Economic Research Week in Focus 14 November 2014 Euro zone: What you need to know about QE The ECB has its finger on the button. At the last ECB press conference Mario Draghi practically announced broadly-based government bond purchases (QE), should the ECB balance sheet not increase as hoped, or inflation expectations fall again. Our assessment suggests that both these conditions are likely to be fulfilled in the early months of next year. The ECB is therefore likely to decide at one of the first three meetings of 2015 to purchase government bonds (QE) and it will probably allocate the purchases according to the ECB capital key across member states. Page 2 The Week in Focus in 100 seconds Please follow this link for a video summary. Without QE, the ECB can barely pump up its balance sheet by 1 trillion Euros Estimated volumes of ECB measures in the next 2 years, all figures in billion Euro, figures marked with * are known 1500 1250 1000 Compensation for maturing assets (72) Compensation for repayment of LTROs (300)* Autonomous factors (25) Gap (740) 750 500 Targeted net increase of ECB‘s balance sheet (1000) Purchases of ABS (150) and Covered bonds (80) TLTROs in 2015/2016 (205) 2nd TLTRO (130) 250 1st TLTRO (net 42)* 0 ECB's gross target Commerzbank expectations Source: ECB, Commerzbank Research Product Idea: € 5y Knock-in Swap. Compared with fixed-rate hedges, variable-rate funding is currently cheap. We therefore recommend scaling into a 5y Knock-in Swap as a hedge against higher rates, in the long term. This strategy requires no upfront premium. Page 5 Outlook for the week of 17 November to 21 November 2014 Economic data: Euro zone leading indicators may well show some positive signals next week, with a pickup in the German ZEW index and euro zone manufacturing PMI. Page 7 Bond market: While investors’ discussions about ECB government bond purchases are now focusing more on “when” and “how“ rather than “whether”, the downside potential for yields appears somewhat limited. Consequently, the range trading should continue for Bunds next week although peripheral bonds will likely remain under pressure. Page 11 FX market: Domestic economic issues have lost much of their influence on EUR exchange rates with the result that EUR-USD volatilities could continue falling. Page 12 Equity market: Volatility should remain relatively high on the German equity market in 2015 and individual stock selection should therefore grow in importance. In selecting positions, investors should consider earnings momentum and the already high valuations of some DAX and MDAX companies. Page 13 Commodity market: A week ahead of the OPEC meeting, volatility on the oil market looks set to increase. Yet the price is unlikely to drop much lower than USD80 per barrel. No additional impetus is likely in the base metals markets whilst silver could go lower, driven by the trend in gold prices. Page 14 Chief economist Dr Jörg Krämer +49 69 136 23650 [email protected] For important disclosure information please see page 17. research.commerzbank.com / Bloomberg: CBKR / Research APP available Editor: Peter Dixon +44 20 7475 4806 [email protected] Economic Research | Week in Focus Euro zone: What you need to know about QE Dr Michael Schubert Tel. +49 69 136 23700 The ECB has its finger on the button. At the last ECB press conference Mario Draghi surprisingly announced more measures to come, should the ECB balance sheet not increase as hoped, or inflation expectations fall again. Our assessment suggests that both these conditions are likely to be fulfilled in the early months of next year. The ECB is therefore likely to decide at one of the first three meetings of 2015 to purchase government bonds (QE) and it will probably allocate the purchases according to the ECB capital key across member states. We expect corporate bond purchases to be more of an add-on than an intermediate step. No QE in December Although Draghi’s surprisingly clear words fuelled fresh speculation of QE, such a move is unlikely to be announced at the next meeting on 4 December. This is primarily due to the fact that the volume of the second targeted long-term tender (TLTRO) will only become clear a week after the meeting and without this information it is difficult to make even a provisional judgement of whether the central bank’s balance sheet can be expanded by about a trillion euros, as the ECB desires, on the basis of the measures announced so far. Another reason to expect a wait-and-see stance at the December meeting are Draghi’s words that it is “premature” to discuss specific measures in the Governing Council. At the last meeting, the Council predominantly discussed the ABS programme that had just been agreed. And the downward revisions to ECB projections that now look likely for December are unlikely to change anything; according to Draghi, at its November meeting the Governing Council shared the view of the recently-released consensus forecasts for growth and inflation which saw downward revisions to the outlook for growth and inflation. Consequently, the new forecasts will not contain any new information for members of the Governing Council. Balance sheet target is unlikely to be reached … That said the situation at the beginning of the year will presumably change rapidly enough to prompt the ECB to decide on QE early in the coming year. We expect this to be announced at one of the first three meetings in January, March or April. 1 It should then be clear that the central bank balance sheet is increasing at a much slower pace than the ECB had anticipated (Chart 1). In quantifying ECB expectations in the chart, we have assumed that the ECB expects total demand for the TLTROs of one trillion euros, i.e. the maximum amount that Draghi cited at the press conference in July. For the ABS/Covered Bond programmes, we have assumed a total of 500 billion euros. According to news agencies, this is the sum being discussed at the ECB. Many ECB representatives see these targets as too ambitious, but even if they are fulfilled the balance sheet target would not remotely be close to being achieved, not least because the two 3-year tenders will be paid back in the meantime. CHART 1: ECB balance sheet target is unlikely to be achieved Balance sheet total of Eurosystem in billion euros and forecasts 3300 ECB target 3100 2900 2700 2500 2300 2100 1900 1700 1500 Jan-12 Jul-12 Jan-13 Jul-13 Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16 Jan-17 Jul-17 ECB balance sheet Commerzbank forecast ECB expectation Source: ECB, Commerzbank Research 1 2 From 2015 onwards, the Council will decide on monetary policy only every six weeks. 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus In any event, the balance sheet is expected to increase at a much slower pace. Against the backdrop of a continued weak economy, and hence very sluggish demand for credit, the outstanding TLTROs are likely to see demand of only 350 billion euros (130 billion euros at the following TLTRO in December). 2 In the case of covered bonds, we expect a buying volume of 80 billion euros whilst the ABS total is expected to be around 150 billion euros. 3 Based on these assumptions, the balance sheet will increase in the next two years by only about 200 billion euros, which is well short of the ECB target. Consequently, by next spring the balance sheet is likely to be some 100 to 150 billion euros lower than the ECB’s target path; indeed, it could even drop below its present level for a while. Over this period it should therefore become clear to the ECB that it will not achieve its target with the existing measures. And at the last press conference ECB president Draghi announced further measures in this eventuality. … and inflation expectations could fall again The fact that inflation expectations are likely to fall again is another argument in support of further measures. We recently showed in a model analysis 4 that long-term market-based inflation expectations are beginning to drift from their anchor. The measure clearly favoured by the ECB – the expectation calculated from inflation swaps for inflation in five years for the following five years (“5x5 expectation”) – has not only fallen sharply in recent weeks (Chart 2), but is also now showing a much stronger reaction to disappointing economic data than in the past. Investors increasingly appear to doubt that the ECB will be able to offset the effect of weak economic growth on inflation in the medium and long term. And there will be considerable potential for disappointing economic data in the months ahead. We believe the present consensus expectation for growth in 2015 (1.2%) is still much too optimistic despite recent downward revisions (Commerzbank: 0.8%). We should therefore see a new round of downward corrections in the spring, which should put further pressure on long-term inflation expectations. Surveys also indicate falling inflation expectations. The central bank primarily looks at the latest results of the Survey of Professional Forecasters (SPF). According to the SPF, the likelihood of the ECB missing its target in the long term has run in parallel with the (much more volatile) market-based inflation expectation since the start of the debt crisis in 2010. It has therefore become increasingly likely that the economists’ survey will begin to show similar doubts in the months ahead. In the latest survey, published yesterday, participants assigned a probability of around one third to the likelihood that the inflation rate will be no higher than 1.4% on a five year horizon. CHART 2: Euro zone: Continued downside risks for inflation Five-year inflation linked forward swap rate in five years, likelihood according to SPF that the inflation rate will be under 1.5% in five years (inverted scale) 2.9 5 2.7 10 15 2.5 20 2.3 25 2.1 30 1.9 1.7 2005 35 40 2006 2007 2008 2009 market expectation (lhs) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Likelihood (inflation < 1.5%) (rhs) Source: ECB, Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research 2 3 4 14 November 2014 “The €1,000bn TLTRO question”, Rates Radar, 10 July 2014. “The Big Picture: Whatever it takes!”, Ahead of the Curve, 4 September 2014. “Euro inflation expectations no longer firmly anchored – a model analysis”, Economic Insight, 5 November 2014. 3 Economic Research | Week in Focus Legal problems argue in favour of a decision in April Given the sluggish increase in the size of the balance sheet and the likelihood of further declines in inflation expectations, a majority on the ECB Governing Council will likely favour broad-based government bond purchases at one of the first three meetings next year. Legal problems suggest that a decision is more likely to come in April; the European Court of Justice is soon expected to pass its judgment on OMT, the government bond buying programme implemented in 2012. This judgement is unlikely to place any obstacles in the way of broad-based government bond buying in principle. 5 According to latest media reports, a judgment by the ECJ is likely in the first quarter 6 and the ECB may well hold off on QE until after the ruling in order to avoid any legal problems. Government bond purchases in accordance with ECB capital key For legal reasons, the ECB is likely to allocate QE purchases among euro member states in accordance with the ECB capital key. 7 The German Federal Supreme Court in its judgement on OMT criticized the fact that OMT purchases were “selective”. QE allocation should therefore be as “fair” and “equal” as possible. A weighting by ECB capital key – i.e. according to members’ shares in population and economic strength – not only appears plausible but has also been tested. Furthermore, it is stipulated in the EU treaties that in its decisions on central bank capital or questions of gains and losses, the votes of the ECB Governing Council should be weighted in accordance with this key. If the capital key is used for QE, 26% of the buying volume would go to German government bonds, 20% to French and 18% to Italian. For a targeted increase of the balance sheet to 3 trillion euros, which would likely require QE of about 750 billion euros, this would mean that the ECB would acquire German securities worth around 120% of gross issues in 2015 (France 70%, Italy 50%). Probably not an intermediate step There were some factors that did suggest for a while that the ECB Governing Council would decide on a further intermediate step prior to QE. News agencies reported in October that the ECB might decide in December to buy corporate bonds from 2015. The only plausible reason for such an intermediate step would be continued strong resistance amongst Governing Council members to broad-based government bond buying. Consequently, the purchase of corporate bonds could be seen as a compromise first step. There had been media reports of substantial opposition ahead of the last ECB Council meeting. However, the outcome of the last meeting and comments at the press conference thereafter suggest that resistance to Draghi’s course is not that great. We have always been sceptical about the substance of such purchases. They would not help small and mid-sized enterprises with financial difficulties, especially in the periphery. At the same time, yield spreads of corporate bonds from euro countries have already aligned significantly since mid-2012 so there have been no problems on this score for some time. Legally too, corporate bond purchases might be problematic; due to their unequal distribution the ECB could be accused of financing individual companies. Finally, the potential annual buying volume is unlikely to exceed 40 to 50 billion euros so the ECB would not be able to achieve its balance sheet target in this way. Indeed, why would the central bank take this path when it has had such bad experiences with the ABS/covered bonds buying programme? Consequently, we believe corporate bond purchases are likely only as an add-on to QE. Like in the first purchase programme, the Securities Markets Programme, the ECB Governing Council could decide to “conduct interventions in the euro area public and private debt securities markets” and merely point out that an increase of the balance sheet to the levels of early 2012 is expected. 5 6 7 4 “European Court of Justice: OMT before the court, so what?”, Economic Insight, 14 March 2014. “Draghi and the naysayers”, Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, 9 November 2014. “ECB QE: Allocation probably by capital key”, Week in Focus, 10 October 2014. 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Structured Hedge Products: € 5y Knock-in Swap Markus Koch Tel. +49 69 136 87685 Capitalise on cheap variable-rate funding without forgoing a favourable fixed-rate hedge Compared with fixed-rate hedges, variable-rate funding is currently cheap. We therefore recommend scaling into a 5y Knock-in Swap as a hedge against higher rates, long term. This strategy requires no upfront premium. While it is tempting to lock in historically low € 5y IRS/3m funding rates, the rate is still considerably higher than current 3-month Euribor fixings. Besides the resulting negative carry, which should remain in place until the ECB starts to tighten policy, the risk of a sharp increase in medium-term funding rates appears low. On the contrary, with the ECB preparing additional quantitative stimulus from Q1 2015, we believe the yield lows are still ahead of us. The upwardly sloped Euribor future strip implies that the ECB starts unwinding its ultra-loose stance after 2016. While this appears rather early in the current environment, uncertainty about longer-term inflation and policy prospects looks set to rise when the ECB ventures into QE. When combining a medium and a long-term horizon, is there any strategy to hedge against rising rates without incurring the negative carry currently associated with fixed- versus variable-rate financing?? Borrowers who look for variable rates to stay low for a long time before facing increasing risks of higher rates are recommended scaling into a € five-year Knock-in Swap. The swap presents several advantages compared to a cap on interest payments or an unstructured swap. First of all, no upfront premium is required to be paid. At the same time the borrower benefits from the ultra-low Euribor rates (positive carry), without foregoing a favourable fixed rate hedge. If the reference index – 3-months Euribor – rises significantly, the structure switches from a variable into a fixed rate. As long as the reference index at the quarterly fixings stays below the strike of 0.4%, the borrower’s loan remains fully financed at a variable rate: only the lower 3-month Euribor rate is paid. We expect that this will be the case for at least the next two years. However, if the reference index is fixed above the strike of 0.4%, the fixed rate knocks in. Specifically, the borrower pays a fixed rate of 1.8% through redemption. This way the borrower hedges funding costs from that quarter onwards against the risk of higher rates later. Note that a temporary overshooting of the barrier will not trigger the switch. Compared with a forward starting swap and with the current uncertainty about future interest rates in mind, this fixed rate does not seem unduly high. All else equal, the borrower breaks even with a 5y fixed rate with a switch after 3.75 years. Finally, note that shifting the switch feature out to year two (three) would increase the knock-in rate level by c. 45bp (100bp). In other words, accepting the low switch risk from inception considerably reduces the knock-in (fixed) rate. In the best case, borrowers benefit from variablerate funding through maturity while a (highly unlikely) rate hike in in first quarter of 2015 represents the worst case. € 5y Knock-in Swap Issuer: Type: Minimum Lot: Maturity: Client receives: Client pays: Reference index (RI): Strike: Knock-in rate: Fixing: Payment: Basis: 14 November 2014 A- (average) Swap € 1m 5 years 3m Euribor 3m Euribor or 1.8% fixed rate, as soon as the reference index has been fixed above strike 3m Euribor 0.4% 1.8% Quarterly, in arrears Quarterly, in arrears Act/360 5 Economic Research | Week in Focus Major publications from 7 – 13 November 2014 Economic Insight: Renzi’s labour market reforms – no second “Agenda 2010” Renzi’s labour market reforms – reduced protection against dismissal, more flexible fixed-term employment contracts, greater pressure on the unemployed – are reminiscent of the German Agenda 2010 reforms. But unlike in Germany, Renzi’s reforms are unlikely to engender a deceleration of wage growth or an improvement in competitiveness. The Italian social partners have in the past proved extremely uncooperative and have fallen far short of exploiting their scope for reform, as they have demonstrated time and again. For this reason Italy will continue lagging behind the euro area in terms of economic growth. But nevertheless, the yield spreads of Italian government bonds versus their German and Spanish peers should tend to decline – due to the ECB’s easy monetary policy. more Economic Insight: Greece – the political uncertainty is the problem The sharp rise in risk premiums on Greek government bonds has dashed the Greek government’s hopes of leaving the current programme without further support, as in the case of Ireland and Portugal. In the negotiations over a new support programme, the bone of contention will presumably not be so much the money but the conditions attached. Yet the real stumbling block is likely to come in February. By that point, parliament has to elect a new president. If the election fails, this will mean early new elections, which the unpredictable left-wing SYRIZA is likely to win according to the present opinion polls. more Economic Briefing: BoE Watch – Lower for longer The BoE’s latest Inflation Report showed a slight downward revision to the GDP growth projections but a much larger downward correction to CPI inflation forecasts. Indeed, over the whole of the three year horizon, the inflation rate is projected to continue running below the 2% central target. For the most part, the disinflationary forces acting on the UK are the result of global effects but the MPC’s response is likely to be to keep domestic rates on hold for longer. more FX Hotspot: NOK – The curse of the black gold The Norwegian economy, and as a result the Norwegian krone, are paying a heavy price for the steep fall in the oil price. Within a short space of time the krone depreciated by approx. 6.5% against the euro. Due to the economic risks NOK weakness is likely to continue. Only once the ECB begins implementing broad-based bond purchases is EUR-NOK likely to ease sustainably again. more EM Briefing: Turkey – Biggest beneficiary of the oil price drop Turkey is the biggest beneficiary within the region from a decline in oil prices – its macroeconomic outlook has the potential to improve significantly if commodity prices were to hold at current levels. Core inflation and current account dynamics are already beginning to display positive trends; and what is crucial, an emerging market’s capacity to finance a given external gap improves dramatically against a backdrop of improving imbalances. Hence, a rise in US 10y yields would have much less adverse impact on Turkish markets than it had in 2013. more Credit Note: EU Banks – TLAC or how to bail in senior debt The upcoming G20 summit in Brisbane this weekend will shed more light on how G20 leaders are planning to tackle the “too big to fail issue”. Requesting the 30 largest banks globally (G-SIB) to hold loss absorbing capacity of up to 25% of risk-weighted assets could have far reaching consequences for banks’ balance sheet structures. The exact impact on each bank’s capital and liability tranche is, however, far from clear as the proposed TLAC requirements leave room for interpretation and are far from being finalised in detail. For EU banks we expect TLAC to be a tricky, though ultimately manageable, issue as we see TLAC for EU banks as only a further specification of existing bail-in rules under the BRRD. Ultimately, we expect senior debt to be TLAC eligible which would significantly lower the hurdle to comply and reduce pressure to raise capital. This is in line with our Overweight for financials and our Overweight for AT1/Tier 2. The necessary restructuring of senior debt could add volatility to this class, but should overall benefit outstanding “old-style” senior debt. more 6 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Preview – The week of 17 to 21 November 2014 Time Region Indicator Period Forecast Survey Last Monday, 17 November 2014 0:50 13:30 14:15 JPN USA GDP Empire State Index Industrial production Q3 Nov Oct qoq sa mom, sa 0.5 10.0 0.3 0.5 10.0 0.2 -1.8 6.2 1.0 mom yoy 0.1 1.3 5.0 -0.1 55.0 0.1 1.2 -3.5 -0.1 55.0 0.0 1.2 -3.6 -0.1 54.0 Tuesday, 18 November 2014 9:30 GBR CPI Oct 10:00 13:30 15:00 GER USA ZEW Index Producer prices, final demand NAHB Index Nov Oct Nov mom, sa sa Wednesday, 19 November 2014 # JPN Statement on Monetary Policy by the BoJ target monetary 13:30 USA Housing starts Oct Housing permits Oct GBR: Bank of England releases minutes of MPC meeting on Nov 5/6 (09:30) US: Federal Reserve releases minutes from Oct 28/29 FOMC meeting (19:00 h) trn yen base SAAR, k SAAR, k 80 – 80 1020 1040 1025 1040 1017 1031 sa sa sa sa sa sa mom yoy k, sa mom, sa mom, sa sa SAAR, mn 49.0 48.5 51.5 54.5 51.0 52.5 0.1 3.6 270 -0.1 0.1 18.0 5.10 – – 51.5 54.5 51.0 52.4 0.3 3.8 – -0.1 0.2 18.3 5.15 48.5 48.3 51.4 54.4 50.6 52.3 -0.3 2.7 290 0.1 0.1 20.7 5.17 Thursday, 20 November 2014 8:00 FRA • 8:30 GER • 9:00 EUR 9:30 GBR 13:30 USA 15:00 PMI, manufacturing PMI, services PMI, manufacturing PMI, services PMI, manufacturing PMI, services Retail sales Nov Nov Nov Nov Nov Nov Oct Initial claims CPI CPI excl. food and energy Philadelphia Fed Index Existing home sales Nov 15 Nov Nov Nov Nov Friday, 21 November 2014 No relevant data is due for release. Source: Bloomberg. Commerzbank Economic Research; *Time GMT (subtract 5 hours for EST. add 1 hour for CET). # = Possible release; mom/qoq/yoy: change to previous period in percent. AR = annual rate. sa = seasonal adjusted. wda = working days adjusted; • = data of highest importance for markets 14 November 2014 7 Economic Research | Week in Focus Dr Ralph Solveen Tel. +49 69 136 22322 Economic data preview: Euro zone: Sign of hope for the economy? Positive signals for the euro zone economy will probably come from leading indicators next week. Financial market participants, questioned about their economic expectations for Germany in the ZEW, should be not quite so pessimistic about the future as of late, and the manufacturing PMI should confirm a stabilisation relative to October. In the USA, positive figures are expected from industry. Comments on the September data from German manufacturing focused a little too much on the monthly growth rates, which were below the consensus. It was therefore overlooked that after having been revised, the August figures were not as bad as originally thought. That said, the September figures do appear to have reduced the fear of a German economic collapse. According to the Sentix survey, institutional investors are no longer quite so sceptical about Germany’s economic outlook (Chart 3). As a similar group of people take part in the ZEW survey, the responses here are likely to be similar. We therefore expect the ZEW to return to positive territory (forecast 5.0 following a previous reading of -3.6; consensus: -3.5). More uncertain is the prediction for the manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) in the euro zone. This picked up again in October for the first time in six months, primarily because the German index climbed by a substantial 1½ points after falling since the beginning of the year (Chart 4). But is this the turnaround? Our Early Bird index, which has been pointing upwards since the start of the year and led the German PMI by 7 and 11 months respectively at the last two lower turning points, suggests at least that the turnaround is now not far away. That said, the rise in the German index in October was favoured by a working day effect, which will be absent in November. We therefore expect a practically unchanged index for Germany (forecast 51.5 after 51.4; consensus: 51.5). For the other euro zone countries, we anticipate slightly higher PMIs on account of the better economic environment signalled by the Early Bird – in particular the weaker euro should have an increasingly positive effect – causing us expect a slight rise for the euro zone from 50.6 to 51.0 (consensus: 51.0). USA: Industry faces tailwind, inflation headwind Sentiment is bright in US industry. The ISM index in October returned to a high of 59 in October. The “mining” sector (which includes oil and gas production) looks particularly good. In October, almost 10% more hours were worked in this sector compared to October 2013. Consequently, industrial production should also have picked up by 0.3% versus September (consensus 0.2%). On the other hand, the price surge that the Fed is hoping for could take a while longer. Amid falling petrol prices, consumer prices are likely to have fallen by 0.1% on the previous month (consensus -0.1%). CHART 3: Germany – analysts are not quite so depressed CHART 4: Euro zone – Has the PMI turned the corner? Economic expectations for Germany, Sentix: subcomponent for institutional investors in Germany Purchasing managers’ index for industry (PMI) 50 100 25 50 0 0 65 60 55 50 -25 -50 2009 -50 -100 2010 2011 2012 Sentix (lhs) Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research 8 2013 2014 ZEW (rhs) 45 40 2010 2011 Germany 2012 2013 2014 Euro area excluding Germany Source: Global Insight, Commerzbank Research 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Central Bank Watch (1) Fed An increasing number of FOMC members are speaking out in favour of dropping the Fed's zero-interest-rate assurance soon. This is essentially about the statement that key interest rates should remain at their current level for "some time". It is scarcely surprising that declared hawks such as Dallas Fed president Fisher and Philadelphia Fed president Plosser have said they are in favour of deleting this formulation from the communiqué. More interesting is the stance taken by Loretta Mester; the president of the Cleveland Fed is a member of a Fed working group that looks at how to improve central bank communication. Even if the Fed heavyweights, including Janet Yellen, have not yet spoken out on this subject, the likelihood is rising that the Fed will remove the phrase "some time" from the statement at its December meeting. The continued improvement in the labour market gives the Fed enough arguments to adjust its communication. The unemployment rate fell by 1.4% in the twelve months to October, an unusually sharp decline. The number of vacancies was recently at its highest level since 2001 and job growth has stabilised at above 200,000 per month Bernd Weidensteiner +49 69 136 24527 CHART 5: Expected interest rate for 3-month funds (USD)) 2,0 1,5 1,0 0,5 0,0 current Dez 14 Futures Mrz 15 13.11.14 Jun 15 Sep 15 06.11.14 Dez 15 Commerzbank TABLE 1: Consensus forecasts Fed funds rate Q4 14 Q2 15 Q4 15 Consensus 0.25 0.25 1.00 High 0.25 1.00 2.00 Low 0.25 0.25 0.25 Commerzbank 0.25 0.50 1.50 Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research ECB ECB president Draghi repeated the central bank’s commitment to “take further unconventional policy actions should medium-term inflation expectations worsen or if the measures already decided on prove to be insufficient”. ECB Executive Board member Coeuré warned that “given the latest indicators, we face the risk of a self-fulfilling loss of momentum in euro area growth. The European Commission just marked down its growth forecast. There is a need for forceful and consistent action on all three fronts: monetary, fiscal and structural policies. On the monetary front, the ECB is playing its part …We have to try again and again. We have instruments, if they do not work we will try other ones." ECB Executive Board member Mersch who has always been critical regarding government bond purchases said that “there hasn’t been a decision to buy government bonds. It is a theoretical option if the situation deteriorates.” "Should the situation deteriorate further, then we would have to weigh all possibilities based on their risk, how doable they are, the limits of instruments and their efficiency," he argued. According to ECB’s Weidmann, government bond purchases would raise legal questions, set wrong incentives and may not produce desired results. At the same time, he warned that having inflation too low for too long was an “immense challenge.” CHART 6: Expected interest rate for 3-month funds (EUR 1,0 0,8 0,6 0,4 0,2 0,0 current Dez 14 Futures Mrz 15 13.11.14 Jun 15 06.11.14 Sep 15 Dez 15 Commerzbank TABLE 2: Consensus forecasts ECB minimum bid rate Q4 14 Q2 15 Q4 15 Consensus 0.05 0.05 0.05 High 0.05 0.05 0.05 Low 0.05 0.05 0.05 Commerzbank 0.05 0.05 0.05 Source: Reuters, Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research Dr Michael Schubert +49 69 136 23700 14 November 2014 9 Economic Research | Week in Focus Central Bank Watch (2) Bank of England (BoE) This week’s Inflation Report release was broadly in line with our expectations and showed a sharp downward revision to the near-term inflation outlook. The average inflation rate in 2015 is projected at 1.2%, and Governor Carney noted during his press conference there was a good chance that he would have to write a letter to the Chancellor early in the year to explain why the inflation rate has dipped below the lower end of the inflation target corridor (1-3%). This has further raised the odds against a near-term rate increase with the market probability of a 25 bps move by mid-2015 now below 40%, whilst a move in Q3 is no longer fully priced. Next week sees the release of the November MPC minutes and attention will focus on whether the two dissenters maintained their push for a 25 bps rate hike. On the basis of the forecast presented this week, their position looks untenable in view of the fact that the BoE does not expect CPI inflation to return to the central 2% target until late 2017. That said, Martin Weale has pointed out that he is more concerned by a buildup of wage pressure and he can point out that real wage inflation (ex. bonuses) is now running at its highest rate since spring 2008. It is by no means certain that Mr Weale is yet for turning. CHART 7: Expected interest rate for 3-month funds (GBP) 2,0 1,5 1,0 0,5 0,0 current Dez 14 Mrz 15 Futures 13.11.14 Jun 15 06.11.14 Sep 15 Dez 15 Commerzbank Peter Dixon +44 20 7475 4806 BoJ (Japan) The BoJ meeting next Wednesday is likely to be a non-event. After all, it was only at its last meeting that the BoJ increased its targeted widening of the monetary base to ¥80trn per year. As a result of this policy, the Japanese central bank will become an even more dominant player on the Japanese government bond market. At present, the BoJ holds around 22% of the Japanese central government’s outstanding debt. This share will rise to 31% by end-2015 and to around 38% a year later. Back in 2011, this ratio stood at less than 10%. So far, however, the “quantitative and qualitative easing” has failed to show the effect the BoJ had hoped for. The core rate of inflation adjusted for the VAT impact recently stood at just over 1%. By accelerating its government bond purchases, the central bank has at least put the yen under pressure. The pricedriving effect of this depreciation could help the BoJ in meeting its inflation target. However, the risk is that such a policy, whose effects unfold mainly through the exchange rate channel, will trigger international protest. This has been avoided so far. In fact, the Japanese have even ensured their partners' consent in that fighting deflation has priority. However, silent acceptance of such devaluation will only remain in place as long as it does not turn out be too big. CHART 8: Expected interest rate for 3-month funds (JPY) 1,0 0,8 0,6 0,4 0,2 0,0 current Dez 14 Mrz 15 Futures 13.11.14 Jun 15 06.11.14 Sep 15 Dez 15 Commerzbank Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research Bernd Weidensteiner +49 69 136 24527 10 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Michael Leister Tel. +49 69 136 21264 Bond market preview: Looking for fresh impetus European bond markets are currently looking for fresh impetus. While investors’ discussions about government bond purchases by the ECB are now focusing more on “when” and “how“ rather than “whether”, the downside potential for yields appears somewhat limited given current levels and the likely ECB inaction at the December meeting. Consequently, range trading should continue for Bunds next week while the bonds of periphery countries will likely remain under pressure for now. TABLE 3: Weekly outlook for yields and curves Yields (10-year) Curve (2 – 10-year) Bunds US Treasuries sideways moderately higher neutral flatter Source: Commerzbank Research Outlook for the Bund Future, 17 – 21 November Economy → Inflation → Monetary policy ↑ Trend ↑ Supply → Risk aversion → Bunds are currently moving in a relatively narrow trading range (Chart 9). Trading activities have decreased noticeably, one reason being the public holidays in the US and various euro zone countries. Overall, European bond markets appear to be looking for fresh impetus though. After Draghi’s dovish surprise at the last ECB meeting, discussions about government bond purchases (QE) by the ECB are now focusing more on the question of “when” and “how“ they will happen rather than “whether”. Yesterday’s ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters (SPF) has provided further arguments for QE. Inflation expectations on a five-year horizon have fallen significantly compared to the previous quarter and are now in line with the corresponding market-based measures (Chart 10). In contrast to the latter, the SPF is not distorted by risk and liquidity premiums, nor by temporary technical factors. This confirms our view that the fall in the market-based measures over the past months is primarily due to falling inflation expectations and not – like the ECB states – to greater uncertainty about the inflation outlook. Investors increasingly doubt that the ECB will achieve its inflation target in the medium to long term. This in itself gives Bund yields tailwind. Even so, we expect the recent sideways movement to continue for now; the market does not expect ECB president Draghi to give any concrete indications of imminent government bond purchases at the December meeting and the pending economic data are unlikely to deliver a sufficiently strong new impetus either. The periphery countries should remain under pressure irrespective of growing QE speculation, especially as political risks are increasingly moving to the fore. CHART 9: Interest-rate markets looking for new impetus CHART 10: Inflation creditability of ECB is crumbling Bund Future contract €5y5y inflation rate derived from inflation swaps (5x5), in % and 5y. inflation expectations of ECB expert survey (SPF), in % 151.8 2,9 2,10 151.6 2,7 2,05 151.4 2,5 1,95 151.2 2,3 1,90 151.0 2,1 150.8 1,85 1,9 150.6 150.4 05.11. 2,00 1,80 1,7 2005 06.11. 07.11. 10.11. Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research 14 November 2014 11.11 12.11. 13.11. 1,75 2008 5x5 Inflation Swap (LHS) 2011 2014 SPF 5y inflation expect. (RH Source: Bloomberg, ECB, Commerzbank Research 11 Economic Research | Week in Focus Ulrich Leuchtmann Tel. +49 69 136 23393 FX market preview: When all is said and done Since ECB President Mario Draghi de facto proclaimed a target for the ECB’s balance sheet volume, domestic euro area issues have lost much of their influence on EUR exchange rates. This means that EUR-USD volatilities could continue falling. TABLE 4: Expected trading ranges for next week EUR-USD EUR-JPY USD-JPY Range Trend 1.2250-1.2600 141.50-147.50 113.50-119.50 Î Ò Ò EUR-GBP GBP-USD EUR-CHF Range Trend 0.7850-0.8050 1.5450-1.5900 1.2000-1.2080 Î Î Î Source: Commerzbank Research Will the ECB buy government bonds on a broad base or not? Whilst this remains an exciting question for the bond market, it has become much less relevant for the FX market. By proclaiming a de-facto balance sheet target, ECB President Mario Draghi has already announced the additional liquidity the ECB wants to provide (around 1 trillion euros). The allocation of this volume on ECB measures already underway (TLTRO, ABSPP, CBPP3) and a potential QE programme is of minor importance to the FX market. This is because liquidity measures mainly affect exchange rates via the liability side of the central bank’s balance sheet. But this also means that EUR exchange rates are now hardly driven by changes in the QE probability. Only declining inflation expectations (which could trigger an increase in the €1 trillion target) would put additional pressure on the euro. But this appears unlikely at present (Chart 11). On the USD side, the minutes of the October FOMC meeting, which will be released next Wednesday, should be interesting. After all, the corresponding FOMC statement was interpreted as surprisingly hawkish. But this also means that markets could once again ignore the hawkish passages in the minutes as already priced in and instead fling themselves at some dovish remark or other that will inevitably crop up given that there is a small but vocal group of doves on the FOMC. In combination with a still sizeable amount of USD long positions, this could be at least sufficient to interrupt the medium-term downtrend in EUR-USD (Chart 12). However, a larger correction upwards is unlikely. The fundamental arguments in favour of existing EUR-USD short positions are still valid. All in all, this probably means that – similar to last summer – the EUR-USD market could lapse into fatigue. Short EUR-USD volatilities therefore have new downside potential in the near future – but only until the market starts to price in more aggressive Fed rate hikes than currently. CHART 11: Pressure on inflation expectations is easing CHART 12: Threat of fatigue in EUR-USD? 5Y×5Y inflation expectations in euro area (ex tobacco), from inflation swaps Implied EUR-USD volatility, 1 month, ATM; percent annualised 2.3% 10 2.2% 9 2.1% 8 2.0% 7 1.9% 6 1.8% 5 1.7% Jan 14 Mar 14 May 14 Source: Commerzbank Research 12 Jul 14 Sep 14 Nov 14 4 Jan 13 Jul 13 Jan 14 Jul 14 Source: Bloomberg 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Markus Wallner Tel. +49 69 136 21747 Equity Market Preview: Investment themes 2015 Volatility should remain relatively high on the German equity market in 2015. The selection of individual stocks should therefore grow in importance. Key issues are likely to be the upcoming turnaround in the US monetary policy, further depreciation of the euro (especially versus the US dollar) and ongoing restructuring. In selecting positions, investors should also consider earnings momentum and the already high valuations of some DAX and MDAX companies. These themes will be specified in our Equity Outlook 2015, which will be published next week. TABLE 5: Equity markets are still volatile Earnings 2014e Performance (%) since 31/12 Index points Growth (%) current current 31/12 P/E 2014e Index 31/10 30/09 31/12 current 31/12 DAX 30 9,211 -1.2 -2.8 -3.6 706.0 731.1 1.6 11.6 13.0 13.1 MDAX 16,157 0.1 1.0 -2.5 926.3 994.2 26.7 41.6 17.4 16.7 Euro Stoxx 50 3,047 -2.1 -5.5 -2.0 221.7 242.3 4.5 12.1 13.7 12.8 S&P 500 2,038 1.0 3.3 10.3 116.8 119.3 7.8 9.9 17.4 15.5 Source: Commerzbank Corporates & Markets, I/B/E/S Fed turnaround: The looming interest rate turnaround in the coming year should mean additional volatility on the German equity market. Stocks of highly indebted companies should suffer especially. One example is ThyssenKrupp, whose net debt is almost five times as high as operating earnings before interest, taxes and amortization. In the financial sector, the rise in interest rates will mostly weigh on the real estate sector, while the banking and insurance sectors have actually mainly profited from this in the past. German companies with a high percentage of sales in the emerging markets such as Brazil, Indonesia and Russia are likely to be indirectly affected by the Fed turnaround; the currencies of these countries should come again under pressure from the change in course of US monetary policy. Weaker euro: While the earnings of German companies generally suffered over the year from euro appreciation earlier in the year, they should soon gain a tailwind from this front. Discussions on further monetary easing in the euro zone, coupled with the expected turnaround on interest rates by the US central bank, have caused the euro to lose 9% against the USD in past weeks. This trend is set to continue in the coming year and companies with positive earnings sensitivity to a rising US dollar should of course profit most. This is the case for K+S or BMW, for example. Restructuring: Given the likely continued weak sales growth momentum, or even declining sales, German companies will undertake further restructuring to maintain earnings margins or even increase them. This applies especially to firms with high fixed costs whose earnings react strongly to sales fluctuations. In the case of Hochtief, for example, 1% lower fixed costs would lift operating earnings by around 7%. Earnings momentum and valuation: Despite the consolidation of the German equity market in October, the valuations of some DAX and MDAX stocks are still quite high. Investors should therefore continue to focus on the shares of companies whose earnings momentum is stronger than that of the general market and whose valuations based on the P/B ratio are lower or relatively close to the long-term average. This holds true of HeidelbergCement and K+S, for example. 14 November 2014 13 Economic Research | Week in Focus Barbara Lambrecht Tel. +49 69 136 22295 Commodities market preview: Increasing nervousness ahead of the OPEC meeting One week ahead of the OPEC meeting, volatility on the oil market looks set to increase. After all, the usual statements from OPEC delegates in the run-up to the meeting should trigger strong price fluctuations. Yet the price is unlikely to drop much lower than USD80 per barrel. The Study Groups’ and World Bureau of Metal Statistics’ supply-demand balances do not promise any further impetus for base metals. Neither is the Silver Institute’s report likely to come up with a surprise on the silver market. Instead, silver might cheapen once more, driven by gold. TABLE 6: Tendencies in important commodities Per cent change 13 Nov 1 week 1 month Tendency Commodity specific events 1 year short-term Brent (USD a barrel) 79.4 -4.2 -10.7 -25.9 Þ Copper (USD a ton) 6718 0.9 0.1 -3.8 Ö Gold (USD a troy ounce) 1162 1.8 -6.0 -9.4 Ö Silver (USD a troy ounce) 15.7 2.1 -10.0 -23.7 Ö ILSZG (17), WBMS (19) Silver Market Interim Report (18) Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research Brent oil continues to move lower and is currently trading at just under USD80 – a level last seen four years ago (Chart 13). One week before the eagerly awaited OPEC meeting, the downtrend on the oil market is likely to start losing momentum though. After all, there is a (small) chance that the oil cartel will vote in favour of reducing supply. Speculative investors look set to turn more cautious as a result. After all, Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Al-Naimi this week denied that his country was engaged in any price war, saying that the Saudis were interested in stable oil prices. This leaves room for interpretation. The usual statements from OPEC delegates in the run-up to the meeting should trigger price fluctuations all the more. Silver has lost almost 20% since the start of the year. In recent months, in particular, the price pressure was much stronger than on the gold market, although both prices traded at 4½-year lows. Further to the downward pull from the gold market, the silver price is being hit by two additional factors: For one, there is the weakening Chinese economy since industrial demand is much more significant for silver than for gold. For another, supply appears to be rising strongly. More than half of silver supply is created in the production of base metals which are still in great demand at present (Chart 14). In recent years, the supply overhang has been absorbed by rising investment demand. Yet stagnating holdings of silver ETFs argue for receding buying interest from investors. The report of the Silver Institute, due to be released on Tuesday, should reflect these market trends and thus leave the price virtually unaffected. Near-term, price trends on the gold market should therefore continue to lead silver prices as the price correlation between both precious metals remains high. Long-term, however, silver might benefit from strengthening industrial demand. CHART 13: Oil price continues heading further south CHART 14: Oversupply on the silver market USD per barrel In million ounces 0.90 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0.85 0.80 0.75 0.70 Jan-10 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Source: Bloomberg, Commerzbank Research 14 Jan-14 Industrial Fabrication Mine Production Source: Silver Institute, Commerzbank Research 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus Commerzbank forecasts TABLE 7: Growth and inflation Real GDP (%) Inflation rate (%) 2013 2014 2015 2013 2014 2.2 2.2 2.9 1.5 1.7 1.8 2.0 2.3 2.5 0.9 2.1 2.0 Japan 1.5 1.0 1.3 0.4 2.8 1.5 Euro area -0.4 0.7 0.8 1.4 0.6 1.0 - Germany 0.1 1.3 1.3 1.5 1.1 2.1 - France 0.4 0.3 0.5 0.9 0.6 0.7 - Italy -1.7 -0.2 0.3 1.2 0.4 0.6 USA Canada 2015 - Spain -1.2 1.4 2.3 1.4 0.0 0.5 - Portugal -1.4 1.0 1.5 0.3 -0.2 0.8 - Ireland 0.2 5.2 3.1 0.5 0.6 1.4 - Greece -4.2 1.0 2.0 -0.9 -1.3 0.5 United Kingdom 1.7 3.0 2.6 2.6 1.6 1.9 Switzerland 2.0 1.7 1.8 -0.2 0.0 0.5 China 7.7 7.3 6.5 2.6 2.3 2.5 India 4.7 5.8 6.2 6.3 6.5 6.2 Brazil 2.5 0.3 0.9 6.2 6.3 6.5 Russia 1.3 0.3 0.9 6.8 7.3 6.5 World 2.9 3.1 3.4 • The ultra-expansionary policy of the Fed is boosting the US economy. At the same time, fiscal policy is at least no longer a headwind. We therefore expect US growth to markedly accelerate. • Growth in China decelerates further, also due to decreasing house prices. • The recovery in the euro zone will only continue at a slow pace. GDP growth will remain lower than that of the USA. • EMU has survived the sovereign debt crisis, but is gradually evolving into an “Italian-style monetary union”. • Despite its current weakness, the German economy looks set to continue outperforming the rest of the euro area – partly because ECB target rates are much too low for Germany. • High unemployment in most countries is keeping inflation low for the time being. In the long term, however, inflation is likely to rise, as central banks have given up some of their independence. TABLE 8: Interest rates (end-of-quarter) 13.11.2014 Q4 14 Q1 15 Q2 15 Q3 15 Q4 15 Federal funds rate 0.25 0.25 0.25 0.50 1.00 1.50 3-months Libor 0.23 0.25 0.30 0.80 1.35 1.90 2 years* 0.52 0.70 0.90 1.20 1.60 2.00 5 years* 1.63 2.10 2.40 2.70 2.95 3.20 10 years* 2.35 2.70 2.90 3.10 3.30 3.50 Spread 10-2 years 183 200 200 190 170 150 Swap-Spread 10 years 13 10 10 10 15 15 USA Euro area Minimum bid rate 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 3-months Euribor 0.08 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 2 years* -0.05 -0.10 -0.10 -0.10 -0.05 0.00 5 years* 0.10 0.25 0.20 0.25 0.35 0.40 10 years* 0.79 1.10 0.80 1.00 1.20 1.35 Spread 10-2 years 84 120 90 110 125 135 Swap-Spread 10 years 21 15 25 30 35 35 United Kingdom Bank Rate 0.50 0.50 0.75 0.75 1.00 1.25 3-months Libor 0.56 0.80 0.90 1.05 1.25 1.40 2 years* 0.60 1.00 1.25 1.30 1.35 1.55 10 years* 2.17 2.60 2.85 3.05 3.20 3.35 • The Fed has ended its QE3 programme. Interest rate hikes are on the cards from 2015Q2, due to a continuously decreasing US unemployment rate and gradually rising inflation. • Since the Eurosystem balance sheet will probably not expand as expected by the central bank, and as inflation expectations are likely to fall further, we expect the ECB to announce broad-based government bond purchases during the first half of 2015. • 10y Bund yields are likely to stabilise around 1% later this year when the Fed communication changes but mark new record lows when the ECB announces QE in 2015. Thereafter, yields should rise gradually. The structurally low interest rate environment remains intact. • The focus on the Fed’s lift-off will put upward pressure on US$ rates. A return to 3% for 10y USTs is only on the cards for 2015, though. The curve is in for a textbook-style flattening via the short-end in the coming quarters. • Risk premiums of peripheral government bonds are set to decline further. TABLE 9: Exchange rates (end-of-quarter) 13.11.2014 Q4 14 Q1 15 Q2 15 Q3 15 Q4 15 EUR/USD 1.25 1.25 1.22 1.19 1.17 1.15 USD/JPY 116 117 117 120 122 125 EUR/CHF 1.20 1.21 1.21 1.21 1.21 1.21 EUR/GBP 0.79 0.77 0.76 0.75 0.74 0.73 EUR/SEK 9.25 9.10 9.00 8.95 8.90 8.90 EUR/NOK 8.47 8.80 8.60 8.55 8.50 8.40 EUR/PLN 4.23 4.15 4.10 4.08 4.06 4.05 EUR/HUF 306 312 310 309 308 306 EUR/CZK 27.65 27.50 27.30 27.00 27.00 26.90 AUD/USD 0.87 0.87 0.85 0.83 0.81 0.80 NZD/USD 0.79 0.77 0.75 0.73 0.71 0.70 USD/CAD USD/CNY 1.13 1.13 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 6.13 6.10 6.05 6.00 5.95 5.95 • USD should further profit from the expectations of Fed interest rate normalization. Current USD rates have not priced in the speed of rate hikes that we expect. • The high yielding G10 currencies should particularly suffer from US rate hikes. • The discussion about an ECB QE programme will not put much pressure onto the euro for the time being because the overall volume of ECB liquidity measures is already known. • CEE currencies are generally benefiting from the dovish ECB backdrop, meaning central banks have room to cut rates further. HUF, PLN and RON should trade range-bound, while EUR/CZK will float above the 27.0 floor set by the CNB. Source: Bloomberg. Commerzbank Economic Research; bold change on last week; * Treasuries, Bunds, Gilts, JGBs 14 November 2014 15 Economic Research | Week in Focus Research contacts (E-Mail: [email protected]) Chief Economist Dr Jörg Krämer +49 69 136 23650 Economic Research Interest Rate & Credit Research FX Strategy Commodity Research Dr Jörg Krämer (Head) +49 69 136 23650 Christoph Rieger (Head) +49 69 136 87664 Ulrich Leuchtmann (Head) +49 69 136 23393 Eugen Weinberg (Head) +49 69 136 43417 Dr Ralph Solveen (Deputy Head; Germany) +49 69 136 22322 Alexander Aldinger +49 69 136 89004 Lutz Karpowitz +49 69 136 42152 Daniel Briesemann +49 69 136 29158 Elisabeth Andreae (Scandinavia, Australia) +49 69 136 24052 Rainer Guntermann +49 69 136 87506 Peter Kinsella +44 20 7475 3959 Carsten Fritsch +49 69 136 21006 Dr Christoph Balz (USA, Fed) +49 69 136 24889 Peggy Jäger +49 69 136 87508 Thu-Lan Nguyen +49 69 136 82878 Dr Michaela Kuhl +49 69 136 29363 Peter Dixon (UK, BoE), London +44 20 7475 4806 Markus Koch +49 69 136 87685 Esther Reichelt +49 69 136 41505 Barbara Lambrecht +49 69 136 22295 Dr Michael Schubert (ECB) +49 69 136 23700 Michael Leister +49 69 136 21264 Dr Michael Schubert (Quant) +49 69 136 23700 Equity Markets Strategy Eckart Tuchtfeld (German economic policy) +49 69 136 23888 David Schnautz +1 212 895 1993 Cross Asset Strategy Dr Marco Wagner (Germany, France, Italy) +49 69 136 84335 Benjamin Schröder +49 69 136 87622 Bernd Weidensteiner (USA, Fed) +49 69 136 24527 Dr Patrick Kohlmann (Head Non-Financials) +49 69 136 22411 Andreas Hürkamp +49 69 136 45925 Ted Packmohr (Head Covered Bonds and Financials) +49 69 136 87571 Technical Analysis Christoph Weil (Euro area) +49 69 136 24041 Emerging Markets Simon Quijano-Evans (Head) +44 20 7475 9200 Dr Bernd Meyer (Head) +49 69 136 87788 Christoph Dolleschal (Deputy Head Research) +49 69 136 21255 Gunnar Hamann +49 69 136 29440 Markus Wallner +49 69 136 21747 Achim Matzke (Head) +49 69 136 29138 Other publications (examples) Economic Research: Economic Briefing (up-to-date comment on main indicators and events) Economic Insight (detailed analysis of selected topics) Economic and Market Monitor (chart book presenting our monthly global view) Commodity Research: Commodity Daily (up-to-date comment on commodities markets) Commodity Spotlight (weekly analysis of commodities markets and forecasts) Interest Rate & Credit Research: Ahead of the Curve (flagship publication with analysis and trading strategy for global bond markets European Sunrise (daily comment and trading strategy for euro area bond markets) Rates Radar (ad-hoc topics and trading ideas for bond markets) Covered Bonds Weekly (weekly analysis of the covered bonds markets) Credit Morning Breeze (daily overview on European credit market) Credit Note (trading recommendations for institutional investors) FX Strategy: Daily Currency Briefing (daily comment and forecasts for FX markets) Hot Spots (in-depth analysis of FX market topics) FX Alpha (monthly analyses, models, and trading strategies for FX markets) Weekly Equity Monitor (weekly outlook on equity markets and quarterly company reports) Equity Markets Strategy: Monthly Equity Monitor (monthly outlook on earnings, valuation, and sentiment on equity markets) Digging in Deutschland (thematic research focusing on the German equity market) Emerging Markets: EM Week Ahead (weekly preview on events of upcoming week) EM Briefing (up-to-date comment of important indicators and events) EM Outlook (quarterly flagship publication with EM economic analysis and strategy recommendation) Cross Asset: Cross Asset Monitor (weekly market overview, incl. sentiment and risk indicators) Cross Asset Outlook (monthly analysis of global financial markets and tactical asset allocation) Cross Asset Feature (special reports on cross-asset themes) To receive these publications, please ask your Commerzbank contact. 16 14 November 2014 Economic Research | Week in Focus This document has been created and published by the Corporates & Markets division of Commerzbank AG, Frankfurt/Main or Commerzbank’s branch offices mentioned in the document. 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