Market Analysis: Currencies Tumble And Gold Rebounds

 | Jan 05, 2015 06:34AM ET

EUR/USD salutes the new year by mimicking it EUR/USD saluted the New Year 2015 by mimicking it – hitting 1.2015 (and even a bit lower) and then gapping lower at the opening Monday. ECB President Draghi was quoted in the German paper Handelsblatt Friday as saying that the risk that the ECB doesn’t fulfill its mandate of price stability is higher than it was six months ago and that they are “in technical preparations” to institute quantitative easing early in 2015 if necessary.

The first part of his statement is obviously true; all you have to do is wait for this Wednesday, when the eurozone CPI for December is forecast to go into deflation (-0.1%) as opposed to +0.5% back in June. Even that figure was well below their 2% target, though. The second part though depends on getting agreement on the ECB board. As mentioned on Friday, not everyone on the board agrees (even though Draghi said the Board was “unanimous”) and furthermore, the Greek elections may prove a legal obstacle to instituting QE in January and perhaps later as well.

Draghi’s comments not only pushed EUR/USD down to right above the psychological line of 1.2000, but also pushed eurozone bond yields, already at record lows, down further. German bond yields for example are now negative out to 5-Year and 10-Year went below 50 bps for the first time. There’s now not so much difference overall between German yields and Japanese yields. Does this presage Japanese-style deflation and therefore Japanese-style monetary policy in the eurozone? It might, eventually. In any case, if they do not institute QE, then there is likely to be a big sell-off in eurozone bonds and repatriation of currency that would push EUR/USD even lower.