Consolidation Afoot as Dijsselbloom Commentary Keeps Euro Lower

ASIA/EUROPE FOREX NEWS WRAP

The majors are consolidating on Tuesday after explosive moves the past several days, all thanks to some untimely and ill-advised commentary from the new Eurogroup president, Jorgen Dijsselbloem. Having replaced Jean-Claude Juncker as the head of the Euro-zone’s finance ministers, Mr. Dijsselbloem’s words carry significant weight; it is of no surprise that the Euro plummeted yesterday after he spoke.

Essentially, Mr. Dijsselbloem called the Cypriot bailout – one which looped in depositors to take the fall for banks’ poor investing (gambling) decisions – a “template” for the rest of Europe. This is unprecedented, as was the Cypriot bailout: according to the IMF, not one of the 147 financial crises since 1970 has required depositors to contribute to the bailout/in of their banks; this is an atypical result. Stemming from this unique event was the notion that depositors with €100,000 or more would be uninsured.

As I said yesterday, “The decision to tax savers is important because of how the European sovereign debt crisis has flowed: each policy undertaken has set precedence for the next bailout; if Cypriot savers had to contribute to the bailout of its banks, then why wouldn’t the same measures be forced upon Italian and Spanish savers? The Troika will be forced to give the same terms at minimum in order to prevent alienating Cyprus – the Euro is about unity, anything short would paint Cyprus as a second-class citizen.” (Addendum: treating Cyprus as a second class citizen, unfair treatment, would lead to its exit from the region). The big question now: if you have over €100,000 in a country whose banking system is on life support, do you feel that your money is safe?

Taking a look at European credit, peripheral yields have compressed, serving as a counterweight to concerns lingering after the Cypriot bailout, allowing the Euro to rally on Tuesday. The Italian 2-year note yield has decreased to 1.750% (-4.9-bps) while the Spanish 2-year note yield has decreased to 2.265% (-6.2-bps). Likewise, the Italian 10-year note yield has decreased to 4.532% (-6.8-bps) while the Spanish 10-year note yield has decreased to 4.881% (-5.4-bps); lower yields imply higher prices.

RELATIVE PERFORMANCE (versus USD): 10:45 GMT

EUR: +0.12%

CAD: +0.06%

AUD: +0.05%

GBP:+0.02%

CHF:-0.01%

NZD:-0.01%

JPY:-0.17%

Dow Jones FXCM Dollar Index (Ticker: USDOLLAR): -0.03% (-0.55% past 5-days)

ECONOMIC CALENDAR

Consolidation_Afoot_as_Dijsselbloom_Commentary_Keeps_Euro_Lower__body_Picture_7.png, Consolidation Afoot as Dijsselbloom Commentary Keeps Euro Lower
Consolidation_Afoot_as_Dijsselbloom_Commentary_Keeps_Euro_Lower__body_Picture_7.png, Consolidation Afoot as Dijsselbloom Commentary Keeps Euro Lower

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