Swiss Exports Disappoint

 | Nov 22, 2016 07:33AM ET

Forex News and Events

Swiss exports collapsed in October

After surging 5%m/m in September, Swiss exports contracted significantly in October, falling 4.7%m/m in real term amid further contractions in watch (-25.5%), jewellery (-12.3%) and machine & electronics manufacturing (-5.6%) exports. On the other hand, pharmaceutical and chemical industries recorded the biggest surge in exports and helped to partially offset the drop in other sectors. Pharma exports grew 7% m/m in October. Compared to October 2015, working day-adjusted real exports contracted 3.3% as pharma went down 3.3%, machine & electronics manufacturing contracted 7%, watchmaking was off 17.8% and jewellery slid 30%.

Imports rose across the board in October with 10 out of 12 sub-groups growing. Real exports surged 2.8%m/m, led by pharma (+19%) and textile & clothing imports (16%). Compared to October 2015, working day-adjuste

d real imports grew 3.7%. All in all, the strength of the Swiss franc continued to provide a boost to importations, especially from the eurozone. On the other hand, exports’ growth to the eurozone were subdued.

In spite of the recent positive trend in exports, we still expect a cloudy future for Swiss exports, especially due to the strength of the Swiss franc. Last week, EUR/CHF tested the 1.07 threshold many times but never broke it to the downside. The rise in domestic sight deposits (+CHF5bn) suggests that the SNB stepped in to protect the franc. The pair returned to 1.0740 today; however given the significant political risk in the eurozone over the next year, we do not expect this pressure to ease yet.

Short Oil

The news flow suggests that despite our scepticism, OPEC is moving towards a deal to slow production glut. After optimistic chatter from the preliminary talks in Vienna, oil extended gains up 3.9% to $47.49 brl (highest level since October). With Saudi ramping up production to close their massive budget deficit, they will be forced to take the biggest productions cuts, which continues to make us doubtful of a meaningful agreement. On a positive note, since many nations are producing at full capacity there is little room for cheating any deal. However, the agreement’s snail-like progress and deteriorating sovereign balance sheets due to sustained low oil prices means that we would short oil on rallies. In addition, with a pro-energy presidential election and Trump looking to unleash the US oil producer, marginal productions cuts will quickly be filled by new crude sources. The upside in WTI remains limited (even with a 32.5m brl ceiling) without a fundamental pick up in global demand, while a failure to agree to a production cut will lead to a surge in the supply overhang and crashing oil prices

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WTI - Sharp bullish move.