Swedish krona: A forecast revision

Similar documents
Swedish Krona: Swimming naked?

Four reasons why EUR/GBP won t reach parity

G10 FX Week Ahead: Waiting for the ECB

Romania s GDP growth rises to 7% in 2017

Belgium: Just not fast enough

Key events in developed markets next week

US import tariffs on steel and aluminium: Who stands to lose?

Key events in EMEA and Latam next week

Polish GDP grows by 5.1%YoY in the fourth quarter; we remain upbeat

Petro-currencies lose their mojo

Dollar Regime Change: The Prequel

$57.2bn. Why the US trade deficit is heading the wrong way. Economic and Financial Analysis

Swiss Economy 2018 outlook

10% Asia week ahead: First test of US protectionism. Economic and Financial Analysis

EUR/CHF: Welcome back, the Swiss franc

Key events in developed markets next week

What a bearish re-steepening of the Treasury curve could mean for FX

Trade in 2018: Nowhere close to its heyday

Swiss Quarterly: On the right track

Taiwan: GDP riding global growth trend but prone to trade threat

Key events in developed markets next week

3.9% Good MornING Asia - 6 April Asia week ahead: Trade war threats weighs on central banks

Turkey central bank to remain on hold this time

Romania: Wage growth slows

Hungary: Consumption drives GDP growth

2.1%, 2% Canada s yield curve: Should we be worrying? Economic and Financial Analysis

US: Dangerous deficits?

Turkey Room for optimism

G10 FX Week Ahead: Dollar isolationism

The Bank of England s road to August in six charts

Russia-China trade in national currencies: the product mix is key

7.50% Mexico: Another rate hike this week. Economic and Financial Analysis

4.75% Philippines: Central bank to pause as inflation drops

-0.4% Japan 3Q18 GDP - blame it on the weather. Economic and Financial Analysis

Yapi Kredi: $1bn cap raise brings relief

Federal Reserve preview: A glass half full

G10 FX Week Ahead: Dollar gets the Trump treatment

Russia: Hit by a double shot of sanctions

Dutch Economy Chart Book

Is there any stopping thermal coal?

What now for tax cuts after Trump s healthcare failure?

Indian Banks: A fundamental overview

What lies beneath Asian currencies pain?

Shrinking oil inventories mean higher prices

The end of the year marks high hopes for Brazil in 2019

Central banks and rates, the definitive guide

USD: Return of the king or just a breather from a crowded short trade

Three things the Fed is thinking about

FX Week Ahead: Getting over the dollar rally

G10 FX Week Ahead: State of the dollar

Dollar bloc FX: Keep calm and carry off?

OPEC oil cuts: To continue or not to continue, that is the question

G10 FX Week Ahead: The art of trade wars

How will China s new central bank governor run the new central bank?

Good MornING Asia - 1 March 2018

Brexit update: Theresa May s biggest test yet?

G10 FX Week Ahead: Scusa, no can do

Good MornING Asia - 29 June 2018

Eurozone: That late summer feeling

G10 FX Week Ahead A turning point?

Crude oil: What s in store for 2018?

Aluminium: Stakes are high for Section 232

Contents The best of MYR appreciation may be over A clear victory but muddled future And more economic risks ahead But some positives

2,881. Metals mettle. Economic and Financial Analysis

Anadolu Efes returns to normal

Dutch Economy Chart Book

Crude oil: A story of demand

The dollar s inflection point

G10 FX Week Ahead: The Dollar s Hocus POTUS

Turkey s Yapi Kredi still short of capital

US yield curve and recession risk - watch the shape not the slope

Good MornING Asia - 3 September 2018

Brazil: Monetary easing reaches final stage

Dutch Economy Chart Book

ECB s Sisyphean task

Copper: What s it going to take to flip the curve?

G10 FX Week Ahead: Trade War, Huh, Yeah, What is it good for

NAFTA: What now for the worst trade deal ever?

Digital transformer. ECB policy supportive of innovation. Economic & Financial Analysis

Switzerland: The sun is shining but clouds loom

ECB preview Dovish and slightly worried

Brexit: Seven big questions looming in 2018

Our view on next week s key events

G10 FX Week Ahead: Back from the brink

Brazil: Dire fiscal constraints imply binary outcomes

The structural decline in the Eurozone s growth potential

Leumi. Global Economics Monthly Review. Arie Tal, Research Economist. July 12, Capital Markets Division, Economics Department. leumiusa.

US dollar: Curb your enthusiasm

G10 FX Week Ahead: Dollar haunted by Voodoonomics

Strategy The big EUR curve flattening has started

Norges Bank Review 24 September 2015

Brazil: Buying time with intervention

Argentina oil & gas. Unleashing its potential. Shale development phases

Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review

G10 FX Week Ahead Trump s infinity trade war

Euro inflation research #3 Time to position for higher inflation

Where next for global central banks?

Summary. Economic Update 1 / 7 May Global Global GDP growth is forecast to accelerate to 2.9% in 2017 and maintain at 3.0% in 2018.

Week ahead: September 5 th 9 th

Strategy With fading EU political risks, global business cycle back in focus

Transcription:

Economic and Financial Analysis 8 May 2018 FX 8 May 2018 Article Swedish krona: A forecast revision We expect the battered Swedish krona to remain under pressure as global trade tensions, domestic politics and low summer liquidity weigh on the currency. We thus revise up our EUR/SEK forecast and expect it to reach the 11.00 level over the next three months Contents Trade war risk premium to rise again Dovish Riksbank to remain dovish The bar for a Riksbank response is set very high Economy to slow down Domestic politics Current account surplus shrinking Trade war risk premium to rise again We see further upside risks to EUR/SEK and revise our previous EUR/SEK forecast higher. We look for EUR/SEK to reach the 11.00 level in the next three months and stay there for the remainder of the year. As per USD: Curb Your Enthusiasm, we expect the theme of protectionism to return in June following the recent calm after the US administration recorded some quick wins, with trade negotiations with Mexico, Canada and South Korea being a good example. As Chris Turner points out, the focus will now turn to China and the EU, as both are preparing retaliatory tariffs should the US go through and implement its threats. On the Chinese side, it will be late May/early June when President Trump decides which of the proposed tariffs on China will stick. We doubt Beijing can offer enough in early May to significantly water down these tariffs. Instead, we look for a residual of those US tariffs to be implemented in June and the Chinese to reciprocate. These concerns about a global trade war should be negative for the krona. As per SEK: Swimming naked?, we see SEK as one of the G10 currencies most vulnerable to escalating trade tensions due to the openness of its economy (one of the highest in the G10 FX space) and its high beta to global growth. This is depicted in Figure 1 which shows a material rise in the SEK risk premium (against EUR), with the trade war risk premium now being at around 4%. While extreme, we don t rule out a further rise in the risk premium given the SEK s high vulnerability and its cheap funding costs (SEK being the second cheapest G10 currency to short).

SEK vulnerability to the global trade tensions was one of the main reasons why we turned bearish on the currency earlier in the year and why we now revise our EUR/SEK forecast even higher. 1 Persistent risk premium evident in SEK Dovish Riksbank to remain dovish On the Riksbank side, history teaches us that one should assume a dovish stance as a base case. The Swedish central bank has repeatedly pushed back the date for its first rate hike. Its April decision to push the projected first rate hike into December was the eighth revision to the policy rate forecast since negative rates were first introduced in 2015 (Figure 2). So we have to ask ourselves, what would it take for the Riksbank to change its behaviour and actually deliver a rate hike in 4Q 2018? In our view, it s hard to see why this time will prove any different. The Riksbank s dovish bias remains intact and there is little sign of domestic price pressure accelerating to push inflation above 2%. 2 Rate hike continuously postponed The bar for a Riksbank response is set very high 2

The krona s latest depreciation could lead to inflation printing above the 2% target towards the end of 2018 and early 2019. However, as we show in Figure 3, a simple projection based on the Riksbank s latest forecast and different scenarios for the currency suggests that even a further depreciation (i.e. EUR/SEK at or above 11.00) would not necessarily lead to a significant overshoot in core inflation. Even with EUR/SEK at 11.50, the core inflation would still remain within the +/- 1% tolerance band around the 2% inflation target. Importantly, as seen in the chart below, this is likely to be a temporary effect and the Riksbank can probably look through above-target inflation were that to be driven by external factors. Hence, we see the EUR/SEK 11.00 as achievable and the journey towards it not necessarily drastic enough to trigger an actual Riksbank response via rate hikes (bar some occasional verbal interventions). Given its inherent dovish bias, we no longer expect the Riksbank to hike this year (provided SEK does not experience an extreme sell off well above our target of EUR/SEK 11.00) and will only hike next year in line with the ECB in the middle of 2019. 3 Inflation overshoot limited Economy to slow down While the main reason for the Riksbank s dovish shift this year has been the weaker-thanexpected inflation figures in 1Q, the wider Swedish economy also looks a bit softer. Forwardlooking indicators have come off and household spending weakened at the start of the year. This is in large part due to the housing market slowdown that started in the second half of 2017. Though house prices have stabilised over the past couple of months, construction is set to slow materially in 2018 and 2019. This will drag overall economic growth down from the 3% average of the past five years. Though the Riksbank has factored this housing slowdown into its forecasts, we see downside risks to its expectation of 2.6% in 2018 and 2.0% in 2019. The housing market turmoil could easily end up doing more damage to household consumption than anticipated. And the global growth story, a key support for Sweden s export-oriented economy, looks a bit less solid than a few months ago. We see a material probability that the Swedish economy slows more abruptly than expected, which would become another reason for the Riksbank to delay rate hikes. Domestic politics 3

Another factor that could weigh on SEK over coming months is the upcoming Swedish election in September. The rise of the far-right Swedish Democrats means that neither of the traditional centre-right and centre-left party groupings are likely to win a majority in parliament. That means we are likely to see a repeat of the 2014 stalemate situation, resulting eventually in a weak minority government. While Sweden benefits from strong institutions and an underlying consensus on key issues among the mainstream parties, political uncertainty could nevertheless provide an additional negative factor for SEK in an environment where investors are looking for any negative headline news to sell the battered SEK. Current account surplus shrinking As noted SEK: Swimming naked?, the SEK has all but lost the relative current account surplus advantage vs the EUR. The deteriorating Swedish current account surplus (from 4% of GDP early last year to a projected 2.5% by end 2018) contrasts with the Eurozone current account dynamics which remain stable at around 3% of GDP (Figure 4). As the relative current account positions converge, the krona s cushion vs the euro fades away, making the currency more vulnerable to the direct effect of global risk sentiment or the relative monetary policy position. We thus see further upside risks to EUR/SEK and we revise our previous EUR/SEK forecast higher. We look for EUR/SEK to reach the 11.00 level in the next three months and stay there for the remainder of the year. 4 SEK losing the tailwind of the current account advantage 4

Chris Turner Global Head of Strategy and Head of EMEA and LATAM Research +44 20 7767 1610 chris.turner@ing.com Petr Krpata, CFA Chief EMEA FX and IR Strategist +44 20 7767 6561 petr.krpata@ing.com Jonas Goltermann Developed Market Economist +44 20 7767 6909 jonas.goltermann@ing.com 5

Disclaimer This publication has been prepared by the Economic and Financial Analysis Division of ING Bank N.V. ("ING") solely for information purposes without regard to any particular user's investment objectives, financial situation, or means. ING forms part of ING Group (being for this purpose ING Group NV and its subsidiary and affiliated companies). The information in the publication is not an investment recommendation and it is not investment, legal or tax advice or an offer or solicitation to purchase or sell any financial instrument. Reasonable care has been taken to ensure that this publication is not untrue or misleading when published, but ING does not represent that it is accurate or complete. ING does not accept any liability for any direct, indirect or consequential loss arising from any use of this publication. Unless otherwise stated, any views, forecasts, or estimates are solely those of the author(s), as of the date of the publication and are subject to change without notice. The distribution of this publication may be restricted by law or regulation in different jurisdictions and persons into whose possession this publication comes should inform themselves about, and observe, such restrictions. Copyright and database rights protection exists in this report and it may not be reproduced, distributed or published by any person for any purpose without the prior express consent of ING. All rights are reserved. The producing legal entity ING Bank N.V. is authorised by the Dutch Central Bank and supervised by the European Central Bank (ECB), the Dutch Central Bank (DNB) and the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (AFM). ING Bank N.V. is incorporated in the Netherlands (Trade Register no. 33031431 Amsterdam). In the United Kingdom this information is approved and/or communicated by ING Bank N.V., London Branch. ING Bank N.V., London Branch is subject to limited regulation by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). ING Bank N.V., London branch is registered in England (Registration number BR000341) at 8-10 Moorgate, London EC2 6DA. For US Investors: Any person wishing to discuss this report or effect transactions in any security discussed herein should contact ING Financial Markets LLC, which is a member of the NYSE, FINRA and SIPC and part of ING, and which has accepted responsibility for the distribution of this report in the United States under applicable requirements. 6