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saga in the country, raising doubts about any possibility of a remedy to be
offered at any time.
By the time we went to press, Bloomberg news reported that an attempt by a
group of Argentine banks to buy about $1.5b of defaulted bonds off holdout
creditors also failed after a meeting in New York. This notwithstanding, it
seems that a private sector involvement, after Minister Kicillof speech,
could still offer a better opportunity to close the gap currently existing
between the government and holdouts, though it remains unclear whether Judge
Griesa would be willing to accept such an outcome.
In any case, default is now a fact. To our understanding, the deadline for
the payment to be made to the clearing house was 7PM Eastern time yesterday.
This will provide a basis to trigger cDs and a reason for bond acceleration,
though we continue to be of the idea that acceleration would be unlikely. It
was very unfortunate that the market had a dramatic rally on the same day
default took place, before it would likely sell off even more dramatically
the following day. For those who wonder what would happen after default, our
piece put out on Tuesday (see Argentina: will there be life after default?)
should still be relevant - with the caveat that the baseline scenario
described in that piece may look a bit too rosy after yesterday's event.
FOMC: slightly more hawkish
The FOMC evidently intended not to make any significant changes in its policy
guidance. However, DB's Peter Hooper thinks the statement was slightly more
hawkish than the preceding edition on balance judging by the tone, with a
change in wording on the labor market that leaves them about where they were
as of the June meeting and some changes in wording on inflation that advances
them a bit closer to lift off. Looking ahead, he expects tapering will be
completed on schedule in October, and, more importantly, if the next two
labor reports and various wage and price inflation data show positive trends
in the weeks ahead, the September FOMC message could begin to signal more
clearly an exit process, including initial rate hikes, that could be moved up
to the first half of 2015.
Colombia: BanRep to continue hiking
we expect the monetary board of Banco de la Republica to increase by 25bps
the intervention rate on the meeting today taking it to 4.25% after four
consecutive hikes. This hike is expected by market participants after the
pickup in inflation and GDP growth in the first half of the year. In our
view, while the curve seems fair at the very front end (75bp of implied hikes
till December) the markets continue to price an overly aggressive BanRep for
2015. we continue estimating around 50bp of premium priced for 2015, which
should be supportive for short end receivers (IBR 6M1Y captures the bulk of
the premium, displaying around 5bp/month of carry) and the front end of
TES16. Also see Data Flash - Colombia.
Drausio Giacomelli (+1)
Robert Burgess (+44 20 7547-1930 -
Hongtao Jiang (+1)
Sameer Goel (+65 ) 64236973 -
(Embedded image moved to file: pic25064.gif)
Tazia Smith
Director I Key Client Partners - US
DB Securities Inc
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management
345 Park Avenue 10154-0004 New York, NY, USA
Tel.
Fax
Mobi e
CONFIDENTIAL — PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e) DB-SDNY-0 124297
CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00270481
EFTA01461971
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