FX Pulse
Transcription
FX Pulse
MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH Global Currency Research Team For research analysts, please see contact list at the back of this material. February 26, 2015 Currencies Global FX Pulse The EUR Imitation Game USD Data-Dependence. The prospect of reduced forward guidance from the Fed is set to increase the sensitivity of USD to data surprises. However, overall, the trend of relative-return expectations will likely remain USDsupportive as the US economy approaches escape velocity. We maintain our structural bullish USD view. Click to search for research by currency Active Orders Short SGD/INR Long USD/THB Long EUR/PLN Short AUD/USD Long USD/PEN Short EUR/INR Long USD/CAD Long USD/CHF Long USD/TRY Options Trades Long EUR Put/USD Call Short EUR Put/USD Call Entry 46.74 32.78 4.16 0.7735 3.0690 71.05 1.2450 0.9400 2.4600 Entry Date 05-Feb-15 05-Feb-15 Stop 46.70 31.75 4.10 0.8000 3.0600 72.00 1.2250 0.9250 2.4000 Expiry Date 07-May-15 07-May-15 Target 45.00 35.00 4.35 0.6900 3.2600 64.00 1.3000 1.0000 2.6500 Strike 1.1250 1.0850 See page 10 for more details. Changes in stops/targets in bold italics. Yield Sensitivity. Investment inflows have kept US yields suppressed until now. Should front-end treasury yields begin to rise, we see several channels via which FX will be impacted – initially by reducing hedging activity, followed by decreasing the relative attractiveness of non-USD denominated debt. Both are USD supportive. Reduced USD Hedging. It is not just yield differentials, but rather the shape of the yield curve that matters for FX, and hedging activity in particular. Higher front-end US rates, reducing the incentive to hedge US asset positions, will drive the USD higher. Such a dynamic is most pronounced against CHF and JPY, with ZAR, NZD, NOK and AUD also vulnerable to higher US front-end yields. Relative Attractiveness. Countries with high foreign participation in their bond markets could also see their currencies weaken if higher US yields spur local debt outflows. This is very significant for EM markets where 40% or more of local debt is in foreign hands. Overall, within EM, we find that BRL, TRY, ZAR and MXN have recently exhibited high sensitivity to US yield selloffs. Within G10, we would add AUD and NZD to the list given the high foreign participation in their local bond markets and the extent of their external liability positions. MS Major Currency Forecasts EUR/USD USD/JPY GBP/USD USD/CHF USD/CAD AUD/USD NZD/USD EUR/SEK EUR/NOK USD/ZAR USD/TRY USD/RUB EUR/PLN EUR/HUF USD/CNY USD/INR USD/KRW USD/SGD USD/BRL USD/MXN 1Q15 2Q15 3Q15 4Q15 1.12 118 1.48 0.91 1.27 0.77 0.71 9.50 8.70 11.65 2.36 66.00 4.33 320 6.16 62.5 1190 1.34 2.65 14.7 1.08 120 1.44 0.93 1.30 0.75 0.68 9.60 8.90 11.75 2.42 68.00 4.35 322 6.13 62.5 1210 1.36 2.75 14.9 1.06 124 1.39 0.99 1.33 0.72 0.66 9.70 9.20 12.05 2.47 70.00 4.35 324 6.12 62.3 1230 1.38 2.85 15.0 1.05 127 1.38 1.02 1.35 0.69 0.65 9.50 9.30 12.30 2.52 72.00 4.35 325 6.09 62.5 1230 1.40 2.90 15.1 Note: Forecasts for end-of-period. G10 and EM forecasts updated on January 22, 2015. AUDUSD and NZDUSD updated on Feb 5, 2015. FX Market Overview P2 Is EUR the New JPY? P5 Technical Chart of the Week – EM Currencies P9 This Week’s Edition Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations P10 G10 & EM Currency Summary P13 Is EUR the New JPY? While EUR has lost its positive beta to risk appetite, it has not yet developed a negative beta to risk akin to the JPY. Thus, the bearish EUR trade does not require a risk-on environment. At the same time, increased foreign investor hedging of European equities is beginning to mirror Japan’s experience. This is limiting EUR’s ability to gain from equity inflows. As long as foreign investor hedging of European equities is popular, we expect EUR rebounds to be shallow and short-lived. Global Event Risk Calendar P15 FX Volatility/Carry Grids, Tactical Indicators P17 MS FX Positioning Tracker P19 Macro Forecasts FX Forecasts P20 P22 For important disclosures, refer to the Disclosures Section, located at the end of this report. MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse FX Overview Hans Redeker, Vandit D. Shah The Fed increasingly seems to be headed towards our basecase scenario of delaying liftoff until some certainty is achieved on inflation reaching the 2% target. A patient Fed has us retaining our emphasis on nominal growth and yield differentials staying supportive of the USD. Despite the Fed’s slow approach, risks to US bond yields are skewed to the upside, we believe. Higher US rates reduce the relative attractiveness of nonUSD denominated debt. The US is the biggest debtor globally with non-official holdings of USD-denominated debt often FX-hedged. If front-end US yields pick up increasing the cost of USD hedging, we find CHF, JPY, ZAR, NZD, and NOK as most exposed. EM markets with significant foreign holdings of their local debt will be vulnerable should US yields break higher. Mexico, Hungary, and Malaysia fall into this category. On examining the past seven UST selloff periods since 2013 and comparing it to the most recent one, we find that BRL, TRY, ZAR and MXN are the most vulnerable within EM. expectations have eased by 2bp to 1.57%. The temporary pause in the USD rally and some stability in commodity prices have proven enough to push US inflation expectations higher, while the pause in the EUR decline has caused EMU inflation expectations to resume the trend lower. A lower EURUSD could be in the interest of both sides, helping the Fed delay liftoff and aiding EMU in importing inflation from abroad. Watch the US Bond Market So far, US bond yields have stayed low as domestic capital demand has been outpaced by foreign capital inflows, tipping the balance between capital demand and supply towards lower rates. Relative to the strength of US domestic demand, bond yields have stayed remarkably low (Exhibit 1). Meanwhile, US labor market conditions have strengthened as illustrated by the Jolts report, which has rarely shown such a large gap between job openings and actual hirings. Looking only at US factors, US bond yields should move higher. Exhibit 1 US Bond Yield Upside Risks Are Building Within G10, countries with large net external liability positions could be vulnerable. We maintain our bearish AUD stance. We stay long USD against PEN, THB, CAD, CHF, AUD and TRY, in addition to long INR trades against EUR and SGD. The Fed and the USD The Fed may use its March meeting to qualify its forward guidance and increase its flexibility in hiking interest rates. However, removing “patient” does not necessarily mean the Fed will actually hike rates early (see US Economics: Yellen's Semi-Annual Testimony on Tap (20 Feb 2015)). Labor market slack exists with wages only growing moderately and headline inflation is yet to have bottomed out. Nonetheless, reduced Fed guidance suggests more data-dependence and with the US economy getting closer to escape velocity than any other DM economy, we expect anticipated relative-return differentials to stay USD-supportive. The relative behavior of 5-year inflation expectations over recent weeks tells it all. While US 5-year inflation expectations have increased this month by 16bp to 2.27%, EMU inflation . Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research Exhibit 2 US Economy Now Supported by a Strong Labor Market Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research 2 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Exhibit 3 Net Inflows into US Treasurys Increasingly Coming from Asia (12m Sum) Exhibit 4 FX Sensitivity to Moves in Front-end US Rates 18 16 14 May 2013 - Feb 2015 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 CHF JPY ZAR NZD NOK AUD PLN SEK TRY MXN HUF EUR KRW BRL MYR RUB GBP IDR CAD THB INR PEN COP Obviously, the US has benefited from debt-related inflows which have suppressed bond yields. Exhibit 3 denotes where these funds are coming from. Asia and China have been the main sources of capital finding its way into the US debt securities. It appears that an increase in Asian savings and related capital outflows helped keep bond yields low. Interestingly, ahead of ‘taper-tantrum’ in summer 2013, foreign-debt inflows into the US slowed down resulting in Treasury yields spiking sharply higher. In response, unsurprisingly, EM currencies traded lower. Beta to UST2y Note: We use daily %changes to calculate these betas. For example, USD/CHF rises by 1.7% with a 10bps rise in UST2y. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research EM’s Vulnerability Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research Should inflows into US debt markets ease or US capital demand increase disproportionally due to a rebounding US economy, US bond yields could rise. An additional factor to consider is the slope of the US yield curve. In anticipation of the Fed hiking rates sooner or later, front-end yields have risen, reducing the profitability of a yield-curve-inspired carry trade. When the US yield curve is steep and front end rates are low, there is a high incentive to FX-hedge this exposure. However, when US interest rates rise, increasing the cost of currency hedging, the incentive to FX-hedge the US exposure decreases. Reducing currency hedges due to higher US frontend rates can move FX markets considerably, we believe. Looking at the sensitivities of global FX to UST2y since the Fed came back into play in May 2013, we find that CHF, JPY, ZAR, NZD, NOK and AUD are most vulnerable (Exhibit 4). Risks to US yield have shifted to the upside, we think, raising the issue of FX vulnerabilities (US Interest Rate Strategy Insight: A Great Opportunity to Add (20 Feb 2015)). For EM, there are two risks. First, those economies that run significant international investment deficit positions, resulting from years of debt-fuelled current account deficits, will likely experience some pressure as a result of the USD strength that results fro higher UST yields. Second, economies that have seen a significant build-up of leverage, both USD and local currency denominated, will likely come under pressure as global interest rates start to rise (driven by higher UST yields). Although USD-denominated debt has reached record highs in absolute numbers (USD9trn), admittedly USD liabilities are often either covered by USD-denominated assets or broadly matched by FX earnings, allowing a higher USD to support both sides of balance sheets and not critically raise vulnerabilities (see Asia Insight: How Vulnerable Is Asian Debt to a Strong USD? (24 Feb 2015)). However, when USD funding costs move higher, debt maintenance becomes more of a problem. Initially, this increase in costs may be small, only kicking in when debt expires, but it progressively increases over time. The initial USD-supportive impact of higher USD yields, therefore, will come via the reduction of FX hedges – especially of the foreign holding of USD-denominated debt. In addition, countries with a large proportion of foreign holdings of their local debt will be vulnerable as a rise in US yields will make them relatively less attractive, potentially spurring outflows. Exhibit 5 lists the proportion of foreign holdings in 3 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Weak Capex Further Negative for AUD local EM debt markets. DM investments in local currencydenominated debt may flee when US bond yields spike higher. Using this framework, we find Mexico, Hungary, Malaysia, Peru, Indonesia and South Africa as most vulnerable. When EM bonds lose their relative yield advantage, we may see related currency weakness. Exhibit 5 Foreign Holdings in Local EM Bond Markets Country % Foreign Owned Local FX Holding (in Bn) As of Czech Republic Hungary Israel Poland Russia South Africa Turkey Brazil Colombia Mexico Peru Indonesia Korea Malaysia Thailand 14.5% 50.6% 5.5% 39.8% 24.2% 36.0% 28.6% 18.6% 16.0% 60.2% 44.5% 40.2% 15.1% 46.9% 17.9% 197 5,094 196 877 585 52 407 31.347 1.436 24 500,832 65,926 150 611 Dec-14 Jan-15 Dec-14 Dec-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Dec-14 Dec-14 Jan-15 Jan-15 Dec-14 Jan-15 Jan-15 Sep-14 Jan-15 Source: National Country Treasuries, Morgan Stanley Research Finally, we look at the impact on USD/EM from the most recent UST selloff after the January labour market report, comparing it to USD/EM returns in the previous seven UST selloffs since 2013 (Exhibit 6). While sensitivities on the whole have reduced somewhat, they are still quite high in absolute terms in important EM markets such as BRL, TRY, and ZAR. This likely reflects positioning and valuations. Exhibit 6 EM FX Sensitivity to US Treasury Yields 3 We have maintained a long-standing negative view on AUD as the combination of a deeper-than-expected terms of trade shock, rich valuations, a stalling domestic economic transition, and a dovish central bank put pressure on the currency. Given its large net external liability position, AUD is also vulnerable to a spike in UST front-end yields. Indeed, only a few weeks ago, we reduced our AUD/USD year-end forecast further to 0.69 as our economists projected two additional rate cuts from the RBA by May, taking the cash rate to 1.75% (see FX Pulse: Revising AUD and NZD (Further) Lower (06 Feb 2015)). With this week’s capex data in Australia coming in much weaker than expected, we reiterate our negative stance, especially with the non-mining capex outlook coming in surprisingly soft (see Australia Macro+: Weak non-mining capex – case for more RBA rate cuts (26 Feb 2015)). The capex intentions for 2015-16 (first estimate) came in much lower than expected at A$110bn, pointing to a 16% decline over FY16 following from on an expected -7% fall in FY15. While early capex intention estimates need to be treated with caution, this material weakness challenges the RBA’s forecast for an eventual recovery in non-mining investment. As such, while market expectations have reduced for further RBA cuts since the February meeting (only 10bps priced in for March and 29bps by May), we see an even-stronger case now for two 25bps cuts from the RBA by May. This will further compress the already-historically low spread between AU and US bond yields, putting further pressure on AUD/USD. Our Trades We maintain our strategy of selectively returning to USD longs and hold our short positions in TRY, THB, and PEN within EM and CHF, CAD, and AUD within G10. In addition, we continue to favour long INR positions on a relative-value basis, against EUR and SGD. 2 1 0 -1 -2 BRL TRY ZAR PEN MXN INR PLN SGD IDR PHP TWD Average Sell-off KRW THB CNY CZK HUF CLP COP RUB MYR -3 Recent Move Note: The average selloff is average beta to UST during the past seven UST selloff periods since 2013. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 4 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Is EUR the New JPY? Evan Brown, Calvin Tse, Vandit D. Shah Exhibit 1 EUR and JPY Betas to S&P500 Returns While EUR has lost its positive beta to risk appetite, it has not yet developed a negative beta to risk like JPY. Negative-beta currencies have three characteristics: (1) very low interest rates, (2) high foreign hedge ratios on domestic assets, and (3) a net external asset position. EUR qualifies for the first two but is still a few years away from the third. A shock to risk sentiment is not enough to reverse EUR’s downtrend, in our view. Hedging behavior for European equity inflows is beginning to mirror Japan’s experience. As long as hedging remains popular, EUR rebounds should be shallow and short-lived. The Japanification of the Eurozone Clients often want to discuss whether Europe is going down the road of Japan in the 1990s. Many feel European policymakers were late in providing sufficient monetary stimulus, early in tightening fiscal policy and slow in implementing necessary structural reforms. It remains to be seen whether the ECB’s easing to date will be enough to arrest deflationary pressures and help growth back onto a stable footing. But a crucial question which we can begin testing now is whether Japan’s and Europe’s respective currencies are developing similar behavior. JPY has a tradition of behaving counter to investor risk appetite; it rallies on negative news, both foreign and domestic, and depreciates when sentiment is positive. In short, it behaves like a true global funding currency. Is EUR beginning to exhibit the same characteristics? We find that while EUR has lost its positive beta to risk appetite, it has not yet developed the negative relationship with risk found with JPY. Exhibit 1 shows the updated EUR and JPY rolling betas to the S&P 500, an external measure of 1 risk appetite for both currencies. Since late 2012, JPY has had a significant negative relationship with the S&P 500, meaning JPY tends to sell off when US stocks are rising. EUR, on the other hand, used to have a positive relationship with the S&P 500; however, this has deteriorated over the last year-and-a-half. EUR’s beta to US stocks is now slightly negative but is not statistically significantly different from zero. In short, EUR no longer benefits from a risk-on environment, nor does it dependably sell off in a positive risk-sentiment environment, as measured by S&P 500 returns. 0.4 EUR/USD 0.3 JPY/USD 0.2 0.1 -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.4 -0.5 -0.6 Dec-11 Oct-12 Jul-13 May-14 Feb-15 Note: Weekly betas are calculated using our FX Drivers model (see FX Pulse: G4: The Drivers They Are a-Changin’, August 29, 2013). Dotted lines denote statistically insignificant betas. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research What about sensitivity to domestic equities? JPY tends to move inversely with Japanese equities, though the relationship is not one-way. A weaker JPY supports equities via a competitiveness boost and higher translated earnings. But higher Japanese equities also signal greater faith in the reflationary effort, which lowers real yields and weakens JPY. Likewise, robust Japanese risk appetite is often associated with risk-seeking outflows from Japanese investors, which also means JPY selling. Is the same true for EUR? A look at 90-day rolling correlations shows that after months of near-zero correlation between EUR/USD and Eurostoxx, the relationship has gone negative. In the lead-up to the ECB’s QE announcement, the correlation between FX and stocks in Europe was even more negative than that in Japan (see Exhibit 2). But in recent weeks the European correlation has begun to reverse back towards zero. There is little sign of a stable relationship developing as of yet – but again, we are quite far from the materially positive relationship that Eurostoxx and EUR/USD used to exhibit. The bottom line is that EUR is not yet trading with a negative beta to risk but very much appears to have lost its positive beta; indeed, correlations are still evolving and we need time to see where they stabilize. EUR has not achieved full funding currency status such that ‘risk-off’ would challenge its bearish trend. What would have to happen for EUR to behave as such? 1 Weekly betas are calculated using our FX Drivers model. For details, see FX Pulse: G4: The Drivers They Are a-Changin’, August 29, 2013. 5 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Exhibit 2 Exhibit 3 EUR and JPY 90-day Rolling Correlations to Domestic Equity Returns Core Europe Yields Lower than Japan Sep-12 Feb-13 Jul-13 EUR/USD Dec-13 May-14 Sep-14 Feb-15 JPY/USD Note: Correlations are calculated on daily percent changes. We use Eurostoxx and Topix returns. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research How EUR Becomes JPY EMU Banks Increase Lending to Foreign Entities Relative to Domestic Ones %, YoY Loans ex Europe Loans Europe 8 6 2) High foreign-hedge ratios on domestic assets, such that risk-seeking foreign inflows have a smaller impact on the currency. 0 4 2 -2 -4 -6 3) A large net external asset position, so when risk appetite sours, local investors repatriate. On interest rates, the average sovereign 2y yield in the eurozone has fallen by 40bp over the last year, compared to a fall of 5bp in Japan, and an increase of 30bp in the US. As a result, core Europe in the front end now trades at negative interest rates – at yields even below Japan’s (see Exhibit 3). Consistently, EUR is becoming more popular as a global funding currency. As rates have come down and domestic opportunities appear comparatively less attractive, EMU banks have increased lending to foreign entities much more rapidly than at home (see Exhibit 4). Australia Exhibit 4 1) Very low interest rates compared to other countries, increasing the incentive to fund higher-yielding investments abroad. Rates and Funding US Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research In our view, currencies like JPY or the pre-floor CHF trade inversely to risk appetite because they have: EUR’s history of positive beta performance reflects that it did not check the boxes above. However, over the last year, EUR has ticked off both the first and second prerequisites required for a currency to trade inversely to risk. It has yet to fulfill the third, which explains why EUR has not developed a significant negative beta to positive risk appetite for now. New Zealand -0.6 May-12 Norway -0.5 UK -0.4 Canada -0.3 Portugal -0.2 Italy 0.0 -0.1 Spain 0.1 Japan 0.2 France 0.3 Netherlands 0.4 Germany 0.5 2Yr Sweden 0.6 % Switzerland 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 -0.5 -1 0.7 -8 -10 Jan-10 Jan-11 Jan-12 Jan-13 Jan-14 Jan-15 Source: ECB, Morgan Stanley Research Meanwhile, non-European companies have increasingly 2 issued debt in EUR. By issuing debt in EUR, foreign companies are able to either access cheaper funding or broaden demand for their securities. In environments of low domestic interest rates and demand for yield by domestic investors, the cross-currency basis tends to become more negative. In this regard, the evolution of the EUR FX basis is similar to the dynamic in Japan (see Exhibit 5), suggesting that domestic reach for yield and central bank easing policies are pushing EUR closer to the status of a true funding currency. 2 See FT: US companies increasingly borrow in euros, December 14, 2014. 6 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Exhibit 5 FX Basis Suggests EUR Becoming Funder Cross-Currency Basis 5yr 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 -40 -50 -60 -70 26 23 2 strength. Thus, it was unsurprising that FX-hedged positions in Japanese equities have become so popular among the international community. This hedging allowed Japanese equities to rally and JPY to weaken simultaneously. Similarly, even as European equities are attractive to global investors today, the support for EUR is limited, given high hedge ratios that neutralize the FX impact. Exhibit 7 -10 Large Portion of Japanese Equity Flows FX-Hedged -31 13000 -42 -65 JPY USDmn 11000 -57 DKK CHF EUR GBP CAD NZD AUD Cumulative Flows: Japan Equity ETFs Abe Wins Election 9000 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 7000 Foreign Hedging 5000 Another notable trend has been greater FX hedging of EURdenominated investments. Given that FX hedges are typically done over-the-counter, we gauge this dynamic by examining the ETF market. Since the ECB implemented a negative deposit rate, implicitly using EUR as the transmission mechanism for monetary policy, foreign investors have significantly increased FX-hedged equity investments relative to unhedged ones (see Exhibit 6). As long as front-end rates trade in the red, foreign investors essentially are paid to remove FX risk from their European investments. And knowing that the central bank welcomes a significantly weaker currency to boost competitiveness and increase imported inflation, we expect this hedging to continue. FX Unhedged 1000 -1000 Jun-12 Dec-12 Jun-13 Dec-13 Jun-14 Dec-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research A key risk to the EUR downtrend is that unhedged flows surge faster than hedged ones. There are, indeed, early signs of a pick-up in unhedged ETF flows, but so far hedged flows are still moving at a faster pace. We will watch the ETF market carefully to gauge whether EUR can stage a meaningful counter-trend rally from risk-seeking inflows. The Net International Investment Position Exhibit 6 European Equities Are Now Being FX-Hedged 16000 FX Hedged 3000 USDmn Cumulative Flows: Europe Equity ETFs 14000 12000 FX Hedged 10000 FX Unhedged negative depo ECB implements 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 -2000 Jan-14 Apr-14 Jul-14 Oct-14 Jan-15 While EUR qualifies on low rates and high foreign hedge ratios, it does not yet meet the third characteristic of a negative beta currency – a net external asset position. Investors in most countries have a natural home bias, such that when risk appetite sours they repatriate. If local investors hold more assets abroad than foreigners own of their local markets, periods of risk-aversion cause local currency strength due to repatriation. It is no coincidence that both JPY and CHF, two currencies known for their negative beta behavior, are from countries with large net international asset positions (see Exhibit 8). This is still the case when FX reserves, which are less influenced by global risk sentiment, are removed from the net international investment position. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research This trend mirrors Japan’s experience. Core to the launch of Abenomics in late 2012 was a desire to correct prior JPY 7 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Exhibit 8 Net International Investment Position to GDP While EUR may be gradually evolving into a negative-beta currency like JPY, it is not there yet. The bearish EUR trade does not require a risk-on environment. While short-term position adjustments are always a risk, we do not see a shock to sentiment as powerful enough to reverse the EUR downtrend. At the same time, increased foreign investor hedging of European equities is beginning to mirror Japan’s experience. This is limiting EUR’s ability to gain from equity inflows. As long as foreign investor hedging of European equities is popular, we expect EUR rebounds to be shallow and short-lived. 140% 120% NIIP Bottom Line NIIP ex Reserves 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% -20% EMU Japan Switzerland Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research EMU, on the other hand, still has a net external liability of €850 billion. This goes a long way towards explaining why EUR does not dependably behave as a negative beta currency. But it seems only a matter of time before Europe meets this final criterion. Remember that the net international investment position is the stock and current account is the flow. As Europe’s current account surpluses have mounted, its net external liability has shrunk. In fact, the net external liability has declined by €600 billion just in the last year-and-ahalf, reflecting both current account surpluses and FX valuation adjustments. The IMF forecasts that large eurozone current account surpluses will continue; these are flows which by definition will have to be recycled into foreign assets. At the current pace of flow adjustments, Europe would post a net external asset position some time in the next few years. When the cumulative current account surpluses build into a European net foreign asset position, then repatriation flows can support EUR in risk-off environments. But this backdrop is likely several years away. 8 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Technical Chart of the Week – EM Currencies Sheena Shah 10-year EURPLN Chart 5.00 4.80 4.60 4.40 4.20 4.00 3.80 3.60 3.40 3.20 3.00 100 05RSI 4.9307 4.4000 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 0 05 EURPLN has formed a contracting triangle from its peak of 4.9307 in 2009. Having broken out of the triangle in December, the pair failed to make it past the 4.40 level. We now expect a break out higher from the triangle, looking for an initial move towards 4.40. We would place a stop at 4.10 since this is a move much below and out of the triangle, suggesting some downside. Long-term USDZAR Chart 15.0 14.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 100 00RSI 01 13.8401 12.1350 11.8710 10.6905 (61.8% retracement) 5.5950 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 0 00 01 USDZAR briefly created a new 10-year high of 11.8926. Breaking back above this level is key for the long-term uptrend. USDZAR has continued to trade within a channel since 2012, with the lower end around 11.30. Market participants are likely to keep USDZAR above this channel, but a clear break below the 11.20 area could open up some downside risks for the pair. Long-term USDBRL Chart 4.00 USDBRL is trading towards the top end of a trend channel formed since 2012. Having broken through the recent high at 2.7600, technically there is further upside potential. After a break of the psychological level of 3.0000, the next key level to watch is the 61.8% retracement of the bearish move from 2003-11 at 3.0431. 3.9790 3.50 3.0431 (61.8% retracement) 3.00 2.7600 2.50 2.4650 (38.2%R) 2.00 1.50 100 00RSI 01 1.5291 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 0 00 01 For a description of the Elliott Wave Theory see: Trading Technicals – The Elliott Wave Method, January 10, 2014. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 9 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations Evan Brown, Vandit D. Shah 20-Feb-15 Enter: 0.9400; Target: 1.0000; Stop: 0.9250 Hold: Long USD/CHF Switzerland’s policymakers face an urgent struggle against the rise in their real exchange rate. Not only do they risk a sharp fall in competitiveness and exports, but as well a rise in deflationary risks. As such, we expect Swiss policymakers to try to counter CHF REER appreciation – which itself is overvalued trading at 2.5 standard deviations above its historical average. We like selling CHF against USD as we expect the structural bullish USD trend to continue. 20-Feb-15 Enter: 1.2450; Target: 1.3000; Stop: 1.2250 Hold: Long USD/CAD 12-Feb-15 Hold: Short AUD/USD 12-Feb-15 Hold: Short EUR/INR 23-Feb-15 Enter: Long USD/TRY Switzerland Risks Falling into Deflation Canada ULC Still Relatively High With WTI oil remaining below $60, the assumption implied in the BoC’s economic forecasts, we think there is room for further easing. We continue to highlight the second round effects of the oil price fall including an estimated 30% fall in capex, which BoC Senior Deputy Governor called ‘huge.’ We are also concerned that non-commodity production and export growth remains tepid. The rise in manufacturing unit labor costs suggest Canada will gain less from US growth than in the past. The key risk to our trade is a sustained rebound in oil prices. Enter: 0.7735; Target 0.6900; Stop: 0.8000 AUD REER Still Overvalued The negative pass-through to national income, investment and labour markets from the decline in Australia’s terms-of-trade appears substantial, with the RBA downgrading 2015 growth and inflation forecasts. Our economists now expect two more 25bp cuts from the RBA by May, with the bank looking to ease while relying on macroprudential policies to contain the housing market. In contrast, the rates curve is pricing only roughly 29bp of cuts by May. What’s more, economic data from China continue to print weak. Enter: 71.05; Target: 64.00; Stop: 72.00 Macro Outlook Improving in India Improved governance and a renewed push for structural reform, lower oil prices and a narrowing current account deficit, and credible monetary policy make us relatively constructive on INR. India is one of the few places in the world offering an attractive carry-to-vol ratio. While we will closely watch the upcoming budget outcome, we maintain our stance on long INR positions being a good way to pick up carry. In contrast, we stay negative on EUR on yield compression, reserve diversification and political uncertainty. Increased bank lending and FX hedging could only lead to further EUR weakness. Enter: 2.4600; Target: 2.6500; Stop: 2.4000 Past CBT Easing Cycles Risk surrounding US yields and CBT monetary policy keep us bullish on USD/TRY. On domestic monetary policy, we think a further easing of policy will further fuel market concerns on declining real yields leaving TRY vulnerable to the external environment; while even if the CBT takes a more prudent course, we think TRY gains would be limited given ongoing commentary from some public officials on the need for faster rate cuts. We believe a rise in UST yields will drive TRY weaker given Turkey’s high external financing needs. For more, see EM FX Trades: Buy USD/TRY (23 Feb 2015). 10 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse 12-Feb-15 Hold: Long USD/PEN Enter: 3.0690; Target: 3.26; Stop: 3.0600 05-Feb-15 Enter: 4.16; Target 4.35; Stop 4.10 Hold: Long EUR/PLN We see good risk/reward in long EUR/PLN positions after its sizable move lower in recent weeks. Further strengthening of PLN versus EUR becomes self-defeating since it increases external deflationary pressures on the economy, and may lead the market to price in an increased risk of some form of policy response. In addition, long EUR/PLN positions provide a hedge to any increase in market pricing of euro area peripheral tail risks and Russia/Ukraine risks – which may result in a fixed income outflow from the POLGB market. For more, see FX Pulse: CEE FX: Policy and External Risks Delay Recovery (13 Feb 2015). 29-Jan-15 Enter: 32.78; Target: 35.00; Stop: 31.75 Hold: Long USD/THB The battle against lowflation fought by global central banks is in full swing with surprise easing from the MAS, RBI, BI, BCRP, BoC and RBA in recent weeks, in addition to the ECB’s monetary salvo. With our ASEAN economics team expecting Thailand to join the easing bandwagon soon, we think current levels provide good risk-reward to be long USD/THB. The high THB REER is undermining competitiveness and stoking disinflationary pressures increasing the need for the BoT to act. For more, see EM FX Trades: Long USD/THB (29 Jan 2015). 8-Jan-15 Enter: 46.74; Target: 45.00; Stop: 46.70 Hold: Short SGD/INR With the MAS shifting dovishly recently, SGD moved lower in line with our expectations that Singaporean policymakers would need to act to counter deflationary risks and unwanted REER appreciation. We maintain that view and couple our long-standing bearishness on SGD to our structurally bullish view on INR as a relative value trade within AxJ. Improved governance and a renewed push for structural reform, lower oil prices and a narrowing current account deficit, and credible monetary policy make us relatively constructive on INR. 5-Feb-15 Buying a 3m 1.1250/1.0850 put spread Hold: EUR/USD put spread Peru REER Elevated; Trade Balance Down Copper and gold account for the bulk of Peru’s export revenues and China is the main trading partner. In line with this, PEN is vulnerable to lower metal prices and weaker demand from China. PEN is also vulnerable to higher US interest rates, because of high foreign ownership of local government bonds. Peru’s REER has room to adjust lower compared to Chile and other currencies in LatAm. The key risk to this trade is a sharp rebound in commodity prices. PLN Faces Deflationary Pressures THB REER Has Appreciated Sharply Change in C/A Balance Favors India Greece: Key Maturities in July &August EURUSD moves over the coming months are likely to be highly driven by the political uncertainty around Greece and its position in the Euro area. While we have seen some positive headlines recently, enough uncertainty lingers. As such, we keep our put spread on to position for any sharp moves. Source for all charts: Bloomberg, Haver Analytics, Macrobond, Reuters EcoWin, Morgan Stanley Research 11 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Strategic FX Portfolio Nominal Notional Weight Trade Recommendation Entry Date Entry Level Current Stop Target Spot P&L Carry P&L Portfolio Contribution Active Trades Short SGD/INR $10.0mn 9.8% 08-Jan-15 46.74 45.75 46.70 45.00 $257.3k $109.7k $367.0k Long USD/THB $10.0mn 9.8% 29-Jan-15 32.78 32.36 31.75 35.00 -$129.2k -$24.2k -$153.4k Long EUR/PLN $10.0mn 9.8% 05-Feb-15 4.16 4.15 4.10 4.35 -$33.0k -$11.5k -$44.6k Short AUD/USD $10.0mn 9.8% 12-Feb-15 0.7735 0.7824 0.8000 0.6900 Long USD/PEN $10.0mn 9.8% 12-Feb-15 3.0690 3.0915 3.0600 3.2600 Short EUR/INR $10.0mn 9.8% 12-Feb-15 71.05 70.12 72.00 64.00 Long USD/CAD $10.0mn 9.8% 20-Feb-15 1.2450 1.2499 1.2250 Long USD/CHF $10.0mn 9.8% 20-Feb-15 0.9400 0.9540 0.9250 Long USD/TRY $10.0mn 9.8% 23-Feb-15 2.4600 2.4993 2.4000 Cash $11.7mn Portfolio Mark to Market -$115.1k -$7.8k $72.8k -$20.7k -$122.9k $52.1k $250.6k $30.0k $280.7k 1.3000 $39.2k -$1.1k $38.1k 1.0000 $146.8k $0.4k $147.1k 2.6500 $157.2k -$8.4k $148.9k 11.4% $101.9mn Source: Morgan Stanley Research Notes: (1) Stops are based on the WMR fixing. (2) The portfolio represents hypothetical, not actual, investments. For more details regarding calculations, please see “Reading FX Tactical Trade Performance” at the back of FX Pulse. Our FX Trade Data Performance Package (12 Feb 2015) contains complete performance statistics. (3) Reported returns are unleveraged. Reported returns do not take into account transaction fees and other costs; past performance is no guarantee of future results. (4) In the case that trade allocations are increased, entry levels are a weighted average. * Global Risk Demand Index – US Pat. No. 7,617,143. We updated our methodology for our portfolio in 2011 (FX Pulse: Watching Europe, October 13, 2011). Simulated Managed Account Monthly Gross Performance - % Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year return 2007 -0.75 -0.77 -1.08 0.94 0.36 -2.02 1.07 2.75 1.26 0.45 1.16 0.18 3.52% 2008 1.07 2.25 2.72 -1.41 -0.53 1.28 -0.17 -0.24 -0.86 3.12 0.62 0.87 8.96% 2009 0.74 -0.97 -0.15 -1.09 0.50 -0.87 0.30 0.22 2.00 0.77 1.27 0.55 3.27% 2010 -0.01 -0.27 1.71 1.13 1.39 -0.86 -2.36 0.95 0.67 -0.30 0.13 0.66 2.80% 2011 -1.20 0.29 -1.71 0.51 -1.11 -0.33 0.84 -1.02 0.50 -1.03 -0.18 0.44 -3.97% 2012 0.34 0.46 -0.42 0.52 1.78 -0.43 0.39 0.56 0.43 0.53 0.96 0.47 5.72% 2013 -0.23 -0.66 0.08 0.10 0.26 0.05 -0.71 -0.13 -0.62 0.23 1.17 -0.27 -0.75% 2014 1.09 -0.67 -0.54 -0.02 -0.20 -0.26 1.20 0.30 1.23 0.35 -0.30 0.37 2.54% 2015 2.21 0.09 2.30% Source: Morgan Stanley Research; see notes above Options Trades Trade Recommendation Notional Entry Date Expiry Date Strike Entry Spot Entry Vol Entry Cost Current Spot Closed Option Trades Long EUR put/USD call Short EUR put/USD call Current Vol Current Cost Total 2015 P&L $10.0mn $10.0mn 5-Feb-15 5-Feb-15 7-May-15 7-May-15 1.1250 1.0850 1.1470 1.1470 12.23% 12.98% 1.56% 0.70% 1.1254 1.1254 8.58% 10.30% 1.60% 0.56% P&L $17.5k $3.8k $13.8k 12 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Click here for interactive currency pages: G10 Currency Summary Dara Blume and Sheena Shah USD Re-Loading Longs 6.7% We remain bullish on USD and are slowly re-adding to our long positions. Chair Yellen’s recent comments suggest ‘patient’ could be removed from the statement in March, but we do not take this as a sign that the central bank will hike in June. However, tighter monetary policy has never been the key driver for our bullish USD call. Instead, we believe that growth differentials and investment opportunities in the US economy should boost the dollar. EUR Focus Back on ECB -8.6% Greece risks seem to have tempered somewhat with an agreement in the works to extend funding for several months. This should put the focus squarely back on the ECB with central bank purchases set to begin in March and the ECB meeting next week. We have seen initial signs that the easing seen thus far has translated into green shoots of growth, but are cautious that this is unlikely to support the EUR given monetary policy differentials and strong US growth. JPY A Brighter Picture 0.3% Japanese economic data has shown fledgling signs of strength, and we will be watching upcoming economic data to see if this continues. Stronger data is likely to keep the BoJ on hold, even if energy prices are low. Indeed, the BoJ has indicated it will look through low inflation if this is driven by energy prices. With the central bank on hold and comments from Kuroda suggesting there could even be downside risks to the 2% inflation target, we believe JPY could gain on the crosses. GBP GBP – Support from Gilt Inflows - 1.6% Over the coming week GBP may continue to receive some support driven by relative rate differentials say with Sweden or the Euro area, bringing GBP strength on the crosses. In addition, gilt inflows from regions that are experiencing low bond yield levels could provide support for GBP. Against the USD we become more cautious over the medium term given growing political risks that could reduce FDI inflows. We like selling EURGBP and buying GBPSEK and will watch Services PMI this week. CHF CPI in Focus - 2.8% We remain bearish on the CHF and data out this week may support this view. CPI is due on Tuesday will cover a period post the removal of the EURCHF floor. Supermarkets in Switzerland have been reporting dropping prices of imported goods by as much as 20%. If CPI is weak then this could increase market expectations for further monetary accommodation at the SNB’s March meeting. FX reserves will give an indication of SNB intervention in Feb. CAD Better Levels to Buy USDCAD Bearish Watch: GDP, BoC Rates Decision The BoC’s Poloz’s speech caused rate cut expectations to be priced out of the upcoming meeting. We like to use the dip to buy USDCAD since the BoC is likely to keep its dovish tone and with oil markets remaining volatile, the CAD will remain weak. Even if oil prices stabilize, the low prices still pose risks to Canadian growth, and the currency may continue to weaken. The BoC will be the main risk event this week. Bearish Watch: Current Account, RBA Decision, GDP, Retail Sales, Trade 9.8% AUD Bullish Bearish Neutral Neutral Bearish Watch: GDP, PCE, ISM, ADP, Employment Report Watch: M3, Consumer Confidence, PMI, CPI,ECB, GDP Watch: Jobless Rate, CPI, IP, Retail Sales, PMI, Watch: Mortgage Approvals, Services PMI, BoE Rates Decision Watch: Sight Deposits, KOF, GDP, SNB FX Reserves, CPI - 7.8% We believe AUD could unwind some of its recent gains over coming weeks. The latest capex data were weaker than the already downbeat market expectations. While the RBA may not cut at the coming meeting, with growth soft and investment in the commodity sector likely to decline, we expect that this would be a delay in further easing rather than an end of the easing cycle. We remain bearish on AUD. NZD Falling Inflation Expectations - 4.0% We stick to our bearish NZD view, as the central bank has consistently spoken out against currency strength. The rates market is pricing in some chance of a cut, but this has not yet been reflected in the FX. Indeed, the latest inflation expectation data showed a drop to the lowest level in over ten years, suggesting that the central bank will need to keep a dovish bias. SEK Strength Limited by Riksbank 12.5% The Riksbank’s Per Jansson was recently quoted as saying that any sharp gains in SEK would mean “game over”, meaning that it would be difficult to get the economy out of deflation. We would expect any sharp appreciation of SEK (say if EUR begins its next leg lower) to trigger some vocal responses from the central bank showing its readiness to act, hoping that this signaling limits SEK appreciation. We like buying GBPSEK and also USDSEK. Still Oil Dependent Bearish Watch: Retail sales, Norges Bank Daily NOK purchases NOK 7.1% Bearish Bearish Watch: M3, Terms of Trade Watch: GDP, Retail Sales, Industrial Production EURNOK has come down from its highs of 9.89 in December, tracking the price of oil. While we remain bearish over the longer term, there are risks that our bearish view may not play out over the coming weeks and the 8.50 level remains key. A move below here could open the way to further downside, but for the moment staying above here could keep EURNOK rangebound. We watch the Norges Bank’s daily purchase of NOK; an increase would suggest that the economic outlook is weak. Charts show 3M performance against USD, as normally quoted and DXY for USD. Click on any currency for a reference webpage on Matrix. Charts show 1M performance against USD, as normally quoted 13 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse EM Currency Summary Jessica Liang (AXJ), Meena Bassily (CEEMEA), Felipe Hernandez (LatAm) CNY Neutral INR Neutral IDR Neutral 0.2% Despite the domestic growth slowdown, our expectation is for the PBoC to manage excess volatility in RMB. Looking ahead, we anticipate a stable path for CNY. 0.6% In the near term, we expect INR to be range-bound. Lower oil prices will benefit India both from a current account perspective and by allowing RBI to lower rates earlier. Longer-term prospects for INR will hinge more on the success of reform efforts, in our view. Being long INR on the crosses can be attractive from a carry perspective. Positive political developments, including the 2015 budget revisions, subsidy reforms, and support for direct local elections, show that the Jokowi government is gaining support within parliament. That said, IDR remains vulnerable to risk sentiment, amidst the current account deficit and falling commodity prices. 2.9% 1.6% KRW Bearish - 0.4% MYR Bearish 0.0% PHP Neutral THB Bearish CZK Neutral HUF Bearish ILS Bearish PLN Bearish RUB Neutral TRY Bearish ZAR Bearish BRL Neutral CLP Neutral COP Bearish - 0.4% 0.2% - 1.4% 0.1% - 0.7% - 9.7% 5.4% - 0.9% 12.1% - 0.8% 4.6% 2.3% MXN Bullish 2.3% PEN Bearish We expect USD/KRW to head higher over the medium term. The Bank of Korea remains reluctant to ease rates, but we think they will eventually act and undertake measures to try weaken the currency to raise competitiveness. We see MYR as susceptible to continued low commodity prices and see the potential for portfolio investment outflows in the event of carry trade unwinds. That said, with oil prices stabilizing somewhat we could see a tactical correction in USDMYR. The Philippines’ strong fundamentals support the peso even as the central bank turns more neutral. We see USD/PHP trading with the stronger USD trend but think it is likely to be a relative outperformer in the region. Although THB has remained relatively stable, we now expect USD/THB to head higher as the impetus on Asian central banks to cut rates rises due to increasing disinflationary pressures and unwanted REER appreciation. With our economist now expecting the BoT to cut rates, we are bearish on THB. President Zeman said the next CNB Board appointments would oppose the devaluation of CZK and be supportive of EUR adoption. Singer and Janacek’s terms are set to expire in July 2016; this could increase market speculation that current CNB guidance of using the CZK as a policy tool to end-2016 may not be achieved. Headline inflation has fallen to new lows at -1.4%Y and we now look for the NBH to re-start an easing cycle which will consist of 60bp worth of cuts. A new easing bias, along with still significant external risks related to Greece and Ukraine, should provide EUR/HUF support. However, we are mindful of Hungary’s strong external position. The BoI has reduced the policy rate to 0.10% and indicated that it is possible rates become negative. They have placed large emphasis on ILS strength as a reason to cut, and we therefore keep to forecasting a move in USD/ILS back above 4.00, but think interventions will be needed for upward momentum in the cross to increase. EUR/PLN had continued to head lower on the back of early signs of improvement in growth and on-hold monetary policy, while Ukraine risks have reduced. However we think the NBP will deliver a 50bp cut next week which should help stem recent PLN strength. As such we keep to recommending long EUR/PLN positions. The recent increase in oil prices in addition to the Minsk agreement have allowed for a recovery in RUB. However, with the cease fire remaining fragile and risks of more dovish CBR actions we do not think RUB valuations are attractive, and keep to a neutral stance on the currency. We entered a long USD/TRY position at the start of the week as we see asymmetric risks for the TRY surrounding monetary policy and external funding costs. Any further CBT easing and political noise surrounding the appropriate policy rate should result in more TRY weakness, in addition to any rise in UST yields. ZAR volatility has become increasingly correlated to UST yields with concerns building around future Fed hikes, which may result in SAGB volatility and therefore ZAR weakness. In addition, further weakness in gold prices relative to oil suggests further terms of trade weakness for ZAR. BRL could see some further weakness given rising political concerns and risks to the fiscal position. Over the medium term, we would expect BRL to depreciate further in light of poor valuations and competitiveness. That said, a lot of negative news is already in the price, and with a high cost of carry, BRL may not continue to weaken at the same pace seen since the start of the year. CLP could be a relative outperformer within LatAm. It is one of the few places in Latin America where the depreciation seen thus far has translated into an improvement in exports, which should support growth. We’ve already seen signs that the economic cycle is bottoming, and with copper prices rising, CLP has room to strengthen against other Latin American currencies. USDCOP has broken out of its recent range and could now accelerate towards our year end target. With oil prices at current levels, this will pressure external and fiscal accounts, as well as reduce investment opportunities in Colombia. Though COP has already moved a lot, we see scope for further weakness. MXN should remain a relative outperformer within EM, though it could struggle to strengthen against USD in an environment of broad dollar strength. Mexico has hedged its exposure to oil prices, limiting its fiscal exposure to falling oil prices. There are still fruitful investment opportunities in Mexican oil as well, which should support MXN. PEN is likely to be one of the underperformers within Latin America. There is scope for further depreciation as the REER remains elevated and the trade balance has moved into negative territory. Central bank intervention could limit the pace of depreciation, but not the direction, in our view. Charts show 1M performance against USD, as normally quoted 14 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Global Event Risk Calendar Charles Rubenfeld Date Day 27-Feb Fri 28-Feb Sat 1-Mar Sun 2-Mar Mon 3-Mar 4-Mar 5-Mar Time (Ldn) Ccy Event Ref. Period 00:30 13:00 00:05 09:30 09:00 09:00 08:30 08:30 08:30 13:30 14:45 15:00 15:00 AUD EUR GBP GBP NOK NOK SEK SEK SEK USD USD USD USD Private Sector Credit (MoM) German CPI (YoY) GfK Consumer Confidence GDP (QoQ) Retail Sales (MoM) Unemployment Rate GDP (QoQ) PPI (YoY) Retail Sales (MoM) GDP (QoQ) Chicago PMI Pending Home Sales (MoM) Univ. of Michigan Confidence N/A EUR Deadline for National Parliament Approval of Greek Plan 01:00 CNY Manufacturing PMI Feb 05:30 22:30 14:30 08:00 08:30 01:45 09:00 10:00 09:30 09:30 08:00 07:30 13:30 13:30 13:30 15:00 15:00 AUD AUD CAD CHF CHF CNY EUR EUR GBP GBP NOK SEK USD USD USD USD USD Commodity Index (YoY) Consumer Confidence PMI Manufacturing SNB Sight Deposits Manufacturing PMI PMI Manufacturing PMI Manufacturing CPI Estimate (YoY) Mortgage Approvals PMI Manufacturing Manufacturing PMI Manufacturing PMI Personal Income Personal Spending PCE Core (YoY) Construction Spending (MoM) ISM Manufacturing Feb 00:30 00:30 03:30 13:30 13:30 06:45 09:30 01:30 N/A 15:00 AUD AUD AUD CAD CAD CHF GBP JPY NZD USD Current Account Balance Building Approvals (MoM) RBA Rates Decision GDP (QoQ) Industrial Product Price (MoM) GDP (QoQ) PMI Construction Labor Cash Earnings (YoY) Global Dairy Trade Announces Milk Auction Results IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism 00:30 N/A 15:00 01:45 09:00 10:00 00:01 09:30 N/A 13:15 15:00 AUD BRL CAD CNY EUR EUR GBP GBP PLN USD USD GDP (QoQ) COPOM Rates Decision BoC Rates Decision PMI Composite PMI Services Retail Sales (MoM) BRC Shop Price Index (YoY) PMI Services NBP Rates Decision ADP Employment Change ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite 00:30 00:30 15:00 12:45 AUD AUD CAD EUR Retail Sales (MoM) Trade Balance Ivey PMI ECB Rates Decision Jan Feb P Feb 4Q P Jan Feb 4Q Jan Jan 4Q S Feb Jan Feb F MS forecast -0.2% 1 0.5% 0.5% 2.1% Market 0.5% -0.3% 2 0.5% 0% 3% 0.5% Previous 0.45% 2% 58 2% 94 0.5% -0.4% 1 0.5% 0.2% 3.1% 0.3% -0.09% -0.62% 2.6% 59.4 -3.73% 93.6 49.8 49.8 Feb -20.4% 110.8 51 Feb Feb F Feb F Feb Jan Feb Feb Feb Jan Jan Jan Jan Feb 48.2 50.1 51.1 -0.6% 60.275 53 51.9 55.1 0.3% -0.3% 1.3% 0.4% 53.5 0.4% -0.3% 0.4% 53.5 0.4% -0.1% 1.2% 0.3% 53.3 Tue 4Q Jan 4Q Jan 4Q Feb Jan -12.525B -3.3% 2.25% 2.847% -1.6% 0.6% 59.1 1.3% Mar 47.5 2% 2.25% Wed 4Q 12.50% 0.75% 12.75% 0.5% 1.50% 1.75% 210k 56.5 Feb Feb F Jan Feb Feb Feb Feb 0.3% 12.25% 0.75% 51 53.9 0.3% -1.3% 57.2 2% 213.3k 56.7 Thu Jan Jan Feb 0.05% 0.2% -436m 45.4 0.05% 15 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse 5-Mar 6-Mar 8-Mar 9-Mar 10-Mar 11-Mar 12-Mar 13-Mar 17-Mar 18-Mar 19-Mar 19-Mar 29-Apr 12:00 10:00 GBP MYR BoE Rates Decision BNM Rates Decision 14:00 08:30 13:30 15:00 NOK SEK USD USD Norges Bank's Olsen spks (Oslo) Industrial Production (MoM) Initial Jobless Claims Factory Orders 13:30 13:30 06:25 08:15 10:00 05:00 09:00 13:30 13:30 13:30 CAD CAD CHF CHF EUR JPY NOK USD USD USD Building Permits (MoM) Trade Balance SNB FY Earnings CPI (YoY) Eurozone GDP (QoQ) Leading Index CI Industrial Production (MoM) Change in Nonfarm Payrolls Unemployment Rate Trade Balance N/A N/A 23:50 23:50 CNY CNY JPY JPY Trade Balance Exports (YoY) Trade Balance BoP Basis GDP (QoQ) 22:30 12:15 08:00 08:15 23:50 N/A 14:00 AUD CAD CHF CHF JPY JPY USD Consumer Confidence Housing Starts SNB Sight Deposits Retail Sales Real (YoY) M3 (YoY) Eco Watchers Survey Outlook Labor Market Conditions Index 00:30 01:30 23:50 09:00 14:00 14:00 AUD CNY JPY NOK USD USD 05:30 09:30 23:50 20:00 07:00 08:30 07:30 00:30 07:00 10:00 09:30 N/A 21:30 23:00 12:30 12:30 0.5% 3% 0.5% 3.25% 0.5% 3.25% 290k -0.1% 1.74% 283k -3.4% Thu Jan Jan Fri Jan Jan 7.7% -0.65B Feb 4Q P Jan P Jan Feb Feb Jan -0.5% 0.3% 105.6 0.3% 257k 5.7% -46.6B 250k 5.6% -38.2b 245k 5.6% -42.5B Sun Feb Feb Jan 4Q F 60.03B -3.3% ¥-395.6B 2.2% Feb 110.8 187k Jan Feb Feb Feb 1.9% 2.8% 50 4.9% NAB Business Confidence CPI (YoY) Machine Orders (MoM) CPI Underlying (YoY) Wholesale Inventories (MoM) JOLTs Job Openings Feb Feb Jan Feb Jan Jan 3 0.8% 8.3% 2.4% 0.1% 5.03m CNY GBP JPY NZD SEK SEK THB Fixed Assets Ex Rural YTD (YoY) Industrial Production (MoM) Tertiary Industry Index (MoM) RBNZ Rates Decision TNS Sifo Prospera Swedish inflation expectations CPI (YoY) BoT Rates Decision Feb Jan Jan AUD EUR EUR GBP KRW NZD PEN USD USD Employment Change German CPI (YoY) Industrial Production (MoM) Visible Trade Balance GBP/Mn BoK Rates Decision Manufacturing PMI BCRP Rates Decision Retail Sales Advance (MoM) Initial Jobless Claims Feb Feb F Jan Jan CAD JPY RUB USD Employment Change Industrial Production (MoM) CBR Rates Decision Univ. of Michigan Confidence Feb Jan F JPY USD CHF NOK SEK BoJ Rates Decision FOMC Rate Decision SNB Rates Decision Norges Bank Rates Decision Riksbank Rates Decision Mon Tue Wed 3.50% 3.5% 15.7% -0.2% -0.3% 3.5% 1.75% 2% -0.21% 2% Feb Thu -0.3% 1.75% Feb Mar Feb 3.25% 290k -12.2k -0.4% 0% £-10154 2% 50.9 3.25% -0.8% 283k Fri 12:30 04:30 10:30 14:00 Upcoming Risk Events N/A 19:00 09:30 10:00 08:30 2.7% 15% Mar P Mar Mar Mar Mar Apr 94 0.1% 0.25% -0.75% 0.75% 35.4k 0.8% 15% 93.6 0.1% 0.25% -0.75% 1.25% -0.10% N/A Denotes timing approximate or not confirmed / All times and dates are GMT and correct as of the date of publication / For a full list of economic events see the calendar on the Morgan Stanley Matrix Platform / Source: Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg 16 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Cross-Currency Carry and Vol Heat Map Vandit D. Shah Note: Access is available to the carry metrics on an interactive basis on the Morgan Stanley Matrix Platform. Contact your Morgan Stanley sales representative if you do not have access. For a user’s guide to this heatmap, see FX Pulse, April 24, 2014, page 22. 17 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Click here for interactive charts G10 FX Tactical Indicators Charles Rubenfeld Exhibit 1 Exhibit 2 Historical Currency Performance FXVIX (FX Volatility Index) 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% -1% -2% -3% -4% 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.0 8.0 NZD NOK GBP AUD CAD DXY EUR JPY SEK CHF Monthly 7.0 6.0 Weekly 5.0 Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 Dec-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Exhibit 3 Exhibit 4 Relative Momentum Indicator MS GRDI – Standardized 10 3 2 5 1 0 0 -1 -5 -2 -3 -10 AUD NZD GBP SEK CAD Current NOK USD JPY EUR CHF -4 Last week -5 Feb-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Apr-14 Jun-14 Aug-14 Oct-14 Dec-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Global Risk Demand Index – US Pat. No. 7,617,143 Exhibit 5 Exhibit 6 DXY (Dollar Index) IMM Positions Summary ($bn) 98 NZD 96 CHF 94 MXN 92 90 CAD 88 GBP 86 AUD 84 JPY 82 EUR 80 78 Jan-14 Mar-14 May-14 Jul-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Sep-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 -28 -26 -24 -22 -20 -18 -16 -14 -12 -10 -8 -6 -4 -2 Note: Aggregate USD positioning in nominal terms, see appendix for details. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 18 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Click here for a full positioning history Morgan Stanley FX Positioning Tracker Calvin Tse, Sheena Shah Overall Score This Week Component Scores Last Week Short Neutral Long MS Flow IMM TFX Beta ETF -9 8 -10 4 2 4 USD -5 -10 4 -3 1 -5 EUR 8 10 9 -7 -5 -5 JPY -8 -3 -7 7 1 -4 GBP 8 -2 3 -8 CHF 3 -6 CAD AUD Toshin USD 0 1 EUR -3 -4 JPY 1 1 GBP -3 -3 CHF 0 0 CAD -1 -1 3 -3 AUD 0 -1 9 -6 -3 1 -3 NZD -3 -3 1 -10 -1 -2 -3 NOK -6 -6 SEK -3 -4 -10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 -1 Since Monday, February 23, positioning in currencies has shifted. In the majors, the largest shorts are in EUR, GBP, and NZD. There are no significant longs in the G10. USD positioning continued to scale back intra-week. Global macro hedge funds reduced longs, and bullish sentiment moderated. EUR shorts were further reduced. This move was driven by hedge fund positioning primarily. We will provide a full updated report and refresh positioning scores for all of our underlying sub-indicators on Monday. Sentiment NZD -3 -8 NOK -8 1 SEK For methodology, see Appendix. Tactical Rich and Cheap Fair Value Model AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP JPY NOK NZD SEK Average Spot Fair Value Z-Score 0.78 0.78 1.26 1.25 1.26 0.50 0.94 0.93 -0.37 1.14 1.36 -4.03 1.54 1.55 -1.53 119.03 120.18 0.36 7.53 6.95 -4.44 0.75 0.70 2.23 8.38 7.62 -5.26 TRAC Trade Exp. App. Short -0.25% Short -0.28% Neutral 0.37% Long 19.16% Long 0.39% Short -0.96% Long 8.35% Short -6.54% Long 10.10% 3.37% BRL CLP COP HUF ILS IDR INR KRW MYR MXN PHP PLN RUB SGD THB TRY ZAR Average Spot Fair Value 2.87 2.90 616 630 2,458 2,562 305 308 3.86 3.76 12,825 12,975 62.22 62.29 1,112 1,077 3.65 3.27 15.03 15.03 44.25 43.29 4.17 4.18 62.06 84.60 1.36 1.36 32.57 32.64 2.45 2.45 11.64 10.73 Z-Score 0.44 1.25 1.32 0.66 -2.60 0.76 0.77 -0.72 -2.95 0.00 -2.20 0.31 1.34 -0.14 0.95 -0.01 -3.25 TRAC Trade Exp App Short -1.11% Short -2.20% Short -4.05% Short -1.08% Long 2.71% Neutral -1.16% Short -0.11% Neutral 3.23% Long 11.64% Neutral 0.00% Long 2.22% Neutral -0.36% Short -26.64% Neutral 0.11% Short -0.20% Neutral 0.00% Long 8.46% -0.50% The Morgan Stanley Tactical Rich and Cheap (TRAC) model is designed to signal whether a currency is overvalued or undervalued over a 2- to 3-month investment horizon, and aims to provide an indication of short-term fair value rather than a determination of long-term equilibrium fair value. The model is based on an econometric approach using both macroeconomic and market variables, using an algorithm that identifies the ‘best’ model on the basis of modern statistical considerations and economic theory. In particular, the algorithm (called L2 Boosting in academic literature) identifies the most important drivers for each currency, while remaining flexible enough to quickly adapt to new environments and identify ‘false’ market signals. For statistics on how the TRAC model has performed since introduction in November 2013, see FX Fair Value – Revisiting TRAC 3.0, April 24, 2014. Model updated as of February 23, 2015. 19 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Central Bank Watch Next rate Market MS decision expects (bp) expects (bp) US 18 Mar 1 0 Euro Area 05 Mar -4 Japan 17 Mar 0 UK 05 Mar -1 Current Morgan Stanley Forecasts 1Q15 2Q15 3Q15 4Q15 0.125 0.13 0.13 0.13 0.13 0 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0 0.1 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.5 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.75 0.75 0.75 0.75 0 Canada 04 Mar -8 0 0.75 Switzerland 19 Mar -16 0 -0.75 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Sweden 29 Apr -2 0 -0.10 -0.10 -0.10 -0.10 -0.10 Norway 19 Mar -18 -50 1.25 1.75 1.75 2.00 2.25 Australia 02 Mar -11 -25 2.25 2.00 1.75 1.75 1.75 New Zealand 11 Mar -2 0 3.5 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 Russia 13 Mar - 0 15 15.00 15.00 14.50 12.50 Poland 04 Mar -13 -50 2 1.50 1.25 1.25 1.25 Czech Rep 26 Mar -1 0 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 Hungary 21 Mar -12 -10 2.1 2.00 1.70 1.50 1.50 Romania 31 Mar - -25 2.25 2.00 1.75 1.75 1.75 Turkey 17 Mar - -25 7.50 7.25 6.75 6.75 7.25 Israel 23 Mar -1 0 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 South Africa 26 Mar 11 0 5.75 5.75 5.75 6.00 6.00 Nigeria 24 Mar - 0 13 14.00 14.00 14.00 14.00 Ghana 01 Apr - 0 21 21 21 21 20 China - - - 5.60 5.35 5.10 5.10 5.10 India 07 Apr - -25 7.75 7.50 7.00 6.75 6.50 Hong Kong 19 Mar - 0 0.5 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 S. Korea 12 Mar 0 -25 2 1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75 Taiwan 26 Mar - 0 1.875 1.88 1.88 1.88 1.88 Indonesia 17 Mar - 0 7.50 7.50 7.25 7.00 6.75 Malaysia 05 Mar - -25 3.25 3.00 2.75 2.75 2.75 Thailand 11 Mar 0 -25 2 1.75 1.50 1.50 1.50 Brazil 04 Mar 51 25 12.25 12.50 12.50 12.50 11.50 Mexico 26 Mar 3 0 3 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.50 Chile 19 Mar -6 0 3 2.75 2.75 2.75 2.75 Peru 12 Mar - 0 3.25 3.25 3.00 3.00 3.25 Colombia 20 Mar 0 0 4.5 4.50 4.50 4.50 4.50 Source: National Central Banks, Morgan Stanley Research forecasts as of February 25th; Note: Japan policy rate takes a mid-range value. Market expects for G10 as of Feb 26. EM | What’s In the Price. Green (Red) means MS expects a lower (higher) rate than the market at the next meeting. G4 Policy Rates BRICs Policy Rates US 7 Japan UK Euro Area China 30 Brazil 6 25 5 Russia India 20 4 15 3 10 2 5 1 0 2002 2004 2006 2008 Source: Morgan Stanley Research, Haver Analytics 2010 2012 2014 0 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 Source: Morgan Stanley Research, Haver Analytics 20 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse FX Bull/Bear Projections EURUSD EUR/USD 1.50 USDJPY USD/JPY 140 MS Forecast MS Forecast 130 1.40 120 1.30 110 1.20 100 1.10 90 1.00 0.90 Jun-12 80 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 70 Jun-12 Jun-15 USD/CAD 1.38 1.33 1.28 1.23 1.18 1.13 1.08 1.03 0.98 0.93 Jun-12 Jun-13 EURCHF EUR/CHF 1.40 MS Forecast 1.20 1.10 1.00 0.90 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 AUD/USD 1.09 1.04 0.99 0.94 0.89 0.84 0.79 0.74 0.69 0.64 Jun-12 MS Forecast MS Forecast 35 1150 34 1.35 1100 33 1.30 1050 Jun-14 Jun-15 MS Forecast 4.25 29 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 29 13.5 Jun-14 Jun-15 MS Forecast 12.5 11.5 27 10.5 26 3.95 9.5 25 3.85 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 24 Jun-12 8.5 Jun-13 USDBRL MS Forecast 2.90 2.70 2.50 2.30 2.10 1.90 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-14 Jun-15 7.5 Jun-12 Jun-13 USDMXN 3.10 1.70 Jun-12 Jun-13 USDZAR USD/ZAR 14.5 28 4.05 USD/BRL 3.30 28 Jun-12 EUR/CZK 30 MS Forecast 4.15 3.75 Jun-12 MS Forecast EURCZK 4.35 Jun-15 30 EURPLN EUR/PLN 4.45 Jun-14 31 950 Jun-13 Jun-13 32 1000 900 Jun-12 Jun-15 USDTHB USD/THB 36 1200 1.25 Jun-14 MS Forecast USDKRW USD/KRW 1250 1.40 1.20 Jun-12 Jun-13 AUDUSD MS Forecast USDSGD USD/SGD 1.45 Jun-14 MS Forecast USDCAD 1.30 0.80 Jun-12 GBPUSD GBP/USD 1.75 1.70 1.65 1.60 1.55 1.50 1.45 1.40 1.35 1.30 Jun-12 Jun-15 USD/MXN 16.50 16.00 15.50 15.00 14.50 14.00 13.50 13.00 12.50 12.00 11.50 Jun-12 Jun-14 Jun-15 USDCLP USD/CLP 710 MS Forecast MS Forecast 660 610 560 510 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 460 Jun-12 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 Source for all charts: Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg; shaded area is the range of market forecasts. 21 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Click here for custom cross forecasts Morgan Stanley Global Currency Forecasts We updated most of our G10 and EM forecasts on 22 January, 2015. AUDUSD and NZDUSD were updated on 5 February, 2015. 2015 Current EUR/USD USD/JPY GBP/USD USD/CHF USD/SEK USD/NOK USD/CAD AUD/USD NZD/USD EUR/JPY EUR/GBP EUR/CHF EUR/SEK EUR/NOK USD/CNY USD/HKD USD/IDR USD/INR USD/KRW USD/MYR USD/PHP USD/SGD USD/TWD USD/THB USD/BRL USD/MXN USD/ARS USD/VEF USD/CLP USD/COP USD/PEN USD/ZAR USD/TRY USD/ILS USD/RUB EUR/PLN EUR/CZK EUR/HUF EUR/RON MS Dollar Index MS AXJ Index 1.12 119 1.54 0.95 8.38 7.65 1.25 0.78 0.75 134 0.73 1.07 9.39 8.58 6.26 7.76 12831 61.8 1097 3.58 44.1 1.36 31.4 32.4 2.9 14.97 8.7 6.3 619 2488 3.1 11.5 2.50 3.96 60.8 4.19 27.8 314 4.41 94.08 102.88 4Q15 % change to: 2016 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q Consensus Forward 1.12 118 1.48 0.91 8.48 7.77 1.27 0.77 0.71 132 0.75 1.02 9.50 8.70 6.16 7.80 12600 62.5 1190 3.70 45.5 1.34 32.0 33.4 2.65 14.65 10.63 12.0 640 2450 3.05 11.65 2.36 3.98 66.0 4.33 27.8 320 4.46 94.84 101.23 1.08 120 1.44 0.93 8.89 8.24 1.30 0.75 0.68 130 0.75 1.00 9.60 8.90 6.13 7.80 12800 62.5 1210 3.85 46.0 1.36 32.2 33.8 2.75 14.85 11.25 14.0 650 2500 3.10 11.75 2.42 4.05 68.0 4.35 27.8 322 4.48 97.48 100.36 1.06 124 1.39 0.99 9.15 8.68 1.33 0.72 0.66 131 0.76 1.05 9.70 9.20 6.12 7.80 13000 62.3 1230 3.90 46.5 1.38 32.6 34.2 2.85 15.00 11.88 14.0 655 2550 3.15 12.05 2.47 4.10 70.0 4.35 27.9 324 4.50 100.29 99.58 1.05 127 1.38 1.02 9.05 8.86 1.35 0.69 0.65 133 0.76 1.07 9.50 9.30 6.09 7.80 13200 62.5 1230 3.85 47.0 1.40 32.7 34.5 2.90 15.10 12.50 14.0 660 2600 3.20 12.30 2.52 4.15 72.0 4.35 27.9 325 4.50 101.74 99.30 1.03 126 1.40 1.06 9.13 8.83 1.37 0.68 0.63 130 0.74 1.09 9.40 9.10 6.14 7.80 13000 62.7 1250 3.80 47.3 1.41 32.6 34.7 3.00 15.00 12.50 14.0 670 2650 3.25 12.35 2.54 4.17 72.0 4.34 27.9 325 4.45 102.34 98.89 1.02 125 1.39 1.08 9.12 8.73 1.38 0.67 0.61 128 0.73 1.10 9.30 8.90 6.09 7.80 13000 63.0 1240 3.80 47.5 1.41 32.5 35.0 3.05 14.95 12.50 14.0 680 2700 3.30 12.40 2.56 4.19 70.0 4.28 27.6 320 4.45 102.84 99.14 1.01 123 1.38 1.11 9.11 8.71 1.39 0.65 0.60 124 0.73 1.12 9.20 8.80 6.07 7.80 13000 63.0 1230 3.80 47.7 1.40 32.4 34.5 3.10 14.85 12.50 14.0 685 2750 3.35 12.45 2.58 4.22 70.0 4.24 27.4 315 4.40 103.24 99.45 1.00 125 1.37 1.13 9.00 8.70 1.40 0.65 0.60 125 0.73 1.13 9.00 8.70 6.07 7.80 13000 63.0 1230 3.80 48.0 1.40 32.5 34.5 3.15 14.75 12.50 14.0 690 2800 3.40 12.50 2.60 4.25 70.0 4.18 27.0 310 4.40 104.23 99.40 -4.5 1.6 -8.6 5.1 6.7 12.1 6.3 -8.0 -8.5 -1.6 4.2 1.9 3.3 9.3 -1.3 0.5 1.5 -0.8 8.8 5.8 3.4 0.7 1.2 2.1 -0.7 4.1 7.3 -60.0 5.6 6.1 0.0 2.5 0.8 4.3 8.6 4.8 1.1 5.3 2.3 5.4 -2.1 -6.9 7.1 -10.3 8.3 8.6 15.3 7.7 -10.4 -11.4 -0.2 3.9 0.9 1.1 7.4 -4.1 0.6 -3.4 -3.6 10.8 4.5 5.7 2.8 4.6 4.5 -7.7 -1.2 8.6 122.5 3.9 1.7 -0.5 1.5 -5.7 5.3 4.8 3.4 1.4 6.0 0.5 8.4 -1.5 Source: Morgan Stanley Research 22 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Appendix The Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations page presents the portfolio of tactical trade ideas of the FX Strategy team and the performance of this portfolio over time. Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations (Note: The portfolios represent hypothetical not actual investments.) On 10 June, 2010, we implemented changes to our portfolio to make it more robust and to better reflect our confidence levels and relative risk. A detailed explanation of this change can be found in “Portfolio Methodology Update” (10 June 2010). In summary, the trades and the weightings are primarily reviewed weekly on Thursdays and published in the Pulse. However, if we think there has been a material change to the risk-reward, we will make intraweek changes. We monitor trades daily. We will continue to publish the portfolio as a list of trades where our strongest conviction ideas will be given the largest weightings. We will, however, also adjust the weights of trades in order to manage our risk exposure. A table showing the trade, trade weight, trade entry date, risk allocation and levels for (average) entry, current, stop and target will be shown in the Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations section of the FX Pulse. If we increase the weighting allocated to a trade, the entry level published in the table will be changed to reflect a proportionally weighted rate of the initial entry level and the entry level on the date the weight was increased. Performance Statistics We rebalance our portfolio daily at the NY close to keep the weight of each trade consistent with the published weight. We will primarily enter and exit trades using the bid or offer rate of the WMR fixing. If we make an intraday change to our portfolio, we will cite the closest Bloomberg half hourly fix in our published note and enter/exit at this rate. Stops or targets will be triggered if the stated level is met at the WMR fix. Returns shown include the cost of carry using the 1W interbank deposit rate if this is quoted liquidly but do not include any other expenses, slippage or fees and no interest on cash holdings are included. Reported returns are not levered. We have re-estimated our returns from 22 June 2006 to 10 June 2010, when we re-launched the portfolio, to take into account our more robust calculation technique. We provide a monthly breakdown of our historical portfolio performance back to Jan 2005 in the Strategic FX Portfolio section of the Pulse. The FX Tactical Indicators table highlights the most recently updated indicators we, as a research team, use as inputs to generate both longer and more tactical forecasts. Matrix charting codes are given in brackets. Change the G10 currency in italics as required. •Historical Currency Performance: Price changes in currency over the past week and past month. (EURUSD) •FXVIX (Volatility Index): An index of 3 month implied volatility calculated using 30 G10 and EM crosses (MSFXVIX) •Relative Momentum Indicator: Measures the momentum of a currency relative to all other currencies; not indicative of historical performance. (MSRMUS) •MS GRDI*: An index to assess risk sentiment. It looks at ten different asset classes to gauge risk demand. The GRDI index seen in the graph is a standardized reading of the index based on the 365-day rolling average. (GRDIIDX) •G10 Surprise Index: Measures the performance of actual economic data in G10 countries relative to expectations. G10 Average Index is a simple index; G10 GDP weighted average is based on GDP weights. (MSSIUSD) •IMM Commitment of Traders Report: The “Aggregate USD Index” is the cumulative aggregate positioning of currencies we track on the IMM against the USD. We combine IMM positioning on the AUD, CAD, CHF, EUR, GBP, JPY, and MXN to calculate an aggregate USD index to measure overall net positioning. (MSPIUS) FX Positioning Tracker Methodology (MSPIUS) See the primer •MS Flow - Our internal flow data track all spot and forward trades transacted by Morgan Stanley FX globally. •IMM - We use the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s IMM report to track positioning of non-commercial traders. •Toshin - The Toshin accounts are Japanese foreign currency investment trusts that seek yield abroad. They typically cater to retail investors and offer a higher return by investing in foreign assets on a currency un-hedged basis. •TFX - The Tokyo Financial Exchange (TFX) measures Japanese currency trading on margin accounts, and comprises an estimated 10% of the retail margin market. •Beta - As an alternative proxy for positioning, our Beta-Tracker measures one-month rolling betas of currency managers’ and global macro hedge funds’ daily returns on major currency indices. •Sentiment - The Daily Sentiment Index gathers opinions on all active US futures, eurozone interest rates, and eurozone equities futures markets. Morgan Stanley Tactical Rich and Cheap Model methodology: See the full report (EURTRAC) Historic data for all these models can be found on the Morgan Stanley Matrix Platform. See New FX Strategy Interactive Features (January 17, 2014). Click on the Matrix logo throughout this document or here for a G10 currency reference page: * US Pat. No. 7,617,143. 23 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse Global FX Strategy Team Head of Global FX Strategy (London) Hans Redeker, Managing Director hans.redeker@morganstanley.com (44 20) 7425 2430 Co-Head of US FX Strategy (New York) Co-Head of US FX Strategy (New York) Currency Strategist (New York) Currency Strategist (New York) Evan Brown, CFA, Vice President Calvin Tse, Vice President Dara Blume, Associate Charles Rubenfeld, Analyst evan.brown@morganstanley.com calvin.tse@morganstanley.com dara.blume@morganstanley.com charles.rubenfeld@morganstanley.com (212) 761 2786 (212) 296 5423 (212) 296 5786 (212) 296 5911 Head of European FX Strategy (London) Currency Strategist (London) Currency Strategist (London) Ian Stannard, Executive Director Sheena Shah, Analyst Vandit D. Shah, Analyst ian.stannard@morganstanley.com sheena.shah@morganstanley.com vandit.shah@morganstanley.com (44 20) 7677 2985 (44 20) 7677 6457 (44 20) 7425 3978 Head of Asia FX and Rates Strategy (Hong Kong) AXJ FX Strategy (Hong Kong) Rates/FX Strategist (Hong Kong) AXJ Strategy (Hong Kong) Geoffrey Kendrick, Executive Director Jessica Liang, Vice President Kewei Yang, Executive Director Kritika Kashyap, Associate geoffrey.kendrick@morganstanley.com jessica.liang@morganstanley.com kewei.yang@morganstanley.com kritika.kashyap@morganstanley.com (852) 2239 7399 (852) 3963 3021 (852) 3963 0562 (852) 2239 7179 LatAm Macro Strategy (New York) LatAm Local Rates Strategy (New York) Felipe Hernandez, Vice President Robert Habib, Associate felipe.hernandez1@morganstanley.com robert.habib@morganstanley.com (212) 296 4996 (212) 761 1875 Global EM Macro Strategy (London) CEEMEA Macro Strategy (London) James Lord, Executive Director Meena Bassily, Associate james.lord@morganstanley.com meena.bassily@morganstanley.com (44 20) 7677 3254 (44 20) 7677 0031 Morgan Stanley entities: London – Morgan Stanley & Co. International plc; New York – Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC; Hong Kong – Morgan Stanley Asia Limited. 24 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH February 26, 2015 FX Pulse This material includes trade flow data that have been compiled by the Morgan Stanley Foreign Exchange trading desks from transactions executed by Morgan Stanley in the over-the-counter foreign exchange markets with its global institutional and high net worth individual customer base. The data have been aggregated and anonymized in a manner that does not identify the underlying transactions of any particular customer. In compiling, interpreting, and analyzing the data, Morgan Stanley makes certain assumptions, which may vary over time, relating to the classification of an account as a client. No representation is made that the aggregated data are reflective of trading patterns or trends in the markets included in this material for any particular type of customer. 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