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Showing posts with label Barclays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barclays. Show all posts

Will the Fed start its famed taper in September?


64% of 800 investors polled think it will start this week but weak US data suggest it might not be aggressive.
Two big events this week - the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on Wednesday and RBI's policy review on Friday - will determine which way equity markets head.
Since June, the Federal Reserve has been looking to taper its $85 billion a month bond buying programme. The FOMC's meeting is crucial for emerging markets like India because over the last few years, financial markets have been fuelled by easy liquidity.

Since 2009, $100 billion has flowed into Indian equities. Not surprising, then, that the talk of a possible taper from this month has sent risk assets and commodities into a tailspin.
So, are the taper related fears unfounded or are they real? To begin with, markets have already priced in some tapering from this month. However, if the Fed tapers its bond buying by $10 billion, the impact on financial markets would be negligible.
But if it is higher than $10 billion, markets may roil. According to a Barclays survey, conducted among 800 global investors, 64 per cent of respondents believe tapering will start this week and almost all of them expect it to occur before the end of the year.

Investors now perceive the removal of Fed stimulus will start earlier, the survey says. Forty five per cent expect the Fed to finish their open-ended QE3 programme in second quarter of 2014, while most respondents in our June survey thought it would happen in the fourth quarter of 2014 or later.

Interestingly, most investors believe equities have become less attractive but have shown a slight increase in their preference for emerging markets and commodities from June.

Barclays says: "The perception of key risks has also shifted. Last quarter, a reduction in Fed policy stimulus was seen as the key risk for markets by nearly 40 per cent of survey participants; today, the number is just 26 per cent."
Several economists in the US believe concerns regarding a taper could be premature, as growth data continues to be weak and the Fed does not want "risk off" trades just yet.
Talks of a taper have pushed up interest rates in the US by over 100 basis points and any further increase would impact growth. For starters, it is believed growth has slowed in the third quarter (ended September) from the 2.5 per cent seen in the second quarter. Economic growth bottomed out in the fourth quarter of 2012 when it touched 0.1 per cent. While there is no doubt that growth is picking up, questions remain on how sustainable this would be without the stimulus.

Since the Fed met at the end of July, there have been 21 growth-related data releases. Of the 21 releases, 12 have been below consensus.

New home sales in the US in the month of July have fallen by 13.4 per cent. Bank of America Merrill Lynch says it's a close call but it is still in the December camp when it comes to the Fed's possible tapering.

Rate cuts may be delayed with RBI focus on rupee: Barclays


New Delhi: With the Reserve Bank's policy focus geared towards supporting the rupee, the central bank may delay easing rates to between December and April 2014, a Barclays report says.

According to the global brokerage firm, the RBI is likely to remain focused on supporting the rupee, which has depreciated by more than 13 percent since May and crossed the psychological level of 62 against the dollar last week.

"As such, while the focus is on the INR, we think monetary policy calibration will eventually be biased towards further easing, rather than tightening. However, we think further policy easing will likely be delayed," Barclays said in a research note.

The financial services major believes key policy rates would be eased by as much as 75 basis points in this fiscal but it would be a "delayed" affair.

"We still expect 75 bp of repo rate cuts, but now we expect them to take place between December 2013 and April 2014, rather than our initial expectation of September -December 2013," Barclays said.

The industry has been demanding a cut in key policy rate to boost economic activities. Industrial output contracted for the second consecutive month in June.

Moreover, inflation rose for the second consecutive month and shot up to 5.79 percent in July, driven largely by double-digit rise in prices of food articles, including vegetables and onions.

The RBI, in its First Quarter Review of Monetary Policy on July 30, left all key interest rates unchanged.

The repo rate, at which the RBI lends to the system, was kept at 7.25 percent and the cash reserve ratio, the amount of deposits banks park with it, was unchanged at 4 percent.

The RBI is scheduled to hold its next mid?quarter review of policy on September 18.