Commodity Bloc Boosted After Confident RBA; Euro at 5-week Low vs Yen

ASIA/EUROPE FOREX NEWS WRAP

A growing divergence between the commodity currencies and the European currencies has formed the past several weeks, as near-crisis trading conditions have slowly receded: the tight ‘risk-on, risk-off’ atmosphere that saw the majors move in lockstep against the Japanese Yen and the US Dollar has given way to a new dynamic. Now, as has transpired overnight, the Australian, Canadian, and New Zealand Dollars are appreciating relatively to their weaker European counterparts, the British Pound, the Swiss Franc, and the Euro.

In the Asian trading session on Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of Australia kept its key rate on hold at 3.00% as expected, and amid renewed confidence that its easing of monetary policy during “late 2011 and 2012 is having an expansionary effect on the economy,” the Australian Dollar has surged back towards the $1.0500 level against the US Dollar. Similarly, on the back of a much stronger than expected commodity price gauge, the New Zealand Dollar is heading back towards its yearly highs. The Australian and New Zealand Dollars are the two top performers this year.

In Europe, the big news is that the Euro-zone Unemployment Rate ticked up to 12.0% in February (although the January figure was revised higher to 12.0% from 11.9%, technically making it two months at this horrid level), underscoring the likelihood that contraction gripped the region in the 1Q’13. The ECB is scheduled to meet on Thursday, where it is widely expected that they will keep their key interest rate on hold at 0.75%. I suspect that, despite the broken policy transmission mechanism (German and French companies/banks field substantially lower rates than their Italian and Spanish counterparts). As the economic divergence between the Euro-zone and the United States grows midyear, the ECB will be more open to a rate cut, just not now.

Taking a look at European credit, modest relief in peripheral yields has helped buffer the Euro from a deeper sell-off on Tuesday. The Italian 2-year note yield has decreased to 1.793% (-9.8-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has decreased to 2.266% (-12.0-bps). Likewise, the Italian 10-year note yield has decreased to 4.687% (-6.3-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has decreased to 4.986% (-5.6-bps); lower yields imply higher prices.

RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 10:50 GMT

NZD: +0.73%

AUD: +0.48%

CAD: +0.38%

CHF:+0.08%

JPY:+0.01%

EUR:-0.11%

GBP:-0.24%

Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): 0.00% (-0.28% past 5-days)

ECONOMIC CALENDAR

Commodity_Bloc_Boosted_After_Confident_RBA_Euro_at_5-week_Low_vs_Yen_body_Picture_7.png, Commodity Bloc Boosted After Confident RBA; Euro at 5-week Low vs Yen
Commodity_Bloc_Boosted_After_Confident_RBA_Euro_at_5-week_Low_vs_Yen_body_Picture_7.png, Commodity Bloc Boosted After Confident RBA; Euro at 5-week Low vs Yen

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