Euro banknotes
As fears of a euro zone recession urge investors to pile on the pessimistic wagers, the euro has dropped to a five-year low, rekindling the chance that the currency would reach parity with the dollar for the first time in two decades.
Russia’s decision to shut off gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland is the latest setback for the currency, which is already under pressure from the dollar’s rise and widespread COVID-related lockdowns in China, a key market for bloc exports. Gas restrictions could be imposed on Germany and other European countries next.
“The embargo could tip the European economy into recession sooner than later and as a result we are short the euro expecting it to weaken to at least $1.05 in the near term and maybe towards parity,” said Kaspar Hense, a senior portfolio manager at Bluebay Asset Management in London.
As the single currency plumbed a low of $1.0514 against the dollar, bringing April losses to 4.5% , some high-frequency financial and economic indicators are flashing red.
Data in the euro zone’s biggest economy Germany showed consumer morale at a historic low and the government sharply cut its 2022 growth forecasts.
A credit default swap index showed the cost of insuring exposure to lower-rated European debt is at its highest in two years, highlighting risks companies face.
More downside is likely, said Vasileios Gkionakis, EMEA head of G10 FX strategy at Citi, adding that “speculative positioning is much cleaner than before, suggesting scope for bigger ‘short’ accumulation.”
Indeed, one-month euro/dollar risk reversals — a option market gauge of demand for options on a currency rising or falling — moved sharply on Wednesday to imply more euro weakness.
The ratio of call options on the euro compared to puts almost halved on Wednesday from the previous day to minus 1.8, the lowest since early-April. Call options confer the right to buy an asset while puts enable holders to sell.
THE LESSER HAWK
The euro has moved steadily lower since peaking at $1.6 in 2008, deriving little benefit from expectations the European Central Bank may raise interest rates this year by 80 basis points.
That’s because markets are prepped for far more aggressive tightening from the U.S. Federal Reserve, with money markets betting U.S. rates will rise by 1% in the next two meetings.
ECB rates, currently at -0.50%, won’t rise to U.S. levels this year or the next.
“In the euro zone, you’re really only talking about getting that deposit rate out of negative territory and maybe back to slightly positive territory by year end. What that means is that the European currency depreciates,” said Craig Inches, head of rates at Royal London Asset Management.
Inches highlighted the euro’s slump against trading partners’ currencies as worrying for bond investors as it can exacerbate the bloc’s 7.4% inflation rate.
A worsening inflation outlook because of currency weakness “makes us assess the value of bond yields… are we being compensated in longer-dated bonds for the inherent term premia and future inflation risk,” he said, adding that 10-year German bonds made little sense at sub-1% yields.
HURDLES TO PARITY
A move to euro-dollar parity won’t be straightforward, with currency traders facing some stiff technical barriers.
Euro downside is guarded by sizeable option contracts around the early-2017 low of $1.0340, and then the $1.02 level last hit December 2002, according to two traders.
Swift moves might also invite ECB intervention, last seen in 2000 and 2011, especially if euro weakness sparks bond market blowouts in weaker states such as Italy read more .
The latest drop may be partly down to a positioning clean-out — weekly data from Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed hedge funds broadly neutral on the euro, with short positions well off highs seen in early-2020. .
For those reasons, few banks are willing to forecast euro-dollar parity will be hit; HSBC for instance says the 1.0341 level of early-2017 may heave into sight “if macro and political challenges don’t abate.”
Rabobank said it would reconsider its $1.10 euro forecast, noting the “stronger-for-longer” dollar, but expects “euro-dollar parity will be side-stepped” if energy supply disruptions are averted and ECB policy tightening stays on course.