EFTA01458290
EFTA01458291 DataSet-10
EFTA01458292

EFTA01458291.pdf

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I September 2015 Special Report: The "Great Accumulation" Is Over: Fx Reserves Have Peaked, Beware QT unAelv lc; orNdie [Mel dr. In the advanced economies holding reserves of any note—Switzerland and Japan—we expect no further accumulation in the foreseeable future. The Swiss experiment with a permanent exchange rate peg could not be repeated credibly. Instead, the SNB stands ready to intervene sporadically against acute safe-haven inflows. In order to do so credibly in the future, the SNB will probably seek to reduce its balance sheet. The SNB would likely adopt a more gradualist approach than the Danish National Bank, which has recently sold the reserves accumulated during the post-SNB speculation against its own peg aggressively back into the market (Figure 23}. !Figure 23: SNB ccruld tollow Danish example of freeing up Figure 24: A very undervalued JPY should mean any So.i (space on balance sheet for future credibility intervention is a long way off DOC. to m eserves . 41afish FX reserves (rini CHF, Oa 350 350 600 503 300 300 700 500 250 250 400 200 200 300 303 1 50 150 200 100 100 100 50 50 of e0 73 77 81 85 89 93 97 01 05 09 13 C6 05 07 09 09 10 11 12 13 is 15 V.vdrc• Partiela Pe.. :,.ret NJ XIS Br*. XISIAMAILI Medium-term, the SNB faces the predicament of sterilizing the potential inflationary pressure created by excess liquidity in the banking system. Indeed, we think it is more likely that inflationary pressure will eventually develop on the back of excess domestic liquidity than be imported through a weakening exchange rate vis-à-vis the Eurozone. Hence, the SNB may choose to sterilize past interventions rather than to reverse them by selling EUR/CHF. This means that there would be no need to swap non-EUR reserves into EUR; CHF liquidity could be mopped up by selling foreign assets in proportion to the current allocation, with only negligible ramifications for non-CHF exchange rates such as EURMSD. The Bank of Japan is unlikely to intervene directly in the foreign exchange market to build reserves in the near future. Even if there is another bout of safe-haven driven inflows, the fact that the JPY is trading near undervaluation extremes should make BoJ comfortable with accommodating some appreciation from very cheap levels (Figure 24). BoJ's last major bout of intervention took place when JPY was trading at overvaluation extremes. FX and fixed income implications The fact that two thirds of global reserves are held in dollars means that a sell-off should be bullish USD against other reserve currencies. This is because as central banks prop up their currencies against the dollar, they also sell other reserve currencies against the USD so as to keep their FX allocations constant. Indeed, fluctuations in EURMSD are tightly correlated with changes in global reserves (Figure 25), though this correlation naturally captures causality in both directions. To start with, we again estimated a simple OLS model of the relationship between EUR/USD and global FX reserves to gauge the impact of an unexpected fall in global reserves worth $200bn, amounting roughly to Chinese outflows in August and not even taking into account more consistent selling by other EM and OPEC Deutsche Bank AG/London Page 13 CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R CRIM. P. 6(e) DB-SDNY-0118145 CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00264329 EFTA01458291
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EFTA01458291
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