Euro Sell-Off Extended On Persistent Worry On Spain

 | Jul 23, 2012 03:05AM ET

Euro remained broadly pressured last week and fresh selling was seen towards the end on renewed concerns in Spain. Spanish 10-year yields closed above 7.2% and were a clear reflection on markets' lack of confidence despite all the efforts by European leaders. Risk appetite was originally solid on corporate earnings and sent the Dow to as high as 12977 and boosted the aussie, kiwi and loonie against dollar. The contrast in the sentiments could be seen with EUR/AUD and EUR/CAD dropping to new records. However, equities markets were then dragged down by eurozone worries and sent the high beta currencies lower. After all, the overall development in markets remained unchanged.

Equities could still try to make another high cautiously, on expectation on more easing from major central banks, even though the path would be bumpy. The aussie and to a lesser extent, the Canadian dollar and sterling, would benefit most from risk rallies while the euro will definitely lag behind. Eurozone concerns will be the major driver that set risks back and in those cases, the common currency would continue to be sold off. The dollar and yen would be stuck mixed with yen with an uncertain upper hand. So, selling EUR/AUD, EUR/CAD, EUR/NZD and to a lesser extent, EUR/GBP, would remain the strategy that has the clearest higher odds.

Some late developments in the eurozone should be noted. Spain said on Friday that the GDP will contract -0.5% in 2013, a sharp downward revision from prior projection of 0.2% growth. 2012 projection was revised slightly up from -1.7% to -1.5%. Nonetheless, the data means Spain will remain in recession at least till the end of 2013. Also, Valencia, Spain's most indebted region, sought help under the EUR 18b program passed on Thursday. The act reflected the fact that Spain's regions are suffering from a liquidity shortage in the markets and more are expected to come.

The negative news overshadowed the fact that eurozone finance ministers approved the terms of the EUR 100b bailout for Spanish banks. The Spanish 10-year yield closed at 7.267% and broke above June's high. It should be noted again that 7% is seen by markets as an unsustainable level that eventually led to national bailout of Greece, Ireland and Portugal. So situation in Spain is getting more dangerous now. Another negative news was that ECB said on Friday that it would reject Greek government bonds as collateral for its lending operations. And ECB said it would revisit the eligibility of Greek bonds only after the Troika conclude their reviews on Greece's progress in austerities and reforms.

Another development to note is that even since ECB cut the benchmark interest rates to historical low of 0.75% and deposit rate to 0.00% on July 5, Euribor continued to dive. The three month bank-to-bank lending rate dropped to a new record low of 0.451% on Friday. That's the first time it dropped below 3 months dollar LIBOR since 2008, which fixed at 0.451% on Friday. That's based on market expectation that more rate cuts could be seen from ECB ahead. Indeed, ECB Executive Board Member Coeure said that negative rates is an option.