Quality Matters: Look at HUF and SEK

 | Jan 12, 2012 10:44AM ET

h3 SEK: quality pays off

The mere fact that the Swedish krona is trading stronger, rather than weaker, when the global business cycle is on the defence is at odds with normality  –  the krona is an inherently pro-cyclical currency  – and  must be viewed in the context of relative fundamentals with sound public finances in Sweden contrasting sharply with the poor fiscal backdrop elsewhere and a solid Swedish current account surplus.Sweden, together with Norway and the US, has the world’s lowest CDS rates (sovereign default risk). Stable AAA is a privilege of the few: only nine countries in the world that remain on AAA have not been put on the watch list for downgrade.

Hence,  quality seems to be paying off  in the exchange rate. Foreign accounts have continued to add Swedish bonds to their holdings and in October the foreign sharebreached 50% (at 51%) for  only  the second time ever. We also expect further strong foreign demand for Swedish debt in 2012.

Although EUR/SEK and the TCW index trade some 3% below historical averages, the levels are far from stretched in terms of long-term valuation, particularly not if compared with other high-quality currencies within the G10 universe (AUD, CAD, NOK, etc.). Indeed, it can be argued that what we see is a removal of persistent misalignment (undervaluation). Interestingly, it lies within the Riksbank’s forecast that the krona will appreciate further in the next two to three years. The target is 119, which, all else being equal, corresponds to EUR/SEK 8.50. It goes without saying that these and even lower levels would not be utopian or unbearable for the Swedish surplus economy. At some
point, the Riksbank is likely to become uncomfortable though (strong SEK weighing on exports and inflation) and start to intervene verbally but we are not there yet.

If the euro crisis lingers,  with risks of a break-up being priced in, the Swedish krona remains a good hedge and if fundamentals and quality arguments stay at the forefront of investors’ focus in 2012 too there is a strong case for continued SEK appreciation. Technically, a break of 8.78 would open the way for key support at 8.70, which is where we have medium-term fair value.

Temporary correction on the cards?
That said we do not accept a full SEK decoupling from the business cycle, or
monetary policy, or risk sentiment. Indeed, we are able to explain some of the recent downtrend in EUR/SEK with precisely these factors. However, we must admit that we are surprised by the fast pace with which EUR/SEK has fallen recently. There have been only few and minor corrections on the way. Our short-term models suggest that the sell-off is partially overdone and that a correction could be on the cards.