📄 Extracted Text (476 words)
Subject: Update in USDCNH
From: Daniel Sabba .z >
Date: Mon, 03 Nov 2014 12:17:38 -0500
To: jeevacation8gmail.com
Cc: Paul Morris <
Vahe Stepanian
Stewart Oldfield <
Classification: Public
Jeffrey,
Rich and I spoke last week on USDCNH, and I wanted to send a recent piece from
our research team on this topic. For full disclosure, I personally don't share
our research team's recommendation, as USDCNH vol still extremely low and it
represents a very cheap out-of-consensus expression of CNH out-performance vs.
USD, so don't see the value of crossing bid offer on the transaction. Having
said that, our research team advocates closing their USDCNH put spreads as
they view •the next phase of FX depreciation will be driven more by China's
own worsening fundamentals, namely: 1) slower growth and disinflation, (2) a
pick-up in outflows, (3) de-leveraging that increases short-term risks and (4)
valuations approaching expensive extremes•
You could unwind you $75mm USDCNH put struck at 6.16 expiring on 12-Aug-2015
for $270k bid (Spot ref 6.1310 - the mid would be $315k - pricing as of noon
11/03/2014)
You paid $273k for it.
More details on the research piece below.
Best regards,
Daniel
Forwarded by Daniel Sabba/db/dbcom on 11/03/2014 11:49 AM
Classification: Public
China growth is facing increasing headwinds, with DB Economics downgrading our
2015 growth forecast to 7.0% this week. In this context, we believe RMB
weakness will return to haunt the market in 2015. This weakness will be
different from the early 2014 squeeze, which appeared to be engineered by
policy-makers to target speculative capital. The next phase of RMB
depreciation will be driven more by China's own worsening fundamentals,
namely: (1) slower growth and disinflation, (2) a pick-up in outflows, (3)
de-leveraging that increases short-term risks and (4) valuations approaching
expensive extremes. In our view, the resistance from policy-makers to FX
weakness will be minimal since it will reflect underlying fundamentals, and
authorities should be comfortable with a more market-driven RMB. Moreover,
retaining the current policy bias for appreciation would only pull in more
'hot' money flows, which increase systematic risks in China. With this in
mind, we are reducing the long CNH exposure in our portfolio by closing out
our USD/CNH put spread. The slowdown in Chinese growth and RMB weakness is
also likely impact other Asian currencies. We examine four channels of
spillover: (1) exports, (2) FDI, (3) financial linkages, and (4) FX policy,
and find the KRW, MYR and TWD to be most likely to be affected.
Link:
http://pull.db-gmresearch.com/cgi-bin/pull/DocPu11/2643-DFF1/41968444/DB_AsiaFXStrat_2014-10-23_0900
b8c088c00869.pdf
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EFTA01410549
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