Showing posts with label yen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yen. Show all posts

Friday, January 18, 2013

A MELHOR APOSTA


Soube-se hoje - vd aqui - que nos EUA os Republicanos dicidiram aumentar o teto da dívida por três meses, o que representa uma quase vitória de Obama. Quase, porque este recuo da oposição é significativo de que os conservadores dificilmente virão a querer assumir a responsabilidade de uma recessão que a admissão das suas propostas implicaria. De qualquer modo haverá um ajustamento da despesa, isto é, cortes de despesa suficientes para conformarem o défice com o novo teto "debt ceiling". São frequentes os relatos das consequências das restrições orçamentais.

No Economist desta semana, por outro lado, destaca-se a decisão do primeiro-ministro japonês, eleito recentemente, de realizar um programa de renovação de infraestruturas - vd aqui - de 13 triliões de yenes, cerca de 150 biliões de dólores, equivalente a 2,6% do PIB, um valor que excede o investimento público de reconstrução em consequência do terramoto de 2011. Criticado pela oposição de reincidir em políticas de obras públicas, defendem-no os seus apoiantes confiantes argumentando que este programa de cimento relançará a economia por, além dos efeitos directos sobre a actividade de obras públicas, provocar a desvalorização do yene e, desse modo, aumentar a competitividade da indústria japonesa no exterior.


A aposta de crescimento económico prevalecente nos EUA e no Japão subalterniza, portanto, o crescimento da dívida pública, que no Japão atinge os 200% do PIB, mas muito maioritariamente interna, e o câmbio das respectivas moedas. Aliás, se alguma intenção deliberada existe em matéria cambial ela parece resumir-se a "quanto mais baixo melhor". Krugman*, que tem apoiado uma política anticíclica nos EUA desde o deflagrar da crise em 2008 e criticado a politica de austeridade na União Europeia, determinada sobretudo pela Alemanha, a partir de 2010, tem aplaudido repetidamente a decisão do primeiro-ministro japonês logo que ela foi anunciada.

Porque a China joga com cartas viciadas e o valor da sua moeda, internacionalmente, reflete sobretudo as decisões do governo, a aposta da União Europeia é singular na mesa que junta os ainda principais protagonistas da economia a nível mundial. Até quando a aposta europeia pode ainda sair vencedora, não se sabe. O que se  sabe é que parece, e cada vez mais, perdedora.
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*Krugman publicava há dias um gráfico comparativo da dívida pública, que tem observado uma escalada sem precedentes  desde a Segunda Guerra Mundial, com a evolução praticamente insensível dos preços no consumidor.

Sunday, October 02, 2011

O OURO E O EURO

A crise do euro anda anunciada por toda a parte, aliás, muita gente sabida anda a rezar-lhe pela alma desde que ele nasceu. E, no entanto, ele continua firme mesmo quando o sistema bancário é abalado pelo descontrolo, que ele mesmo promoveu, de algumas dívidas soberanas. Relativamente ao dólar, a divisa de referência ainda mais usada nas transacções internacionais, o euro vem-se mantendo desde o seu lançamento, salvo um período quase inicial relativamente curto, bem acima da moeda norte-americana. Se os investidores não são generalizadamente tontos, o desaparecimento do euro não acontecerá nos tempos mais próximos.

Dos 27 países membros, 10 não aderiram ainda à zona euro, mas destes, 4 têm o valor das suas moedas ligadas ao euro. Das 6 restantes, a libra enleou-se ao euro nos últimos doze meses (aqueles em que a crise do euro tem sido mais badalada) entre um mínimo de 0,830 e um máximo de 0,905 EUR/GBP, e uma desvalorização do euro de apenas 1,3% no período considerado; a coroa sueca flutuou entre 8,70 e 9,40 EUR/SEK e uma variação quase nula; contra a coroa checa, entre 23,99 e 25,36 EUR/CZK, e uma variação quase nula; contra o florint hungaro, entre 262,46 e 294,5 EUR/HUF e uma valorização de 7% ; contra o zlot polaco, entre 3,84 e 4,52 EUR/PLN e uma valorização de 25%; contra o leu romeno, entre 4,06 e 4,36 EUR/RON e uma valorização de 1,6%; Conclusão: Com excepção da Polónia, todos os países membros da UE não membros do SME, Reino Unido, incluido, têm as suas moedas ancoradas ao euro em situação de crise do euro.

Contra as moedas de refúgio: duas moedas fortes europeias de países não membros da UE - Noruega e Suiça - a coroa noruegesa flutuou entre 7,50 e 8,20 EUR/NOK e uma desvalorização do euro de 13% ; o franco suíço, que se colou ao euro recentemente por razões de defesa de competitividade da economia suiça, e que apanhou muita gente desprevenida, flutuou entre 1,02 e 1,37 EUR/CHF e o euro desvaloriza 10%. Contra o Yen japonês, entre 101,27 e 123 EUR/JPY e uma desvalorização de 10%. Contra o dólar, entre 1,289 e 1,484 e uma desvalorização de 2,8% .

Se alguns dos mais abonados foram apanhados desprevenidos com a desvalorização súbita do franco suíço, aqueles que se refugiaram no ouro acabam de apanhar um balde de água fria. Há dias, Odyssey Ocean, uma empresa dedicada à caça de tesouros, encontrou ao largo da Irlanda um barco afundado em 1941 com 220 toneladas de prata a bordo, afundando as cotações do ouro.  Conclusão: Não há, definitivamente, nenhum refúgio seguro.

Segundo o FT de hoje, "Investors discovered that, in an interconnected world, all assets move together in a crisis. Just as in 2008, traders who had borrowed or used futures to invest in, say, shares or copper, last week had to stump up more cash to back the loans as prices fell. To raise money, they turned to the one part of their portfolios showing a profit – and that meant selling precious metals, hurting their price".

Mas, ainda segundo o articulista do FT, há quem não duvide que o ouro voltará a subir e chegará aos 2000 dólares/onça.
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A menos que a Odyssey Marine lhes baralhe outra vez os prognósticos.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

CARÍSSIMO FRANGO


Em consequência de tanta procura do franco, o frango suíço continua caríssimo. 

Tanto que o governo helvético anunciou mais medidas para compensar a valorização do franco, e do frango.

A Suíça vai implementar um programa de despesa pública para contrariar os efeitos da "sobrevalorização maciça" do franco suíço, que está a penalizar a competitividade do sector exportador do país. É o que dizem aqui.

Depois de uns (poucos) dias em que corrigiu cerca de 19% contra as principais moedas, voltou hoje a valorizar-se cerca de 3% em poucas horas.
O que indicia que o nível de confiança em geral continua pelas ruas da amargura.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

O PREÇO DO FRANGO

aqui

O iene esteve a cair de forma acentuada na manhã muito volátil que está a viver-se nos mercados cambiais, com rumores não-confirmados de que o Banco do Japão estaria a intervir no mercado. Franco suíço também cai com rumores de intervenção.
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Também a moeda da Suíça está em forte queda esta manhã, depois de três sessões em subida ininterrupta, com notícias de que o banco central poderia indexar o franco suíço ao euro.

O euro-franco suíço está a valer 1,0488 euros, contra os 1,03 euros do fecho de ontem, também penalizado por rumores de que o banco central estaria a prepara a introdução de uma taxa especial sobre os depósitos bancários denominados em francos suíços, para deter o influxo de capitais para o sistema financeiro suíço.

Sunday, August 07, 2011

EU NÃO SOU EU NEM SOU OUTRO

Em Abril do ano passado o presidente checo foi rude e jocoso com Cavaco Silva, seu convidado, a quem recomendou, além do mais, não dizer a ninguém que Portugal tinha um défice orçamental superior ao da República Checa.
Cavaco fez-se despercebido e, já em Portugal, desdramatizou o incidente garantindo que Portugal não era a Grécia e, se as metas do OE fossem cumpridas, em 2013 o défice português seria inferior ao checo. 

Passou pouco mais de um ano e, há dias, Obama afirmava que os Estados Unidos não são nem a Grécia nem Portugal.

Os chineses que detêm cerca de 1,6 triliões de dólares em reservas e, muito provavelmente, mais fora da China, são os maiores detentores de dívida soberana norte-americana, na sequência do downgrade da Stantard and Poor´s, alertam mais uma vez os EUA para reduzirem a sua dependência do crescimento do défice e a retomar o princípio de bom senso que recomenda que não se viva acima das suas possibilidades.

Segundo a agência governamental chinesa, "A China, o maior credor da única superpotência mundial, tem todo o direito de, agora, exigir que os EUA resolvam os problemas estruturais que estão na origem do crescimento da sua dívida soberana e assegurem a estabilidade do valor dos activos  denominados em dólares"..." O governo americano tem de reconhecer que acabaram os bons velhos tempos em que podia obter crédito ilimitado" . Saliente-se que a agência de rating chinesa Dagong, fundada em 1994 para estabelecer o rating das empresas chinesas, mas não reconhecida pela U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, tinha já notado a dívida norte-americana com A+ e reviu agora em baixa para A-. 

O Japão, o segundo maior credor dos EUA, tem opinião diferente: "A confiança e o interesse que tínhamos nas obrigações do tesouro americano não se alteraram em consequência desta acção (da Standard and Poor´s)".
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Amanhã, veremos onde param as modas.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Thursday, October 07, 2010

GUERRA CAMBIAL - 3

Ameaça de guerra cambial atira euro para 1,40 dólares

A ameaça de uma guerra cambial levou o euro a passar a barreira dos 1,40 dólares pela primeira vez desde Janeiro.

A moeda única europeia está hoje a negociar nos 1,4010 dólares, uma apreciação de 0,57% que está a ser explicada pelos peritos pelo risco de "guerra cambial", uma ameaça que Dominique Strauss-Kahn classifica de "real".

"Estou a levar muito a sério a ameaça de uma guerra cambial", disse hoje o secretário-geral do Fundo Monetário Internacional (FMI) numa entrevista publicada no jornal francês Le Monde. O assunto também passou pela conferência de imprensa com Jean-Claude Trichet, presidente do Banco Central Europeu (BCE).

Em causa está sobretudo uma tensão entre União Europeia e China que, confrontadas com a necessidade de aumentarem as suas exportações para estimularem as suas economias, estão a tentar desvalorizar as suas divisas para, dessa forma, ganharem competitividade nos mercados internacionais.

Com a cotação actual, o euro reduz as perdas anuais para o dólar para 2,1%. Desde 28 de Janeiro de 2010 que a moeda comunitária não transaccionava acima de 1,40 dólares.

GUERRA CAMBIAL - 2


Forcing Beijing to revalue its currency would lead to a “disaster for the world”, Wen Jiabao, China’s premier, has warned amid increasing tensions over efforts by governments and central banks to hold down their exchange rates.

Speaking in Brussels, Mr Wen hit back at international criticism of China’s currency policy, saying that acceding to demands for a faster rise in the renminbi could cause social unrest in China.

“Do not work to pressurise us on the renminbi rate,” Mr Wen said, departing from prepared remarks. He said Chinese export companies had very small profit margins, which could be wiped out by actions such as the currency import tariffs the US Congress is threatening to impose.

“Many of our exporting companies would have to close down, migrant workers would have to return to their villages,” Mr Wen said. “If China saw social and economic turbulence, then it would be a disaster for the world.”

Mr Wen’s comments come a day after a trio of leading European Union officials, including Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the eurozone group of finance ministers, were politely rebuffed when they asked China to allow the renminbi to appreciate faster.

With fears rising about a global currency war, government and central bank officials across emerging Asia are contemplating more intervention to hold down their exchange rates.

Tim Geithner, US Treasury secretary, said that intervention was contagious. “When large economies with undervalued exchange rates act to keep the currency from appreciating, that encourages other countries to do the same,” he told a conference in Washington.

In June, Beijing ended a two-year period of intervening in the currency markets to re-peg the value of the renminbi against the dollar, and allowed it to resume appreciating. But since then it has risen by only just over 2 per cent against the dollar, and has fallen more than 9 per cent against the euro.

Mr Wen said a gradual appreciation was already under way and that “we are going to proceed with the reforms”, but China has refused to give a guarantee about how quickly the currency will rise.

Upward pressure on emerging Asian currencies against the dollar, euro and renminbi has triggered increasing talk of official action. Senior Thai and Indian central bank officials have been the most aggressive, voicing complaints that significant inflows of western funds are pushing up currencies and, in India’s case, fuelling inflation.

The Thai baht and Indian rupee strengthened on Wednesday in spite of suggestions by Wongwatoo Potirat, director of the Bank of Thailand, and Subir Gokarn, deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of India, that action to curb appreciation pressures might be imminent.

Mr Wongwatoo said the Thai central bank was considering restrictions on fund flows to try to manage the baht, while Mr Gokarn said the RBI was looking at ways to deal with the “potential threat” of inward capital flows.

Although exchange-rate policy has boiled over into a heated political issue in the US, where it has been blamed for a yawning trade deficit and high unemployment, it has been less of a concern in Europe, which still enjoys a trade surplus

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

GUERRA CAMBIAL


Has the time for a currency war with China arrived? The answer looks increasingly to be yes. The politics and economics of an assault on Chinese exchange rate policy are increasingly convincing. The idea is, of course, deeply disturbing. But I no longer believe there is an alternative.

We have to address four questions. Is China a “currency manipulator”? If it is, does it matter? What might China reasonably be asked to do? Finally, can other countries shift China’s policies, with limited collateral damage?

The first question is the easiest. If a decision to invest half a country’s gross domestic product in currency reserves is not exchange rate manipulation, what is? Moreover, by sterilising the monetary effects, the Chinese government has also thwarted the mechanism of adjustment in a fixed-rate regime, which was explained by the great Scottish philosopher, David Hume, in the 18th century (see chart below).

Now turn to the second question: does this matter? One answer is that it is a protectionist policy. By keeping its real exchange rate down, China subsidises production of its exports and import substitutes. Since China is now the world’s biggest exporter, this has to be a significant distortion of world trade.

The Chinese current account surplus is far from the only explanation for the US current account deficit. Yet it is also true that China’s currency policies have driven those of other countries; that capital-importing high-income countries are unable to make productive use of the surplus savings of the emerging countries; and that the net flow of funds from the poor to the rich is altogether perverse.

Moreover, if high-income countries such as the US are to have more prudent household sectors and more fiscal discipline, they must either enjoy a big investment boom or a shift into current account surplus. More plausibly, they need both.

Given, in addition, the continued savings surpluses of Germany, Japan and a number of other high-income countries, a return to stable growth in the world economy requires the battered high-income countries, as a group, to move into sizeable current account surplus. China is the most dynamic and solvent emerging country. It also runs the world’s largest current account surplus. If all the offsetting shift towards deficit is in much weaker emerging economies, the ultimate result is likely to be another round of financial crises. Yet China could move today’s current account surplus towards deficit, by $300bn a year, at negligible risk.

This leads us to the third question: what might China reasonably be asked to do? An adjustment in the nominal exchange rate is neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition for the rebalancing of the world economy: not necessary, because higher inflation could bring about changes in relative prices, instead; not sufficient, because it would still require an increase in domestic spending, relative to output. At most, therefore, an adjustment in the nominal exchange rate is a facilitator of a wider set of desired adjustments.

Thus the menu of possible options for the Chinese authorities could include a cap on the intervention, an end to sterilisation of the monetary consequences and targets for real domestic demand, household consumption and the current account. Meanwhile, China should demand complementary actions elsewhere, notably in the US.

In any such discussions, one would have to address Chinese concerns that letting the exchange rate appreciate significantly would not only damage export industry, but risk a “lost decade” similar to that of Japan in the 1990s. What happened to Japan was largely the result of using monetary policy after 1985 to offset the negative impact of the rising exchange rate on net exports. Naturally, China does not wish to enter the same trap. But, as Gabriel Stein of Lombard Street Research argues in a paper released in June, the two situations are very different: China has far greater potential for fast growth than Japan did in the late 1980s, because Japan’s GDP per head (at purchasing power parity) was already close to that of the US, while China’s is less than a fifth; and China, above all, has huge potential for higher consumption rates. Aggressive credit expansion is a dangerous way to achieve a permanent rise in domestic spending relative to output. That will also require structural changes in the economy. But these are very much in the interest of the Chinese people.

This leads to the final question: how might China be cajoled or coerced into changing its policies? Negotiation remains a hope. The rest of Group of 20 leading countries should unite in calling for these changes. But if negotiation continues to fail, alternatives must be considered. Import surcharges are one possibility.  Fred Bergsten of Washington’s Peterson Institute called for countervailing currency intervention in the FT this week; and Daniel Gros of the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels recommends capital account reciprocity: affected countries could prevent other countries from purchasing their financial instruments, unless the latter offered reciprocal access to their financial markets. This idea would also make the Bergsten plan more effective.

I find ideas for intervention in capital markets far more attractive than those involving action against trade, as the US House of Representatives proposed last week. First, action on trade would have to be discriminatory: there is no reason to attack all imports, merely to change Chinese behaviour. But this would almost certainly be a violation of the rules of the World Trade Organisation. A trade war would be very dangerous. Insisting that China stop purchasing the liabilities of other countries so long as it operates tight controls on capital inflows is, instead, direct and proportionate and, above all, moves the world towards market opening.

Some fear that a cessation of Chinese purchases of US government bonds would lead to a collapse. Nothing is less likely, given the massive financial surpluses of the private sectors of the world and the continuing role of the dollar. If it weakened the dollar, however, that would be helpful, not damaging.

The post-crisis world economy will not work so long as its most dynamic economy is also its largest capital exporter. Moreover, China has insured itself to a vastly more than adequate extent. Adopting a set of policies that would turn China into a net importer would benefit both its own people and the rest of the world. The time has come to move beyond rhetoric. Action is urgent.

clicar para aumentar

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

A VIA INEVITÁVEL

As desvalorizações competitivas já começaram.
A inflação segue dentro de algum tempo.

Beggar, then sneakily enrich, thy neighbour

AMONG today's big news items is the word that Japan is now actively selling yen in order to improve its exchange rate against other major currencies. The yen has risen sharply in recent months, dealing a blow to Japanese exporters and slowing Japanese recovery. The move has led to some fretting that a period of competitive devaluation is nigh. Here's Tim Duy, for instance:

What it all boils down to is this: There apparently is no motivation for global central banks to stop directing capital inflows at the US in an effort to support mercantilist objectives. If it isn’t China, it will be some other economy. And equally apparent, there is no motivation among US policymakers to address such government directed capital flows. Which will leave politicians falling back on ultimately harmful trade barriers. The absolute inability of US policymakers to seriously address a global financial architecture where a rule of the game is "when in doubt, by Dollars" will ultimately have serious consequences via disruptive adjustment when the system can no longer be maintained, via either external or internal forces.

Doom and gloom, but I feel more positive about this development. Consider Buttonwood's take:

As David Bloom of HSBC points out in a note responding to the move, the costs of intervention to the Japanese are not great. Selling yen and buying dollars results in more yen being created, which might be inflationary, but a bit of Japanese inflation wouild be a good thing.

My thought concerns the general tendency of countries to want their currencies to depreciate. Everyone would like to boost their growth by letting their currencies slide and increasing exports. Of course, not all can succeed. Someone must increase net imports and let their currency appreciate. The obvious candidate is the Chinese, but they are unwilling to let it happen (at least at a pace desired by the rest of the world).

The result is like a game of deflationary pass the parcel in which the countries with appreciating currencies eventually feel the pressure, and try to reverse the trend.


A bit of inflation in Japan wouldn't just be a good thing. It would be a really, really great thing. And if other countries react to Japan's intervention by attempting to print and sell their own currencies in order to toss the deflationary potato to someone else, well then so much the better. As the chart at right indicates, its a rare rich economy that couldn't use a bit more inflation.

Not every country can simultaneously depreciate its currency. But everyone can nonetheless benefit from the attempt, if currency interventions lead to expanded money supplies and rising inflation expectations.

It's worth looking again at this important chart:



Sunday, May 30, 2010

DANÇA COM CÂMBIOS

Dollar suffers as risk appetite returns
By Peter Garnham

A turbulent week on the currency markets pushed the dollar and yen lower as risk appetite made a tentative return.
This weighed on haven demand for both the US and Japanese currencies at the end of the week.
It was a different story early in the week as concerns over the eurozone debt crisis, and Spanish banks in particular, weighed on global equities and hit confidence. Those concerns were exacerbated by rising hostility between North and South Korea.
But world equities regained their poise from Wednesday. Analysts said there was a heightened belief that Asian economies and the US could decouple from the problems in Europe. “The theory of a decoupling of the rest of the world from the problems in the eurozone seems to be taking hold, following the theory frequently heard in 2008 of the emerging markets decoupling themselves from the recession of the industrialised world,” said Ulrich Leuchtmann, at Commerzbank.
He said the reasoning was clear: the exposure of the financial systems in Asia and the US to the stricken countries of the eurozone was small and economic effects were small as Asia, not Europe, was the engine of the global recovery.
“It makes no difference short-term whether the decoupling theory is correct or not,” said Mr Leuchtmann. “If that is the reason behind concerns being overcome, then the currencies that are considered to be high risk will benefit.”
Commodity-linked currencies, which are highly sensitive to the prospects for global growth, rallied sharply.
Over the week, the Australian dollar rose 1.9 per cent to $0.8481 against the US dollar, while the Canadian dollar gained 1.2 per cent to C$1.0467. The dollar dropped 0.4 per cent to $1.4528 against the pound.
The dollar did advance against the yen and the Swiss franc, which have benefited from haven demand driven by the bout of turbulence on global markets. Over the week, the dollar rose 1.1 per cent to Y91.01 against the yen and 0.3 per cent to SFr1.1529 against the Swiss franc.
The dollar also advanced against the euro as the fiscal problems in the eurozone continued to weigh on the single currency.
The euro dropped to a low of $1.2152 on Thursday, just above the four-year trough of $1.2142 it hit last week, after an article in the Financial Times said China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which manages the country’s vast foreign exchange reserves, was concerned over its exposure to peripheral eurozone government debt. This raised speculation that China might be reviewing its policy of diversifying its reserves away from the dollar and into the euro, a big source of support for the single currency in recent years.
The euro staged a rally after China reiterated its commitment to investing in the eurozone. But analysts were unconvinced.
“It would be silly to think that recent events in the eurozone have not changed and won’t change China’s behaviour at all,” said Alan Ruskin at RBS. “No serious investor can be inured to the chilling events at the eurozone’s periphery and its repercussions for long-term confidence in the single currency.”
Over the week, the euro fell 1.7 per cent to $1.2361 against the dollar and dropped 2.1 per cent to £0.8509 against the pound.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

TURBULÊNCIAS

Currencies Trading All Over the Map: Wild Swings Confuse Investors, Hamper Trade

Currencies including the dollar and the euro have entered a period of extreme volatility that is hindering global commerce and adding further uncertainty to a world economy facing its worst downturn in decades.
Over the past several months, global exchange rates have taken some of their wildest swings in years, with a fresh bout of zigzags hitting an array of currencies in both rich and poor countries in the past few weeks. That has humbled some of the strongest and most time-honored of coins, like the British pound, while fortifying others, like the Japanese yen.
Many currencies are shifting directions like a sailboat in a storm, causing unpredictable shifts in exchange rates that are further worsening the outlook for global trade as they confront buyers and sellers of internationally traded goods with another ill besides slumping demand: rapidly changing prices.
Over the past seven days alone, for instance, the Australian dollar shed nearly 10 percent against the Swiss franc. That means an Australian steel company with a contract to sell beams to, say, a Swiss construction company would be forced to take a significant haircut on those sales. As a result of the swings, exporters from Brazil to Baltimore say they are pushing for shorter-term contracts and boosting their purchases of foreign exchange hedges.
"Honestly, we just don't know how to analyze these currency markets properly right now," confessed David Bloom, head of currency markets for
HSBC in London. "We're now in an unconventional world where you're getting huge movements that are no longer grounded in the conventional models. So currencies are lurching this way and that, and it's creating a huge uncertainty."
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