Top-5 ECB Plays And The Euro's Reaction

 | Dec 02, 2015 16:34

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

When the European Central Bank unveils a fresh round of stimulus on Thursday, the announcement will not be a surprise for most investors. Euro traders have had plenty of time to prepare for the move and based upon the 8% decline in the EUR/USD over the past 6 weeks, they sufficiently discounted fresh easing from the central bank. However many analysts believe that EUR/USD is headed for parity and we agree that the path of least resistance for the euro is lower. Euro is extremely oversold but with less than 24 hours to go before the monetary policy announcement, there's still significant uncertainty surrounding the actions that the ECB will take. ECB President Draghi pledged to "do what we must" to return inflation to 2% "as quickly as possible" and the desire to get ahead of the slowdown could mean more aggressive policy action.

h3 The 5 Most Alluring ECB Options:/h3
  1. Cut the deposit rate by 0.1% or 0.2%
  2. Extend the QE end date beyond September 2016
  3. Frontload bond purchases
  4. Broaden types of assets purchased
  5. Introduce a two-tired deposit system

We do not believe that investors have sufficiently discounted the potential aggressiveness of the central bank's actions. Draghi could choose one or a combination of these measures and the more actions they take the more weakness we expect in EUR/USD. Extending the end date of QE is almost certain since it was always a soft target. The same is true for front loading bond purchases -- they've done it before and will do it again. Lowering the deposit rate will automatically broaden the bonds they can purchase because the ECB prefers not to lose money but yields would adjust quickly. Broadening the types of assets purchased to include sub-sovereign bonds and nonperforming loans is the most controversial. In addition to these actions, the ECB's forward guidance will also have a significant impact on the euro -- if they maintain an easing bias and suggest that they are willing to increase stimulus further, then a 2 to 3 big-figure move in EUR/USD would not be a surprise. If the ECB shifts to wait-and-see mode after easing, the initial 1 to 2 big-figure decline (depending on the aggressiveness of the program) could find support quickly.

It is extremely difficult to handicap the central bank's level of aggressiveness. Based on ECB rhetoric, low inflation, the decline in commodity prices and the risks that the Paris attacks pose to the region's economy, the actions by the central bank should be bold. However some investors may find it surprising that the German and Eurozone economies saw more improvement than deterioration since the October meeting. The table below shows the decline in unemployment rates, uptick in consumer prices, acceleration in manufacturing and service-sector activity. In other words, the ECB has less to be worried about in December than October. There's no doubt that the French economy slowed as a result of the Paris attacks but the markets avoided a major sell-off. So if Draghi chose to do so, he could reserve some stimulus for a later time when the slowdown actually manifests in the data -- but that is not generally his style.