to next week’s Riksbank meeting. If the ECB is loosening, it will be hard for the Riksbank even to maintain a neutral stance as the country is already in deflation. As the graph shows, historically when the Eurozone’s inflation rate has been higher than Sweden’s, normally the Eurozone’s policy rate has also been higher. That isn’t the case now, so Riksbank may have to cut further.