Red hot euro, time to meet ECB's Mr cool
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[January 25, 2018]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - The euro steadied at a
three-year high on Thursday and shares inched back as traders waited to
see if the European Central Bank would try to cool the currency's
hottest run in nearly four years.
Concerns about U.S. protectionism kept the dollar weak after its worst
day in six months, but it was the signals from the ECB's first meeting
of 2018 after it again kept rates at record lows that were attracting
attention.
A boom in the euro zone economy means some of the bank's top
policymakers want an increasingly swift end to its 2.6 trillion euro
stimulus program, but they know it comes with plenty of challenges.
Number one is how to address the euro's surge - it was at a three-year
high of over $1.24 ahead of a 1330 GMT ECB news conference - as this
could dampen inflation and endanger the work done by years of
unprecedented stimulus.
Euro zone bonds were again reducing the premium offered by former debt
crisis countries such as Greece, Portugal and Spain compared with
ultra-safe German debt, but it will be a delicate balancing act for ECB
chief Mario Draghi. [GVD/EUR]
Oil prices, which are a major driver of inflation, hit $71 per barrel in
Asian trading for the first time since 2014. [O/R]
"The rate of change (in the euro) might make the ECB a little
uncomfortable," said State Street's head of EMEA macro strategy, Tim
Graf.
"They can't push back too much on the fruits of their success, but you
may well get comments around excessive currency volatility."
The uncertainty about the ECB made for a quiet pre-amble for share
markets.
Wall Street futures were pointing fractionally higher amid a flurry of
earnings from heavyweight companies 3M Co <MMM.N>, digger maker
Caterpillar <CAT.N>, which saw its sales surge 35 percent, and computer
chip giant Intel <INTC.O>. [.n]
The pan-European STOXX 600 <.STOXX> was getting going too. It had barely
budged early on as Germany's exporter-heavy DAX <.GDAXI> index fell, but
it was last sitting 0.2 percent higher as Frankfurt recovered to add to
small gains on London's FTSE <.FTSE> and France's CAC 40 <.FCHI>. [.EU]
As well as the euro's $1.24 milestone, sterling hit a new post Brexit
vote high against the dollar of $1.4250 <GBP=D4> and also climbed to its
highest in six months against the euro despite the euro zone currency's
broad advance. [GBP/]
TRADE WAR GAMES?
Asian trading had been a mixed bag, with many of the moves driven by the
weakening of the dollar.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS> touched an all-time peak for the ninth session in a row,
but Japan's Nikkei <.N225> fell 1.1 percent, hit by the yen's latest
jump against the greenback.
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100 Euro Banknotes are seen at the Money Service Austria company's
headquarters in Vienna, Austria, November 16, 2017. REUTERS/Leonhard
Foeger
MSCI ACWI <.MIWD00000PUS>, the index provider's broadest gauge of the world's
stock markets, consolidated its more than 6.5 percent gains for the month
A Reuters poll of over 500 economists showed the global economy is expected to
grow at the fastest pace since 2010.
The upbeat mood, however, has come up against renewed fears of protectionism by
the United States after President Donald Trump's decision to impose steep import
tariffs on washing machines and solar panels earlier in the week.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, hinted at other measures against China too
on Wednesday, saying at the annual Davos meeting that Washington was
investigating whether there was a case for taking action over China's
infringements of intellectual property.
Trump is scheduled to speak in Davos on Thursday.
Also in the Swiss Alpine town, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin made a
major departure from traditional U.S. currency policy on Wednesday, saying
"obviously a weaker dollar is good for us as it relates to trade and
opportunities".
Analysts say they cannot remember any U.S. Treasury Secretary openly embracing a
cheaper dollar, at least in the last two decades or so.
"I was speculating the Trump administration may role out something with fanfare
given its big delegation to Davos," said Masayuki Kichikawa, chief macro
strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management.
"I'd think the real aim of Mnuchin's comments on the dollar is not so much
engineering a weaker dollar per se as putting pressure on trading partners to do
some trade deals with the administration," he added.
The dollar's index against a basket of six major currencies <.DXY> <=USD>
tumbled to a three-year low of 88.816 before steadying in European trading. It
has fallen 1.9 percent so far this week.
The dollar had also slipped to as far as 108.74 yen <JPY=>, its lowest since
mid-September, and to its weakest against the Chinese yuan since November 2015 <CNY=CFXS>.
It is on course for its biggest monthly fall against the yuan.
"They (the U.S. administration) can either have tariffs with the rest of the
world or do it organically through a nice depreciation of the dollar," said JP
Morgan Asset Management's chief European markets strategist Karen Ward.
(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Alison Williams)
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