tirsdag den 27. maj 2014

Leading indicator: Belgium post lowest inflation in 4 years - 1st EUROZONE report for May

If Belgium is any indication – and it normally is – then inflation will notch down in May – Belgium reported as first country in the Eurozone this morning:

 

 

Trend is clear – inflation is down 400 bps since 2011!!!

 

 

 

Belgium CPI & 10 Year Germany..

 

 

ECB June 5th:

 

Still making up my mind on ECB – what we know is:

 

·         Draghi & ECB likes to talk more than act – leaving them likely to wait-and-see

·         Lending remain subdued – action also reflecting a "social need" for addressing inequality

·         Bank of Italy is working on some measures to include SME asset into collateral program – (Reuters May 12th) – indicating it could be part of "solution"

·         Negative rates & REPO cut will be futile as measures to re-activate the growth, reform and increase consumer demand but…. Action is better than opposite for policy makers

 

Consensus:

 

·         Repo cut by 10 bps

·         Negative deposit rates -10 bps

·         Targeted lending to SME related business

 

Positioning:

 

The bond market have an "economic put" built is for free:

 

1.    If ECB does not move – inflation will be unanchored to downside – making bonds very attractive.

2.    If ECB does move – will be seen as monetary easing…

3.    EP-2014: Was one big exercise of increasing complexity, increasing compromise and moving further away from reform, simplicity and listening to the voters of Europe. Leaving victims in the shape of lower growth, no reforms.

 

 

On beneath all of this Germany export orders needs to be watched – we are nearing the zenith in growth, export and production coming from the "over optimism" which kick started the year – reality is close by…..

 

Bunds should test 1.20% in June and ultimately break 1.00% - our JABA model is now looking for an acceleration to the downside in yields, despite my fixed income "friends" telling the game is over, but then again, the same crowd in January sold bought yield steepners and reduced duration. Any set back will see me add to already 70% long fixed income position towards 90% - now mainly buying US bond market.

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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mandag den 26. maj 2014

EU Parliamentaty commentary: Europe's lurch to right will see unemployed, growth, emerge as losers

Dear All,

 

My two cents on the EP-2014. The one conclusion which stands out to me is: Growth and reform will be delayed. The trade remains LONG fixed income – everything which just happened in Ukraine, ECB and now EP-2014 has a negative growth/inflation impact.

 

Europe is caught out – miscommunication is the norm, and the mandate for change just moved further away despite the strong showing for anti-EU votes. This votes however is diluted by institutional frameworks and a modus operandi in proceedings which makes it impossible to change the course, but hopefully It can change the pace.

 

Europe rejected Barosso's idea that the solution to Europe's problem is more Europe – they shouted: No! It's a better working Europe.

 

Steen

 

 

Europe's lurch to right will see unemployed, growth, emerge as losers

Steen Jakobsen

Chief Economist & CIO / Saxo Bank

Denmark

·          

·          

·         Massive eurosceptic bloc breakthrough at parliamentary elections impossible to ignore

·         European project at risk as voters reject Brussels' push for ever-further integration

·         Real losers in vote continue to be unemployed and growth prospects as Europe divisions rise

 

By Steen Jakobsen

 

Across Europe, EU-sceptic voters gained ground, but it could be in vain as the overall majority of the old guard: Conservative, Liberals, Greens and Social Democrat's still carry 70 percent of the mandates. 

How the protest votes engage with the main stream parties will set the tone for Europe over the next five years. If the protest parties just want a floor to shout "No thank you to Europe", then we will see the old parties align themselves more towards the middle and dilute the negative votes. On the other hand, if the EU-sceptic votes want real influence, then compromise and seeking real influence on key votes will be the strategy. 

 

The European Parliament makes a new law every second day, which is scary in itself, but it also shows you that Europe today is very much a machine where stopping the momentum is extremely hard. The EU system is built and set up to protect the bureaucratic model and it clearly favours pro-EU inclined political parties.

This biased set-up and momentum makes the results in the UK, Italy, Greece, Denmark, and France impossible to ignore. The implications in France and the UK carries the biggest weight where Marine Le Pen's National Front took 25 percent of the vote foran estimated 25 seats and Nigel Farage's UK Independence Party obliterated the traditional parties of power to take 28 percent of the poll and an estimated 23 seats. 

 

The chances of a UK voting no in the referendum next year is now a clear and present danger. UKIP has arrived at the national scene, likewise in France where Marine Le Pen has now clearly become a force to reckon with in the next Presidential election. 

 

 

 

National Front leader Marine Le Pen celebrates a major victory in the European Parliamentary elections which saw Francois Hollande's socialist party obliterated. Photo: Pascal Le Segretain \ Thinkstock

 

A move to a more wait-and-see attitude away from the full support for everything European will be the biggest marginal change in Europe. By ignoring the wishes of their voters a lot of mainstream parties across Europe are now looking for a new strategy – a strategy which after this week's election will entail less Europe, not more. 

 

It is also in total opposition to EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barosso's State of the Union speech where he said: "the problem with Europe is not that we have too much Europe, it's that we have too little". Europe's voters clearly disagree and the consequences of this EP election may be slow and small, but significant.

 

******

·         Le Pen's National Front takes 25% of the vote, Francois Hollande's socialists plunge to 14%

·         UKIP relegates traditional parties to win 23 MEP seats, Liberal Democrats obliterated

·         Denmark, Hungary and the Netherlands all see significant right-wing gains

·         Italy's centre-left holds off right-wing party to take 40% of vote

·         Germany stays firmly on the middle road with Angela Merkel's Christian Union taking 35%

*********


The new European Parliament will have stronger democratic credentials which is anchored in the Lisbon Treaty and includes new lawmaking powers. It will be decisive on the majority of EU legislation. In total, over 40 new fields have been added including agriculture, energy policy(or the lack of it), immigration and EU funds. The Parliament also has the final say on the EU budget. 

 

The biggest immediate change will be that the new President of the European Commission will need to have the approval of the Parliament to take office. We can expect a major fight between the EU Council and the European Parliament on exactly this point. Don't expect any consensus before the last minute. 

The 751 members of the EU Parliament operate through coalitions of interest across countries and sometimes political standpoint. The final date for submitting a coalition is June 23, and a "coalition" has to be at least 25 members from seven different nations. 

 

Here the protest votes can play vital role. The Europe-sceptic vote is divided. The risk is that, similar to the Occupy movement in the US, al ack of common goal, except those of a negative nature, allows the majority get away with ignoring what clearly is a call from the voters to the politicians that Europe is too far away from the daily life of its 500 million citizens.


The Banking union, high unemployment and low growth remain formidable challenges. I still see a dramatic slow-down in Germany into 2015 as the biggest risk for Europe. Germany has been the locomotive so far, surviving by exporting to Asia during this crisis, but now Asia is slowing down leaving us with less export in Europe. 

 

The EU "economic police" will be tested. France and Spain is already in violation of budget deficits for 2014 and 2015. The so called "recovery" is actually a stabilisation, not recovery. In history, unions, even primitive ones, fail when economic times turns negative. A new test is upon us as we leave 2014 in my opinion, and has not been made easier by the new European Parliament. Voters and politicians are clearly not agreeing. Putting anything European to a referendum will be risky and hence Europe is now on move to a pace of speed walking from jogging along.

 

 

 

Austerity protests in the likes of Spain may struggle to make their message heard if the political landscape in Europe sees rifts become ever wider. Photo: InFocusDC \ Thinkstock

 

The market is ignoring the European Parliamentary 2014 results, they see the glass as half-full. However, as the new European Parliament gets down to business, the in-fighting will continue in the European Council, in the European Parliament, between the EU Council and European Parliament, and between the EU and the voters of Europe. That is the ultimate conclusion: Europe's politicians and its voters have never been further apart. The price for that is a continued flow of miscommunication which will leave Europe weaker, with less decision power and ever-widening rifts. 

 

As George Bernard Shaw once said: "The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place". 

What Europe needs is to move forward with a political and fiscal union to consolidate and progress. It will clearly not happen. It also needs to simplify its business. Also very unlikely to happen. We have just increased the complexity of politics and decision making. The loser, as always remains the unemployed, growth and reforms. The victor: Buying more time. Sad. Really.

 

-- Edited by Martin O'Rourke

 

Steen Jakobsen is chief economist and CIO at Saxo Bank. For more of his observations and analysis of the global economy please click here

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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torsdag den 22. maj 2014

MACRO Outlook presentation

My most recent presentation – of course being a "light presenter" I don't submit a lot of text, which leaves you with the work of figuring out what some of the charts "means"… but I know a few of you always looking for charts/inputs…

 

Steen

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

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Deflation now UNANCHORED

From Bloomberg Report yday:

 

Which remind me of my favorite economist John Makin recent piece: Now is the time to preempt deflation: The same is true with deflation. It is necessary to be preemptive. Deflation is self-reinforcing, so if you wait to offset it until prices are actually falling, you risk losing control. The resulting pain can be more substantial than the physical pain that results from delaying ingestion of painkillers, since those will eventually quell discomfort, and deflation's appearance suggests that it will intensify before you can get control of it.

Deflation Warnings

It is not as if no one is noticing that deflation is creeping closer. The March 29 weekend Financial Times front-page, above-the-fold headline was, "Specter of eurozone deflation in view." Underscoring that fear, actual eurozone inflation for March was reported at a 0.5 percent year-over-year pace, down from a 0.7 percent pace in February. Core inflation in Europe is falling as well. Figure 1 shows measures of trend inflation since March 2011.

 

Steen Jakobsen note: Without saying I disagree with what's needed – monetary policy is totally impotent at zero bound, but…. SME/Lending through to velocity of money isn't – problem? It takes too long for quick-and-dirty results which both policy makers and politicans needs/wants.

 

 

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
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onsdag den 14. maj 2014

Why are market ignoring slow-down in Germany? German yield will test all-time low

Back from major trip to Brazil, Uruguay, US and Spain.

 

The one thing which to me is being ignored by the market is the coming slow-down in Germany. The market can of course go up in times of weaker growth, but my big "thing" is that no one believes Germany economically is slowing despite very negative macro changes in the last twelve months:

 

ü  The China rebalancing will cost Germany export volume.

ü  The most expensive energy policy in Europe – a drive away from atomic power dependency to a less obvious dependency on Russian gas.

ü  Ukraine crisis. According to the Federation of German Wholesale, Foreign Trade and Services (BGA) about 6.200 German companies are doing business in Russia.

ü  The coming Chinese devaluation of CNY – will significantly lift Chinese import prices.

 

I had to write a monthly OP-ED for Swiss Financial newspaper and as I sat down to verify my long held opinion that Germany would slow-down in Q4 I was surprised to find Germany already seeing relative dramatic slow-down signs:

 

German & China Export is interlinked. Germany export "capacity" – China converts it to net export….

 

 

Better link; https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466152903968055296

 

 

 

German export climate in IFO survey. Slight negative trend recently.

 

Better link: https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466177268264751104

 

 

Citigroups Surprise Index – Europe (Source: Bloomberg LLP & Saxo Bank A/S)

 

 

Better link from internet: https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466495786105049088

 

 

German 10 Y Bund & Citigroup's Surprise Index (Source: Bloomberg LLP and Saxo Bank A/S)

 

 

Better link: https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466495044262707200

 

New low for the year in CESIEUR Index – Citigroup Surprise Index…..

 

German Manu Export YOY & GDP Chain GDP YOY….. (Source: Bloomberg LLP and Saxo Bank A/S)

 

 

Better link: https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466495245056999424

 

 

If history is any guide growth should hit zero inside next quarters..

 

Conclusion/Strategy

 

I have constantly argued for this slow-down being logic based on Germany's Asia dependency on export volume growth but with poor policy responses from Germany on energy and a neglected understanding of the Russian exposure the market is in for very negative surprise on growth as we leave 2014. More than 6.200 German companies are involved in Russia – The Economist claims more than 300.000 jobs depends on Russia export. Russia is Germany's 11th biggest export market & its 7th biggest import market. Germany now imports more than 70% of its energy and which more than 25% comes from Russia. Merkel has created a risky energy policy which makes her impotent in international dealings.

 

Europe and Germany must soon own up to the fact that we are energy deficient. We run major short position in energy. That should be the main topic for the next EU Council Minister meetings, but instead they are going to celebrate the crisis is finally over…. The King is dead – long live the King.

 

DAX Index – (Source: Bloomberg LLP & Matt Hastings)

 

 

https://twitter.com/Steen_Jakobsen/status/466496819833602049

 

 

I have been long core European bonds since Q4 last year – that position combined with short EUR and AUDUSD remains the only three trades I have on and also the only three trades I have done in the last three months. Our rule of stock market lagging real economy by three month would indicate that DAX is getting very close to "full price" – I have presently no positions in stocks, but I am looking for way to short either naked or against Nikkei over next week. We need a catalyst to upset the status quo.

 

Safe travels,

 

Steen

 

 

 

Med venlig hilsen  |  Best regards
Steen Jakobsen  |  Chief Investment Officer

 

Saxo Bank A/S  |  Philip Heymans Allé 15  |  DK-2900 Hellerup
Phone: +45 39 77 40 00  |  Direct: +45 39 77 62 23  |  Mobile: +45 51 54 50 00

 

Research: http://www.tradingfloor.com/traders/steen-jakobsen

Please visit our website at www.saxobank.com

 

This email may contain confidential and/or privileged information.
If you are not the intended recipient (or have received this email
by mistake), please notify the sender immediately and destroy this
email. Any unauthorised copying, disclosure or distribution of the
material in this email is strictly prohibited.

Email transmission security and error-free status cannot be guaranteed
as information could be intercepted, corrupted, destroyed, delayed,
incomplete, or contain viruses. The sender therefore does not accept
liability for any errors or omissions in the contents of this message
which may arise as a result of email transmission.