Euro remains broadly soft as continued to be weighed down by negative
news flow from Eurozone. Spain formally requested for bailout for its
banks yesterday and is expecting to finish the MOU before EcoFin meeting
in early July. The bank bailout program agreed earlier this month could
give Spanish banks a lifeline of as much as EUR 100b and it's estimated
it may take as much as EUR 62b in the worst case scenario European
Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn emphasized
that "Restructuring the banking sector is key to reinforce the
confidence in the Spanish economy and to restore the conditions to
proper access to credit by companies and households, thus for sustaining
the recovery".
Shortly after Spain's formal request for bailing out its banking
sector, Moody's reduced long-term debt and deposit ratings for 28
Spanish banks and two issuer ratings. That include a cut to Banco
Santander's long-term rating to Baa2 from A3 and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya
Argentaria SA to Baa3 from A3. Both are Spain's largest lenders and are
placed not far from junk level. Overall, over a dozen of Spanish banks
were downgrade to junk status and Moody's had indeed downgraded six
banks by four notches and ten by three. According to the rating agency,
these banks have a link to Spain's creditworthiness which has
deteriorated and will affect the "credit profile for Spanish banks".
Meanwhile, it's reported that Cyprus has asked for financial
assistance from the EU/IMF to save its banks, making it the firth
country in the bloc that needed bailout. Yet, the amount and terms will
still need negotiation in coming days. It's expected that the required
fund will range from EUR 5-10b, compared with EUR 100b required by
Spain.
On the other hand, German Chancellor hardened her stance on Euro
bonds ahead of the EU summit on June 28-29. Merkel said that "Euro
bonds, Euro bills and European deposit insurance with joint liability
and much more" was "economically wrong and counterproductive". Moreover,
she openly stated that the upcoming summit "will be far too much about
all kinds of ideas for joint liability and far too little about improved
oversight and structural measures....So the goal has to be a political
union in which the standard is whatever the best, not mediocrity is".
These comments suggested that Merkel continued to oppose the ideas of
joint Euro bonds. While this does not mean that she will not accept such
as move even though the market situation deteriorates markedly further,
the terms and conditions of any joint issuance would likely be under
Germany's ruling.
In US, Richmond Fed Lacker said that monetary policy "doesn't have a
lot of capability right now" to boost growth. He said that further
stimulus at this point would "most likely just raise inflation". And,
Lacker warned that there is a "significant fiscal adjustment" ahead that
could have "a demonstrable effect on growth", referring to the so
called "fiscal cliff". On the other hand, BoE miles said yesterday that
UK needs a "more expansionary monetary policy", with "substantial change
in asset purchases".
On the dataflow, Germany's Gfk consumer sentiment probably slipped
-0.1 point to 5.6 in July. In the US, consumer confidence might have
dropped -0.9 points to 64 in June while S&P/Case-Shiller
composite-20 index might have contracted -2.05 y/y in April after a
-2.6% drop in the prior month.
(actionforex.com)
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