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Posts by "macrosam"

189 Posts Total by "macrosam":
184 Posts by member
macrosam
(United States)
5 Posts by Anonymous "macrosam":
macrosam
, United States
Posted Anonymously
13 years ago
Jan 10, 2011 0:08
Also, if the CCY basis continues to linger where it is (though it has recently rallied), Euro institutions may come to USD markets for funding and then swap them back into EUR for domestic use, i.e. arbitrage. We've seen this already during the first week in January
macrosam
, United States
Posted Anonymously
14 years ago
Sep 3, 2010 2:53
In Thread: JPY
Keep in mind that the largest investors in the world are pension funds and insurance companies. Both sell liability product and consequently must own a spread above their liabilities not only to meet obligations but to generate profits. Pension funds are severely underfunded to they must continue to put a bid into higher yielding assets otherwise they must contribute more of their funds to these asset pools.
macrosam
, United States
Posted Anonymously
14 years ago
Jul 19, 2010 0:33
In Thread: EUR
More dollar denominated debt:
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=avNXnGsrVUmc&pos=1

External debt is managable if it is dominated in the native currency. EUR is a bit of a special case as the restrictions (both fiscal and monetary) associated with the currency make it comparable to the restrictive (repressive?) nature of gold as a currency, coupled with the incongruence of economies, results in debt that is really in no one's native currency, yet the currency must be used as such.

macrosam
United States
Posted Anonymously
14 years ago
Jul 18, 2010 21:30
In Thread: EUR
As long as there is a large amount of outstanding USD denominated debt, as long as there are assets invoiced in USD regardless of who and where they are being transacted (i.e. crude oil), there will be a strong demand for USD because that is the only way to pay down that debt.

There are clear, evident reasons for EUR rise aside from short covering, which clearly occurred. EONIA has been floored by the gradual yet progressive removal of excess liquidity in the expiration of the 12 month repo and the presumably limited lifespan on the remaining 3 month and 1 week repos. This has set a floor on front end rates, supportive of the EUR. If you saw last week when China's growth of 10.3% was released, it was also accopmanied by the release of China's overall reserve holdings (as China does not provide the transparency to identify the % composition of these reserves). Foreign reserves grew by the smallest amount in years. Some of this has to do with lower exports (trade accounting is flawed, but for the sake of this argument let's go with this). Less exports results in less USD and EUR China is long. But another driver of the decline buried within the smaller net increase has clearly got to be due to the decline in the EUR. China's EUR reserves lost value, while USD increased. Couple this with possible greater US export revenues versus EUR revenues (again, don't have this transparency), any asset manager would engage is a rebalancing of reserves that required both the selling of USD to decrease exposure and the purchasing of EUR to increase the % of the reserve bucket. This had to occur regardless of trade concerns. And those trade concerns are more effectively addressed by focusing on increasin domestic demand and consumption, which China is explicitly focusing on as China is not foolish enough to ignore the fact that external consumption in the form of exports is a ship that has sailed. Why do you think China is going to relapse into stimulus, even at the risk of restarting the bubble-like real estate market via a revisitation of their Western expansion strategy (originated in 2000 and put on hold)? Have you not read the stories of labor unrest, mid-skill labor shortages resulting in increased wages?
macrosam
, United States
Posted Anonymously
14 years ago
Apr 2, 2010 13:51
In Thread: EUR
Sunday will see more volume I'm guessing as they'll have the weekend to digest the report, but here is what I see:

Less padding impact than expected from census and govt. created jobs
Private payrolls rise by 123K
Ex-census, March payrolls are up by 114K
Unrounded unemployment at 9.749%